2009-10 Coastal Carolina Men's Golf Media Guide

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2009-10 MEN’s MEN’S GOLF MEDIA GUIDE

Two-Time All-Big South Senior SAM LYONS Two-Time All-Big South Senior DAN OBREMSKI

12 BIG SOUTH CHAMPIONSHIPS

10 NCAA APPEARANCES

w w w . G o c c us p o r t s . c om


2009-10 Men’s Golf Squad

Drew Ernst Seneca, S.C.

Anders Larson Knivsta, Sweden

Alan Lee Lima, Peru

Sam Lyons Little River, S.C.

Tripp McAllister Lake City, S.C.

Dan Obremski Irwin, Pa.

Petur Petursson Reykjavik, Iceland

Sebastian Soderberg Ojersjo, Sweden

Charlie Winegardner Lothian, Md.

Daily Young Springfield, Mo.

Allen Terrell Head Coach

Chris Wilson Associate Head Coach

Cameron Hooper Student Asst. Coach

Name Drew Ernst Anders Larson Alan Lee Sam Lyons Tripp McAllister Dan Obremski Petur Petursson Sebastian Soderberg Charlie Winegardner Daily Young

Yr. R-So. Fr. R-So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Fr. Fr. So. R-Fr.

Ht. 5-11 5-8 5-11 6-0 5-11 5-10 6-0 6-2 6-0 5-7

Wt. 160 143 165 160 143 170 164 182 170 215

Hometown/High School (Previous) Seneca, S.C./Seneca Knivsta, Sweden/Celsiusskolan Lima, Peru/Heritage Academy (Arkansas) Little River, S.C./North Myrtle Beach Lake City, S.C./The Carolina Academy Irwin, Pa./Penn-Trafford Reykjavik, Iceland/Pendleton School (Fla.) Ojersjo, Sweden/Katrinelundsgymnasiet Lothian, Md./Calverton School Springfield, Mo./Hillcrest

Director of Golf/Head Men’s Golf Coach: Allen Terrell Associate Head Coach: Chris Wilson Student Assistant Coach: Cameron Hooper


Quick Facts/Outlook 2009-10 Men’s Individual Photos & Roster...............................Inside Front Cover 2009-10 Golf Quick Facts and Outlook........................................................................1

2009-10 Chanticleers

Sam Lyons..............................................................................................................................2 Dan Obremski.......................................................................................................................3 Alan Lee..................................................................................................................................4 Tripp McAllister....................................................................................................................5 Drew Ernst..............................................................................................................................6 Charlie Winegardner..........................................................................................................7 Daily Young/Anders Larson.............................................................................................8 Petur Petursson/Sebastian Soderberg........................................................................9 Student Assistant Coach Cameron Hooper............................................................ 10 Chants in the Community............................................................................................. 10 2009-10 Tournament Schedule................................................................................... 11 Director of Golf/Head Men’s Coach Allen Terrell.............................................12-13 Associate Head Coach Chris Wilson . ........................................................................ 13 Golf Perfornance Center................................................................................................ 14 Private Practice Facility................................................................................................... 15 TPC of Myrtle Beach........................................................................................................ 16 Other Courses of the Chanticleers............................................................................. 17 General Jim Hackler Championship.......................................................................... 18 NCAA Appearances......................................................................................................... 19 Chants’ International Flavor.......................................................................................... 20 Chanticleers On the Road.............................................................................................. 21 2008-09 Results & Statistics.......................................................................................... 22 Big South Conference..................................................................................................... 23 Big South Awards & Finishes........................................................................................ 24 Individual & Team Records............................................................................................ 25 Coastal Carolina University........................................................................................... 26 University Executive Officers........................................................................................ 27 Athletic Facilities............................................................................................................... 28 Athletic Department....................................................................................................... 29 Tradition of Excellence................................................................................................... 30 NCAA Compliance............................................................................................................ 31 Athletic Media Relations................................................................................................ 32 Chants in the Pros..............................................................................Inside Back Cover 2009-10 Schedule........................................................................................... Back Cover

2009-10 COASTAL CAROLINA QUICK FACTS

Location: .........................................................................................Conway, S.C. 29526 Founded: ...................................................................................................................... 1954 Enrollment: ................................................................................................................ 8,300 Nickname: .................................................................................................... Chanticleers Colors: .........................................................................................Teal, Bronze and Black Conference: . ......................................................................................................Big South President: . .............................................................................................. David DeCenzo Athletic Director: . .............................................................................Hunter Yurachek

CHANTICLEER GOLF

Director of Golf/Men’s Head Coach: . ................ Allen Terrell (Methodist, ’97) Coastal Years/Overall Coaching Years: . ............................ 10th Year/13th Year Assistant Coach: .........................................Chris Wilson (Louisiana-Monroe, ’01) Home Course: ..............................................................................TPC of Myrtle Beach

TEAM INFORMATION

Letterwinners Returning/Lost: . ............................................................................4/4 Newcomers...........................................................................................................................3 Big South Record Finish: ......................................................................... Champions NCAA Regional Finish: . ..........................................................................................13th

Coastal Carolina ATHLETIC MEDIA RELATIONS

Asst. AD-Media Relations/Golf Contact: . ..................................John A. Martin Office Phone: . .......................................................................................... 843-349-2822 Email: ............................................................................................jamartin@coastal.edu Office Fax: .................................................................................................. 843-349-2819 Web site: .................................................................................www.GoCCUsports.com

Coming out of the 2009 fall season, the Coastal Carolina University men’s golf team has reason for optimism. Despite losing three letterwinners, including All-American Zack Byrd, from the roster, the Chanticleers showed the depth of the program by posting three top-five finishes in four events, including a win at The McLaughlin. This early success showed Head Coach Allen Terrell both the strengths of the squad as well as some areas to work on in preparation for the spring. “The fall season was solely about opportunities,” Terrell said. “We were able to play four different lineups, giving our young guys the expereince to know how their respective games held up under competition. Our team showed they could be very competitive but at the same time inconsistent. We have some very talented, hard working guys on this team. However, all of our college golf experience is in three players. As our entire lineup gains more experience, I believe we will be very competitve in postseason play.” Terrell will rely on his two seniors, Sam Lyons and Dan Obremski, for leadership this season, as they are the two returners with the most extensive experience. Each of them had a breakthrough during the fall season, capturing individual titles at The McLaughlin (Lyons) and the Windon Memorial Classic (Obremski), showing on-the-course results of matching their abilities with hard work and leadership. “Dan and Sam have made an enormous impact on our team this year,” Terrell commented. “Those two guys take great pride in our program and want to make sure their last year is a great one. No one works harder than Dan and Sam. They developed into players that can win top tier events. As they grow their consistency, they will become even more successful.” The win at The McLaughlin, played at the Bethpage Park Red Course in Farmingdale, N.Y., demonstrated the potential of the Chants this year. Coastal Carolina finished the final round with the only under-par round of the final day to post a school-record 5-under 835 and come from behind for a four-shot victory. It was a victory that was invaluable for the team as they look to even stronger competition in the spring. “It is always valuable experience when your players are in contention,”Terrell stated. “We had quality contribution from all five guys. College golf is so deep these days. You can have great teams and never win an event. I was so proud of our seniors posting their low rounds the final day to help us win. It was a great to see the guys rewarded for their hard work.” The 2010 spring slate is again one of the toughest in school history, as the Chanticleers continue to compete on a national level with the best in the nation. While playing all six regular-season events in the Southern states, the fields all include some of the top teams from around the country. The six-time defending Big South Conference champions know that, while they want to win another league title, they are also preparing for the NCAA Regionals and a chance to move on to the NCAA Championship, being played in the Southeast again at the Honors Course outside Chattanooga, Tenn. “Our goal is to play against the best,” Terrell said. “Our players want to play after college so it is important they play the toughest competition possible. At the same time, they need to play against the best so each players know where they stack up. Postseason is not the time to find out what kind of team we have. It is important our players have a strong level of comfort in May. “Everything we do is to prepare our team for postseason,” the 10th-year leader of the Chants continued. “However, we take great pride in our conference history. Every year, winning conference is one of our top goals. I feel our conference is vastly improving. We have some great young coaches working hard trying to knock us off our streak. The more competitive our conference championship is the better prepared our team will be for postseason. It is always great to have a close battle in conference to help your team gain experience of handling their emotions when there are conference trophies on the line.” The Chants will again host the General Hackler Championship in March and it again boasts one of the top fields in the country. This year, Coastal welcomes 11 other programs to the Grand Strand, with nine of them having played in the NCAA Regionals last year and two advancing to the NCAA Championship. This is something that Terrell and the program take great care to cultivate and continue to build the national respect of the program. “Our community takes so much pride in the Hackler,”Terrell concluded. “I am always humbled to see the amount of volunteers and support we get for the event. That support makes a huge impact on our visiting teams. We feel like we are continuing the legacy of General Hackler, a responsibility we take very seriously. At the same time, we are promoting the great golf in our community.We are so proud of the growth.”

What is a Chanticleer?

Credits

Writing, Design, Layout: John Martin with special assistance from Kent Reichert, Matt Hogue, Teresa Garbee, Deandra Danch and the City of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Cover Design: Regis Minerd-University Communications with assistance from John Martin. Photography: Bill Edmonds, Judsey Johns, Chris Wilson, John Martin, TPC of Myrtle Beach and Brandon Advertising.

12 Big South Conference Championships

Chanticleer (SHON-ti-cleer) gives Coastal Carolina University one of the most unique nicknames in all of sports. Chanticleer comes from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and came to Coastal when the University was a member of the University of South Carolina system. A Chanticleer is a rooster who rules the barnyard with cunning and wit. His competitiveness never wanes as he battles to the end, using his brains to come out on top every time.

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2009-10 Chanticleers SAM LYONS

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Senior, 6-0, 160 Little River, S.C. North Myrtle Beach

Starts the spring ranked eighth on Coastal’s career scoring chart at 74.55 strokes per round in 78 rounds played... Fall 2009: Ranked second in the Big South in fall scoring average at 72.58 strokes in 12 rounds played, including a pair of top-five finishes... Earned his first collegiate medalist honor after tying for first at The McLaughlin with a 2-under 208, leading the Chanticleers to the team victory in the event... Earned Big South Player of the Week for the second time in his career for his win at the McLaughlin... His 208 ties for the 10th-best 54-hole score in Coastal history, while his 67 in the final round was the fall low round for Coastal and third best in the Big South... Started off the season with a tie for fifth at the Golfweek Conference Challenge... Posted five of 12 fall rounds at par or better... 2008-09: Played in 24 rounds, averaging 74.83 strokes per round, the ninth best in the league... Earned All-Big South honors after tying for runner-up honors at the Big South Championship with a 54-hole total of 224...Had three top-10 and four top-20 placings in eight events... Led the Chants with a tie for ninth at the SunTrust Gator Invitational, shooting a 1-under 209, including a 4-under 66 in the opening round... Also tied for ninth at the Desert Shootout with an 8-under 208... His 65 in the second round was a career best and tied for the third lowest in school history... Also tied for 19th as an individual at the General Hackler Championship with a 225... Had five rounds of par or better on the year... Advanced to the quarterfinals at the 2009 U.S. Amateur Public Links in Norman, Okla., including an upset the top-ranked amateur in the U.S. and No. 2 in the world, Rickie Fowler, in the Round of 16.... 2007-08: Played in 21 rounds in seven events as a sophomore... Averaged 75.1 strokes per round and posted five rounds under par... Had his best tournament of the year in the CordeValle Collegiate, shooting a team season-low and career-best 68 in the first round en route to a tie for seventh at three-under 213, earning Big South Golfer of the Week honors... Also finished in the top 20 at the General Hacker Championship, placing 19th at 227... Played for Coastal Carolina at the NCAA East Regional, tying for 47th at 1-over 214, including a 1-under 70 in the first round... 2006-07: Saw action in six events and 21 rounds as a true freshman, posting a 74.81 scoring average... Had one top-10 and two top-20 results while posting six rounds of par or better... Shot a three-round total of 223 to tie for ninth at the Big South Championships and earn All-Big South accolades... Had his first top-20 finish of his college career at the Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic, firing a 1-over 217 to tie for 11th and help the Chanticleers to the team title... Had four rounds of par or better in the fall, including backto-back rounds of one-under 71 in the second and third rounds at Duke... High School: Earned All-State and All-Region honors his final three years at North Myrtle Beach... Named “Toast of the Coast” by The Sun News... Was second at the International Junior Fourball prior to his senior year, as well as finishing third at the Junior Rice Planters... Finished third at Regionals his junior season in 2005... Won the 2004 George Holliday Memorial Classic in Myrtle Beach, shooting even-par 216 and winning in a playoff... Qualified for the United States Team for the WJGC in 2003... Finished third at the 3-A State Championship as a sophomore, as well as finishing third in the S.C. Junior Match Play in 2003... Won the EJGA Tour Championship and South Carolina Junior Match Play his freshman year... Was a member of the Beta Club... Personal: Full name: Sam Cody Lyons... Son of Ray and Michele Lyons... Majoring in recreation and sport management. SAM LYONS - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round 2006-07 7 21 1,571 74.81 217 70 2007-08 7 21 1,577 75.10 213 68 2008-09 8 24 1,796 74.83 208 65 Fall 2009 4 12 871 72.58 208 67 Totals 26 78 5,815 74.55 208 65

Par/- Best Finish Top Rounds Finish 5 10 20 6 t-9th 0 1 2 5 t-7th 0 1 2 5 t-2nd 1 3 4 5 1st 2 2 2 21 1st 3 7 10

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


2009-10 Chanticleers Dan Obremski

Senior, 6-0, 180 Irwin, Pa. Penn-Trafford

Enters his final spring ranked sixth all-time at Coastal in scoring average at 74.00 in 102 rounds played... Fall 2009: Was one of three Coastal players to see action in all four events and 12 rounds, averaging 72.75, third best in the Big South, with three rounds of par or better... Had one top-five and two top10 finishes in the fall... Won his first collegiate tournament at the Windon Memorial Classic, shooting a 1-over 214... Also earned Big South Golfer of the Week for the first time for his victory... Also tied for sixth at The McLaughlin with a 2-under 208, helping Coastal to the team win... Had his best round of the fall in the final round of The McLaughlin, shooting a 2-under 68... 2008-09: Played in 10 tournaments and 30 rounds, averaging 74.20, fifth best in the conference, with two top-10 placings... His best finish of the year was a tie for sixth with a 1-under 215 at the Bank of Tennessee at the Ridges Collegiate, helping Coastal Carolina to the team title... Also tied for 10th at the CordeValle Collegiate at 218... Posted a season-best 69 in the second round of the BOT at The Ridges and first round of the Administaff Augusta State Invitational.. His best 54-hole total was 215 at the SunTrust Gator Invitational... 2007-08: Was voted as an All-Big South selection by the league’s head coaches and sports information directors for his play during the regular season... Played in 29 rounds and 10 events on the season, ranking second on the squad and fifth in the league with a 73.83 scoring average, including eight rounds of par or better... Posted one top-five and two top-10 finishes on the year... Posted his best finish of the year at the Big South Championship, tying for fifth at 222... His other top 10 was a tie for sixth at the General Jim Hackler Championship... Posted his best round of the season in the opening round of the SunTrust Gator Invitational, firing a 2-under 68, tying for the second lowest single round of the Chants’ season... Helped lead Coastal Carolina to an upset of top-seeded Charlotte at the Callaway Match Play with his upset of All-American Corey Nagy at No. 1...Named to the Big South Presidential Honor Roll... 2006-07: Was on the course for 10 rounds and 31 rounds, averaging 74.45 strokes per round... Had nine rounds of par or better and two top-10 and four top-20 finishes on the year... Placed 10th at the Big South Conference Championships, earning All-Big South honors... Also was in the lineup for the NCAA East Regional and NCAA Championships... Shot 1-under 215, including a season-best 69 in the opening round, at the Administaff Augusta State Invitational to help the Chants rally for the team title... Opened his career with a tie for sixth with a 3-over 219 at the Johnny Palmer/Old North State Classic... Tied for 11th with a one-over 217 at the Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic to help the Chanticleers earn the team victory... Also shot even-par 216 at the CordeValle Collegiate to tie for 33rd... Has four of six rounds at par or better in the fall, including a pair of 2-under 70s... High School: Attended the International Junior Golf Academy in Hilton Head Island in 2005-06, winning three events during the IJGT Tour... Won the points title on the Nike Junior Series, consisting of 10 events, six on the West Coast... Was a medalist eight times his senior year, averaging 37.1 for nine holes... Finished sixth as a senior at the 2004 Pennsylvania State Championships... Was also sixth at the WPIAC Finals after winning both the regional and sectional events... Won the State Qualifier at Dauphin Highlands in 2004, as well as the Westmoreland County Junior Amateur... Finished third at the WPIAL Championships his junior year... Picked up golf one week before freshman tryouts in 2001... Also was a baseball standout for the Warriors, earning Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Player of the Year honors as a senior after hitting .480 with four homers... Earned All-Section honors his final two years of high school... Personal: Full name: Daniel Landon Obremski... Son of Daniel and Tami Obremski... His father Daniel was the No. 1-ranked racquetball player in the world... Majoring in exercise and sport science. DAN OBREMSKI - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round 2006-07 10 31 2,308 74.45 215 69 2007-08 10 29 2,141 73.83 213 68 2008-09 10 30 2,226 74.20 215 69 Fall 2009 4 12 873 72.75 210 68 Totals 34 102 7,548 74.00 210 68

Par/- Best Finish Top Rounds Finish 5 10 20 9 t-6th 0 2 4 8 t-5th 1 2 2 9 t-6th 0 2 2 3 t-1st 1 2 2 29 t-1st 2 8 10

12 Big South Conference Championships

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2009-10 Chanticleers Alan Lee

Junior, 5-11, 160 Lima, Peru Heritage Academy (S.C.) (Arkansas)

Fall 2009 : Did not play in any fall events for the Chanticleers... 2008-09: Saw action in three evnts, playing nine rounds and averaging 73.78 shots per round... Had his best collegiate finish playing as an individual at the General Hackler Championship, tying or sixth at 4-over 220... Shot a 1-under 71 in the second round at the Hackler... Followed it up with a tie for 57th at the Desert Shootout, shooting a 4-over 220 in the 54-hole tournament... Had the best single round of his collegiate career in the second round at the Shootout, shooting a 4-under 68... Played in just one tournament his first fall, tying for 46th with a three-round 224 at the season-opening Windon Memorial... Posted a pair of 73s in the first two rounds... Had six rounds of 75 or better in his first year with the Chanticleers... Prior to Coastal Carolina: Spent his freshman season at Arkansas, where he played in just one event... Tied for 64th at the Wolf Run Intercollegiate with a 233... High School: A 2007 graduate of Hilton Head Academy in South Carolina... Qualified for the U.S. Junior Amateur for three consecutive years... In 2007 advanced to match play where he was defeated in the first round... Captured medalist honors at the 2006 IJGT Myrtlewood.. Also finished second at the 2005 AJGA Hargray Junior Classic and 10th at the 2005 AJGA Golf Pride Junior Classic... Personal: Full name: Alan Fernando Lee... Son of Wenchun Lee and Yeichun Hung... Majoring in finance.

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ALAN LEE - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Par/- Best Finish Top Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Rounds Finish 5 10 20 2007-08* 1 3 233 77.67 233 75 0 t-64th 0 0 0 2008-09 3 9 664 73.78 220 68 2 t-6th 0 1 1 Fall 2009 Did Not See Any Action Totals 4 12 897 74.75 220 68 2 t-6th 0 1 1 * Spent the season at Arkansas

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


2009-10 Chanticleers TRIPP M c Allister

Junior, 5-11, 143 Lake City, S.C. Carolina Academy

Fall 2009: Did not play in any rounds during the fall schedule... 2008-09: Competed in 10 events and 30 rounds for the Chanticleers, averaging 75.90 with one top-10 and two top-20 finishes... Had seven rounds of par or better on the year... His best finish was a tie for sixth at the Big South Conference Championship, earning him All-Big South honors for the second straight year and helping Coastal to its sixth consecutive Big South crown... His best round of the year was in the second round of the Arizona Intercollegiate, shooting a 2-under 69... His best 54-hole scores were at the Desert Shootout and Administaff Augusta State Invitational, posting 1-under 215 in each tournament... Posted a tie for 18th at 220 at the 2008 Bank of Tennessee at The Ridges Intercollegiate, helping the Chants to the team title... Had his best round of the fall in the final 18 at The Ridges, shooting an even-par 72... Tied for 10th at the 2009 South Carolina Amateur in the summer... 2007-08: Was the 2008 Big South Conference Player and Freshman of the Year after as voted by the league’s head coaches and sports information directors, the first in league history to accomplish that feat... Finished second in the Big South with a 73.55 stroke average in 26 rounds played and was the highest-ranked individual in the conference according to Golfstat... Was Coastal Carolina’s top finisher in four events, posted three top-20s and finished in the top 35 in seven of nine events while playing the second-toughest schedule in the country... Named Big South Golfer of the Week twice (Feb. 21 and March 27) and posted three rounds in the 60s... Carded a 1-under 209 at the SunTrust Gator Invitational to finish tied for 12th – his season best... Also was the top finisher for Coastal Carolina at the NCAA East Regional, tying for 35th at 1-under 212, including a team season-best 67 in the first round... Played in two of the three matches at the Callaway Match Play, earning a half against Robin Wingardh of Tennessee... Was medalist at the 2008 South Carolina Amateur Match Play Championship and went on to win the match play title as well... High School: Was the 2005-06 SCISA Individual State Champion and Class AA Player of the Year after leading his squad to their second consecutive state title in 2006... Was a four-time All-State selection, four-time Team MVP and runner-up individually at the 2005 State Championships... Ranked as high as fifth among junior boys in South Carolina and 72nd in the nation by GolfWeek...Qualified for the U.S. Junior Amateur in 2005 and 2006, advancing to the match play portion in 2005... Also won the title at the 2005 George Holliday Memorial and finished in the top six in four of summer events in 2006... Was a member of the National Honor Society and High Honor Roll.... Personal: Full name: Billy L. McAllister III... Son of Billy Jr. and Debbie McAllister... Major is exercise and sport science.

TRIPP McALLISTER - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Par/- Best Finish Top Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Rounds Finish 5 10 20 2007-08 9 26 1,911 73.50 209 67 9 t-12th 0 0 3 2008-09 10 30 2,277 75.90 215 69 10 t-6th 0 1 2 Fall 2009 Did Not See Any Action Totals 19 56 4,188 74.79 209 67 19 t-6th 0 1 2

12 Big South Conference Championships

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2009-10 Chanticleers Drew Ernst

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Redshirt Sophomore, 5-11, 160 Seneca, S.C. Seneca

Fall 2009: Was in the lineup for all four tournaments for the Chanticleers, averaging a teamand Big South-best 72.50 strokes in 12 rounds played... Had five rounds of par or better and recorded one top-five and three top-20 finishes... Opened the season as Coastal’s top player at the Golfweek Conference Challenge, tying for fifth at 2-under 214, including a 1-under 69 in the second round... Finished 11th at The McLaughlin at 1-over 211, helping lead the Chants to the team title... Shot a 2-under 68 in the second round of The McLaughlin, his best fall round and tying for the second best on the squad... Led the team with a 19th-place finish in the Bank of Tennessee Intercollegiate at The Ridges, shooting a 1-over 217... 2008-09: Played in all seven spring events for the Chants, averaging 74.05 in 21 rounds played with one top-five and three top-20 placings... Had his best finish at the Big South Conference Championship, tying for fourth at 9-over 225 and earning All-Big South Conference honors while helping Coastal win its sixth straight league crown... Was the Chants’ leader at the NCAA Northeast Regional, tying for 11th at 8-over 221... Had his best 54-hole total at the Administaff Augusta State Invitational, posting a 4-under 212 to tie for 18th... Twice posted a 68 for his best round of the year, shooting the score in the second round at Augusta State and final round of the NCAA Regional... Did not play in any tournaments in the fall schedule as he continued his rehabilitation from the injury... Tied for third at the 2009 Southeastern Amateur, tied for fourth at the South Carolina Open and tied for fifth at the South Carolina Amateur during summer action... Named to the Big South Presidential Honor Roll... 2007-08: Redshirted his true freshman year due to injury, retaining the year of eligibility... Was named to the Big South Presidential Honor Roll... High School: Was ranked as high as eighth in the state Boy’s rankings and 23rd in the nation according to GolfWeek’s Junior Boy’s Ratings of the Class of 2007... Was a 2006 Class 3A All-State selection and three-time Region 1 Player of the Year... Finished in the top 15 of three American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) tournaments the summer of 2006, as well as placing sixth at the GolfWeek Top-100 event... Played for the victorious South Carolina squad in the 2006 matches versus Canada, his second straight season on the team, as well as playing in the 2005 Carolinas Versus Virginias matches... Honored as the Wendy’s High School Heisman nominee in 2007 from Seneca High School... Was also a member of the Honor Roll, National Honor Society and Who’s Who of American High School Students... Personal: Full name: Andrew Mark Ernst... Son of Mark and Melanie Ernst... Dad Mark played college golf at Furman in 1982-83... Majoring in recreation and sport management.

DREW ERNST - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Par/- Best Finish Top Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Rounds Finish 5 10 20 2007-08 Redshirted 2008-09 7 21 1,555 74.05 212 68 6 t-4th 1 1 3 Fall 2009 4 12 870 72.50 211 68 5 t-5th 1 1 3 Totals 11 33 2,425 73.48 211 68 11 t-4th 2 2 6

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


2009-10 Chanticleers CHARLIE WINEGARDNER

Sophomore, 6-0, 170 Lothian, Md. Calverton School

Fall 2009: Played in two events in the fall schedule... Posted his career-best collegiate finish with a tie for 12th at the season opening Golfweek Conference Challenge, shooting an even-par 216... Was consistent at the Conference Challenge, shooting no round greater than 73 and posting a career-best 1-under 71 in the final round... Also played in the Windon Memorial Classic, tying for 61st... 2008-09: Competed in three tournaments and nine rounds his freshman season... Had his best 54-hole total at the Desert Shootout, firing an even-par 216 to tie for 37th... Had two under par rounds in The Shootout, shooting 5-under 67 and 3-under 69 in the first two rounds, his best rounds of the year... Also played in the General Hackler Championship, tying for 57th at 234... Saw his only action of the fall in the inaugural Duke Coca-Cola Individual Collegiate, tying for 36th at 230... High School: Four-time MISAL Conference Most Valuable Player and named All-County each of his four seasons, including Player of the Year as a senior... Named Washington Post All-Met his senior season... Finished third at the Maryland State Boys Championship, shooting scores of 67 and 73 in the tournament... Broke the school record with a 29 in a match his final year for the Cougars... In the summer of 2007 won the Williamson Cup, shooting a four-under 140 in the event and was runner-up in the Robert Riley Open... Was the Washington Metropolitan Junior Golfer of the Year in 2006 after winning titles at the Robert Riley Open, Bobby Gorin Championship and Titleist Golf Tournament at the University of Maryland Course... Also had three topthree IJGT finishes, including winning the event at Mastain Branch, Md... Also has played varsity basketball all four years, serving as co-captain his senior year, as well as playing varsity lacrosse his first two seasons... Personal: Full name: Charles Richard Winegardner... Son of Thomas and Sharon Winegardner... Majoring in marine science.

CHARLIE WINEGARDNER - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round 2008-09 3 9 680 75.56 216 67 Fall 2009 2 6 448 74.67 216 71 Totals 5 15 1,128 75.20 216 67

Par/- Rounds 2 2 4

12 Big South Conference Championships

Best Finish Top Finish 5 10 20 t-36th 0 0 0 t-12th 0 0 1 t-12th 0 0 1

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2009-10 Chanticleers DAILY YOUNG

Redshirt Freshman, 5-7, 215 Springfield, Mo. Hillcrest

Fall 2009: Played in his first two collegiate events in the fall... Had his best outing at The McLaughlin, shooting a 7-over 217 to tie for 34th... His best round was a 1-under 69 in the opening round of The McLaughlin... Also played in the Golfweek Conference Challenge, tying for 68th in his first collegiate tournament... 2008-09: Redshirted in his first year at Coastal Carolina due to injury, retaining the year of eligibility... High School: Was a two-time All-State and four-time All-District and All-Conference selection... Finished 23rd at the Missouri Class 4A State Championship his senior year after capturing the title his junior year, earning the 2007 High School Story of the Year from the Springfield NewsLeader... Was the 2008 Southwest Missouri Junior Golf Association Player of the Year, as well as the Jim Pierson All-City Tournament... Posted a fourth-place finish in the 2007 Bubba Conlee Junior National, including tying for the low round of the tournament with a 64... Also placed second in the 2007 Missouri Collegiate Preview and fifth at the 2007 Bass Pro Shops AJGA Tournament... He also qualified for the 2007 U.S. Junior Amateur by placing second in his qualifier... At the U.S. Junior Amateur tied for 30th in stroke play before being eliminated in the second round by the No. 1 seed... Also played in the top 16 as a freshman and sophomore in the Missouri State Championship... Was also a National Honor Society Officer and a member of the Superintendent’s Student Advisory Board... Personal: Full name: Daily Scott Young... Son of Scott and Barbara Young... Undecided on major.

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DAILY YOUNG - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Par/- Best Finish Top Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Rounds Finish 5 10 20 2008-09 Redshirted Fall 2009 2 6 452 75.33 217 69 1 t-34th 0 0 0

ANDERS LARSON

Freshman, 5-8, 143 Knivsta, Sweden Celsiusskolan

Fall 2009: Played in three tournaments in the fall for the Chanticleers... Averaged 75.67 strokes in nine rounds played... Posted a top-10 finish in his first collegiate tournament, tying for sixth at The McLaughlin with an even-par 210 and helping the Chants to the team title... Fired a personal fallbest 69 in the opening round of The McLaughlin... Also played in the Windon Memorial and Bank of Tennessee Intercollegiate at The Ridges... Had two rounds of par or better in his nine fall rounds... High School: Was the fourth-ranked junior in Sweden... Captured the Swedish Junior Matchplay Championship in 2009 and played in the European Tour’s SAS Masters ... Won the Swedish National Junior Championship, equivalent to the U.S. Junior, by eight shots and qualified for the European Tour Event in Stockholm... Additionally won six events and picked up four runner-up finishes in his four years on the Skandia Tour in Sweden, the equivalent to the AJGA in the United States... Posted three wins and two runners-up in 2008, including winning the Vassunda Junior Open, Junior Masters Invitational and DM Uppland... In 2008, played 13 of 41 rounds under par, with the best a 5-under 66 at the Upsala GK... Made the cut in 17 of 18 tournaments played, with the 10 top-10 placings and averaging 72.66 in 41 rounds played... Was ranked #21 on Skandia Tour elite boys amateur rankings... In his career on the Skandia Tours had six victories in 59 competitions, four runners-up, five third places and nine other top-10 placings... Also posted 17 additional top-20 finishes and made the cut in 57 of 59 career events.... Personal: Full name: Anders Rapeepatn Larson... Son of Ulf and Waraporn C- Larson... Undecided on major. ANDERS LARSON - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Fall 2008 Did Not See Any Action

Par/- Best Finish Top Rounds Finish 5 10 20

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


2009-10 Chanticleers PETUR PETURSSON

Freshman, 6-0, 164 Reykjavik, Iceland The Pendelton School (Fla.)

Fall 2009: Did not see any action in his first fall at Coastal Carolina University... High School: Completed his high school work at The Pendleton School in Bradenton, Fla., in 2008... Spent his junior and senior years in Iceland... Won the Icelandic Junior Championship twice and finished in the top 10 in the Icelandic Championship for men... Personal: Full name: Petur Freyr Petursson... Son of Petur Gudmundsson and Holmfridur Lilly Omarsdottir... Younger sister Gudrun is on the Icelandic National Golf team... Undecided on major.

PETUR PETURSSON - CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Fall 2009 Did Not See Any Action

Par/- Best Finish Top Rounds Finish 5 10 20

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SEBASTIAN SODERBERG

Freshman, 6-2, 182 Ojersjo, Sweden Katrinelundsgymnasiet

Fall 2009: Played in one tournament in the fall for Coastal... Tied for 53rd at The Bank of Tennessee Intercollegiate at The Ridges, shooting a 10-over 226... Fired an even-par 72 in the second round of the BOT Intercollegiate, his best round of the fall... High School: Graduated in 2009 from Katrinelundsgymnasiet... Ranked in the top-10 juniors in Sweden... Was a member of the Swedish National Junior team, helping the squad to a gold medal in the European Boys Team Championship... Won the Swedish High School Championship by two shots after shooting a 69 in the final round.. Won four times on the Junior Master Invitational circuit, averaging 69.25 strokes a round in his wins... Personal: Full name: Sebastian Jan Soderberg... Son of Jan and Aneth Soderberg... Majoring in business management.

SEBASTIAN SODERBERG- CAREER STATISTICS # Low Tournaments Season Events Rounds Strokes Avg. 54-holes Round Fall 2009 1 3 226 75.33 226 72

Par/- Best Finish Top Rounds Finish 5 10 20 1 t-53rd 0 0 0

12 Big South Conference Championships


2009-10 Chanticleers C AMERON HOOPER

Student Assistant Coach

Cameron Hooper is in his first year as a student assistant coach with the Coastal Carolina University men’s golf program but is a well-known face within the program. Hooper earned four letters with the Chanticleers, playing in 17 career events and 77 rounds in posting a 75.0 average and helping the squad to four straight Big South Conference titles, four NCAA Regional appearances and a pair of NCAA Championship berths. He had three top-10 and five top-20 finishes in his four years, while only playing a partial season his final year due to injury. His best career finish was a seventh-place finish in the 2006 General Hackler Championship at 1-over 217. His best career tournament score was in the 2006 International Collegiate in Scotland, shooting a 5-under 211 to tie for eighth. He also stepped up when it mattered most, shooting a career-best 3-under 67 in the third round of the 2007 NCAA Championship to help the Chanticleers advance to the final round, where they would finish a BIg South record fifth in the national tournament. In the summer of 2009, Hooper qualified for the 2009 U.S. Amateur, played at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. A four-year letterwinner at Bishop Kenny High School in Jacksonville, Fla., Hooper led his squad to three straight state tournament appearances. He earned All-Region honors his final two years after finishing second as a senior and fourth as a junior and leading the team to two straight regional runner-up finishes. He led the Crusaders to a fifth-place finish at the state championships his final season after placing seventh the previous two years. Hooper also finished 12th as an individual at the state champioship his senior season and earned a place on the Athletic Honor Roll. Hooper is completing his bachelor’s degree in business administration.

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Chanticleers in the Community The Coastal Carolina University men's golf program has continued its involvement with various community service projects, with one of them working October 24 at the Grand Strand Humane Society. The Chanticleers helped with cleaning, basic maintenance of the kennels and everyone's favorite - a daily walk for all of the dogs. All of the animals were awesome and were so excited to have someone there to take them for a walk. The men's golf team participates in mutiple community service projects a year chosen by them. The Chants also participated this past fall in the American Heart Association Heart Walk and plan to participate in several more projects this year.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


2009-10 Tournament Info GolfWeek Conference Challenge August 30-September 1, 2009

SunTrust Gator Invitational February 13-14, 2010

Host: Golfweek & University of Iowa Location: Riverside, Iowa Course: Blue Top Ridge Resort Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 7,505 SID Contact: Nick Hegland Office Phone: 319-335-9743 Email: Nicholas-hegland@uiowa.edu Web Site: www.hawkeyesports.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, Iowa, Baylor, California, Florida State, Georgia Southern, Illinois State, Memphis, Middle Tennessee State, New Mexico State, South Florida, Texas-Arlington, Vanderbilt, Virginia Commonwealth, Xavier

Host: University of Florida Location: Gainesville, Fla. Course: Mark Bostick Golf Course Course Par/Yardage: 70 / 6,701 SID Contact: Kate Manly Office Phone: 352.375.4683 X. 6131 Email: KateM@gators.uaa.ufl.edu Web Site: www.gatorzone.com Tournament Field: Florida, Coastal Carolina, Alabama-Birmingham, Central Florida, Chattanooga, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, Lamar, LSU, Mississippi, Mississippi State, North Florida

The McLaughlin September 18-19, 2009

John Hayt Collegiate Invitational February 28-March 2, 2010

Host: St. John’s University Location: Farmingdale, N.Y. Course: Bethpage Park Red Course Par/Yardage: 70 / 6,734 SID Contact: Stephen Lee Office Phone: 718-990-1523 Email: stephen.lee09@stjohns.edu Web Site: www.redstormsports.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, St. John’s, Boston College, Connecticut, Creighton, Dartmouth, Harvard, Iona, Johnson & Wales (Fla.), Princeton, Rutgers, Sacred Heart, St. Thomas Aquinas, Temple, Towson, UNC Wilmington, Villanova, West Florida

Windon Memorial Classic October 5-6, 2009

Host: Northwestern University Location: Skokie, Ill. Course: Skokie Country Club Course Par/Yardage: 71 / 7,081 SID Contact: Doug Meffley Office Phone: 847-491-3688 Email: d-meffley@northwestern.edu Web Site: www.nusports.com Tournament Field: Northwestern, Coastal Carolina, California, Eastern Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Kent State, Michigan, Minnesota, Northern Illinois, Old Dominion, Purdue, Tennessee, Tulsa, UC Davis

The Bank of Tennessee at The Ridges Intercollegiate October 24-26, 2009

Host: East Tennessee State University Location: Jonesborough, Tenn. Course: The Ridges Golf and Country Club Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 7,147 SID Contact: Michael White Office Phone: 423-439-4220 Email: whitem@etsu.edu Web Site: www.etsubucs.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, East Tennessee State, Alabama-Birmingham, Auburn, Duke, Missouri, Kent State, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Oregon State, Tennessee, UNC Wilmington, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest

WOLFPACK INTERCOLLEGIATE April 9-10, 2010

Host: North Carolina State Location: Raleigh, N.C. Course: Lonnie Pool Golf Club Course Par/Yardage: 71 / 7,350 SID Contact: Brian Reinhardt Office Phone: 919-515-8953 Email: brian_reinhardt@ncsu.edu Web Site: www.gopack.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, North Carolina State, Coastal Carolina, College of Charleston, Duke, East Carolina, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Maryland, Michigan, New Orleans, North Carolina, Purdue, UNCW, Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest

Big South Conference Championship April 19-21, 2010

Host: University of North Florida Location: Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Course: Sawgrass Country Club Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 6,895 SID Contact: Jeff Wuerth Office Phone: 904-620-4027 Email: jwuerth@unf.edu Web Site: www.unfospreys.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, North Florida, Alabama, Alabama-Birmingham, Central Florida, Duke, Florida, Furman, Georgia Southern, LSU, Mercer, North Carolina State, TCU, Tennessee, Tulsa

Host: Big South Conference Location: Greenwood, S.C. Course: The Patriot Golf Club Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 7,079 SID Contact: Mark Simpson Office Phone: 704-341-7990 Email: marks@bigsouth.org Web Site: www.bigsouthsports.com Tournament Field: Charleston Southern, Coastal Carolina, Gardner-Webb, High Point, Liberty, Radford, Winthrop

General Jim Hackler Championship March 14-15, 2010

NCAA Regionals May 20-22, 2010

Host: Coastal Carolina University Location: Murrells Inlet, S.C. Course: TPC of Myrtle Beach Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 6,905 SID Contact: John A. Martin Office Phone: 843-349-2822 Email: jamartin@coastal.edu Web Site: www.GoCCUsports.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, Augusta State, Duke, East Tennessee State, Kennesaw State, Kent State, Lamar, Minnesota, North Carolina State, Pepperdine, UNC Wilmington, Wake Forest

LINGER LONGER March 26-28, 2010

Host: Kennesaw State University Location: Greensboro, Ga. Course: Reynolds Plantation Course Par/Yardage: TBA SID Contact: Krissy Wade Office Phone: 256-627-7374 Email: kwade15@kennesaw.edu Web Site: www.ksuowls.com Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, Kennesaw State, Alabama, Charlotte, Florida State, Furman, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Mercer, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, San Jose State, South Alabama, Texas A&M, USC Aiken

Administaff Augusta State Invitational April 3-4, 2010

Host: Augusta State University Location: Augusta, Ga. Course: Forest Hills Golf Club Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 7,231 SID Contact: Joey Warren Office Phone: 706-731-7992 Email: jwarren3@aug.edu Web Site: www.aug.edu Tournament Field: Coastal Carolina, Augusta State, Alabama, Chattanooga, Clemson, Duke, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, Houston, Illinois, Kent State, Lamar, Minnesota, South Carolina, Tennessee, UNC Greensboro, USC Aiken, Virginia Tech

12 Big South Conference Championships

Host: Georgia Institute of Technology Location: Alpharetta, Ga. Course: Capital City Club Host: University of Notre Dame Location: Notre Dame, Ind. Course: The Warren Golf Course Host: San Diego State University Location: San Diego, Calif. Course: Carlton Oaks Golf Course Host: Texas A&M University Location: College Station, Texas Course: Traditions Club Host: University of Washington Location: Bremerton, Wash. Course: Gold Mountain Golf Club Host: Yale University Location: New Haven, Conn. Course: The Yale University Golf Course Tournament Field: 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.

NCAA National Championship June 1-6, 2010

Host: University of Tennessee-Chattanooga Location: Ooltewah, Tenn. Course: The Honors Course Course Par/Yardage: 72 / 7,395 SID Contact: Jim Horten Office Phone: 423-425-2350 Email: james-horten@utc.edu Web site: www.gomocs.com / www.ncaa.com Tournament Field: Top five teams from each regional and top six individuals (one per regional) not on qualifying teams. It is a 54-hole event to determine top eight teams, then bracket match play dual matches (five points per match) to determine national champion.

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Head Coach Allen Terrell

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In his 10th year at the helm, Head Coach Allen Terrell has built the Coastal Carolina men’s golf program into one of the nation’s elite programs through his ability to provide comprehensive coaching, both on and off the course, to his players. After inheriting a team ranked No. 224 in the country, the program finished the 2006-07 season ranked seventh in the nation and posted a fifth-place finish at the NCAA Championships, the highest team finish ever by a Big South Conference squad in any sport. Terrell earned 2007 Region Coach of the Year honor for that squad, adding to his already illustrious total of five Big South Coach of the Year awards. He has led his teams to seven of the top nine season scoring averages in the annals of the program, including 2006-07’s record-setting mark while playing the program’s toughest-ever schedule that included the fifth-place NCAA finish. Terrell has established himself as one of the top teaching instructors in the nation, providing the unique ability in college golf of working on the development of the individual player, including bio-mechanic and physiology assessment and golf-specific fitness training. Currently the Director of Instruction at TPC of Myrtle Beach, he also works with numerous professional players on the PGA, European PGA and Developmental tours. He currently coaches several PGA Tour professionals, including Coastal Carolina alumnus Dustin Johnson, one of the rising stars on the PGA Tour. He was also mentioned as of the top young instructors in the country by The Golf Channel. Johnson showed his growth and development in working with Terrell over the years. In his first year on tour in 2008, Johnson earned his first professional win at the Turning Stone Resort Championship, winning over $1 million in the event, giving him a two-year exemption on tour and ranking him in the top 45 on the year-end money list. Johnson then followed it up with his second career victory in the 2009 Pebble Beach Pro-Am and finished 15th on the PGA Tour’s 2009 Money List. Across the pond, former Coastal Carolina golfer Alvaro Velasco earned his way onto the PGA European Tour for his first full season in 2008. The Spainiard recorded three top-10 finishes and earned more than 280,000 Euros to finish in the top 100 on the tour’s money list. As a college coach, he has had success in both his work with individuals as well as putting together quality teams. He has developed and taught 18 All-Americans, three National Championship individual participants, nine conference Players of the Year, nine conference champions, 46 All-Conference honorees and 14 U.S. Amateur participants. His teams have won 10 conference titles, made 11 NCAA Championship appearances, including six consecutive with the Chanticleers, and won 33 tournaments. His teams have made their mark on the national scene, continuing to build on the previous years’ successes. Last season, Terrell led the squad to its sixth straight Big South Conference championship, earning him his sixth Big South Coach of the Year honor. The squad became the first in League history to have all five players earn All-Big South honors in a single season, while redshirt senior Zack Byrd took home Player of the Year and Third Team All-American honors, as well as winning the conference’s individual title. All five players in the lineup earned All-Big South honors, a first in the history of the league. In addition, the team had two players (Byrd and Cameron Hooper) named GCAA All-America Scholars. Despite losing All-Region player Byrd and top recruit Drew Ernst to injuries in the 2008-09 season, Terrell still managed to guide a young Coastal Carolina squad to its fifth consecutive Big South Conference Championship and NCAA Regional appearance. The squad produced the league’s Player and Freshman of the Year Tripp McAllister and the Big South Championship medalist David Dannelly, along with four All-Big South honorees. In 2006-07, Terrell’s squad showed the continued growth and development of the program by advancing to the final round of the NCAA Championships for the first time in school history and playing in the final group of the tournament. The team picked up three team titles during the year, including its fourth consecutive Big South Conference crown. The squad also boasted two Head Coach Allen Terrell with then junior Dustin Johnson after All-Americans in a single year, with Dustin Johnson earning First Team honors and Lindsay Renolds being an Honorable Mention he was honored as a First Team All-American at the 2006 NCAA selection. Championships

Terrell’s Year-By-Year Coaching Record

Conference NCAA NCAA Other Year Wins Top-Fives Finish Regional Championship Awards Methodist (Assistant Coach) 1997-98 (M) n/a n/a 1st n/a 1st Natl Med., Natl POY, Natl FOY, 3 All-Americans Five All-Conference 1997-98 (W) n/a n/a n/a n/a 1st Natl POY, 3 All-Americans Duke (Men’s / Women’s Assistant Coach) 1998-99 (M) 1 n/a t-2nd 6th MC 1 All-American, ROY, Med., 1 All-Academic, 2 All-Conference 1998-99 (W) 8 n/a 1st 4th 1st 2 All-Americans, POY, ROY, Med., 1 All-Academic, 4 All-Conference 1999-00 (M) 1 n/a 6th 14th - 1 All-American, 2 All-Academic, 1 All-Conference 1999-00 (W) 8 n/a 1st 1st 14th 3 All- Americans, POY, ROY, Med., 2 All-Academic, 5 All-Conference Coastal Carolina (Head Coach) 2000-01 1 7 2nd Ind. - POY, ROY, Med., 2 All-Conference 2001-02 1 7 1st 17th - COY, 3 All-Conference 2002-03 0 7 2nd Ind. - 2 All-Conference 2003-04 1 5 1st 16th - POY, COY, Med., 4 All-Conference 2004-05 3 8 1st 8th 20th 1 All-American, POY, ROY, Med., COY, 3 All-Conference 2005-06 3 7 1st t-5th t-15th 1 All-American, POY, COY, 2 All-Conference 2006-07 3 9 1st t-10th 5th 2 All-Americans, POY, COY, Med., RCOY, 2 All-Academic, 4 All-Conference 2007-08 1 3 1st 22nd - POY, ROY, Med, 1 All-Academic, 4 All-Conference 2008-09 2 5 1st 11th - 1 All-American, POY, Med., COY, SAOY, 5 All-Conference, 2 All-Academic Totals 33 58 10 Champs 1 Reg Title 3 NCAA Titles National - 2 POY, 1 FOY, 18 All-Americans, 1 Med., 11 All-Academic Conference - 9 POY, 6 ROY, 9 Med., 7 COY, 46 All-Conference Other Coaching Career Highlights •

Four NCAA National Champions (three team, one player), Two NCAA Individual Qualifiers at Coastal,11 U.S. Public Links Participants, 14 U.S. Amateur Participants, 18 British Amateur Participants, including 2002 Champion Alex Larrazabal

Other Awards: POY - Player of the Year, ROY - Rookie of the Year, Med - Conference Medalist, COY - Coach of the Year, SAOY - Scholar-Athlete of the Year;l RCOY - Region Coach of the Year, Natl - National award

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Head Coach Allen Terrell The 2006-07 accomplishments built on what was achieved in the 2005-06 campaign. showed the success of development. After a solid collegiate career, Larrazabal won the 2002 That season, Coastal Carolina had a three-peat as Big South champions, earning Terrell earned British Amateur and played in the 2002 British Open and 2003 Masters. While golf is important, Terrell wants his student-athletes to get more out of their expehis fourth Big South Coach of the Year honor, and tied for fifth at the NCAA East Regional, the highest finish at a regional in the history of the Big South. The Chants then followed it up with rience. In each of his nine seasons, the Chants have had a team grade-point average of 3.1 or a tie for 15th at the NCAA Championships, another first for the any program in the league, higher. His players have also been named to the University’s Dean’s List more than 70 different times. made even more impressive by the fact there was not a single senior in the lineup. Terrell came to Coastal Carolina after serving two seaIn 2004-05, Coastal Carolina finished the regular seasons as the Assistant Men’s and Women’s Golf Coach at Duke son ranked sixth in the NCAA’s extremely competitive South University. In his first year, the women’s team won the NCAA region. With this ranking and an automatic bid as Big South Championship and the men’s team ranking improved from No. Champions, Coastal Carolina entered the NCAA East Regionals 64 in the country to No. 18. During his tenure, the women’s as the 11th seed. The Chants continued their success by finishteam won back-to-back Atlantic Coast Conference Championing eighth at the Regionals, propelling the program to another first - a ticket to the NCAA Championship where the team finships while garnering the top spot in the national rankings both seasons. The men’s team finished runner-up at the conished 20th. The remarkable note was all the success came with ference championship and qualified for the national champione of the youngest lineups in the country (two sophomores onship. and three freshmen). Before his time at Duke, Terrell served as the Assistant Individually, Terrell has recruited, taught and coached Coach at his alma mater Methodist College. During his career seven of the top 10 players in school history. In four years of at Methodist, the men’s team won the NCAA Division III Chamfine tuning his game under Terrell’s guidance, Dustin Johnson pionship, setting a new NCAA Championship scoring record. became Coastal Carolina’s first All-American and ended his caAlong with his duties as Director of Golf and TPC Direcreer as a three-time All-American, as well as being a member tor of Instruction, Terrell owns and operates the Allen Terrell’s of the United States team for the 2006 U.S.A. vs. Japan Cup and Players Academy, Inc. A 1997 graduate of Methodist College 2007 Walker and Palmer Cups, helping the U.S. to victories in with a bachelor’s degree in business administration with an each event. Johnson then moved on to the professional ranks, emphasis in professional golf management, Terrell resides in where he earned his PGA Tour card in his first trip through Qualifying School. As well, former Chanticleer Alex Larrazabal Terrell works on the driving range with 2009 Big South Player of Garden City. the Year Zack Byrd

Associate Head Coach Chris Wilson Chris Wilson is in his second season as the associate head men’s golf coach at Coastal Carolina University. Wilson helped the Chants to their sixth consecutive Big South Conference title and is instrumental in the running of the program, handling many of the day-to-day operations, helping run the General Hackler Championship and coordinating recruting. "We are lucky to have attracted a coach with Chris’ talents," Director of Golf Allen Terrell said. "He did an amazing job at ULM. I am thrilled to think what Chris and I will accomplish together in the upcoming years. I have never been more excited about the future of Coastal Carolina Golf.” Wilson arrived to the Grand Strand in Fall 2009 from the University of Louisiana-Monroe, where he has spent the last four-and-a-half years as the head men's and women's golf coach. Combined, his Warhawk squads had three team tournament wins, 35 top-five team finishes, six individual medalists, 13 All-Conference selections and six Golf Coaches' Association of America and National Golf Coaches' Association All-America Scholars. He led the men's program to its highest national rankings in 2005 and 2006, earning Southland Coach of the Year honors in 2006. He also started the women's program in August 2005 and both squads were consistently among the top grade-point averages for athletic teams on the ULM campus. He also raised a majority of the funds for each of his programs, while also coordinating all aspects of each squad's practice and travel. Prior to taking over as head coach at ULM, he worked for two years at McNeese State, starting as the assistant coach and eventually serving as interim head men's coach before leaving to take the job at ULM. While there, he coached four-time All-Conference selection and current European PGA Tour member Adrien Mork. He also worked with two other All-Conference players and helped lead the Cowboys to a pair of team tournament titles. A native of Shawnee, Okla., Wilson started his coaching career at Louisiana-Monroe as an assistant coach for a year, where he helped recruit the No. 17-ranked class in the country. That group eventually went on to earn seven All-Conference awards, a pair of individual tournament champions and the 2004 Southland Conference Championship. Wilson was a standout golfer at ULM, playing two years and earning All-Conference honors as a senior after winning the New Mexico State Intercollegiate and posting five top-10 finishes on the season. He was also an All-Conference selection at Dodge City Community College in 1996-97. He earned his bachelor's degree from ULM in 2001. Wilson is married to the former Heather Austin of Shreveport, La. "The opportunity for me to move ahead in the college golf world and a chance to start a new in life in Myrtle Beach is something Heather and I are very excited about," Wilson stated. "I’m looking forward to working with Allen and helping him with the ultimate goal of winning a national championship. He is regarded as one of the best coaches and teachers in the country and I feel like my strengths will be able to complement his. Coastal Carolina has put the pieces in place for continued success and I couldn’t be more proud to be a part of that."

12 Big South Conference Championships

13


Golf Performance Center

14 TPC of Myrtle Beach also has the Coastal Carolina Golf Performance Center, a player development building that has an indoor hitting bay, workout facilty (shown middle left with current Chanticleers working out and middle right with two-time PGA Tour winner Dustin Johnson working out), coaches office, team lounge, conference room, putting lab and study center.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Private Practice Facility Coastal Carolina players work out at the new Private Practice Facility at TPC, including a 7,000-square-foot putting green (second left), 8,500-square-foot pitching green (second right) and 14,000-square-foot teeing area (middle below). The practice facility also includes a 20-target wedge station to practice wedges from 20-120 yards. Signs greet the players as they enter the facility, including one that lists the various accomplishments by the past squads (top right).

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12 Big South Conference Championships


Home Course of the Chants Host Course of the

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The TPC of Myrtle Beach is the home of the Coastal Carolina men’s golf team and, under Chip Smith’s leadership, has developed a practice facility for the exclusive use of the Chanticleers. The TPC of Myrtle Beach takes players through rustic wetlands and tall pines and features picturesque and demanding par-3s. A Tom Fazio design, the course was built to test the mettle of players of every level. Players can put their game to the test on the course that Golf Digest and s consider among the best public courses in America. For a modern par-72 layout, the TPC of Myrtle Beach is not long, just 6,950 yards from the championship tees, but it can be menacing. The wetlands create formidable carries on several holes, though alternate routes are provided for higher handicap players. More than 70 bunkers, most of them around the medium-large, undulating greens, protect targets. Many fairways have pronounced slopes. To enhance the visual strength of the property, and the playability of the course, most tee boxes are elevated, enabling players to clearly see landing areas. Other free-form bunkers, flashed up and back-tilted, add further definition to Fazio’s broad fairways. As with most TPC courses, spectator viewing areas are incorporated into the layout, but here Fazio and Lanny Wadkins again eschewed any contrivances, relying on natural ridges and subtle slopes on the periphery that blend with the landscape without obstructing its beguiling attributes - no small feat, but one, among many, Fazio and Wadkins pulled off.

Shown above are the 18th hole at TPC looking from the clubhouse (top) and 17th hole (middle left). Within the clubhouse, the course pays tribute to the Chanticleer champions, both team and indviduals, and houses a locker room and lounge that the team utilizes, while the clubhouse at the end of the 18th green shows the grandeur of the top course in the area.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Other Courses of the Chanticleers

The Dunes Club

Ranked #21 in Golfweek Magazine’s “2009 Best Resort Courses”. The Dunes Club was built in 1948 and is recognized as one of Robert Trent Jones finest designs. Since its inception, it has proved to be a world class course, offering the best in golf.

The Reserve Golf Club of Pawleys Island

Designed by Greg Norman, opened in 1998. One of the largest practice facilities on the Grand Strand, complimented by a large chipping green with natural waste bunkers and sand bunkers, allowing one to perfect their short game.

Wachesaw Plantation Club

When it first opened in 1986, Golf Digest dubbed it the No. 1 course in Myrtle Beach. Other accolades include Top 100 Best Residential Golf Courses in America 2006, Golfweek Magazine Top 100 Best Residential Golf Courses in America 2004, Golfweek Magazine Top 50 Best Courses in South Carolina 2005 and South Carolina Magazine Top 50 Best Courses in South Carolina 2004.

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Pawleys Plantation

Pawleys Plantation is a player’s course. This Jack Nicklaus Signature Course is a rare design where extraordinary beauty combines with his masterful architecture to deliver an exceptional golf experience. Wide green fairways lead to subtle greens guarded by natural hazards like the Pawleys Island salt marsh and the barrier island beyond. Named on Golf Digest’s “Places To Play” and given four stars, as one Zagat Survey’s “America’s Top Courses” and as one of the top 25 best courses in the state by the South Carolina Golf Course Ratings Panel.

Barefoot Resort and Golf

The venue was designed by golf’s most inspired architects, Greg Norman, Davis Love III, Tom Fazio and Pete Dye. They fulfilled their goal in creating unique, visually striking, and fun to play courses. The four 18s are golf in its purest form offering courses that are uniquely designed for the playing pleasure of average golfers as well as those with a low handicap. Rated as Golf Digest’s Best Places to Play, Barefoot Resort and Golf provides challenge and enjoyment for every player year round.

12 Big South Conference Championships


General Hackler Championship Coastal Carolina hosts a 12-team tournament, the General Jim Hackler Championship, on March 14-15, at one of Myrtle Beach’s best golf facilites - the TPC of Myrtle Beach. This year’s tournament, in its eighth year at TPC, sports the best field in the program’s history. Of the 12 teams, 10 of them teams played in last year’s NCAA Regionals, with two advancing to the NCAA Championship. It also features the last six team champions of the tournament, including Pepperdine (2004), Coastal Carolina (2005), East Tennessee State (2006), Lamar (2007) and Wake Forest (2008 and 2009). The tournament is named for the late General Jim Hackler, who was a continual supporter of Coastal Carolina golf until his passing in the fall of 2007.

Tournament History

2010 Competing Teams

TPC of Myrtle Beach Only

*2009 NCAA Championship Squad **2009 NCAA Regional Squad

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Coastal Carolina**

Augusta State**

Duke*

East Tenn. State**

Kennesaw State

Kent State**

Lamar**

Minnesota**

NC State**

Pepperdine**

UNC Wilmington

Wake Forest*

1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 9. 10.

2006 (15 teams) East Tennessee St. 286-289-292=867 Coastal Carolina 288-292-297=877 Pepperdine 297-292-298=887 Florida State 292-296-300=888 Virginia Tech 297-297-294=888 Arkansas 294-300-297=891 Texas Tech 303-295-293=891 Kansas State 299-290-302=891 Virginia 298-304-290=892 North Florida 306-298-289=893

1. 2 3. 4. 5. 7. 8.

Alex Coe (Pepperdine) Rhys Davies (ETSU) Jordan Findlay (ETSU) Eamonn McLoughlin (UVa) Scott Gustafson (N. Dame) Gareth Shaw (ETSU) Cameron Hooper (Coastal) Daniel Kefale (UVa) Patrick Nagle (Illinois) Drew Weaver (Va. Tech)

70-71-69=210 69-70-72=211 70-70-73=213 72-74-68=214 70-70-75=215 70-75-70=215 71-72-74=217 72-74-72=218 71-71-76=218 72-75-71=218

1. 2. 3. 4. 5 . 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

2003 (14 teams) Arkansas 295-296-282=873 Virginia Tech 297-294-284=875 Central Florida 301-292-287=880 UNC Wilmington 295-294-302=891 Va. Commonwealth 295-310-302=907 Memphis 303-307-298=908 Washington State 302-302-307=911 Coastal Carolina 306-305-303=914 Louisville 304-306-305=915 East Carolina 301-306-311=918

1. 2. 3. 5. 6. 7. 9.

B. De Jonge (Va. Tech) Andrew Dahl (Arkansas) Barry Roof (UCF) Stefan Wistorf (UCF) Ted Brown (VCU) Chris McKeel (Va. Tech) Derek Brown (UNCW) Seth Murphy (Arkansas) Geoffrey Harris (Old Dom.)

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 8. 9. 10.

2007 (18 teams) Lamar 275-278-285=838 Coastal Carolina 289-283-276=848 Southern California 278-282-291=851 Duke 294-285-289=868 East Tennessee St. 296 284-289=869 Tulsa 287-293-292=872 Charlotte 299-284-289=872 Augusta State 301-280-294=875 New Mexico 293-295-290=878 Georgia Southern 299-294-291=884

1. 2. 3. 4. 6.

Rhys Davies (ETSU) D. Van Der Walt (Lamar) Oliver Bekker (Lamar) Corey Nagy (Charlotte-Ind) Zack Byrd (Coastal) Rory Hie (Southern Cal) Casey Clendenon (Lamar)

76-70-67=213 72-72-70=214 70-75-70=215 71-73-71=215 71-72-75=218 73-72-74=219 70-74-76=220 73-73-74=220 76-73-72=221

70-65-71=206 66-70-71=207 69-72-67=208 68-69-74=211 73-71-67=211 70-73-69=212 69-69-74=212

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.

2004 (19 teams) Pepperdine 292-281-297=870 Arkansas 302-289-285=876 UCF 302-289-288=879 East Tennessee St. 299-297-297=893 Virginia Tech 301-307-286=894 South Carolina 306-298-291=895 Kansas State 303-302-291=896 Wake Forest 297-305-294=896 South Alabama 304-307-296=907 Louisville 302-305-301=908

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Alex Coe (Pepperdine) Randy Creighton (Pepp.) Charlie Woo (Louisville) Andrew Dahl (Arkansas) Michael Putnam (Pepp.) Ryan Stinnett (Va. Tech) Six tied at

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10.

2008 (15 teams) Wake Forest 301-304-292=897 Florida State 301-301-298=900 Duke 302-295-304=901 Coastal Carolina 289-300-314=903 Louisville 305-296-305-906 Lamar 296-309-304=909 North Florida 309-308-298=915 East Tennessee St. 313-302-300=915 Augusta State 308-306-305=919 Pepperdine 301-313-307=921

1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 9.

Derek Fathauer (L’ville) Henrik Norlander (Aug.St.) Nicolas Geyger (Tulsa) Casey Clendenon (Lamar) Michael Schachner (Duke) Chris McCartin (Wake) Dan Obremski (Coastal) Matthew Savage (FSU) Three tied at

74-68-71=213 71-69-74=214 71-75-70=216 76-70-71=217 70-71-77=218 73-78-68=219 220

74-71-72=217 74-72-73=219 73-73-74=220 74-76-71=221 75-76-70=221 74-74-74=222 70-71-81=222 77-71-74=222 223

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

2005 (12 teams) Coastal Carolina 298-284-304=886 Notre Dame 299-294-298=891 Purdue 296-290-309=895 Kansas State 295-296-309=900 Louisville 307-292-302=901 UNC Wilmington 297-300-307=904 East Tennessee St. 296-304-305=905 North Florida 300-300-307=907 Pepperdine 316-296-296=908 UCF 301-300-310=911

1. 2. 4. 5. 7. 9.

Rhys Davies (ETSU) Dustin Johnson (Coastal) Shane Sigsbee (N. Dame) Matt VanCleave (Kan. St.) Rob Langley (Furman) Tyler Brown (N. Florida) Derek Fathauer (L’ville) Zack Byrd (Coastal) P. Junhasavasdikul (Purdue)

1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

2009 (14 teams) Wake Forest 300-291-290=881 North Carolina State 302-295-294=891 Pepperdine 299-291-303=893 Coastal Carolina 298-299-301=898 East Tennessee State 293-294-311=898 Lamar 301-307-292=900 Kentucky 296-305-301=902 Augusta State 304-299-306=909 South Carolina 303-307-300=910 Ohio State 301-308-303=912

1. 2. 3. 6. 8. 10.

Matt Hill (NC State) Zack Byrd (Coastal) Mark Silvers II (S. Carolina) Bo Hoag (Ohio State) Brendan Gielow (Wake) Alan Lee (Coastal) Andrew Putnam (Pepperdine) Hugues Joannes (Lamar) Travis Wadkins (Wake) Three tied at

70-73-71=214 74-69-72=215 73-70-72=215 77-67-74=218 75-70-74=219 74-70-75=219 77-70-73=220 73-71-76=220 71-76-74=221

74-70-69=213 71-74-71=216 74-75-70=219 73-73-73=219 77-71-71=219 75-71-74=220 75-71-74=220 76-72-73=221 73-70-78=221 222

TPC of M yrtle B each Hole

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Out

10

11 12

13

14 15 16

17 18

Championship

377 547 447 452 158 522 187 370 472 3,532

387 425 333 205 502 445 390 193 538

Handicap

13

12

7

5

3

11

15

9

17

1

8

18

14

16

4

TPC owner Chip Smith (left) and Head Coach Allen Terrell (center) pose with the late General Jim Hackler following the 2007 Hackler Championship.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances

6

10

2

In

Total

3,418

6,950


NCAA Appearances NCAA Regionals (Team) 2000 Central Regional - 27 teams Victoria Country Club - Victoria, Texas (Par 71) t-21. Coastal Carolina 290-307-289=886 t-44. Brad Hastings 71-77-70=218 t-74. Jay McAllister 71-77-74=222 t-106. Jacob Wilner 77-76-73=226 t-106. Julian James 71-77-78=226 t-125. John McAllister 81-77-72=230 2002 East Regional - 27 teams Ansley GC - Settin’ Down Creek - Roswell, Ga. (Par 72) 17. Coastal Carolina 302-309-309=920 t-36. Pat Stolpe 72-77-76=225 72. Rafael Vera 76-78-75=229 t-84. Ricardo Bescansa 78-77-78=233 t-106. Dale Ketola 76-83-80=239 2004 West Regional - 27 teams Sunriver Resort−Crosswater Club - Sunriver, Ore. (Par 72) 16. Coastal Carolina 301-304-299=904 t-21. Moises Cobo 74-73-72=219 t-30. Alvaro Velasco 73-74-74=221 t-88. Jeremy Kirkland 75-80-76=231 t-113. Dustin Johnson 79-78-78=235 t-117. Pat Stolpe 81-79-77=237 2005 East Regional - 27 teams Golf Club of Tennessee - Kingston Springs, Tenn. (Par 72) t-8. Coastal Carolina 284-289-276=849 1. Dustin Johnson 65-69-64=198 t-57. Brad Robinson 75-74-68=217 t-68. Moises Cobo 74-75-70=219 t-68. Lindsay Renolds 71-72-76=219 t-82. Zack Byrd 74-74-74=222 2006 East Regional - 27 teams Lake Nona Golf and Country Club - Orlando, Fla. (Par 72) t-5. Coastal Carolina 301-288-288=877 t-2. Dustin Johnson 71-72-69=212 t-36. Cameron Hooper 79-68-75=222 t-44. Moises Cobo 77-74-72=223 t-52. Zack Byrd 78-74-72=224 t-68. Joachim Fourquet 75-75-76=226 2007 East Regional - 27 teams Golf Club of Georgia - Alpharetta, Ga. (Par 72) t-5. Coastal Carolina 301-288-288=877 (advanced in two-team, five-player playoff against Clemson that lasted four holes) t-8. Dustin Johnson 76-69-70=215 t-19. Lindsay Renolds 74-71-74=219 t-56. Dan Obremski 77-74-74=225 t-87. Zack Byrd 77-76-76=229 t-93. Cameron Hooper 73-76-82=231 2008 East Regional - 27 teams Council Fire Golf Club - Chattanooga, Tenn. (Par 71) 22. Coastal Carolina 285-291-289=865 t-35. Tripp McAllister 67-73-72=212 t-47. Sam Lyons 70-73-71=214 t-77. Dan Obremski 73-72-72=217 t-104. Lindsay Renolds 75-73-74=222 t-121. David Dannelly 75-74-76=225

The 2005 edition of the Coastal Carolina men’s golf program became the first ever in Big South Conference history to advance to the NCAA Championships, where they tied for 20th.

2009 Northeast Regional - 14 teams Galloway National Golf Club - Galloway, N.J. (Par 71) 11. Coastal Carolina 319-303-293=915 t-11. Drew Ernst 78-75-68=221 t-38. Zack Byrd 76-79-74=229 t-45. Dan Obremski 81-74-76=231 60. Tripp McAllister 87-75-75=237 t-67. Sam Lyons 84-81-78=243 NCAA Regionals (Individuals) 2001 East Regional - 141 Individuals Golden Horseshoe Golf Club - Williamsburg, Va. (Par 72) t-56. Rafael Vera 72-72-71=216 2003 East Regional Auburn University Golf Club - Auburn, Ala. (Par 72) t-18. Alvaro Velasco 68-72-74=214 NCAA Championships (30 teams) 2005 Caves Valley Golf Club - Owings Mills, Md. - Par 70 t-20. Coastal Carolina 284-301-305=890 t51. Zack Byrd 72-74-75=221 t68. Dustin Johnson 69-79-75=223 t104. Lindsay Renolds 71-76-80=227 t112. Moises Cobo 72-73-83=228 t132. Brad Robinson 78-78-75=231 2006

Sunriver, Ore. - Par 72 (30 teams) t-15. Coastal Carolina 296-287-291=874 (lost in one-hole, five-player playoff to BYU for last spot in final round) t-27. Dustin Johnson 70-71-70-78=289

t-21. t-82. t-111. 156.

Zack Byrd Cameron Hooper Joachim Fourquet Moises Cobo

72-73-71=216 75-71-76=222 79-72-74=225 80-76-86=242

2007 Golden Horseshoe Golf Club - Williamsburg, Va. (Par 70) 5. Coastal Carolina 277-281-272-298=1128 t9. Dustin Johnson 67-68-70-73=278 t15. Lindsay Renolds 70-69-68-72=279 t49. Zack Byrd 70-75-67-76=288 t49. Cameron Hooper 70-73-67-78=288 t72. Dan Obremski 73-71-73-77=294 (Results of 2005 and 2006 individuals at the NCAA Championships, other than Dustin Johnson in 2006, were prior to the final round, which only the top 15 teams qualified for.)

12 Big South Conference Championships

19


Chants’ International Flavor

CCU alumnus Alex Larrazabal won the 2002 British Amateur. Here is shown posing with the British Amateur trophy after capturing the title (left), talking with former South Carolina Governor Jim Hodges as he is awarded with the Governor’s Athletic Medal of Excellence (center), and in action at the British Amateur (right).

20

Coastal Carolina alumnus Dustin Johnson became the first Coastal golfer ever to be named to a United States team when he was selected to play in the 2006 U.S. vs. Japan Cup. He followed that up this past summer by being selected to play in both the Palmer Cup and the Walker Cup, helping the U.S. squad to a pair of victories. Photos above (top right clockwise): Johnson in action at the Walker Cup, the victorious U.S. squad around the Walker Cup, the winning U.S. team holding the Palmer Cup, Johnson playing at the Palmer Cup, Johnson with legendary golfer and tournament namesake Arnold Palmer.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Chanticleers On the Road Coastal Carolina’s golf teams play a quality national schedule each season. In recent years, the Coastal Carolina University men’s golf team had the opportunity to travel nationally, including to the West Coast several times for trips to California, Washington and Hawaii and Fall 2007 headed to Scotland for an international college event.

21

Coastal Carolina has been across the globe on their travels, as shown through the photos here. The 2003-04 team visited Rodeo Drive during a trip to Pepperdine (top left). The Chanticleers on the Swilcan Bridge at St. Andrews during the International Intercollegiate in 2006 (top middle) and Times Square in New York in Fall 2009 (top right). The Chants standing on the 18th tee at famed Pebble Beach in 2002 (lower right), while members of the 2003-04 squad paid a visit to Hawaii (lower left).

The Chanticleers also had the opportunity to visit The Kindgom - Taylor Made’s Custom Fitting Factory (left), as well as the adidas Factory (right) and the Pacific Ocean near San Diego (lower middle) while on their 2008-09 trip to California.

12 Big South Conference Championships


2008-09 Results & Statistics Windon Memorial Oct. 5-6, 2008 -- 15 teams/81 players North Shore Country Club (71 / 7,067) Glenview, Ill. Team Results 1. Illinois 276-283-284=843 (-9) 2. Indiana 286-281-281=848 (-4 ) 3. Tulsa 292-289-284=865 (+13) 4. Kent State 287-290-290=867 (+15) 5. Northwestern 289-289-292=870 (+18) 6. Purdue 295-295-284=874 (+22) 7. Michigan 294-291-292=877 (+25) 8. Missouri 291-287-301=879 (+27) 9. Marquette 285-301-295=881 (+29) 10. Coastal Carolina 296-294-292=882 (+30) 11. Colorado 298-289-301=888 (+36) 12. New Mexico 292-299-298 =889 (+37) 13. San Jose State 291-298-301=890 (+38) 14. Liberty 298-301-294=893 (+41) 15. Santa Clara 303-300-301=904 (+52) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Jorge Campillo (Indiana) 72-70-63=205 (-8) t19. Cameron Hooper 76-69-72=217 (+4) t28. Dan Obremski 74-74-71=219 (+6) 43. Zack Byrd 73-78-71=222 (+9) t46. Alan Lee 73-73-78=224 (+11) t78. Tripp McAllister 77-83-78=238 (+25) Duke Coca-Cola Individual Collegiate October 13-14, 2008 - 63 players (individuals only) Duke University Golf Club (71 / 6,961) Durham, N.C. edalist and Coastal Carolina Results M 1. Philip Chauncey (North Carolina) 74-71-69=214 (+1) t-27. Steve Delmar 78-79-71=228 (+15) t-30. David Dannelly 77-76-76=229 (+16) t-36. Charlie Winegardner 77-76-77=230 (+17) t-46. Michael Murray 80-79-77=236 (+23)

22

Bank of Tennessee at The Ridges October 24-26, 2008 - 14 teams / 75 players The Ridges Golf and Country Club (72 / 7,147) Jonesborough, Tenn. Team Results 1. Coastal Carolina 290-288-291=869 (+5) 2. East Tennessee State 288-290-292=870 (+6) 3. Wake Forest 291-285-295=871 (+7) 4. North Carolina State 290-295-290=875 (+11) 5. Mississippi 292-288-297=877 (+13) 6. North Carolina 299-294-290=883 (+19) 7. Missouri 295-293-299=887 (+23) Tennessee 299-292-296=887 (+23) 9. UAB 293-297-298=888 (+24) 10. Virginia 300-293-296=889 (+25) 11. Kent State 310-288-295=893 (+29) 12. Auburn 295-299-300=894 (+30) 13. Vanderbilt 297-291-308=896 (+32) 14. Ohio State 303-296-299=898 (+34) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Darren Blair (North Carolina State) 71-69-70=210 (-6) t-2. Zack Byrd 71-70-74=215 (-1) t-6. Dan Obremski 72-69-75=216 (E) t-18. Tripp McAllister 74-74-72=220 (+4) t-30. Cameron Hooper 74-77-71=222 (+6) t-30. David Dannelly 73-75-74=222 (+6) CordeValle Collegiate Nov. 3-5, 2008 -- 12 teams / 76 players (6/5) CordeValle Golf Club (72 / 7,119) San Martin, Calif. Team Results 1. Southern California 357-362-361=1080 (E) 2. Stanford 370-368-368=1106 (+26) 3. UCLA 374-374-359=1107 (+27) 4. Washington 372-367-371=1110 (+30) 5. Charlotte 367-379-368=1114 (+34) 6. Arkansas 370-376-374=1120 (+40) 7. Northwestern 382-376-368=1126 (+46) 8. Lamar 374-380-381=1135 (+55) 9. Arizona 386-381-373=1140 (+60) 10. Augusta State 387-381-373=1141 (+61) 11. Coastal Carolina 373-383-387=1143 (+63)

12. Santa Clara 390-389-386=1165 (+85) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results t-1. Nick Taylor (Washington) 71-71-70=212 (-4) t-1. Tim Sluiter (USC) 70-70-72=212 (-4) t-10. Dan Obremski 72-72-74=218 (+2) t-37. Zack Byrd 70-79-79=228 (+12) t-51. Cameron Hooper 71-80-80=231 (+15) t-64. Sam Lyons 82-75-78=235 (+19) t-67. David Dannelly 80-77-79=236 (+20) t-71. Tripp McAllister 80-84-77=241 (+25) Arizona Intercollegiate Feb. 2-3, 2009 -- 16 teams / 92 players Arizona National Golf Club (71 / 6,793) Tucson, Ariz. Team Results 1. Pepperdine 286-279-290=855 (+3) 2. San Diego State 288-280-290=858 (+6) 3. Tennessee 285-285-292=862 (+10) 4. East Tennessee State 300-278-288=866 (+14) UNLV 291-281-294=866 (+14) 6. Arizona 292-281-294=867 (+15) 7. California 294-283-291=868 (+16) 8. New Mexico 295-292-282=869 (+17) 9. UC Irvine 295-286-293=874 (+22) 10. Coastal Carolina 299-282-297=878 (+26) 11. Tulsa 294-282-306=882 (+30) 12. Nevada 299-286-299=884 (+32) 13. Brigham Young 300-286-305=891 (+39) 14. Long Beach State 292-302-306=900 (+48) 15. Rice 313-294-300=907 (+55) 16. Middle Tennessee State 304-296-308=908 (+56) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Chris Paisley (Tennessee) 68 -66-67=201 (-12) 3. Zack Byrd 72-65-69=206 (-7) t-31. Dan Obremski 76-70-76=222 (+9) t-54. Tripp McAllister 78-69-79=226 (+13) t-65. David Dannelly 73-78-77=228 (+15) t-76. Drew Ernst 78-81-75=234 (+21) SunTrust Gator Invitational February 14-15, 2009 -- 14 teams / 75 players Mark Bostick Golf Course (70 / 6,701) Gainesville, Fla. Team Results 1. Florida 269-276-279=824 (-16) 2. Mississippi 274-281-287=842 (+2) 3. UCF 281-285-280=846 (+6) 4. Florida State 288-282-277=847 (+7) 5. Duke 279-284-285=848 (+8) 6. Coastal Carolina 279-286-285=850 (+10) LSU 285-288-277=850 (+10) 8. Chattanooga 280-288-283=851 (+11) 9. North Florida 285-284-287=856 (+16) 10. Georgia State 286-288-284=858 (+18) 11. Mississippi State 290-287-289=866 (+26) 12. Wake Forest 288-292-287=867 (+27) 13. Georgia Southern 289-293-290=872 (+32) 14. UAB 292-296-291=879 (+39) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Toby Ragland (Florida)** 68-65-72=205 (-5) t-9. Sam Lyons 66-70-73=209 (-1) t-17. Zack Byrd 69-72-71=212 (+2) t-26. Dan Obremski 73-71-71=215 (+5) t-35. Cameron Hooper 71-74-71=216 (+6) t-65. Drew Ernst 77-73-72=222 (+12) ** Won a seven-hole playoff for medalist honors. John Hayt Collegiate Invitational February 22-24, 2009 -- 15 teams / 84 players Sawgrass Country Club (72 / 6,955) Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Team Results 1. LSU 296-295-294=885 (+21) 2. Arizona State 290-303-300=893 (+29) 3. Georgia Southern 298-302-295=895 (+31) 4. Georgia State 299-308-293=900 (+36) 5. Tennessee 299-311-291=901 (+37) 6. UAB 298-306-301=905 (+41) 7. Alabama 307-305-295=907 (+43) 8. TCU 302-317-290=909 (+45) 9. Coastal Carolina 301-308-301=910 (+46) 10. UNC Wilmington 305-316-297=918 (+54)

11. North Florida 305-307-307=919 (+55) 12. Tulsa 304-305-312=921 (+57) 13. Furman 310-312-305=927 (+63) Chattanooga 303-317-307=927 (+63) 15. Duke 314-317-301=932 (+68) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. John Peterson (LSU) 71-73-70=214 (-2) t-2. Zack Byrd 71-70-75=216 (E) t-24. Tripp McAllister 74-75-79=228 (+12) t-60. Dan Obremski 78-83-74=235 (+19) t-60. Sam Lyons 78-80-77=235 (+19) 82. Steve Delmar 87-84-75=246 (+30) General Jim Hackler Championship March 8-9, 2009 -- 15 teams / 80 players TPC of Myrtle Beach (72 / 6,905) Murrells Inlet, S.C. Team Results 1. Wake Forest 300-291-290=881 (+17) 2. North Carolina State 302-295-294=891 (+27) 3. Pepperdine 299-291-303=893 (+29) 4. Coastal Carolina 298-299-301=898 (+34) East Tennessee State 293-294-311=898 (+34) 6. Lamar 301-307-292=900 (+36) 7. Kentucky 296-305-301=902 (+38) 8. Augusta State 304-299-306=909 (+45) 9. South Carolina 303-307-300=910 (+46) 10. Ohio State 301-308-303=912 (+48) 11. Duke 303-313-299=915 (+51) 12. UCLA 316-293-313=922 (+58) 13. Illinois 309-308-306=923 (+59) 14. North Carolina 317-301-310=928 (+64) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Matt Hill (North Carolina State) 74-70-69=213 (-3) 2. Zack Byrd 71-74-71=216 (E) t-6. Alan Lee # 7571-74=220 (+4) t-19. Sam Lyons # 76-73-76=225 (+9) t-24. Drew Ernst 79-74-73=226 (+10) t-44. Tripp McAllister 77-78-76=231 (+15) t-44. David Dannelly 73-77-81=231 (+15) t-57. Dan Obremski 77-74-83=234 (+18) t-57. Charlie Winegardner # 75-75-84=234 (+18) t-68. Steve Delmar # 82-79-80=241 (+25) 80. Michael Murray # 88-85-WD=WD # Playing as an individual Desert Shootout March 19-21, 2009 -- 14 teams / 91 players Palm Valley Golf Club (72 / 7,015) Goodyear, Ariz. Team Results 1. Denver 271-277-281=829 (-35) 2. Tulsa 275-281-274=830 (-34) 3. Coastal Carolina 278-277-283=838 (-26) 4. Kansas 282-279-279=840 (-24) 5. Kansas State 287-276-282=845 (-19) 6. Iowa State 287-282-282=851 (-13) 7. Air Force 278-290-287=855 (-9) Southern Utah 278-292-285=855 (-9) 9. Boise State 283-282-296=861 (-3) 10. Nebraska 290-289-283=862 (-2) 11. Missouri State 294-289-292=875 (+11) 12. Northern Iowa 293-290-300=883 (+19) 13. Cleveland State 287-296-301=884 (+20) 14. Utah Valley 292-300-296=888 (+24) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Tom Whitney (Air Force) 64-69-67=200 (-16) t -2. Zack Byrd 69-69-63=201 (-15) t9. Sam Lyons 69-65-74=208 (-8) t27. David Dannelly # 68-73-73=214 (-2) t33. Tripp McAllister 71-72-72=215 (-1) t33. Drew Ernst 70-71-74=215 (-1) t37. Charlie Winegardner # 67-69-80=216 (E) t42. Dan Obremski 70-73-74=217 (+1) 57. Alan Lee # 74-68-78=220 (+4) # Playing as an individual

Administaff Augusta State Invitational April 4-5, 2009 -- 17 teams / 96 players Forest Hills Golf Club (72 / 7,161) Augusta, Ga. Team Results 1. Augusta State 278-273-277=828 (-36) 2. Chattanooga 273-286-282=841 (-23) 3. Kent State 286-275-282=843 (-21) 4. Coastal Carolina 279-283-287=849 (-15) UCF 282-275-292=849 (-15) 6. Duke 284-280-289=853 (-11) 7. Tennessee 291-281-287=859 (-5) 8. Georgia State 289-277-294=860 (-4) 9. Virginia Tech 288-286-288=862 (-2) 10. USC-Aiken 289-282-293=864 (E) 11. Georgia Southern 288-279-298=865 (+1) 12. Lamar 294-287-285=866 (+2) 13. Charlotte 298-283-292=873 (+9) 14. VCU 289-281-304=874 (+10) 15. Houston 290-287-298=875 (+11) 16. Minnesota 287-285-306=878 (+14) 17. North Carolina 297-287-303=887 (+23) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Taylor Floyd (Augusta State) 68-67-67=202 (-14) t-12. Zack Byrd 73-70-68=211 (-3) t-18. Drew Ernst 72-68-72=212 (-2) t-36. Tripp McAllister 70-73-72=215 (+1) t-43. Sam Lyons 68-74-75=217 (+3) t-47. David Dannelly # 74-70-74=218 (+4) t-56. Dan Obremski 69-72-78=219 (+5) Big South Men’s Golf Championship April 20-22, 2009 -- 8 teams / 40 players The Patriot Golf Club (72 / 7,079) Ninety-Six, S.C. Team Results 1. Coastal Carolina 297-286-308=891 (+27) 2. Liberty 318-294-310=922 (+58) 3. Gardner-Webb 304-303-319=926 (+62) 4. Winthrop 307-309-311=927 (+63) 5. Radford 312-309-307=928 (+64) 6. Presbyterian 307-308-323=938 (+74) 7. Charleston Southern 310-323-309=942 (+78) High Point 313-306-323=942 (+78) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Zack Byrd (Coastal Carolina) 75-67-79=221 (+5) t-2. Sam Lyons 77-73-74=224 (+8) t-2. David Dannelly 73-73-78=224 (+8) t-4. Drew Ernst 75-73-77=225 (+9) t-6. Tripp McAllister 74-73-79=226 (+10) NCAA Division I Men’s Northeast Regional May 14-16, 2009 -- 14 teams / 74 players Galloway National Golf Club (71 / 7,022) Galloway, N.J. Team Results 1. Alabama 303-285-286=874 (+22) 2. Tennessee 296-287-295=878 (+26) 3. Illinois 307-288-292=887 (+35) 4. Virginia 298-291-300=889 (+37) 5. Wake Forest 297-297-296=890 (+38) 6. Colorado State 309-290-297=896 (+44) 7. Minnesota 314-293-298=905 (+53) 8. Kent State 312-289-305=906 (+54) 9. Clemson 310-299-299=908 (+56) 10. Penn State 319-301-290=910 (+58) 11. Coastal Carolina 319-303-293=915 (+63) 12. VCU 315-306-320=941 (+89) 13. Sacred Heart 322-311-313=946 (+94) 14. Columbia 355-317-326=998 (+146) Medalist and Coastal Carolina Results 1. Hunter Hamrick (Alabama) 74-71-67=212 (-1) t-11. Drew Ernst 78-75-68=221 (+8) t-38. Zack Byrd 76-79-74=229 (+16) t-45. Dan Obremski 81-74-76=231 (+18) 60. Tripp McAllister 87-75-75=237 (+24) t-67. Sam Lyons 84-81-78=243 (+30)

2008-09 Final Statistics Zack Byrd

Rounds Played Total Strokes Average Rounds Par or Better Low 18 / 54 Top 5 / 10 / 20

33 2,377 72.0 17 63/201 6/6/8

David Dannelly 24 1,802 75.1 2 68 / 214 1/1/1

Steve Delmar 9 715 79.4 1 71 / 228 0/0/0

Drew Ernst

21 1,555 74.0 6 68 / 212 1/1/3

Cameron Hooper 12 886 73.8 3 69 / 216 0/0/1

Alan Lee

9 664 73.8 2 68 / 220 0/1/1

Sam Lyons

24 1,796 74.8 5 65 / 208 1/3/4

Tripp McAllister 30 2,277 75.9 7 69 / 215 0/1/2

Michael Murray 5 409 81.8 0 77 / 236 0/0/0

Dan Charlie Obremski Winegardner 30 2,226 74.2 9 69 / 215 0/2/2

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances

9 680 75.6 2 67 / 216 0/0/0

Team Statistics 33 9,923 300.7 54 277 / 838 9 / 15 / 22


Big South Conference Since its founding in 1983, the Big South Conference has matured into a competitive leader in college athletics, actively pursuing excellence on the field of play and in the classroom. The League’s growing presence as an NCAA Division I athletic conference is evident by athletic accomplishments on the national stage, innovative marketing and media partnerships, increased television packages, and quality athletic competition while intentionally fostering the academic, personal, social, athletic and leadership development of each student-athlete. This has evolved into the Conference’s mission of “Developing Leaders Through Athletics.” The Big South Conference was formed on August 21, 1983, when Charleston Southern (then Baptist College) Athletic Director Howard Bagwell and Augusta President George Christenberry began recruiting members into the Big South, receiving initial commitments from Augusta, Charleston Southern, Campbell, Coastal Carolina and Winthrop. One month later, Dr. Edward M. Singleton was selected as the League’s first Commissioner and continued to solicit new members. His efforts led to the additions of Armstrong State, Radford and UNC Asheville, giving the Big South more than the required six members to constitute an official conference. The Big South’s first year of competition was in the Fall of 1984, and in September 1986, the Big South Conference was granted full-fledged NCAA Division I status. During its infancy and prior to securing automatic bids to NCAA Championships, the Big South made early strides in earning at-large berths in several national postseason events, including volleyball, women’s basketball and women’s golf. In 1989, George F. “Buddy” Sasser replaced the retiring Dr. Singleton as Commissioner, and in 1990, the League received its first automatic bid – receiving an automatic qualifier to the NCAA Baseball Championship. Under Sasser’s seven years of leadership, the Conference implemented its public relations and compliance programs, and introduced its first-ever men’s basketball television package, featuring the Big South competing among some of the finest teams in the nation.

In August 1996, Kyle B. Kallander replaced Sasser as the League’s third Commissioner, and in his 13 years at the helm of the Big South, Kallander has been instrumental in aggressively promoting the Conference to new levels. The Conference has enjoyed record levels in marketing revenue during the past several years. Kallander has brought television coverage to Big South women’s basketball, baseball and softball for the first time in Conference history, as well as increased national television exposure to the League as a whole through aggressive and unique television packages. Under Kallander’s leadership, the Big South developed and initiated its first long-range strategic plan, re-affirming the League’s vision as a distinctive athletic Conference committed to the quality of institutional life through athletic competition. He also spearheaded the efforts to add football as a championship sport, which came to fruition in 2002, and has solidified Conference membership with the additions of High Point, Gardner-Webb and Presbyterian, and in 2011-12, the return of charter member Campbell University. Kallander’s long range vision has also included technological advancements, as the Conference introduced its first live event video streaming in 2005 and has since expanded its video offerings to more than 600 events annually through a partnership with the member institutions, as well as the creation of several online and social media platforms. In the last 15 years alone, the Big South Conference has experienced monumental growth and success in nearly every sport. During this time, the Conference has had two individual National Champions, more than 200 All-Americans, has reached the “Sweet 16” in men’s soccer, women’s basketball and baseball, has received national Top 25 rankings in men’s soccer, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, men’s outdoor track & field, and men’s golf and had an individual selected to play in the NCAA Singles Championship four times in addition to the first men’s tennis doubles at-large selection. The League also had the No. 1 ranked men’s golfer in the country, has had the nation’s top scoring men’s basketball

Big South Conference

7233 Pineville-Matthews Road, Suite 100 Charlotte, NC 28226 704-341-7990 Fax: 704-341-7991 www.BigSouthSports.com

Kyle Kallander

Commissioner

Mark Simpson

Assistant CommissionerPublic Relations

Nic Bowman Assistant DirectorPublic Relations

Mark Bryant

Coordinator of New Media

team three consecutive years as well as the national men’s basketball scoring leader twice, received an at-large playoff berth in the Football Championship Subdivision in 2006, and had an institution finish fifth in the NCAA Men’s Golf Championships – the Conference’s highest-ever team finish in an NCAA event. In 2006-07 alone, the Big South was the only Conference nationwide to have an at-large participant in the football playoffs (Coastal Carolina), a team in the Second Round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament (Winthrop) and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Baseball Regionals (Coastal Carolina). In fact, Coastal Carolina’s baseball program has been a No. 1 seed three out of the last five years, while its FCS playoff berth in 2006 came in just the fifth-year of the Big South’s football existence. The Conference’s tagline, “Developing Leaders Through Athletics” was unveiled in 2008-09 in conjunction with the Conference’s 25th Anniversary. The League also honored its heritage with the Top 25 “Best of the Best” moments in League history from 1983-2008, with Liberty University’s 10year women’s basketball championship run from 1996-2007 being crowned the No. 1 moment in the Big South’s first 25 years. The Conference’s on-field accomplishments have been duplicated in the classroom. Annually, more than 40 percent of Conference student-athletes are named to the Big South’s Presidential Honor Roll for maintaining a cumulative 3.0 grade-point average, and the League has had more than 95 Academic All-Americans in its quarter-century of existence.

George F. “Buddy” Sasser Cup

Coastal Carolina University won the prestigious George F. “Buddy” Sasser Cup for a record-setting ninth time in 2006-07. The Sasser Cup, named for the former Coastal Carolina Athletic Director and Big South Commissioner, honors the top overall athletic department in the Big South Conference. The award is based on a point system, with points being awarded based upon each school’s finish in each of the 18 league-sponsored sports. T h e C h a n t i c l e e r s’ n i n e Sasser Cup awards are the most earned by one school in Big South history. Coastal won the 2006-07 award by capturing Big South titles in football, women’s indoor track, men’s golf, women’s tennis (tournament) and baseball (regular-season and tournament). In addition to the Big South honors, Coastal Carolina was represented in six different NCAA Championships.

12 Big South Conference Championships

23


All-Time Awards & Finishes GCAA HONORS

Big South TEAM & TOP-5 INDIVIDUAL FINISHES

All-American 2005 Dustin Johnson (Third Team) 2006 Dustin Johnson (First Team) 2007 Dustin Johnson (First Team) Lindsay Renolds (HM) 2009 Zack Byrd (Third Team) All-American Scholar 1988 Matthew “Gus” Pick 2007 Zack Byrd, Lindsay Renolds 2009 Zack Byrd, Cameron Hooper Players Hall of Fame 1997 Tom Brennan

All-Big South Honors

Player of the Year 2001 Rafael Vera 2004 Alvaro Velasco 2005 Dustin Johnson 2006 Dustin Johnson 2007 Dustin Johnson 2008 Tripp McAllister 2009 Zack Byrd

Rafael Vera (top left), Alvaro Velasco (top middle), Dustin Johnson (top right), Tripp McAllister (lower left) and Zack Byrd (lower right) are the five Chanticleers that have earned Big South Player of the Year honors in their careers.

Rookie of the Year 1998 Julian James 2001 Alex Larrazabal 2005 Zack Byrd 2008 Tripp McAllister

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Coach of the Year 1988 Billy Bernier 1997 Todd McCorkle 1998 Donald Clement 1999 Donald Clement 2000 Donald Clement 2002 Allen Terrell 2004 Allen Terrell 2005 Allen Terrell 2006 Allen Terrell (Co-Coach) 2007 Allen Terrell 2009 Allen Terrell Scholar-Athlete of the Year 2009 Zack Byrd (Co) Medalist 1991 Trevor Gliwski 1995 Wil Weldon 1999 Brad Hastings 2001 Rafael Vera 2005 Zack Byrd 2007 Dustin Johnson 2008 David Dannelly 2009 Zack Byrd All-Academic 2000 John McAlister 2001 Dale Ketola 2003 Dale Ketola 2004 Alvaro Velasco 2006 Zack Byrd 2007 Zack Byrd 2008 Lindsay Renolds

All-Big South Selections 1985 Terry Johnson, Donald Clement 1986 John Faidley, Chris Gale 1987 Brian Lamb, Gus Pick, John Faidley 1988 Brian Lamb, Gus Pick, Chris Gale, Darin Hall 1989 Hal Ruska 1990 Trevor Gliwski, Kent Fukushima 1992 Lenny Lasinsky, Trevor Gliwski 1993 Robbie Taylor, Wil Weldon 1994 Wil Weldon, T.J. O’Brien 1995 Lorne Kelly 1996 Scott Taylor 1997 Jay McAllister, Brad Hastings, Mark Thomas, Scott Taylor 1998 Scott Taylor, Brad Hastings, John McAllister 1999 Julian James, John McAllister 2000 Jacob Wilner, Julian James, Brad Hastings, John McAlister 2001 Rafael Vera 2001 Alex Larrazabal 2002 Dale Ketola, A lex Larrazabal, Rafael Vera 2003 Alvaro Velasco, Dale Ketola 2004 Alvaro Velasco, Moises Cobo, Dustin Johnson, Pat Stolpe 2005 Dustin Johnson, Zack Byrd, Lindsay Renolds 2006 Dustin Johnson, Moises Cobo 2007 Dustin Johnson, Zack Byrd, Lindsay Renolds, Sam Lyons 2008 Tripp McAllister, Dan Obremski, David Dannelly, Lindsay Renolds 2009 Zack Byrd, Sam Lyons, David Dannelly, Tripp McAllister, Drew Ernst

Past Champions 1985 Augusta 1986 Augusta 1987 Augusta 1988 Coastal Carolina 1989 Campbell 1990 Augusta 1991 Augusta 1992 Campbell 1993 Campbell 1994 Campbell 1995 UNC Greensboro 1996 UNC Greensboro 1997 Coastal Carolina 1998 Coastal Carolina 1999 Coastal Carolina 2000 Coastal Carolina 2001 Charleston Southern 2002 Coastal Carolina 2003 Charleston Southern 2004 Coastal Carolina 2005 Coastal Carolina 2006 Coastal Carolina 2007 Coastal Carolina 2008 Coastal Carolina 2009 Coastal Carolina

CCU Finish 4th (9) 2nd (8) 3rd (8) 1st (7) 4th (7) 4th (7) 4th (8) 2nd (8) 2nd (10) 3rd (10) 2nd (9) 2nd (7) 1st (7) 1st (6) 1st (7) 1st (7) 2nd (7) 1st (8) 2nd (8) 1st (7) 1st (7) 1st (7) 1st (7) 1st (7) 1st (7)

Top 5 Big South Individual Finishes 1986 1988 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

John Faidley - 2nd, Chris Gale - t-5th Brian Lamb - 2nd, Gus Pick - 3rd, Chris Gale - t-5th Trevor Gliwski - t-5th Trevor Gliwski - 1st Lenny Lasinsky - t-4th Robbie Taylor - t-3rd Wil Weldon - 3rd Wil Weldon - 1st Scott Taylor - t-3rd Jay McAllister - 2nd, Brad Hastings- 4th, Mark Thomas - t-5th Julian James - t-3rd, Scott Taylor - t-3rd Brad Hastings - t-5th, John McAllister - t-5th Brad Hastings - 1st, Julian James - 2nd John McAllister - t-5th Jacob Wilner - 2nd, Julian James - 3rd, Brad Hastings - 4th, John McAllister - t-5th Rafael Vera - 1st, Alex Larrazabal - t-3rd Alex Larrazabal - 3rd, Rafael Vera - 4th Alvaro Velasco - t-2nd Alvaro Velasco - 1st, Moises Cobo - 2nd Zack Byrd - 1st, Dustin Johnson - t-2nd, Lindsay Renolds - 4th Dustin Johnson - 3rd, Moises Cobo - 4th Dustin Johnson - 1st, Zack Byrd - t-3rd David Dannelly - 1st, Lindsay Renolds - t-4th Zack Byrd - 1st, David Dannelly - t-2nd, Sam Lyons - t-2nd, Drew Ernst - t-4th

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Individual & Team Records 63 64 65 65 65 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 136 137 138 138 138 138 139 139 140

Zack Byrd Dustin Johnson Sam Lyons Zack Byrd Dustin Johnson Sam Lyons Dustin Johnson Zack Byrd Dustin Johnson Dustin Johnson Dale Ketola Rafael Vera Brad Hastings Rafael Vera Ricardo Bescansa Jacob Wilner Brad Hastings John McAllister Dean Halterman Brad Hastings six times

Single Round Desert Shootout (Rd. 3) NCAA East Regional (Rd. 3) Desert Shootout (Rd. 2) Arizona Intercollegiate (Rd. 2) NCAA East Regional (Rd. 1) SunTrust Gator Invitational (Rd. 1) Big South Championship (Rd. 3) International Collegiate (Rd. 3) Seminole Intercollegiate (Rd. 1) Landfall Tradition (Rd. 3) Pacific Invitational (Rd. 1) Cleveland Golf Collegiate (Rd. 2)

3/21/09 5/21/05 3/20/09 2/2/09 5/19/05 2/14/09 4/18/07 9/2/06 3/5/06 10/30/05 10/22/01 3/20/00

36 Hole Tournament ODU/Seascape Collegiate Cleveland Golf Collegiate ODU/Seascape Intercollegiate UNCW/Belevedere Invitational ODU/Seascape Collegiate UTC Fall Invitational Greensboro Invitational UNCW/Belevedere Invitational

10/25-27/98 3/19-20/01 10/30-31/00 10/5-6/98 10/27-28/97 10/13-14/97 4/5-6/99 10/5-6/98

54 Hole Tournament NCAA East Regional Desert Shootout Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic Seminole Intercollegiate Pacific Invitational Pepsi Intercoll. at Bradford Creek Arizona Intercollegiate CordeValle Collegiate Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic The McLaughlin Desert Shootout International Collegiate Administaff Augusta State Invit. Palmetto Intercollegiate USC Aiken/Cleveland Collegiate

198 201 201 203 205 205 206 206 207 208 208 208 208 208 208

Dustin Johnson Zack Byrd Dustin Johnson Dustin Johnson Alvaro Velasco Jacob Wilner Zack Byrd Zack Byrd Dustin Johnson Sam Lyons Sam Lyons Dustin Johnson Dustin Johnson Moises Cobo Brad Hastings

5/19-21/05 3/19-21/09 10/9-10/05 3/5-7/06 9/23-24/02 3/19-20/99 2/2-3/09 11/6-7/06 10/9-10/06 9/18-19/09 3/19-21/09 9/1-2/06 4/1-2/06 3/15-16/04 3/20-21/00

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.

Single Season Average (20 Rounds Minimum) Player Year Rds. Strokes Dustin Johnson 2006-07 43 3,027 Dustin Johnson 2005-06 40 2,872 Zack Byrd 2008-09 33 2,377 Dustin Johnson 2004-05 39 2,816 Brad Hastings 1998-99 32 2,318 Alvaro Velasco 2003-04 32 2,321 Zack Byrd 2006-07 40 2,903 Julian James 1998-99 30 2,178 Rafael Vera 2000-01 22 1,601 Dean Halterman 1998-99 23 1,674 Alvaro Velasco 2002-03 38 2,773 Jacob Wilner 1998-99 27 1,971 Lindsay Renolds 2006-07 34 2,490 Matthew Mills 2002-03 35 2,567 Moises Cobo 2003-04 21 1,541

Avg. 70.40 71.80 72.03 72.21 72.44 72.53 72.58 72.60 72.77 72.78 72.97 73.00 73.24 73.34 73.38

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6 7. 8. 9. 10.

Career Average (50 Rounds Minimum) Player Year Rds. Strokes Dustin Johnson 2003-07 167 12,042 Alvaro Velasco 2002-04 70 5,094 Zack Byrd 2004-09 157 11,545 Brad Hastings 1996-00 110 8,100 Rafael Vera 2000-03 88 6,488 Dan Obremski 2006-pres. 102 7,548 Moises Cobo 2003-07 114 8,465 Sam Lyons 2006-pres. 78 5,815 Julian James 1997-01 92 6,868 Lindsay Renolds 2004-08 107 7,991

Avg. 72.11 72.77 73.54 73.64 73.73 74.00 74.25 74.55 74.65 74.68

All records begin in 1990, and are based on statistics available in the Coastal Carolina Athletic Media Relations Office. We apologize for any omissions or mistakes, and welcome any evidence that will help us create a more complete and accurate file.

Brad Hastings set a school 36-hole tournament record at Old Dominion in October 1998.

Rafael Vera won the 2001 Big South Individual title and earned a spot in the NCAA Regionals.

Jacob Wilner finished second at the 2000 Big South Championships and led Coastal Carolina to its first-ever NCAA Regional.

272 274 276 276 276 277 277 277 278 278

18 Holes NCAA Championship (Rd. 3) Big South Championships (Rd. 2) General Jim Hackler Championship (Rd. 3) NCAA East Regional (Rd. 3) UNCW/Belvedere Invitational (Rd. 1) Desert Shootout (Rd. 2) NCAA Championship (Rd. 1) ODU/Seascape Collegiate (Rd. 1) Desert Shootout (Rd. 1) International Collegiate (Rd. 3)

6/1/07 4/19/05 3/12/07 5/21/05 10/5/98 3/20/09 5/30/07 10/26/98 3/19/09 9/2/06

560 560 571 572 573 576 576 581

36 Hole Tournament ODU/Seascape Collegiate UNCW/Belvedere Invitational Greensboro Invitational Big South Championships Kiawah Island Intercollegiate Carolina First Intercollegiate CSU Fall Intercollegiate Birkdale Collegiate Classic

10/26-27/98 10/5-6/98 4/5-6/99 4/19-20/99 9/12-13/94 9/24-25/01 9/21-22/98 3/16/02

838 846 847 848 849 849 850 850 851 851 851 853 854 855 856 856

54 Hole Tournament Desert Shootout Pacific Invitational CordeValle Collegiate General Jim Hackler Championship Administaff Augusta State Invitational NCAA East Regional SunTrust Gator Invitational Ameedisys Intercollegiate Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic Seminole Intercollegiate Big South Championships Administaff Augusta State Invitational Administaff Augusta State Invitational Coca-Cola Duke Golf Classic SunTrust Gator Invitational Mid Pines Intercollegiate

3/19-21/09 9/23-24/02 11/6-07/06 3/11-12/07 4/4-5/09 5/19-21/05 2/14-15/09 10/12-13/98 10/9-10/06 3/5-7/06 4/19-21/99 3/30-4/1/07 4/1-2/06 10/9-10/05 2/9-10/08 9/10-11/01

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Team Scoring Average Year Rnds Strokes 2006-07 40 11,531 1998-99 32 9,245 2004-05 39 11,436 2005-06 36 10,590 2001-02 34 10,021 1997-98 30 8.852 2002-03 34 10,067 2003-04 33 9,805 2000-01 27 8,051 1999-00 38 11,345

The 2001-02 squad captured the school’s sixth Big South Conference title and its second-ever berth in the NCAA Regionals.

12 Big South Conference Championships

Avg. 288.28 288.91 293.22 294.17 294.74 295.07 296.09 297.12 298.19 298.55

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Coastal Carolina University The University Coastal Carolina University is a dynamic, public, comprehensive liberal arts institution located in Conway, just minutes from Myrtle Beach, S.C. The University offers baccalaureate programs to nearly 8,300 students in 42 fields of study including acclaimed programs in marine science, resort tourism and professional golf management. Graduate programs include an MBA as well as master’s degrees in education and coastal marine and wetland studies. The University prides itself on the interaction of students and faculty in the classroom, through internships and hands-on research. The combined expertise of faculty ranges from emerging market economics to global positioning systems, bottlenosed dolphins and the history of rock ‘n’ roll. There are 335 full-time faculty members, 83 percent of whom have doctoral or terminal degrees.

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The Campus The campus comprises 53 main buildings on 307 acres including the Burroughs & Chapin Center for Marine and Wetland Studies and the Coastal Science Center, located on the East Campus at the Atlantic Center on U.S. 501. The University also offers courses at the Waccamaw Center for Higher Education in Litchfield, and in Myrtle Beach, North Myrtle Beach and Georgetown. Waties Island, 1,062 acres of pristine barrier island on the Atlantic coast, provides a natural laboratory for extensive study in marine science and wetlands biology. Students enrolled in Coastal’s Professional Golf Management program staff Quail Creek Golf Club at Coastal Carolina University, a public 18-hole golf facility located adjacent to the campus. Academic Programs Coastal Carolina University offers baccalaureate degree programs in 42 major fields of study and 37 undergraduate minors. The University also offers six master’s degree programs in education, instructional technology, and coastal marine and wetland studies. Coastal’s growing array of international programs take students to places such as Australia, Costa Rica, Cuba, England, Ecuador, Galapagos Islands, Germany, India, Japan and Russia. Coastal Carolina University is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to award the baccalaureate and master’s degrees. The E. Craig Wall Sr. College of Business Administration is accredited by AACSB International - The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. The Spadoni College of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) and the South Carolina State Board of Education. Coastal Carolina University is an accredited institutional member of the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). The Department of Computer Science is accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).

Coastal Carolina University Quick Facts Founded: 1954 (In 1993, the South Carolina Legislature established Coastal Carolina University as an independent, public institution, ending a more than 30-year affiliation with the University of South Carolina.) Student Profile Enrollment Approximately 8,300 students South Carolina residents: 51 percent Out-of-state residents: 47 percent from 45 states International students: 2 percent from 38 countries Male students: 46 percent Female students: 54 percent Average SAT score for first-time freshmen: 1,030

Faculty Full-time faculty members: 335 Faculty members with doctoral or terminal degrees: 83 percent Student to faculty ratio: 18:1 Finances Tuition for 2009-2010 In-state: $4,475 per semester; Out-of-state: $9,385 per semester Residence Halls $3,600 per semester includes meal plans, student health services and Internet access.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


University Executive Officers David A. DeCenzo became the second president of Coastal Carolina University on May 7, 2007. DeCenzo joined Coastal Carolina’s administration in 2002 when he was named dean of the E. Craig Wall Sr. College of Business Administration. He was named provost and senior vice president of academic administration in May 2006. Before joining the Coastal Carolina University faculty, DeCenzo served as director of partnership development in the College of Business and Economics at Towson University in Maryland from 1999 to 2002. He earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Maryland College Park and a master’s degree and Ph.D. from West Virginia University. An experienced industry consultant, DeCenzo has served a wide variety of clients including Citicorp Global Technology, Moen Inc., Motorola and others. His major academic interests are in human resource management, management and organizational behavior. He is the author of textbooks that are used widely at colleges and universities throughout the United States and the world. He serves on the board of directors of the Myrtle Beach Regional Economic Development Center, and he served a two-year term on the Conway Chamber of Commerce’s board of directors. As dean of Coastal Carolina’s Wall College, DeCenzo led the move to establish a Master of Business Administration (MBA) program. He also helped create 27 the Wall Center of Excellence, designed to enhance and reinforce business students’ skills through experiential learning. As provost, he instituted Centers for Excellence to support student internships, research and travel in each of the university’s four colleges. President David DeCenzo shares a laugh with Head Baseball Coach DeCenzo and his wife, Terri, have four children. Gary Gilmore prior to one of the 2008 NCAA Conway Regional games.

University Executive Council

Coastal Carolina University Mission Statement

Original approved by the Coastal Carolina University Board of Trustees on April 18, 1997 Update adopted by the Coastal Carolina University Board of Trustees on December 14, 2007

Coastal Carolina University is a public comprehensive liberal arts institution that seeks to develop students who are both knowledgeable in their chosen fields and prepared to be productive, responsible, healthy citizens with a global perspective. To deliver on this commitment, Coastal Carolina recruits highly qualified and motivated students, faculty, and staff from the region, state, nation, and world to create a diverse and dynamic student-centered learning environment. Because Coastal Carolina embraces the teacher-scholar model, it places primary emphasis on high quality teaching and engaged learning, and it supports faculty research, creative activities, and expert collaboration in the community, state, nation, and world. This focus enables faculty and staff to mentor students in collaborative research, creative opportunities, and internships. To nurture this active learning community, Coastal Carolina maintains a broad range of contemporary technologies, programming, support services, and innovative course offerings and delivery methods. The result is alumni who are well prepared for professional careers or graduate programs in their chosen fields and who continue to be connected to Coastal Carolina. Inspired by its founding in 1954 to serve the educational needs of the immediate area, Coastal Carolina has grown with the region to become a mid-sized regional comprehensive university with a tradition of a strong liberal arts core. As such, Coastal Carolina commits its resources to maintaining a population of 8,000 – 12,000 students by building baccalaureate and selective master’s programs of national and/or regional significance in the arts and sciences, business, humanities, education, and health and human services. Coastal Carolina fully embraces its leadership role as a regional center of economic and intellectual resources, lifelong learning, cultural and recreational opportunities, and athletic programs. As Coastal Carolina executes this mission, it recognizes its responsibility to be a role model to the community and to the professions by assuring fair and honest treatment of people with whom it interacts and sustainable stewardship of resources entrusted to it, adopting the highest standards of integrity and accountability, and committing itself to excellence through continuous self-improvement.

David A. DeCenzo President

Edgar Dyer Executive Vice President

Will Garland Senior VP of Finance and Administration

Robert Sheehan Senior VP of Academic and Student Affairs

Mary Eaddy Interim Vice PresidentUniversity Communication

Judy Vogt Vice PresidentEnrollment Services

Jim Adams Vice PresidentUniversity Advancement

Debbie Conner Associate Vice President University Relations

12 Big South Conference Championships


Athletic Facilities Brooks Stadium

The newest addition to the Coastal Carolina athletic landscape, Brooks Stadium has ranked among the top 15 in the nation in its six years in attendance based on capacity.

Watson Stadium/ Vrooman Field

Coastal Carolina Softball Field

Coastal Carolina Track & Field

The Chanticleer softball program has won over 70 percent of its home contests at the home field, recently renovated with a brick, padded backstop, new backstop netting, permanent chairback seating and inning-by-inning scoreboard. The facility is among the finest on the East Coast and is the home of numerous events during the year.

TPC of Myrtle Beach

TPC is the home course of the nationally-recognized men’s golf program and host to the annual General Hackler Championship.

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Home to the nationally-ranked baseball program, Watson Stadium/ Vrooman Field hosted the 2008 NCAA Conway Regional and has seen the three-time defending Big South Champion Chanticleers win more than 75 percent of their games in the stadium in recent years.

Kimbel Arena

Coastal Carolina Soccer Field

The men’s and women’s soccer squads call Coastal Carolina Soccer Field home as the facility has hosted a first-round NCAA Regional game in recent history, as well as being the home field for two of the top soccer programs in the Big South Conference.

World Tour Golf Links

Kimbel Arena is home to the volleyball and men’s and women’s basketball programs, with an intimate setting providing a solid home-court advantage for the Chanticleers.

Billy Nichols Tennis Center & Joseph Holliday Courts

The center gives Coastal Carolina’s men’s and women’s tennis programs a first-class home advantage. The facility includes six courts and seating for fans.

The 2009 Big South Champion women’s golf program counts World Tour Golf Links among its home courses in the Myrtle Beach area, utilizing the unique course design mimicking some of the greatest holes in golf to its advantage.

Athletic Training Room

Located within Kimbel Arena, the facility houses rehab and treatment equipment for the Chanticleer student-athletes.

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Athletic Department Hunter Yurachek is starting is first year as the Director of Athletics at Coastal Carolina University, taking over the reins of the department in January 2010. “First I would like to thank Dr. (David) DeCenzo and (search committee chair) Charles Hodge for the confidence they have shown in me to lead the Coastal Carolina University Athletics Department.” Yurachek said. “I believe Coastal Carolina is a rising star in college athletics and my family can not wait to become a part of the Conway and Myrtle Beach communities. Most importantly, I can not wait to become a part of the Chanticleer family, be involved in the lives of the student-athletes and work with the coaches and staff. This is where I want to be for a long time and I will do whatever I can to see this department and University reach all of its goals.” Yurachek has spent the last three-and-a-half years at the University of Akron, serving the last two as executive senior associate athletics director. In that role, he led and managed the Zips’ external relations unit, which includes marketing and promotions, media relations, ticket operations, development (Z-Fund), video operations and merchandising. In addition to those tasks, he was the sport administrator for men’s basketball, men’s golf and women’s golf, including hiring golf coaches Nick Goetze and Jenny King, as well as working closely with the football program. Most recently, Yurachek was instrumental in the addition of the 30,000-seat InfoCision Stadium on Akron’s campus. He co-chaired a subcommittee that oversaw the financing and assisted in the selling of the stadium and field naming rights for a combined $15 million. He also brought in another $1.2 million in naming rights for other areas of the facility that opened this season to rave reviews. Yurachek also worked closely with ISP - which handles the athletic program’s radio network, sponsorships and advertising. Yurachek helped increase Akron’s sponsorship past the $500,000 mark two years ago, the first time that occurred in the program’s history. In addition, the amount of gifts increased 75 percent and the monetary portion increased 38 percent during the 2008-09 school year. Prior to his time Akron, the 41-year-old Yurachek spent two years (2004-06) as the associate athletics director for marketing at the University of Virginia. He spent four years (200104) as senior associate athletics director at Western Carolina University and two years at Vanderbilt University (1998-2000) as an assistant athletics director and director of marketing and promotions. The native of Charlotte, N.C., began his career in athletics administration at Wake Forest University (1994-98) as the assistant director of marketing and promotions. A native of Richmond, Va., Yurachek grew up in Charlotte, N.C., and eventually earned his bachelor’s in business management at Guilford College in 1990, where he was a four-year letterwinner in the basketball program. He then followed that with his master’s in sports administration from the University of Richmond in 1994. Yurachek is a member of he National Association of Collegiate Athletic directors and National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators, as well as being involved in numerous community service activities. He and wife Jennifer have three sons, Ryan (13), Jake (9) and Brooks (5).

COASTAL CAROLINA ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT STAFF 29

Elizabeth Appenzeller Cheer Coach

Lauren Barker Business Manager

Kristen Bauer Women’s Volleyball Coach

AraLeigh Beam Assistant Compliance Director

Dwayne Beam Head Athletic Trainer

David Bennett Football Coach

Alan Connie Women’s XC & Track & Field Coach

Stella Cooper Special Projects Coordinator

Jim Curry Compliance Director

Jess Dannelly Associate A.D.Community Outreach

Jody Davis Women’s Tennis Coach

Shaun Docking Men’s Soccer Coach

Cliff Ellis Men’s Basketball Coach

Ken Faircloth Ticket Manager

Heather Fons Assistant Athletic Trainer

Brian Gabriel Head Strength & Conditioning Coach

Gary Gilmore Baseball Coach

Walter Goffigan Associate DirectorAcademic Support

Kelley Green Softball Coach

Bruce Gregory Senior Associate A.D.Internal Operations

Jeff Jacobs Men’s XC & Track & Field Coach

Kayla Johnson Business Assistant

Samantha Kost Student-Athlete Support Services

Alan LeForce Women’s Basketball Coach

Jon Lenze Assistant Athletic Trainer

Barry Lippman Assistant Athletic Trainer

Linda Lyerly Associate A.D/ Finance

John Martin Assistant A.D.Media Relations

Joe Mazurkiewicz Associate A.D.Academics

Bryan Paar Event Operations Coordinator

Jeff Pounds Associate Athletic Trainer

Chris Powers Men’s Tennis Coach

Katie Quinney Women’s Golf Coach

Kent Reichert Associate DirectorMedia Relations

Cari Rosiek Associate A.D./ SWA

Alex Souza Assistant Event Ops. Coordinator

Jennifer Spindler Assistant Athletic Trainer

Allen Terrell Director of Golf/ Men’s Golf Coach

Melissa Todd Administrative Assistant

Sonya Woods Asst. Strength Coach

12 Big South Conference Championships


Tradition of Excellence

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Coastal Carolina University ’s Athletic Department continued its tradition of Athletic and Academic excellence among its student-athletes. In 2008-09, Coastal Carolina Athletics: ♦ Captured the Women’s All-Sport Trophy for the fifth time in six years of existence. ♦ Six Big South Team Championships (Baseball, Men’s Golf, Women’s Golf, Women’s Cross Country, Women’s Indoor Track and Field, Women’s Outdoor Track and Field) ♦ Three NCAA Teams (Baseball, Men’s Golf and Women’s Golf) ♦ Six Big South Athletes of the Year (Women’s Soccer, Men’s Golf, Women’s Golf, Women’s Outdoor Track and Field, Baseball (Player and Pitcher)) ♦ Two NCAA Individual Participants (Men’s Outdoor Track and Field and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field) ♦ Five Big South Coaches of the Year (Women’s Cross Country, Women’s Indoor Track and Field, Men’s Golf, Women’s Outdoor Track and Field, Baseball) ♦ One Big South Freshman of the Year (Women’s Cross Country) ♦ Five Big South Scholar-Athletes of the Year (Women’s Soccer, Volleyball, Women’s Indoor Track and Field, Women’s Outdoor Track and Field, Men’s Golf) ♦ Big South Men’s Golf Medalist, Women’s Golf Medalist, Baseball Tournament MVP and 14 Individual Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Champions. ♦ 90 All-Conference selections ♦ Three CoSIDA Academic All-America winners – Ashleigh Gunning (Second Team - Women’s Soccer), Emily McColl (Third Team - Women’s Soccer) and Marcie Veitch (Third Team Women’s Track and Field) ♦ Seven CoSIDA Academic All-District award winners. ♦ Overall student-athlete cumulative grade point average of 2.983, as compared to 2.922 for the general degree-seeking students. ♦ Cumulative grade point average of all women’s teams is 3.241, compared to a 3.045 of female degree-seeking students. ♦ Women’s track and field’s Marcie Veitch won the Big South’s Christenberry Award for the top graduating female student-athlete, completing her biology degree with a perfect 4.0 GPA. ♦ The men’s golf squad won its sixth consecutive Big South title, including all five golfers earning All-Big South honors, the first time that has happened in League history. ♦ The women’s golf team picked up its third conference crown in school history and made its second appearance in the NCAA Regionals, posting the second-best women’s golf team finish in conference annals. ♦ The women's cross country and indoor and outdoor track and field squads won the League's "Triple Crown" taking home all three league titles in the same year, the third time they have accomplished that feat. ♦ Men’s track and field’s Jacques Watson qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the high jump for the second straight year, clearing 7’ 3 1/2” to continue to raise his Big South record. ♦ Women’s track and field’s Ikeiylah Brown also qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the 200 meters, her first appearance in the postseason event.

Jacques Watson qualified for the 2009 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, his second straight year to advance to the championships.

♦ The baseball team posted 47 wins and earned its third straight Big South Tournament title, advancing to the NCAA Chapel Hill Regional as the No. 2 seed. ♦ Baseball's David Anderson and Cody Wheeler were named Second and Third Team All-Americans, respectively, by Collegiate 2009 Big South Women’s Golf Champion Chanticleers Baseball, while Anthony Meo, Taylor Motter and Daniel Bowman were named Freshman All-Americans by the publication. Nick McCully joined Wheeler and Anderson on the Third Team Ping! Baseball All-America squad, while Meo also picked up Second Team Freshman All-American from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers’ Association and Baseball America. ♦ Men’s golfer Zack Byrd was named Third Team All-American by the Golf Coaches Association of America and Golfweek. ♦ Women’s soccer won its second straight Big South regular season title and advanced to the Big South title game. ♦ Volleyball shared the regular season crown for the first time in more than 10 years. ♦ Baseball Head Coach Gary Gilmore recorded his 800th career win on May 14, 2009, in a 9-1 win over Charleston Southern.

Nine Big South Conference Sasser Cups

1987-88, 1988-89 1989-90, 1990-91, 2000-01, 2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07

83 Big South Conference Championships

Football (3) -- 2004, 2005, 2006 Men’s Soccer (9) -- 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1995, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 Volleyball (3) -- 1996, 1998, 2009 Men’s Cross Country (3) -- 1993, 1995, 1996 Women’s Cross Country (12) -- 1988, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008 Men’s Basketball (3) -- 1990, 1991, 1993 Women’s Indoor Track & Field (5) -- 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Men’s Golf (12) -- 1988, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Women’s Golf (4) -- 1992, 1998, 2005, 2009 Men’s Tennis (4) -- 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994 Women’s Tennis (2) -- 2001, 2007 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field (2) -- 2003, 2006 Women’s Outdoor Track & Field (5) -- 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009 Baseball (11) -- 1986, 1989, 1991, 1992, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009 Softball (5) -- 1992, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2006

72 NCAA Championship Appearances (Team and Individual)

Football (1) -- 2006 Men’s Soccer (7) -- 1993, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Volleyball (3) -- 1996, 1998, 2009 Men’s Cross Country (2) -- 2002, 2003 Women’s Cross Country (7) -- 1996, 1997, 1998, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007 Men’s Basketball (2) -- 1991, 1993 Women’s Indoor Track & Field (6) -- 1998, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2007 Men’s Golf (10) -- 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Women’s Golf (4) -- 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009 Women’s Tennis (2) -- 2001, 2007 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field (6) -- 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Women’s Outdoor Track & Field (9) -- 1996, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009 Baseball (9) -- 1991, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009 Softball (4) -- 1998, 2000, 2001, 2006

Schools COASTAL Carolina HAS Defeated since 2000

Clemson • South Carolina • North Carolina • North Carolina State • Penn State • Georgia Tech • Hawai’i • UCLA • Wake Forest • Louisville • Duke • Virginia • Purdue • Kentucky • Arkansas • Hofstra • Florida Atlantic • East Carolina • Ohio State • St. John’s • California • Iowa State • Washington State • Illinois • Virginia Tech • Syracuse • Texas Tech • South Florida • Oregon • Alabama • Oregon State • Davidson • Bradley • Temple • Boston College • Ball State • Seton Hall • Evansville • George Mason • Louisiana-Lafayette • UNLV • Pittsburgh • West Virginia • Kent State • Minnesota • Memphis • Connecticut • Nebraska • Michigan • Maryland • Marshall • Toledo • Tennessee • Kansas • Michigan State • Creighton

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


NCAA Compliance The NCAA ELIGIBILITY CENTER

TELEPHONE CALLS & CONTACTS

What is the NCAA Eligibility Center?

The NCAA Eligibility Center will certify the academic and amateur credentials of all college-bound student-athletes who wish to compete in NCAA Division I or II athletics. If you intend to participate in Division I or II athletics, you must register with and be certified by the NCAA Eligibility Center.

How do I register with the Eligibility Center?

The only method of registration is online. Please note that the Web address for the Eligibility Center was changed in the summer of 2009. Go online to www.eligibilitycenter.org. Register as a U.S. or international student and complete the Student Release Form online. Then follow instructions to complete the registration process. You will be asked to include your credit or debit card information to pay the fee at the time of registration. The registration fee is $60 for domestic and $85 for international students. Students should register with the Eligibility Center at the beginning of their junior year in high school.

What information does the Eligibility Center need to certify me?

In order to receive a final certification decision from the NCAA Eligibility Center, you must: 1) Register online and pay the registration fee. 2) Send official transcripts from every high school you attended to the Eligibility Center. Faxed transcripts are no acceptable. 3) Request the appropriate testing agency (SAT/ACT) to send your official test scores to the Eligibility Center using code 9999. Test scores on your high school transcript will not be used. 4) Submit your final high school transcript with proof of graduation to the Eligibility Center. 5) Complete the Amateurism Questionnaire AND request final amateurism certification.

What is the 16 Core Course Requirement?

If you want to participate in Division I athletics or receive an athletics scholarship during your first year out of high school, you must satisfy the 16 core course requirement. Remember that not all classes you take to meet high school graduation requirements may be used as core courses. These 16 core courses must be included on your high school’s list of approved core courses which can be found on the Eligibility Center Web site or by asking your guidance counselor. The minimum approved core course requirements are: • 4 years of English. • 3 years of mathematics (Algebra I or higher). • 2 years of natural/physical science (1 year of lab if offered by high school). • 1 year of additional English, mathematics or natural/physical science. • 2 years of social science. • 4 years of additional courses (from any area above, foreign language or non-doctrinal religion/philosophy).

How do I have my test scores sent to the Eligibility Center?

All SAT and ACT scores must be reported to the Eligibility Center directly from the testing agency. Test scores will not be accepted if reported on a high school transcript. When registering for the SAT or ACT, input the Eligibility Center code of 9999 to make sure the score is reported directly to the Eligibility Center. You may also log on to the SAT or ACT web site and request your scores to be sent to the Eligibility Center.

Who can call me on the telephone? When? How often?

Only coaches and authorized institutional staff members may call prospects, and rules regarding telephone calls do vary by sport. In sports other than football and basketball, coaches may begin call you once per week starting July 1st following your junior year. In football, coaches may call you one time from April 15 – May 31 during your junior year. Coaches may then start calling you once per week after September 1 of your senior year. In men’s basketball, coaches are permitted one call per month beginning June 15 before your junior year through July 31 after your junior year. Beginning August 1 after your junior year, coaches may call twice per week. In women’s basketball, coaches are permitted to call once per month in April, May and from June 1-20 during your junior year, as well as once between June 21 – 30, and three times in July after your junior year. Beginning August 1 after your junior year, coaches can make one call per week.

Can I call a coach? When? How often?

Yes. You can make an unlimited number of calls to a coach at your own expense at any time. Remember though that a coach may not be able to call you back if you leave a message if it is not a permissible call period explained above based on your grade level, or if the coach has reached the maximum number of permissible calls for that time period.

Who can have an in-person, off-campus contact with me? When? How often?

Only coaches can have in-person, off-campus contact with a prospect, and similar to telephone calls, the rules regarding contacts do vary by sport. In sports other than football and basketball, it is permissible to make an in-person, off-campus recruiting contact starting July 1 following your junior year, limited to three per year. Football is permitted off-campus contact beginning July 1 of your senior year and is limited to six contacts during a contact period. Men’s basketball is permitted to make an in-person, off-campus recruiting contact starting September 9 of your senior year, limited to three contacts during the prospect’s senior year. Women’s basketball is permitted to do so starting September 16 of your senior year, limited to three contacts during the prospect’s senior year.

When are coaches allowed to have unlimited calls to me?

During the five days immediately prior to, and during, your official visit to that University; on the day of a permissible, in-person, off-campus contact that occurs between you and a coach; after the calendar day on which you sign a National Letter of Intent (NLI); and in all sports other than football, on the initial NLI signing date and during the two days immediately following the initial signing date. In football, coaches are permitted to make unlimited calls during the 48 hours before and after 7 a.m. on the initial NLI signing date.

CORRESPONDENCE AND RECRUITING MATERIALS

From whom can I receive letters? Beginning when?

Coaches can begin sending you recruiting materials, such as letters and e-mails, beginning September 1 of your junior year. In men’s basketball, you may begin receiving recruiting materials June 15 after your sophomore year.

What can a university send me?

General correspondence (such as letters and e-mails), questionnaires, media guides, camp brochures, business cards, institutional note cards or postcards, pre-enrollment information subsequent to signing a National Letter of Intent, nonathletics institutional publications, and NCAA educational material published by the NCAA may all be mailed to a prospect. Game programs, however, cannot be mailed to a prospect but may be provided during an official or unofficial visit.

Can they send me anything prior to my junior year?

RECRUITING REGULATIONS

When do I become a prospective student-athlete?

Typically when you start ninth-grade. However, if a college gives you, your relatives or your friends any financial aid or other benefits that the college does not provide to students generally, then you become a prospective student-athlete before your ninth-grade year.

When is a college considered to be recruiting me?

Recruiting is considered to have occurred when a coach, institutional staff member or representative of the institution’s athletics interests solicits a prospect (or a prospect’s relatives or legal guardians) for the purpose of securing that student’s enrollment and participation in athletics at their institution.

Who can recruit me?

Only University coaches and authorized institutional staff members. Representatives of an institution’s athletics interests, such as boosters, alumni, and friends of the University, are NOT permitted to have contact with a prospective student-athletes in any way.

OFFICIAL VISITS

What is an official visit?

Any visit to a college campus by you and your parents paid for by the college. The college may pay all or some of your expenses and provide you with three complimentary admissions to a home athletics contest.

How many official visits am I allowed to take? Beginning when?

You are limited to one official visit per college and up to a maximum of five official visits total to Divisions I and II colleges. These visits may be taken following the opening day of classes during your senior year of high school.

Yes, but only questionnaires, summer camp brochures, non-athletics institutional publications, and NCAA educational material published by the NCAA.

SUMMER JOBS

Can a university I will be attending help me get a summer job? Beginning when?

Yes, an institution may arrange for employment opportunities provided the employment does not begin until after graduation from high school.

Are there payment regulations for summer employment?

Yes, compensation may only be paid for work actually performed and at a rate comparable with the going rate in that locality for similar services. It is preferred that payment is received by check or direct deposit, as opposed to a cash transaction.

Can I accept transportation from my employer?

Free transportation to and from a job may not be provided unless it is the employer’s established policy to transport all employees to and from the job site.

Any questions?

If you should have any further questions, please contact a member of Coastal Carolina University’s Athletic Compliance Office. You can also gain further information through the NCAA’s Web site at www.ncaa.org and the Web site for the NCAA Eligibility Center, located at www.eligibilitycenter.org.

What must the school have from me before I take an official visit?

Before a college may invite you on an official visit, you will have to register with the Eligibility Center and provide the college with a copy of your high school transcript and SAT, ACT or PLAN score.

UNOFFICIAL VISITS

What is an unofficial visit?

Any visit by you and your parents to a college campus paid for by you or your parents. The only expense you may receive from the college is three complimentary admissions to a home athletics contest.

How many unofficial visits am I allowed to take? Beginning when?

You may make as many unofficial visits as you like and may take those visits at any time. The only time you cannot talk with a coach during an unofficial visit is during a dead period.

Jim Curry Director of Compliance 843-349-2976 / jcurry@coastal.edu

12 Big South Conference Championships

AraLeigh Beam Asst. Director of Compliance 843-349-2029 / abeam@coastal.edu

31


Athletic Media Relations Coastal Carolina Athletic Media Relations Asst. A.D.-Media Relations\Golf Contact................... John A. Martin Office Phone.....................................................................843-349-2822 E-mail..................................................................jamartin@coastal.edu Associate Media Relations Director.............................. Kent Reichert Office Phone.....................................................................843-349-2840 E-mail...................................................................kreicher@coastal.edu

John Martin

Media Relations Assistant.............................................Deandra Danch Office Phone:.....................................................................843-349-6467 E-mail.....................................................................ddanch@coastal.edu

Kent Reichert

Media Relations Assistant................................................Teresa Garbee Office Phone:..........................................................................843-349-2848 E-mail.................................................................... tgarbee@coastal.edu Student Assistants.......... Katie McClure, Phil Johnson, Terrel Curry, . ........................ Kate Dowling, Lindsay Chavez, Samantha Zeisler, . .......Samantha Mann, Janelle Setzer, Kyle Cole, Devon Howard Office fax.................................................................................843-349-2819 Address:........................... Coastal Carolina Athletic Media Relations . .........................................................................................P.O. Box 261954 . ........................ (Overnight Address: 132 Chanticleer Drive West) . ....................................................................................Conway, SC 29528

Deandra Danch

Teresa Garbee

TO GET CCU GOLF INFORMATION Contact the Media Relations Office or the Internet at

www.GoCCUsports.com

32

Media Information Interviews: Interviews with Coastal Carolina University coaches and players must be arranged through the athletic media relations office and will be scheduled before or after practices. No interviews will be allowed with players on gameday unless permission is received from the coaching staff through the athletic media relations office. After all home events, Coastal Carolina players and coaches will be available in the interview room following a brief cooling off period. A member of the Coastal Carolina athletic media relations staff will contact all media representatives at the events for interview requests. Under no circumstances will student-athlete phone numbers be given out.

Directions to Coastal Carolina University

By Air: Arriving at Myrtle Beach Airport, enter the on-ramp for U.S. 17 North (entering to the right). Stay in the right lane and exit for U.S. 501 North (to Conway). Follow the directions below for U.S. 17 the remainder of the way. From I-95: From the South, take S.C. 327 exit to U.S. 76/301 Turn left onto U.S. 76/301. This will become S.C. 576 and then U.S. 501. After passing through Conway, turn right at the second stop light (approximately two miles) into the entrance of Coastal Carolina University. You are now on College Road. Kimbel Arena (basketball/volleyball), Charles L. Watson Baseball Stadium and Brooks Stadium are visible on the right from University Boulevard. To get to the Softball Field or the Track & Field Complex, turn right onto Chanticleer Drive West after passing Kimbel Arena but before getting to the Baseball Stadium. From the North, take the “South of the Border� exit (IMPOSSIBLE to miss). Follow signs to Myrtle Beach and this will lead you to U.S. 501. Then follow the directions above. From U.S. 17: Follow U.S. 17 Bypass to U.S. 501 (Conway exit). At this point, you are approximately eight miles from campus. You will pass the stoplight at Conway Hospital and then pass a Food Lion shopping center (on left). Just after passing Horry-Georgetown Technical College (on left), take the next left into the entrance of Coastal Carolina University. See directions above to find athletic facilities.

Media Outlets Newspapers The Sun News 914 Frontage Road East Myrtle Beach, SC 29577 Phone: 843-444-1767 Fax: 843-626-0356 Web: www.thesunnews.com Josh Hoke, Beat Writer E-mail: jhoke@thesunnews.com Shane Bowen, Sports Editor E-mail: sbowen@thesunnews.com The Chanticleer P.O. Box 261954 Conway, SC 29528 Phone: 843-349-2330 Fax: 843-349-2743 E-mail: chanticleer@coastal.edu The State P.O. Box 1333 Columbia, SC 29202 Phone: 803-771-8415 Fax: 803-771-8613 Web:www.thestate.com E-mail: state@thestate.com Myrtle Beach Herald 2501 North Kings Highway Myrtle Beach, SC 29577 Phone: 843-626-3131 Fax: 843-448-4860 E-mail: mbherald@aol.com The Horry Independent 2510 North Main Street Conway, SC 29526 Phone: 843-248-6882 Fax: 843-248-6024 E-mail: horry80@aol.com TELEVISION WPDE-TV (ABC) 3215 South Cashua Drive Florence, SC 29501 Phone: 843-665-1515 Fax: 843-665-4907 Web:www.wpde.com Rich Chrampanis, Sports Director Mark Haggard, Sports Reporter E-mail: 15sports@wpde.com WBTW-TV (CBS) 101 McDonald Court Myrtle Beach, SC 29588 Phone: 843-294-8402 Fax: 843-293-1760 Web:www.wbtw.com Matt Lincoln, Sports Director E-mail: mlincoln@wbtw.com WMBF-TV (NBC) 918 Frontage Road East Myrtle Beach, SC 29578 Phone: 843-839-9623 Fax: 843-839-9625 Web:www.wmbfnews.com Justin Felder, Sports Anchor E-mail: jfelder@wmbfnews.com Wire Services Associated Press (Columbia) P.O. Box 101101 Columbia, SC 29211 Phone: 800-922-1565 Fax: 803-252-2913 Web:www.ap.org Pete Iacobelli, Sports E-mail: piacobelli@ap.org; apcolumbia@ap.org PA-Sports Ticker 55 Realty Drive, Suite 200 Cheshire, Ct 06410 Phone: 800-367-8935 Fax: 800-336-0383

Three NCAA Championship and Seven NCAA Regional Team Appearances


Coastal Carolina In the Pros PGA Tour rookie Dustin Johnson put Coastal Carolina on the national stage again with his victory at the Turning Stone Resort Championship during the 2008 season. He followed it up with a win in the 2009 Pebble Beach Pro-Am and finished 15th on the PGA Tour Money List in his second season on tour.

Other Former Chanticleers Competing Professionally Alvaro Velasco (pictured right) - PGA European Tour Tom Gillis (pictured left) - 2010 PGA Tour Member


 All-Big South Redshirt Sophomore DREW ERNST

Two-Time All-Big South Junior TRIPP McALLISTER

2009-10 SCHEDULE

Day Date Sun.-Tue. Aug. 30- Sept. 1 Fri.-Sat. Sept. 18-19 Mon.-Tue. Oct. 5-6 Sat.-Mon. Oct. 24-26

Event at Golfweek Conference Challenge (Blue Top Resort - Riverside, Iowa) at The McLaughlin (Bethpage Park - Farmingdale, N.Y.) at Windon Memorial Classic (Skokie Country Club - Skokie, Ill.) at Bank of Tennessee/Ridges Invitational (The Ridges Golf Club - Johnson City, Tenn.)

Sat.-Sun. Feb. 13-14 Sun.-Tue. Feb. 28- Mar. 2 Sun.-Mon. Mar. 14-15 Fri.-Sun. Mar. 26-28 Sat.-Sun. Apr. 3-4 Fri.-Sat. Apr. 9-10 Mon.-Wed. Apr. 19-21 Thu.-Sat. May 13-15 Wed.-Sat. May 26-29

at Gator Invitational (University of Florida Golf Club - Gainesville, Fla.) at John Hayt Collegiate Invitational (Sawgrass Country Club - Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.) General Hackler Championship (TPC of Myrtle Beach - Murrells Inlet, S.C.) at Linger Longer (Reynolds Plantation - Greensboro, Ga.) at Augusta State Invitational (Forest Hills Golf Club - Augusta, Ga.) at Wolfpack Intercollegiate (Lonnie Pool Golf Club - Raleigh, N.C.) at Big South Conference Championship (The Patriot Golf Club - Greenwood, S.C.) at NCAA Regionals (TBA) at NCAA National Championship (The Honors Course - Ooltewah, Tenn.)


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