Austin, TX
2024 NCAA DI men's golf championships: Schedule, how to watch
The 2024 NCAA DI men’s golf championship began with selections on Wednesday, May 1. The championship concludes March 24-29 in Carlsbad, California.
Click or tap here to see every team and individual qualifier.
2024 DI men’s golf championships schedule
Selection show for regional teams and individuals
- Wednesday, May 1 | 2 p.m. ET | Golf Channel
Regionals
- Monday, May 13-Wednesday, May 15
- The University of Texas Golf Club | Austin, TX (Texas, host)
- University Club | Baton Rouge, LA (LSU, host)
- UNC Finley Golf Course | Chapel Hill, NC (UNC, host)
- The Farms Golf Club | Rancho Santa Fe, CA (San Diego, host)
- Stanford Golf Course | Stanford, CA (Stanford, host)
- Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex | West Lafayette, IN (Purdue, host)
National championships
- Friday, May 24-Wednesday, May 29
- Omni La Costa Resort & Spa | Carlsbad, CA
How the championship works
Six 54-hole regional tournaments will be conducted to determine the 30 qualifying teams and six individuals (not on those qualifying teams) who will compete in the finals. Thirteen teams and 10 individuals (not on those teams) will compete at each of three regionals while the other three regionals will have 14 teams and five individuals (not on those teams). The low five teams and the low individual not on those teams will advance to the finals.
All 30 teams and six individuals will complete 54 holes of stroke play. Following 54 holes of competition, the top 15 teams along with the top nine individuals not on an advancing team will advance for one additional day of stroke play to determine the top eight teams for match-play competition and the 72-hole stroke-play individual champion. The top eight teams after 72 holes of play will be placed into a bracket thereafter.
The 2024 national championships will be hosted by the University of Texas at Austin and held at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa.
In team match-play competition, a total of five points will be available with one point being awarded for each individual match. Winning teams will advance to the semifinals and subsequently, the finals. The first team to win three points within the team match will advance, or in the case of the final match, be declared the national champion.
⛳️ Where Masters winners played golf in college
2024 DI men’s golf championships selections
West Lafayette Regional
Hosted by Purdue | Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Vanderbilt
2. Arizona
3. Florida
4. New Mexico
5. Purdue
6. San Diego State [Mountain West Conference]
7. Mississippi State
8. Indiana
9. College of Charleston [Coastal Athletic Association]
10. Stetson
11. Colorado State
12. Southern Illinois [Missouri Valley Conference]
13. Tennessee Tech [Ohio Valley Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Caleb VanArragon, Valparaiso
2. Hunter Thomson, Michigan
3. Cameron Huss, Wisconsin
4. Barend Botha, Toledo
5. Valentin Peugnet, Illinois State
6. Owen Stamper, Middle Tennessee
7. Alex McCulla, Illinois State
8. Ty Gingerich, Cincinnati
9. Luke Fuller, Western Kentucky
10. Ben Ortwein, Rider
Baton Rouge Regional
Hosted by LSU | University Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Auburn [Southeastern Conference]
2. Virginia
3. Texas Tech
4. Oregon
5. Duke
6. Ohio State
7. LSU
8. Louisville
9. Houston
10. South Carolina
11. Lipscomb [ASUN Conference]
12. Yale [The Ivy League]
13. Loyola Maryland [Patriot League]
14. Arkansas-Pine Bluff [Southwestern Athletic Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Alex Goff, Kentucky
2. Max Sturdza, Florida Atlantic
3. Niilo Maki-Petaja, Louisiana Tech
4. Hugo Thyr, South Alabama
5. Archie Smith, Little Rock
Chapel Hill Regional
Hosted by North Carolina | Finley Golf Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. North Carolina [Atlantic Coast Conference]
2. Alabama
3. Georgia Tech
4. East Tennessee State [Southern Conference]
5. Northwestern [Big Ten Conference]
6. Baylor
7. VCU [Atlantic 10 Conference]
8. LMU
9. Long Beach State [Big West Conference]
10. Clemson
11. Michigan State
12. Ball State [Mid-American Conference]
13. Howard [Northeast Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Tobias Jonsson, Mercer
2. Walker Isley, UNCW
3. Nick Mathews, NC State
4. Conor Gough, Charlotte
5. Will Davis, Davidson
6. Spencer Oxendine, NC State
7. Erik Johansson, Campbell
8. Claes Borregaard, Kennesaw State
9. Justin LaRue, Longwood
10. Fred Roberts IV, High Point
Austin Regional
Hosted by Texas | The University of Texas Golf CLub
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Tennessee
2. Arkansas
3. Texas [Big 12 Conference]
4. Georgia
5. Wake Forest
6. Notre Dame
7. UNC Greensboro
8. Brigham Young
9. Utah
10. San Jose State
11. Grand Canyon [Western Athletic Conference]
12. Arkansas State [Sun Belt Conference]
13. Kansas City [The Summit League]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Gustav Frimodt, TCU
2. Luke Gutschewski, Iowa State
3. Hunter Bott, UTSA
4. Cooper Schultz, Kansas State
5. Kobe Valociek, Virginia Tech
6. Joseph Sullivan, Florida Gulf Coast
7. Erik Jansson, Jacksonville State
8. Justin Biwer, Colorado
9. Alexandre Vandermoten, Jacksonville
10. Peicheng Chen, St. John’s
Stanford Regional
Hosted by Stanford | Stanford Golf Course
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Florida State
2. Ole Miss
3. Illinois
4. Texas A&M
5. Stanford
6. UCLA
7. SMU
8. Missouri
9. Fresno State
10. UNLV
11. Augusta University [Southland Conference]
12. Liberty [Conference USA]
13. Sacramento State [Big Sky Conference]
14. Siena [Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Enrique Dimayuga, Nevada
2. Ben Warian, Minnesota
3. Jakob Melin, San Francisco
4. Cole Rueck, Boise State
5. Joe Sykes, Idaho
Rancho Santa Fe Regional
Hosted by San Diego | The Farms Golf Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Arizona State [Pac-12 Conference]
2. Washington
3. Oklahoma
4. California
5. Oklahoma State
6. North Florida
7. Chattanooga
8. South Florida [American Athletic Conference]
9. San Diego [West Coast Conference]
10. West Virginia
11. Kansas
12. Wright State [Horizon League]
13. Seton Hall [Big East Conference]
14. Winthrop [Big South Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Mahanth Chirravuri, Pepperdine
2. Tegan Andrews, Cal State Fullerton
3. William Walsh, Pepperdine
4. Brady Siravo, Pepperdine
5. Kevin Li, Seattle University
Championship history
Florida won last year’s title as the program’s fifth overall. Check out the full championship history below:
| YEAR | CHAMPION | COACH | SCORE | RUNNER-UP | SCORE | HOST OR SITE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Florida | J.C. Deacon | 3 | Georgia Tech | 1 | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| 2022 | Texas | John Fields | 3 | Arizona State | 2 | |
| 2021 | Pepperdine | Michael Beard | 3 | Oklahoma | 2 | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| 2020 | Canceled due to Covid-19 | — | — | — | — | — |
| 2019 | Stanford | Conrad Ray | 3 | Texas | 2 | Fayetteville Ark. |
| 2018 | Oklahoma State | Alan Bratton | 5 | Alabama | 0 | Stillwater, Okla. |
| 2017 | Oklahoma | Ryan Hybl | 3.5 | Oregon | 1.5 | Sugar Grove, Ill. |
| 2016 | Oregon | Casey Martin | 3 | Texas | 2 | Eugene, Ore. |
| 2015 | LSU | Chuck Winstead | 4 | Southern California | 1 | Bradenton, Fla. |
| 2014 | Alabama | Jay Seawell | 4 | Oklahoma State | 1 | Hutchinson, Kan. |
| 2013 | Alabama | Jay Seawell | 4 | Illinois | 1 | Atlanta |
| 2012 | Texas | John Fields | 3 | Alabama | 2 | Pacific Palisades, Calif. |
| 2011 | Augusta State | Josh Gregory | 3 | Georgia | 2 | Oklahoma State |
| 2010 | Augusta State | Josh Gregory | 3.5 | Oklahoma State | 1.5 | Ooltewah, Tenn. |
| 2009 | Texas A&M | J.T. Higgins | 3 | Arkansas | 2 | Toledo |
| 2008 | UCLA | Derek Freeman | 1,194 | Stanford | 1,195 | Purdue |
| 2007 | Stanford | Conrad Ray | 1,109 | Georgia | 1,121 | VCU |
| 2006 | Oklahoma State | Mike McGraw | 1,143 | Florida | 1,146 | Sunriver, Ore. |
| 2005 | Georgia | Chris Haack | 1,135 | Georgia Tech | 1,146 | Owings Mills, Md. |
| 2004 | California | Steve Desimone | 1,134 | UCLA | 1,140 | Hot Springs, Va. |
| 2003 | Clemson | Larry Penley | 1,191 | Oklahoma State | 1,193 | Oklahoma State |
| 2002 | Minnesota | Brad James | 1,134 | Georgia Tech | 1,138 | Ohio State |
| 2001 | Florida | Buddy Alexander | 1,126 | Clemson | 1,144 | Duke |
| 2000 | *Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,116 | Georgia Tech | 1,116 | Auburn |
| 1999 | Georgia | Chris Haack | 1,180 | Oklahoma State | 1,183 | Minnesota |
| 1998 | UNLV | Dwaine Knight | 1,118 | Clemson | 1,121 | New Mexico |
| 1997 | Pepperdine | John Geiberger | 1,148 | Wake Forest | 1,151 | Northwestern |
| 1996 | Arizona State | Randy Lein | 1,186 | UNLV | 1,189 | Chattanooga, Tenn. |
| 1995 | *Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,156 | Stanford | 1,156 | Ohio State |
| 1994 | Stanford | Wally Goodwin | 1,129 | Texas | 1,133 | SMU |
| 1993 | Florida | Buddy Alexander | 1,145 | Georgia Tech | 1,146 | Kentucky |
| 1992 | Arizona | Rick LaRose | 1,129 | Arizona State | 1,136 | New Mexico |
| 1991 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,161 | North Carolina | 1,168 | San Jose State |
| 1990 | Arizona State | Steve Loy | 1,155 | Florida | 1,157 | Florida |
| 1989 | Oklahoma | Gregg Grost | 1,139 | Texas | 1,158 | Oklahoma State/Oklahoma |
| 1988 | UCLA | Eddie Merrins | 1,176 | UTEP/Oklahoma/Oklahoma State | 1,179 | Southern California |
| 1987 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,160 | Wake Forest | 1,176 | Ohio State |
| 1986 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,156 | Oklahoma State | 1,160 | Wake Forest |
| 1985 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,172 | Oklahoma State | 1,175 | Florida |
| 1984 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,145 | Oklahoma State | 1,146 | Houston |
| 1983 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,161 | Texas | 1,168 | Fresno State |
| 1982 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,141 | Oklahoma State | 1,151 | Pinehurst |
| 1981 | BYU | Karl Tucker | 1,161 | Oral Roberts | 1,163 | Stanford |
| 1980 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,173 | BYU | 1,177 | Ohio State |
| 1979 | Ohio State | James Brown | 1,189 | Oklahoma State | 1,191 | Wake Forest |
| 1978 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,140 | Georgia | 1,157 | Oregon |
| 1977 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,197 | Oklahoma State | 1,205 | Colgate |
| 1976 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,166 | BYU | 1,173 | New Mexico |
| 1975 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,156 | Oklahoma State | 1,189 | Ohio State |
| 1974 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,158 | Florida | 1,160 | San Diego State |
| 1973 | Florida | Buster Bishop | 1,149 | Oklahoma State | 1,159 | Oklahoma State |
| 1972 | Texas | George Hannon | 1,146 | Houston | 1,159 | Cape Coral |
| 1971 | Texas | George Hannon | 1,144 | Houston | 1,151 | Arizona |
| 1970 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,172 | Wake Forest | 1,182 | Ohio State |
| 1969 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,223 | Wake Forest | 1,232 | Broadmoor |
| 1968 | Florida | Buster Bishop | 1,154 | Houston | 1,156 | New Mexico State |
| 1967 | Houston | Dave Williams | 585 | Florida | 588 | Shawnee, Pa. |
| 1966 | Houston | Dave Williams | 582 | San Jose State | 586 | Stanford |
| 1965 | Houston | Dave Williams | 577 | Cal State L.A. | 587 | Tennessee |
| 1964 | Houston | Dave Williams | 580 | Oklahoma State | 587 | Broadmoor |
| 1963 | Oklahoma State | Labron Harris | 581 | Houston | 582 | Wichita State |
| 1962 | Houston | Dave Williams | 588 | Oklahoma State | 598 | Duke |
| 1961 | Purdue | Sam Voinoff | 584 | Arizona State | 595 | Lafayette |
| 1960 | Houston | Dave Williams | 603 | Purdue/Oklahoma State | 607 | Broadmoor |
| 1959 | Houston | Dave Williams | 561 | Purdue | 571 | Oregon |
| 1958 | Houston | Dave Williams | 570 | Oklahoma State | 582 | Williams |
| 1957 | Houston | Dave Williams | 602 | Stanford | 603 | Broadmoor |
| 1956 | Houston | Dave Williams | 601 | North Texas/Purdue | 602 | Ohio State |
| 1955 | LSU | Mike Barbato | 574 | North Texas | 583 | Tennessee |
| 1954 | SMU | Graham Ross | 572 | North Texas | 573 | Houston/Rice |
| 1953 | Stanford | Charles Finger | 578 | North Carolina | 580 | Broadmoor |
| 1952 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 587 | Michigan | 593 | Purdue |
| 1951 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 588 | Ohio State | 589 | Ohio State |
| 1950 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 573 | Purdue | 577 | New Mexico |
| 1949 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 590 | Purdue/Texas | 600 | Iowa State |
| 1948 | San Jose State | Wilbur Hubbard | 579 | LSU | 588 | Stanford |
| 1947 | LSU | T.P. Heard | 606 | Duke | 614 | Michigan |
| 1946 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 619 | Michigan | 624 | Princeton |
| 1945 | Ohio State | Robert Kepler | 602 | Northwestern | 621 | Ohio State |
| 1944 | Notre Dame | George Holderith | 311 | Minnesota | 312 | Inverness |
| 1943 | Yale | William Neale | 614 | Michigan | 618 | Olympia Fields |
| 1942 | LSU/Stanford | Major J. Perry Cole/Eddie Twiggs | 590 | Notre Dame | ||
| 1941 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 580 | LSU | 599 | Ohio State |
| 1940 | Princeton/LSU | Walter Bourne/Major J. Perry Cole | 601 | Ekwanok | ||
| 1939 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 612 | Northwestern/Princeton | 614 | Wakonda |
| 1938 | Stanford | Louisville | ||||
| 1937 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1936 | Yale | North Shore | ||||
| 1935 | Michigan | Congressional | ||||
| 1934 | Michigan | Cleveland | ||||
| 1933 | Yale | Buffalo | ||||
| 1932 | Yale | Hot Springs, Va. | ||||
| 1931 | Yale | Olympia Fields | ||||
| 1930 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1929 | Princeton | Deal, N.J. | ||||
| 1928 | Princeton | Apawamis | ||||
| 1927 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1926 | Yale | Merion | ||||
| 1925 | Yale | Montclair | ||||
| 1924 | Yale | Greenwich | ||||
| 1923 | Princeton | Siwanoy | ||||
| 1922 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1921 | Dartmouth | Greenwich | ||||
| 1920 | Princeton | Nassau | ||||
| 1919 | Princeton | Merion | ||||
| 1916 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1915 | Yale | Greenwich | ||||
| 1914 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1912 | Yale (fall)/ Yale (spring) | Huntingdon Valley/Ekwanko | ||||
| 1911 | Yale | Baltusrol | ||||
| 1910 | Yale | Essex County | ||||
| 1909 | Yale | Apawamis | ||||
| 1908 | Yale | Brae Burn | ||||
| 1907 | Yale | Nassau | ||||
| 1906 | Yale | Garden City | ||||
| 1905 | Yale | Garden City | ||||
| 1904 | Harvard | Myopia | ||||
| 1903 | Harvard | Garden City | ||||
| 1902 | Harvard (fall)/Yale (spring) | Morris County/Garden City | ||||
| 1901 | Harvard | Atlantic City | ||||
| 1899 | Harvard | |||||
| 1898 | Yale (fall)/Harvard (spring) | |||||
| 1897 | Yale | Ardsley Casino |
Austin, TX
Environmental experts say Texas data centers come with uncertainty
The main switchyard at a Midlothian power plant. The federal government is sending Texas more than $60 million to strengthen the state’s power grid. Credit: Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune
Texas is home to approximately 400 data centers — some currently operational, others still under construction and a number that are still in the planning stages. Experts say the boom comes with a lot of uncertainty.
Texas data center power demand
What they’re saying:
“Data centers are a relatively large power demand in a small area, something like, you know, 100 or 200 megawatts of power. That’s more than a small city or a small town would be consuming itself,” said Carey King, a research scientist with the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin.
Over the past year, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas has received more than 200 gigawatts worth of large load interconnection requests, approximately 73% of which are from data centers. That has led to questions about whether the state’s grid is up to the task of supplying power to the facilities.
“Many of us who suffered through winter storm Uri still have PTSD over, you know, fears that the grid won’t be able to meet demand,” said Luke Metzger, the executive director of Environment Texas, a local nonprofit working to safeguard the state’s natural environment.
Question of infrastructure
That’s not the only question. King points out that there is also a question of whether all the proposed data centers will actually be built. He says if they don’t end up materializing, it could spell trouble for anyone making investment decisions based on the projections. And if infrastructure is built to accommodate the needs of projects that never come to fruition, those costs could be passed off to consumers in the form of higher rates.
Experts say these speculative data center projects have led to uncertainty around how much power will actually be needed to meet the demands of the state’s data centers.
Senate Bill 6, which was signed into law last June, outlined new requirements for data center projects, including stipulating that data centers put up more capital up front for things like transmission studies and interconnection fees. The bill is, in part, intended to reduce some of that uncertainty around speculative power loads.
Potential environmental impact
But concerns still remain around the potential environmental impact of the state’s data centers.
“There are an estimated 130 new gas-powered power plants that have been proposed for Texas, in part to meet this demand for data centers, and if they’re all built, that’s going to have as much climate pollution as 27 million cars,” said Metzger.
Above all, Metzger says the biggest uncertainty is water, as there is no central entity in the state that collects and compiles information on those needs.
On average, a single data center consumes millions of gallons of water annually, according to researchers with the University of Michigan. Metzger says that’s of particular concern here in Texas, where water supply is already being pushed to its limits.
“Texas is a very drought-prone state, and already, you know, you know, according to the Water Development Board, you know, we don’t have enough supply to meet demand,” said Metzger. “There is no way to make more water. And so, I think ultimately, you know that that could be the greatest concern for the state.”
Over the past year, residents across Central Texas have spoken out about data centers in places like Round Rock and Taylor, citing additional concerns including falling property values, noise, and health impacts.
What’s next:
Moving forward, experts recommend that local leaders undergo long-range planning to determine whether they’re able to allocate limited resources to data centers in the long run prior to approving these projects.
The Source: Information in this article comes from FOX 7 interviews with experts.
Austin, TX
Silver Alert issued for missing 73-year-old man in Austin
AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas Department of Public Safety has issued a Silver Alert for an elderly man who has been missing since Friday afternoon in Austin.
The Austin Police Department is looking for Charles Evans, a 73-year-old man diagnosed with a cognitive impairment. Evans was last seen at 5:37 p.m. on Jan. 9 in Austin.
Silver Alert issued for missing 73-year-old man in Austin
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Police describe him as a 6’3″ tall white male, weighing 225 pounds, has gray hair, hazel eyes, and who uses a walker.
Law enforcement officials believe his disappearance poses a credible threat to his health and safety.
Anyone with information regarding his whereabouts is urged to contact the Austin Police Department at 512-974-5000.
Austin, TX
Man arrested, charged for deadly shooting at downtown Austin hotel
AUSTIN, Texas – A 20-year-old was arrested and charged with murder for a deadly shooting at the Cambria Hotel in downtown Austin, police said.
What we know:
Police said on Monday, Jan. 5, around 6:55 a.m., officers responded to a report of a gunshot at the Cambria Hotel at 68 East Avenue #824. The caller said a person had been shot.
When officers arrived, they found a man with injuries. He later died at the scene. He was identified as Luke Bradburn.
The investigation revealed that Bradburn drove and crashed a car that belonged to 20-year-old Maximillian Salinas. After the crash, Bradburn and the other people in the car left and went to the Cambria Hotel.
Salinas went to the hotel and shot Bradburn.
On Jan. 6, Salinas was arrested and charged with murder.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the Austin Police at 512-974-TIPS. You may submit your tip anonymously through the Capital Area Crime Stoppers Program by visiting austincrimestoppers.org or calling 512-472-8477.
The Source: Information from the Austin Police Department
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