THIS IS TCU GOLF
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C O U R S E S Ridglea Country Club ectioned in the prestigious west quadrant of the city, Ridglea Country Club is rich in both history and tradition. The club was the vision of the late A.C. Luther, who was the premier developer of the Ridglea area over 50 years ago and brought California architecture to the North Texas area.
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The club possesses a pair of distinct, yet equally challenging, 18-hole golf courses. The north course or “Family Course” was built in 1930 and features lush fairways and bentgrass greens. At 6,447 yards from the championship tees, the north course is very hilly and allows golfers the opportunity to practice a variety of golf shots. The south course or “Championship Course” was built in 1967 and features 7,200 yards of some of the most challenging golf in the Metroplex. Several holes on the championship course are rated among the toughest in the Dallas/Fort Worth area - designed to test even the avid golfer. Ridglea Country Club is among the most luxurious club facilities in the city and the staff believes general health is the key to physical well-being and offer a comprehensive fitness program.
Mira Vista Country Club ira Vista Country Club is the creation of golf pro Tom Weiskopf and golf course architect Jay Morrish, whose joint efforts have resulted in the design and construction of this outstanding 18-hole championship golf course - ranked as one of the top courses in the State of Texas.
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The course features state-of-the-art practice facilities that duplicate actual situations with various sand bunkers and target greens. Expansive tee areas at each end of the range allow practice against prevailing winds from either direction. The 11th-hole was selected as the best 11th-hole in America in a 2000-edition of Golf Digest. Mira Vista has hosted the Texas State Amateur, the Southern Amateur and the Texas State Mid-Amateur Championship. The club also frequently hosts the Texas PGA Sectional Championships and USGA Championship qualifying events. Recent enhancements to Mira Vista provide a maximum length of over 7,000 yards, and three lakes enhance this course layout as it meanders through the hills of some of the most scenic countryside of Tarrant County.
Colonial Country Club ocated within minutes of campus, TCU is honored to play on this course that is revered and rated as one of the top-70 golf courses in the world. Each May, Colonial Country Club is the focal point of the PGA Tour as it plays host to the Crowne Plaza Colonial Invitational.
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The course has also played host to the 1941 U.S. Open, 1975 Tournament Players’ Championship and 1991 U.S. Women’s Open. Colonial Country Club is one of the oldest and most prestigious country clubs and was founded by Marvin Leonard, who envisioned the club as a way to introduce Bentgrass greens to Fort Worth. Today, the private, family-oriented club has a full-service golf shop and practice range, along with pro golf instruction. The 18-hole, par-70 course extends to 7,010 yards. With a championship layout, four sets of teeboxes ensure that golfers of all skill levels are able to enjoy the course. Colonial has been rated the top golf course in the state of Texas several times within the last decade. The long, traditional layout requires players to utilize every club in their bag and is a true test of their overall ability.
Shady Oaks Country Club hady Oaks Country Club is considered one of the finest and most intimate private clubs in Texas and is a culmination of the 1955 vision of Marvin Leonard. While a new clubhouse was built in 2005, Shady Oaks still holds true to the original plan for a small, family-like atmosphere and extraordinary golf course.
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The club is known for its atmosphere of casual elegance and its uncompromising quality. With everything from the golf course to the fitness center receiving national recognition, Shady Oaks has a multitude of magnificent facilities and activities for the full enjoyment of its members. Shady Oaks is known as the second home of the late Ben Hogan, known to many as the greatest pro golfer of all time. Portraits of both Hogan and Leonard can be found in the clubhouse and perfectly preserved Hogan memorabilia decorates the hallways and golf shop. Hogan spent his final years playing at Shady Oaks and was quoted as saying, “You won’t find anything like this any place else in the world.”
River Crest Country Club iver Crest Country Club has the distinction of being the oldest club in the Fort Worth area. The club was originally built in 1911 by Tom Bendelow, who was known as the “Johnny Appleseed of American golf” and is credited with having designed some 600 courses in a 35-year span.
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In 1996, Williams, Gill and Associate, Inc. upgraded the course and added a bit of length to the flat terrain. The history-rich course has been the host of LPGA events as well as the Texas Amateur and Texas Cup. The 18-hole course extends to 6,368 yards, making the course relatively short by modern standards. River Crest Country Club possesses Bermuda grass fairways in addition to bentgreen grasses in its challenging layout. The narrow fairways are tough to hit consistently and the small greens make challenging targets on the approaches. On the front nine, two of the longest holes are the third and fifth holes, which go 430 and 458 yards. The club recently renovated the course to add a few wrinkles to the design. River Crest Country Club is a very prestigious club and the 1984 white-columned clubhouse was honored by the Texas Society of Architects. This is TCU Golf
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
H O M E
C O U R S E S
Southern Oaks Golf Club
Split Rail Golf Club
Waterchase Golf Club
Texas Star Golf Course
Rockwood Golf Club
Pecan Valley Golf Course
Meadowbrook Golf Course
Woodhaven Golf Course
Hidden Creek Golf Club
Shady Valley Golf Club
Whitestone Golf Club
Glen Garden Country Club
Squaw Creek Golf Course
Crown Valley Country Club
Hawk’s Creek Golf Club
Golf Club at Fossil Creek
Iron Horse Golf Course
Canyon West Golf Club
Sugartree Golf Club
Diamond Oaks Country Club
This is TCU Golf
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
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L E O N A R D
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L I N K S
LEONARD GOLF LINKS
Leonard Golf Links eonard Golf Links is owned and operated by Marty Leonard, whose family created three cornerstones in North-Central Texas - Colonial Country Club, Shady Oaks Country Club and the top-rated nine-hole course in the State of Texas in Star Hollow Golf Club.
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Leonard Golf Links is widely-considered one of the top ranges in the country and sits on 52 acres of land just minutes from the TCU campus. Considered the finest teaching and practicing facility in the area, Leonard Golf Links is home to NIKE’s Research and Development Center. The home practice facility of TCU men’s golf, Leonard Golf Links offers three-acre Tiff Bermuda grass tees with 62 stations; 10,000-square foot bent grass putting green; short-game area with practice bunkers; 60-foot tall halide light fixtures for night-time practice; covered tee area for inclimate weather; and full-service pro shop. Leonard Golf Links also offers a top-quality teaching staff headed by Dana Bellenger - a member of NIKE’s Elite Professional Staff - and professional club fittings by former TCU standout Steve Russell. This is TCU Golf
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TPI GOLF FITNESS Speed, Strength and Conditioning: The TCU Way he field of strength and conditioning is extremely dynamic and always changing, but the one constant in the field is the dedication of the student-athletes. At TCU, the number-one goal of the strength and conditioning staff is to make each student-athlete stronger, faster and more powerful in they respective sports while building the heart and work ethic that embodies the spirit of the Horned Frogs.
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When it comes to strength and conditioning, the TCU men’s golf program is under the direction of TPI-certified trainer Stephen Gephardt. Under the guidance of Gephardt, the Frogs go through a series of TPI fitness regiments that are focused on the student-athletes strength, flexibility, endurance, power, hip mobility and balance. The main goals of the TPI fitness program is to measure the student-athlete’s ability to generate and transfer speed while determining the most efficient way to transfer energy through their body.
The G-UNIT Workout The G-UNIT Workout was developed by Gephardt in order to test the overall mental toughness, desire to work hard and dedication to the one team concept of the TCU men’s golf program. The Frogs are tested to their limits in a series of five workouts that range from running up and touching every step that fills Amon G. Carter Football Stadium to pushing sleds and dragging chains across the football field to flipping tires around the stadium. After each workout, the Frogs receive one letter of their five-letter “G-UNIT” and after successfully completing the sessions, the student-athletes receive their workout gear. The workout gear has proven to be a big deal around the TCU men’s golf team as it proves solidarity and a commitment to one another in order for the team to reach the top of the Mountain with a NCAA National Championship - the ultimate team goal.
Strength and Conditioning Staff
Don Sommer
Matt Parker
Stephen Gephardt
Zach Dechant
Todd Kensler
Head Coach
Associate Head Coach
Assistant Coach
Assistant Coach
Assistant Coach
This is TCU Golf
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
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T C U M E N ’ S
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S C H O L A R S H I P S
The Ben Hogan | Colonial Scholarship ne of the most prestigious scholarships that can be awarded to a member of the TCU men’s golf program is the Ben Hogan/Colonial Golf Scholarship, which is an endowed scholarship awarded annually by the University. The award recipient is selected by head men’s golf coach Bill Montigel on the basis of character, integrity, high morals, academic excellence and self-motivation.
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This past season, TCU junior Travis Woolf was selected as the recipient of the Ben Hogan/Colonial Scholarship at the annual Horned Frog Classic. “The names Ben Hogan and Colonial Country Club clearly stand for the highest achievement in sports performance,” TCU Chancellor Dr. Victor Boschini said. “The University’s golf program is proud to be associated with both of these legends of the game.” Hogan learned to play golf in Fort Worth as a caddie before becoming one of the best players the sport has ever seen. The winner of 62 professional tournaments, he won the Colonial National Invitation Tournament five times, and, in the process, influenced the nickname “Hogan’s Alley” for the magnificent Colonial layout. Recognized as one of the top courses in the world, Colonial has been named “Best in the State” by a panel of Texas golfers and golf executives.
The Charles Coody | Phi Delta Theta Golf Scholarship he Charles Coody/Phi Delta Theta Golf Scholarship was started in 1999 where funds are accumulated through a portion of proceeds from the Charles Coody Classic Golf Tournament held in Fort Worth each year. The event has raised more than $250,000 for several worthwhile organizations. The Charles Coody/Phi Delta Theta Golf Scholarship is awarded annually to a member of the men’s or women’s golf team.
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After finishing a fine collegiate career at TCU in 1960, Charles Coody joined the PGA Tour in 1963 where his career highlight would be capturing the 1971 Master’s Championship. A three-time winner of the PGA Tour, Coody was a member of the 1971 U.S. Ryder Cup Team. Coody – who was diagnosed with polio at the age of 13 – joined the Champions Tour during the 1987 season where he has accumulated 12 victories during his career on the senior circuit. The former TCU standout captured the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf on three occasions as well as claimed four victories during the 1991 season, including the Chrysler Cup and NYNEX Commemorative. A winner of over $4 million on the Champions Tour, Coody captured the 1997 MasterCard Champions Championship and finished second overall at the 1991 Senior Players Championship. Coody ranks among the top-30 on the tour’s all-time money list and has been inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame and Texas Golf Hall of Fame.
The Brion T. Carlson Memorial Scholarship he Brion T. Carlson Memorial Scholarship is one of the significant scholarships to all of those past and present members of the TCU golf program. The scholarship was established by Carlson’s family and friends and is awarded annually to a current member or prospective student-athlete for the TCU men’s golf program, which became fully endowed in 1993 as a result of proceeds from various life insurance policies held by Mr. Leo Carlson - Brion’s father.
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The Brion T. Carlson Memorial Scholarship is significant to the TCU men’s golf program as the former standout was having a superb career with the Horned Frogs until his untimely death during his senior season in 1981. The Frogs’ team captain during the 1980-81 campaign captured his first-ever collegiate championship at the Southwest Spring Classic where he defeated Lawrence Field of the University of Texas on the first hole of sudden death. A product of Addison, Ill., Carlson joined the Frogs’ during the 1977-78 season where he competed in 10 tournaments during his rookie campaign. Carlson was having the best season of his career before he passed away during his senior season and was honored for his contributions by the coaches of the Southwest Conference as they selected Carlson with unanimous All-Southwest Conference accolades following the season.
The Raymond Gafford Memorial Scholarship he Raymond Gafford Memorial Scholarship, which is linked with a prominent golf name in the City of Fort Worth, was established in 1990 by friends of the late local standout through an annual golf tournament and is given annually to a member of the men’s or women’s golf program. Gafford was a lifelong resident of Fort Worth, who became a club pro at Meadowbrook Golf Course at the age of 19 and devoted his life to helping people both on and off the golf couse. After becoming the head golf pro at Ridglea Country Club in 1954, Gafford held that post until his retirement in 1976.
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The Scott Dike Memorial Scholarship he Scott Dike Memorial Scholarship was established in 1981 by Mr. and Mrs. A.R. “Buddy” Dike along with their family and friends in memory of their son, Scott, who was a student at TCU at the time of his untimely death. Mr. and Mrs. Dike both graduated from TCU in 1958, and Buddy continues his support of the University by serving as a member of the Board of Trustees. The Scott Dike Memorial Scholarship is awarded annually to a member of either the men’s or women’s golf program.
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The Roland Harper Memorial Scholarship he Roland Harper Memorial Scholarship was established by his family and friends in March of 2001 in recognition of his long-time service as the head golf pro at Colonial Country Club and his ability to teach so many people who strived to make themselves better. Harper was a mentor to many who loved the game and was a true friend of TCU, the TCU men’s and women’s golf program and collegiate golf in general. The fund was endowed with a monetary gift from Colonial Charities in November of 2002.
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The Wray and Sally Thompson Memorial Scholarship he Wray and Sally Thompson Memorial Scholarship was established as a passion of three things that were held sacred by the Thompson family - young people, education and golf. When their son, Doug, graduated from TCU in 1984, the Thompson family wanted to establish a permanent legacy for the TCU golf programs, and Wray - Founder, CEO and President of The Leather Factory - knew that the time wasn’t right as his company was in its fourth year.
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By 1993, The Leather Factory had become successful enough to go public, and it used shares of their now-publicly marketable stock to an endowed scholarship for the TCU men’s and women’s golf programs, which is awarded annually to a deserving student-athlete from either program. This is TCU Golf
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
MEET THE FROGS
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Bill Montigel Head Coach
• 23rd Season
2 0 0 9 M o u n t a i n W e s t C o n f e r e n c e C o a c h o f t h e Ye a r ne of the most-decorated coaches in TCU Athletics history, Bill Montigel begins his 24th season as head men’s golf coach and 32nd overall season as a member of the Horned Frog family. Since becoming the leader of the men’s golf program, Montigel has elevated the Frogs into a position of national prominence and the model for building one of the top collegiate golf programs in the country.
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During his tenure as the leader of the Horned Frogs’ program, Montigel has guided the Purple and White to eight conference championships, including their first-ever Mountain West Conference crown during the 2008-09 campaign. Prior to the Frogs’ victory at the Mountain West Conference Championships, Montigel led the Frogs to five consecutive league titles from 2001-05 in two separate conferences (Western Athletic Conference and Conference USA), which set an all-time sport record at TCU. What is even more amazing that the five consecutive conference championship was that the Frogs captured four straight Conference USA gold medals in only four years as members of their former conference affiliate. In each of the four season’s that the Frogs were members of Conference USA, Montigel guided his team to a conference title by an average of 12.25 strokes, including a margin of 26 strokes at the 2005 Conference USA Championships.
The Montigel File
The Frogs continued their success from Conference USA over to the Mountain West Conference where the Purple and White has earned a top-three finish in each of the last three campaigns, including the 2009 Mountain West Conference Championship. An incredible feat happened for the Frogs during the 2009 Mountain West Conference Championships where TCU overcame the biggest stroke deficit in conference tournament history after being down by eight strokes to San Diego State with five holes remaining. After coming back to tie the Aztecs at the end of 54 holes, the two programs went to a sudden death play-off hole where the Frogs captured a 3-under-par score compared to 2-under-par for San Diego State en route to claiming the conference crown. The Frogs’ first three golfers - Alexander Knappe, Tom Hoge and Travis Woolf - all birdied the play-off hole while James Sacheck came up big for the Frogs with a par to seal the gold medal for TCU.
NCAA Championship Appearances 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2010 NCAA Regional Appearances 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year
For his efforts, Montigel was selected as the Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year for the first time in his career, but more impressive was that he became the first coach in the country (of any sport) to earn Conference Coach of the Year accolades in four separate NCAA Division I conferences (Southwest Conference, Western Athletic Conference, Conference USA and Mountain West Conference). In addition, Montigel led the Frogs to their 21st consecutive NCAA Central Regional Championship appearance and became one of four coaches in the country to have taken their programs to 21 or more straight regional championships with the same program. Montigel joined a small and very elite fraternity of coaches in Florida’s Buddy Alexander, Clemson’s Larry Penley and UNLV’s Dwaine Knight to have all accomplished this feat. The Frogs also became one of 15 programs in all of NCAA Division I men’s golf to reach 21 consecutive NCAA Regional Championship appearances.
2009 In a season for the ages, Montigel led a team that was ranked 63rd in the country before the beginning of the season to a final ranking of ninth in the country - a move of 54 spots, which was the largest leap among all NCAA Division I programs this season. The Frogs accomplished this feat despite fielding one of the youngest squads in the country with a lineup that consisted of only one senior, one junior, two sophomores and two freshmen.
Conference USA Coach of the Year 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year 1997 Southwest Conference Coach of the Year 1990 Mountain West Conference Champions 2009
The national recognition was well-deserved for the Frogs as the Purple and White recorded a fourth-place showing at the NCAA Central Regional Championships en route to advancing to the NCAA National Championships for the first time since the 2004 campaign. The Frogs came within four strokes of advancing to Match Play as TCU finished tied for ninth, which was their highest finish since a seventh-place showing at the 1997 NCAA Championships. Hoge had a stellar performance for the Frogs at the 2009 NCAA National Championships as the TCU sophomore posted a third-place finish, which was the highest-ever placing for a Frog’ sophomore and the second-highest finish ever for an individual in the Mountain West Conference. The Fargo, N.D., standout recorded a 3-under-par score of 210 (70-70-70) over the 54 holes of competition and led by two strokes heading into the final nine holes of action. At the NCAA National Championships, the Frogs made their way from 15th-place after the first round of action to almost earning a spot in the Elite Eight of collegiate golf by the end of 54 holes, which once again showed the fighting spirit of the young TCU squad. Being in contention in the final round became nothing new for the Frogs as TCU claimed three conference championships (The Prestige at PGA West, Columbia Invitational and Mountain West Conference Championships) in addition to setting a program record with 11 top-five showings in 13 tournaments this past season. Since joining the Mountain West Conference five seasons ago, the Frogs have continued to make a name for themselves as the most dominant team in the league, which was very evident during the 2008-09 campaign when the Purple and White recorded a 20-2-1 record against conference foes. In addition, TCU has had seven golfers earn a spot on the All-Mountain West Conference team, including two in each of the last two seasons.
Conference USA Champions 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Western Athletic Conference Champions 1997, 1998, 2001 First TCU head coach to win five consecutive conference titles 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 TCU Athletics Coach of the Year 1998 Horned Frogs Classic Hall of Honor 2002 Dallas All-Sports Association TCU Coach of the Year 2003
Montigel with the late PGA legend Ben Hogen Meet the Frogs
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
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Montigel’s rise in the collegiate golf ranks has been well-chronicled from a coach who started out with limited exposure to this particular collegiate sports to becoming one of the most successful coaches in the country. While Montigel’s coaching approach has proven to be solid, it was his arrival upon the collegiate golf coaching scene that perhaps raised a smattering of eyebrows.
During his tenure as head men’s golf coach at TCU, Montigel has guided 26 golfers to all-conference accolades, which total more than 40 awards for the Frogs. In addition, five of those golfers were selected as Conference Golfer of the Year award winners in Alberto Ochoa (1997), J.J. Henry (1998), Adam Rubinson (2003), Adam Meyer (2004) and J.J. Killeen (2005).
Prior to the 1987 campaign, the energetic coach’s career took a dramatically-altered path as he served eight seasons as an assistant basketball coach and top recruiter at TCU under legendary coach Jim Killingsworth. Several of Montigel’s recruiting gems were key performers on the Frogs’ back-to-back Southwest Conference championship squads in 1986 and 1987.
The TCU head men’s golf coach has also seen a plethora of awards bestowed upon him as he earned seven Conference Coach of the Year laurels in four separate leagues, including four in four seasons when the Frogs were a member of Conference USA.
One of Montigel’s prized recruits was a player that nobody in the country was recruiting in a Hollywood, Calif., guard named Jamie Dixon. The under-sized guard went on to lead the Frogs to a pair of Southwest Conference championships and was inducted into the TCU Lettermen’s Association Hall of Fame in 2007. Currently, the once thought to be under-sized guard is now considered one of the top minds in all of collegiate basketball as the head coach of nationally-ranked Pittsburgh. When Killingsworth retired, the TCU administration had to look no further than the men’s basketball office to find its next men’s golf coach.As a graduate student at Oklahoma State, it was his friendship with legendary Cowboys’ golf coach and current OSU Athletics Director - Mike Holder - that truly kindled his interest in golf.
The Frogs capped off their stellar run in Conference USA during the 2004-05 campaign when the Purple and White claimed their fourth consecutive Conference USA crown by pummeling the competition en route to securing a 26-stroke victory. In each of their four seasons as a member of Conference USA, the Frogs also possessed the highest nationally-ranking among conference affiliates in the country. During the 2003-04 season, the Frogs spent the entire season rated among the country’s top-10 and finished the campaign ranked 10th, according to the Golfweek/Sagarin ratings system. After a fifth-place finish at the regional championships, the Frogs tied for 20th overall at the NCAA Championships. Following the season, Meyer was selected as the Conference USA Player of the Year and was tabbed as a third-team All-American.
Knowing that he could recruit, organize and motivate, the TCU head men’s golf coach added some of the valuable lessons he learned in basketball and applied them towards building and maintaining a top-ranked golf program with the Frogs.
The Frogs matched a school record with three tournament victories during the 2002-03 campaign, including the Conference USA crown en route to finishing the fall season ranked fourth in the country. That season, TCU recorded a then-school record 234 victories - which has since twice been broken - including a school-record 298 triumphs during the 2008-09 campaign.
Through the years, Montigel has carefully recruited top student-athletes to the TCU program, and in addition, he has improved the playing schedule for the Purple and White so that it ranks among the most difficult in the country. As a result of his committed efforts, the Frogs have been a mainstay among the nation’s top-25 in the national polls for more than two decades.
In 2002, the NCAA selection committee chose TCU as the number-one seed in the NCAA Central Regional Championships, which was the school’s first-ever top billing in a regional tournament. The Frogs landed in a tie for 11th at the NCAA Championships that season, and Rubinson matched the best-ever showing by a Frog golfer at nationals with a second-place finish.
It took Montigel just three seasons to turn a mediocre program into a contender at the conference, regional and national levels as the Frogs have qualified for the NCAA Regional Championships every season since 1990 and advanced to the NCAA Championships on 11 occasions under his guidance.
The Frogs produced a pair of victories during the 1999-00 campaign, including the program’s third Western Athletic Conference crown in five seasons. In the previous season, Montigel’s program once again proved to be a national power as the Purple and White finished 11th overall at the 2000 NCAA Championships.
In his first 14 campaigns, the Frogs captured nine tournaments, which was an impressive feat considering the lofty competition. However; in the new millennium, the Purple and White has been even more dominant under Montigel’s watchful eye as the Frogs have captured 16 team titles in just eight seasons. In addition, the individual victories have increased as 14 Frogs have claimed tournament titles since the 2001 season.
In the Spring of 1998, the Frogs registered their second consecutive Western Athletic Conference crown, which was earned when the Purple and White stormed back from a five-shot deficit on the final day to defeat topranked UNLV. The Frogs advanced to the NCAA Championships for a TCU record fifth-straight season and the seventh time in eight seasons.
During the 2008-09 campaign, the Frogs had two individuals capture tournament championships in de Beer and Hoge, but was even more impressive was that it took these two standouts fewer than eight collegiate tournaments to be crowned champions. De Beer became the fastest golfer in program history to capture an individual tournament crown as he won The Prestige at PGA West in his second collegiate tournament.
In addition, Henry earned the gold medal at the conference tournament en route to being selected as the WAC Golfer of the Year. Henry also became the second golfer in TCU history to earn first team All-American laurels after he finished second overall after falling by a single stroke at the NCAA Championships. Also, Henry sealed the conference championship for the Frogs with a hole-in-one on the 17th hole in the final round of action.
In the very next tournament, Hoge captured the individual championship at the Columbia Invitational in only his seventh tournament. Once again, Montigel set another milestone as he became the only coach in the country to have two separate individual golfers capture their first-ever tournament championship in under eight starts.
During the 1997 campaign, the Frogs captured the Western Athletic Conference title while Montigel earned WAC Coach of the Year laurels for the first time in his career. The Frogs went on to earn a seventh-place showing at the NCAA Championships, which was the program’s best national placement under Montigel and the second-best showing in school history. The Frogs were ranked fourth in the final Golfweek polls following the season, and Ochoa became the first-ever TCU golfer to earn first team All-American status.
Finding and evaluating talent has been a staple in Montigel’s program as the TCU head men’s golf coach has taken top-rated juniors and up-and-comers alike and given them the necessary tools to become standout collegiate golfers. Since he took over the program, Montigel has had eight golfers take home a total of 14 AllAmerican honors with five transferring to TCU in search of a more positive collegiate experience in Chad Magee (1990, 1991), Charlie Stevens (1992), Bret Guetz (2002), David Schultz (2003) and Adam Meyer (2004.) In addition, Montigel spotted the talent in a Connecticut prep star named J.J. Henry - a player who was under the radar among collegiate golf recruiters - and who worked himself into the program’s lone three-time AllAmerican by the time his career with the Purple and White was finished. The 1998 Golfweek/Taylor Made CoCollegiate Player of the Year finished second overall at the 1998 NCAA National Championships after finishing a stroke shy of becoming the first-ever men’s golfer to capture a national championship in TCU history.
After taking over the program and beginning to fill the roster with his own players, the Frogs saw a dramatic turnaround in the SWC as TCU finished in the top-five in seven of their final nine seasons as a conference affiliate, including finishing second in the conference on three occasions. What is even more impressive is the Frogs finished first or second in the SWC only four times in 40 years prior to Montigel taking over the program. Montigel is the longest-tenured coach at the University and serves a member of the United States Golf Association (USGA) and Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA). The TCU head men’s golf coach has served as the Chairman of the District VI Selection Committee as well as served on the NCAA Men’s Golf Committee and TCU Head Coaches Committee. In 2002, Montigel was voted into the Horned Frogs Classic Hall of Fame and was named TCU Coach of the Year by the Dallas All-Sports Association.
Henry helped the Frogs capture back-to-back Western Athletic Conference championships during the 1997 and 1998 seasons and was selected as the Western Athletic Conference Golfer of the Year in 1998. Currently, Henry is an eight-year standout on the PGA Tour and was a member of the 2006 U.S. Ryder Cup Team.
Montigel and his wife, Margaret, have two children, Kelli (23) and Thomas (18). Kelli graduated from TCU in 2010, and Thomas is currently a freshman at TCU and a member of the Frogs’ men’s basketball program.
Montigel with former TCU Athletics Director Eric Hyman after being inducted into the Horned Frogs Classic Hall of Honor in 2002.
The Montigel Family (from left to right) - Bill, Margaret, Kelli and Thomas
This is TCU Golf
Meet the Frogs
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
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Fargo, North Dakota
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Fargo South High School
2009 PING Honorable Mention All-American 2009-10 • Junior Season
Amateur Highlights
oge saw action in 11 tournaments during his junior campaign where he posted a 74.67 strokes average in 33 rounds of competition... finished tied for 14th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships following a 2-over-par score of 215 (72-74-69), including a 2-under-par score of 69 on the final 18 holes of action... tied for 17th overall at the Western Refining Collegiate All-American Classic, which pitted All-Americans from every level against one another... notched a 2-over-par score of 215 at the Western Refining Collegiate All-American Classic, including a 7-under-par score of 64 in the second round... tied for 18th overall at the National Invitational Tournament with a 1-over-par score of 217 (78-68-71), including a 4under-par score of 68 in the second round... notched a 19th-place showing at the Las Vegas Invitational following a score of 226 (76-76-76)... notched four top-25 showings during his junior campaign.
The Fargo, N.D., standout captured the North Dakota Match Play in Jamestown for the second consecutive season as he defeated six-time champ Mike Pokolak 3&2 to claim the gold medal... captured the U.S. Amateur Qualifying Tournament in Detroit Lakes, MInn., with a 36-hole score of 136 en route to earning his second consecutive trip to the U.S. Amateur Championships... finished third overall at the North Dakota Stroke Play with a three round score of 218 (74-66-78), including holding the tournament lead after 36 holes of action... competed in the stroke-play portion of the 2006 U.S. Amateur where he missed making the cut by just three strokes in his first-ever appearance… captured the tournament title at the North Dakota Golf Association’s 2006 Stroke Play Championships… earned gold medal accolades at the 2007 North Dakota Match Play… finished seventh overall at the 2007 Minnesota Golf Association Amateur… notched five top-15 finishes at American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) Tournaments.
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2008-09 • Sophomore Season Hoge became the first TCU sophomore golfer to earn All-American laurels since J.J. Henry in 1996 after the Fargo, N.D., notched a third-place laurels at the 2009 NCAA National Championships... garnered honorable mention All-American accolades for the first time in his career from the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA)... recorded a third-place showing at the NCAA National Championships, which was the secondhighest finish ever for a Mountain West Golfer... recorded a 3-under-par score of 210 (70-70-70) while holding the top spot on the leaderboard heading into the final nine holes of action... recorded the highest-finish for a Frog golfer since Adam Rubinson during the 2002 season... recorded his first career tournament championship when he captured the gold medal at the Columbia Invitational with a 54-hole score of 221 (80-71-70)... became the second-fastest golfer in program history to claim an individual tournament title after winning the Columbia Invitational in only his seventh collegiate event... recorded a 4-under-par score of 209 (67-70-72) en route to finishing third overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships, which was a career-best score for the TCU sophomore... guided the Frogs claim the Mountain West Conference crown... recorded a fifth-place showing at the NCAA Central Regional Championships with a 6-over-par score of 222 (73-73-76) en route to leading the Frogs to a fourth-place finish and berth at the NCAA National Championships... notched a 10thplace showing at the UH Hilo Intercollegiate with a 2-under-par score of 214 (70-75-69)... recorded eight finishes in the top-20 during the 2008-09 campaign, including four showings in the top-10... recorded a 13th-place showing at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational with a two-round score of 145 (72-73)... finished tied for 16th overall at the ASU Thunderbird Invitational with a 54-hole score of 214 (71-74-69)... recorded four rounds of sub-70, which was tied for second most on the Frogs... earned a 17th-place finish in the first tournament of the season with a score of 221 (73-76-72) at the Kansas Invitational.
High School Hoge helped Fargo South High School captured the North Dakota Boy’s Golf State Championship in each of his four seasons... selected to the all-state team in each of his final three campaigns... collected a trio of topfour finishes at the state tournament... garnered 20 medalist honors during his tenure with Fargo South High School... captured the Eastern Dakota Conference Championship during his senior campaign... selected as the Most Outstanding Golfer during his senior campaign with the Bruins.
Off the Links Hoge is the son of Chuck and Rhonda Hoge... born on May 25, 1989... has one brother, Charlie, and one sister, Elli... majoring in business.
2007-08 • Freshman Season Hoge made a stellar debut for the Horned Frogs as he garnered runner-up honors at the MacDonald Cup hosted by Yale after firing a 36-hole tally of 143 (74-69), including a 69 in the final round of competition... competed in three tournament events during his freshman campaign, including a pair of tournaments during the fall season... tied for 57th overall at the UH Hilo Invitational in the spring season opener after collecting a 6-over par score of 216, including 1-under-par over the final 18 holes of action... notched a score of 70 or lower in three of eight rounds of action with the Frogs this season... notched a 73.50 strokes average in eight rounds of action in his rookie campaign... earned All-Mountain West Conference Scholar-Athlete accolades for the first time in his career. Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
2009-10
11
33
2,464
74.67
64
215
4
0
0
4
T-14th | MWC
2008-09
13
37
2,733
73.86
67
209
4
1
4
3
1st | Columbia
2007-08
3
8
588
73.50
69
216
2
0
1
0
T-2nd | M-Cup
Totals
27
78
5,785
74.17
64
209
10
1
5
7
1st | Columbia
This is TCU Golf
10
Best Finish
Meet the Frogs
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Junior Season PING-Golfweek Preview The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational Western Refining Collegiate All-American Classic UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Invitational Las Vegas Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships
79 - 80 - 74 - 233 74 - 78 - 72 - 224 73 - 78 - 77 - 228 76 - 64 - 75 - 215 76 - 77 - 74 - 227 77 - 77 - 72 - 226 76 - 76 - 76 - 228 78 - 68 - 71 - 217 77 - 75 - 77 - 229 80 - 69 - 73 - 222 72 - 74 - 69 - 215
+17 +8 +12 +2 +11 +10 +12 +1 +16 +6 +2
T-57th T-37th T-33rd T-17th T-54th T-27th T-19th T-18th T-47th T-43rd T-14th
73 - 76 - 72 - 221 74 - 80 - 154 82 - 75 - 74 - 231 80 - 71 - 70 - 221 70 - 75 - 69 - 214 77 - 81 - 75 - 233 75 - 69 - 77 - 221 81 - 74 - 83 - 238 71 - 74 - 69 - 214 73 - 72 - 145 67 - 70 - 72 - 209 73 - 73 - 76 - 222 70 - 70 - 70 - 210
+5 +10 +15 +8 -2 +17 +5 +25 +1 +1 -4 +6 -3
17th T-63rd T-54th 1st T-10th T-56th T-29th T-76th T-16th T-13th T-3rd T-5th T-3rd
74 - 69 - 143 78 - 74 - 77 - 229 77 - 70 - 69 - 216
+3 +13 +6
T-2nd T-66th T-57th
2008-09 • Sophomore Season Kansas Invitational Hartford Hawks Invitational The Prestige at PGA West Columbia Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate ASU Thunderbird Invitational Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
2007-08 • Freshman Season MacDonald Cup The Prestige at PGA West UH Hilo Invitational
M E E T
S c o t t Senior
•
6-1
•
T H E
F R O G S
R o u d e b u s h
190
•
A u s t i n , Te x a s
•
Austin High School
T h r e e C a r e e r To p - 2 0 To u r n a m e n t F i n i s h e s 2009-10 • Junior Season
High School
oudebush saw action in six tournaments during the 2009-10 campaign where he recorded a 76.78 strokes average over 18 rounds of competition... recorded his best showing on the season at The Prestige at PGA West where he tied for 34th overall following a three-round score of 223 (74-75-74)... finished tied for 36th overall at the National Invitational Tournament with a 54-hole score of 222 (72-74-76) en route to helping the Frogs secure the tournament team championship... finished tied for 54th overall at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational with a three-round score of 224 (79-74-71), including a 1-over-par score over the final 36 holes of action.
A standout in the Texas State Capital, Roudebush captured the 2006 District 16-5A Championship during his senior campaign at Austin High School... cited as a District 16-5A selection in each of final three seasons... garnered the Leadership Award during the 2004 season... selected as a team captain in all three seasons that he competed with the Austin High School golf program.
R
Off the Links Roudebush is the son of Jerry and Linda Roudebush... born on August 28, 1987... majoring in marketing and finance with a concentration in real estate.
2008-09 • Sophomore Season The TCU sophomore recorded a sixth-place showing at the Hartford Hawks Invitational with a 2-under-par score of 142 (73-69) in his first collegiate tournament since the 2006-07 campaign... notched a career-best finish at the Columbia Invitational where he finished tied for fourth overall with a score of 225 (76-75-74)... tied for 104th overall at the 2009 NCAA National Championships, but shot 3-over-par over the final 36 holes of action en route to securing a 54-hole total of 227 (82-73-72)... competed in a career-high 10 tournaments during his sophomore campaign where he recorded a 74.74 strokes average... recorded a 17th-place showing at the John Hayt Invitational with a 54-hole tally of 226 (77-77-72)... posted a 30th-place showing at The Prestige at PGA West with a score of 227 (72-85-70) en route to leading the Frogs to their first tournament victory of the fall season... recorded an even-par score of 70 at the TCU-Arizona Dual Match... tied for 39th overall at the ASU Thunderbird Invitational with a 54-hole score of 218 (790-76-72)... recorded three top-20 finishes during the season, including a pair of top-10 showings.
2006-07 • Freshman Season Roudebush appeared in three tournaments where he posted a 74.83 strokes average over the course of six rounds... notched his best finish at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate in his hometown of Austin where he collected a two-round tally of 151 in the rain-shortened event... recorded a season-best score of 70 in the second round of the Morris Williams Intercollegiate... tied for 68th overall at the CordeValle Collegiate in his TCU debut after recording a 54-hole score of 224 (74-75-74)... competed in the Purple and White's dual match against Arizona... saw action in several junior varsity tournaments during his rookie campaign.
Amateur Highlights Roudeush had a strong 2008 summer season as the Austin, Texas, standout recorded a silver medal at the Firecracker Open with an 11-under-par score of 202 (67-67-68) en route to falling one stroke out of the title... finished second overall at the West Texas Amateur Championships with an 8-under-par score of 205 (69-6967)... recorded a fifth-place showing at the CPT Blackhorse Tournament... finished 30th overall at the Texas Amateur Championships... competed in the Cotton States Invitational where he defeated Aaron Stewart of SMU in the Round of 64 before falling in the Round of 32... captured the tournament title at the American Junior Golf Association's (AJGA) Randy Smith Classic in the Summer of 2006... earned the bronze medal at the AJGA's 2006 Stars of Texas Junior Championships... tied for 32nd overall among 200 players at the 2007 Dixie Amateur... reached the quarterfinals of the 2007 Cotton States Amateur... competed in the 2007 Spirit of America Classic in Alabama.
Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Best Finish
2009-10
6
18
1,382
76.78
71
222
0
0
0
0
T-34 | Prestige
2008-09
10
26
1,946
74.85
69
218
1
0
2
1
4th | Columbia
2006-07
3
6
449
74.83
70
224
0
0
0
0
55th | MW Inter.
Totals
19
50
3,777
75.54
69
218
1
0
2
1
4th | Columbia
This is TCU Golf
12
Meet the Frogs
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Junior Season PING/Golfweek Preview The Prestige at PGA West UH Hilo Intercollegiate Las Vegas Invitational National Invitational Tournament Texas A&M Aggie Invitational
78 - 79 - 84 - 241 74 - 75 - 74 - 223 75 - 79 - 79 - 233 79 - 82 - 78 - 239 72 - 74 - 76 - 222 79 - 74 - 71 - 224
+25 +7 +17 +23 +6 +8
72nd T-34th T-77th T-57th T-23rd T-54th
73 - 69 - 142 72 - 85 - 70 - 227 76 - 74 - 75 - 225 77 - 77 - 72 - 226 70 73 - 74 - 83 - 230 77 - 71 - 81 - 229 70 - 76 - 72 - 218 75 - 77 - 152 82 - 73 - 72 - 227
-2 +11 +12 +10 E +14 +16 +5 +8 +14
T-6th T-30th T-4th T-17th
75 - 74 - 75 - 224 81 - 70 - 151 74
+8 +7 +2
2008-09 • Sophomore Season Hartford Hawks Invitational The Prestige at PGA West Columbia Invitational John Hayt Invitational TCU-Arizona Dual Match National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate ASU Thunderbird Invitational Texas A&M Aggie Invitational NCAA National Championships
T-71st T-32nd T-39th T-43rd T-104th
2007-08 • Freshman Season CordeValle Collegiate Morris Williams Intercollegiate TCU-Arizona Dual
T-68th T-55th
M E E T
T H E
J o h a n Junior
•
6-0
•
190
•
F R O G S
d e
Pretoria, South Africa
B e e r •
Pretoria Boys’ High School
2010 & 2009 All-Mountain West Conference Selection 2009-10 • Sophomore Season
High School
e Beer recorded All-Mountain West Conference accolades for the second consecutive season... selected to the PING All-Central Region Team for the first time in his career... competed in 11 tournaments during his sophomore campaign where he finished in the top-five on four occasions... finished third overall at The Prestige at PGA West following a 4-under-par score of 212 (68-73-71), including a 4-underpar 68 in the first round of action... finished fourth overall at the NCAA Central Regional Championships at The Traditions Club in Bryan, Texas, with a 6-under-par score of 210 (71-67-72), including a season-best 67 in the second round of action... finished fifth overall at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate with a score of 219 (75-7173)... finished fifth overall at the Las Vegas Invitational with a score of 222 (68-76-78), including a 4-under-par score of 68 in the first round of action... ranked second on the team with a 73.36 strokes average... tied for 12th overall at the National Invitational Tournament with a 54-hole score of 216 (68-71-55)... tied for 21st overall at the John Hayt Collegiate Invitational with a score of 225 (73-75-77)... recorded seven top-25 finishes during his sophomore campaign... finished 23rd overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships following a 54-hole score of 220 (75-77-68), including a 3-under-par score of 68 in the final round of action.
De Beer attended Pretoria Boys High School during his prep days where he was a member of the North Gaulong men's golf team... recorded a scoring average of 69.71 during the 2007 campaign.
D
Off the Links De Beer is the son of Maritha and Thys de Beer... born on June 25, 1989... has one brother, Thys... majoring in international business.
2008-09 • Freshman Season De Beer enjoyed a stellar freshman campaign that was capped off with All-Mountain West Conference accolades... became the fastest golfer in TCU history to capture a tournament crown when he won The Prestige at PGA West title in his second collegiate tournament... recorded a 54-hole score of 210 (72-70-68), including a 68 on the final 18 holes, to claim the gold medal at The Prestige at PGA West... recorded a third-place finish at the Mountain West Conference Championships en route to leading the Frogs to their first conference title since the 2004-05 season... finished with a career-best 54-hole score of 209 (69-66-74), including a careerbest 66 in the second round, at the Mountain West Conference Championships... recorded a team-high four finishes in the top-10 during the 2008-09 campaign... finished fifth overall at the National Invitational Tournament with a three-round tally of 213 (68-72-73)... garnered sixth-place laurels at the Columbia Invitational with a score of 226 (75-74-77) en route to leading the Frogs to their second tournament crown of the fall season... finished third on the Frogs with a strokes average of 74.06 as well as second with four sub-70 rounds this past season... finished 22nd overall in his collegiate debut at the Kansas Invitational with a score of 223 (73-74-76).
Amateur Highlights A native of South Africa, de Beer finished fifth overall at the 2008 Scottish Open Amateur Stroke Play Championships where he recorded a 54-hole score of 217 (68-71-78)... captured the South Africa Under-19 stroke play title during the 2007 campaign after firing an 11-under-par score of 277 at Kirugersdorp... served as the captain of the South African Under-19 team at the Toyota Junior World Team Championships in Japan as well as in a triangular match against England and Canada at Zebula during the 2007 season... finished fifth overall at the South Africa Amateur stroke play while capturing the gold medal at the 2006 National Junior Tournament... finished 11th overall at the Duke of York Young Champions Tournament, which only invited junior champions from various countries, during the 2007 campaign... finished second overall at the 2008 Sanlam Cape Province Open at the George Golf Course where he posted a 54-hole tally of 208 (70-68-70). Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Best Finish
2009-10
11
33
2,421
73.36
67
210
5
0
4
1
3rd | Prestige
2008-09
12
33
2,444
74.06
66
209
4
1
4
0
1st | Prestige
Totals
23
66
4,865
73.71
66
209
9
1
8
1
1st | Prestige
This is TCU Golf
14
Meet the Frogs
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Sophomore Season The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Collegiate Invitational Las Vegas Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
68 - 73 - 71 - 212 76 - 80 - 76 - 232 79 - 74 - 71 - 224 73 - 75 - 77 - 225 68 - 76 - 78 - 222 68 - 71 - 77 - 216 75 - 71 - 73 - 219 76 - 74 - 72 - 222 75 - 77 - 68 - 220 71 - 67 - 72 - 210 74 - 73 - 72 - 219
-4 +16 +8 +9 +6 E +6 +6 +7 -6 +3
T-3rd T-50th T-50th T-21st T-5th T-12th T-5th T-43rd T-23rd 4th T-58th
73 - 74 - 76 - 223 72 - 70 - 68 - 210 75 - 74 - 77 - 226 73 - 73 - 75 - 221 73 - 83 - 73 - 229 77 68 - 72 - 73 - 213 74 - 75 - 73 - 222 72 - 81 - 153 69 - 66 - 74 - 209 76 - 77 - 83 - 236 77 - 71 - 77 - 225
+7 -6 +13 +5 +13 +7 -3 +9 +9 -4 +20 +12
T-22nd 1st T-6th T-24th T-30th
2008-09 • Freshman Season Kansas Invitational The Prestige at PGA West Columbia Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Invitational TCU-Arizona Dual Match National Invitational Tournament ASU Thunderbird Invitational Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
T-5th T-67th T-49th T-3rd T-46th T-89th
M E E T
T H E
E l i
F R O G S
C o l e
Junior • 5-7 • 140 • Beverly Hills, California • Harvard-Westlake High School Tw o C a r e e r To p - 3 0 To u r n a m e n t F i n i s h e s 2009-10 • Sophomore Season ole saw action in six tournaments during his sophomore campaign where he recorded a 75.17 strokes average over 18 rounds of competition... finished 26th overall in his collegiate debut at The Prestige at PGA West following a three-round score of 221 (74-69-78), including a 3-under-par 69 in the second round of action... finished 21st overall at the John Hayt Collegiate Invitational following a score of 225 (74-7675)... notched a score of 221 (73-77-71), including a 1-under-par score of 71 in the final round, en route to finishign tied for 38th overall at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational... tied for 43rd overall at the NCAA Central Regional Championships at The Traditions Club in Bryan, Texas, following a score of 225 (74-77-74).
C
2008-09 • Freshman Season In his first season with the Frogs, Cole did not appear in any varsity tournaments.
Amateur Highlights Cole recorded five consecutive top-10 showings during the 2007 campaign... captured the 2006 Los Angeles City Shootout Championships... garnered Club Champion honors on two occasions... notched a score of 141 (72-69) at the 2007 U.S. Amateur Qualifying Championships... recorded his best finish of the 2006 season at the Medicus Preseason Junior Championships in Albuquerque, N.M., where he tied for 17th overall after recording a three-round score of 225 (76-76-73).
Off the Links Cole is the son of Dana and Lisa Cole... born on May 18, 1990... has one sister, Rosie... majoring in economics.
Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Best Finish
2009-10
6
18
1,353
75.88
69
221
1
0
0
0
21st | John Hayt
2008-09
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Totals
6
18
1,353
75.88
69
221
1
0
0
0
21st | John Hayt
This is TCU Golf
16
Meet the Frogs
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Sophomore Season The Prestige at PGA West UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Collegiate Invitational Texas A&M Aggie Invitational NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
74 - 69 - 78 - 221 74 - 79 - 80 - 233 74 - 76 - 75 - 225 73 - 77 - 71 - 221 74 - 77 - 74 - 225 74 - 76 - 78 - 228
+5 +17 +9 +5 +9 +12
T-26th T-77th T-21st T-38th T-43rd T-124th
M E E T
T H E
F R O G S
P o n t u s Sophomore
•
6-4
•
200
•
G a d
Linkoping, Sweden
•
Klippans Gymasieskola
F o u r C a r e e r To p - 3 0 To u r n a m e n t F i n i s h e s 2009-10 • Freshman Season n his first season with the Frogs, Gad saw action in 11 tournaments where the TCU newcomer recorded a 75.88 strokes average over 33 rounds of action... finished fourth overall in his collegiate debut at the PING/Golfweek Preview where he recorded a 2-over-par score of 218 (72-74-72)... finished 21st overall at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate following a 54-hole tally of 223 (70-75-77), including a 1-under-par 70 in the first round of action... finished tied for 24th overall at the National Invitational Tournament following a score of 220 (74-77-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 over the final 18 holes of action... notched a 26th-place showing in his second collegiate tournament at The Prestige at PGA West following a tournament score of 221 (78-74-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 in the final round of action... finished 35th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships... helped the Frogs captured two tournament team titles as a rookie.
I
Amateur Highlights A member of the Swedish National Team, Gad guided his country to a sixth-place showing at the 2009 European Men's Amateur Team Championships at the Conwy Golf Club in Wales... finished ninth overall at the European Amateur Championships following a four-round score of 284 (75-71-71-67)... captured the International Skandia Junior Open Championship during the 2009 season... finished third overall at the 2008 TOYOTA Junior Golf World Cup Championships with a four-round score of 13-under-par 275 (71-70-70-64) in a tournament that featured the best junior players in the world... finished third overall at the TOYOTA Junior Golf World Cup Championships during the 2007 season... led Sweden to a second-place finish at the 2007 TOYOTA Junior Golf World Cup Championships... selected as the 2007 Rookie of the Year on the International Skandia Junior Tour in Sweden after earning third-place honors at the Swedish Junior Championships Stroke Play.
Off the Links Gad is the son of Mihael and Eva Gad... has one sister, Cecilia... born on February 23, 1990... majoring in pre-business.
Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Best Finish
2009-10
11
33
2,504
75.88
69
218
2
0
1
0
4th | Preview
Totals
11
33
2,504
75.88
69
218
2
0
1
0
4th | Preview
This is TCU Golf
18
Meet the Frogs
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Sophomore Season PING/Golfweek Preview The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Collegiate Invitational Las Vegas Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
72 - 74 - 72 - 218 78 - 74 - 69 - 221 77 - 71 - 84 - 232 82 - 76 - 74 - 232 77 - 77 - 77 - 231 83 - 81 - 76 - 240 74 - 77 - 69 - 220 70 - 75 - 78 - 223 77 - 75 - 77 - 229 71 - 78 - 77 - 226 80 - 77 - 75 - 232
+2 +5 +16 +16 +15 +24 +4 +10 +16 +10 +16
4th T-26th T-50th T-74th 53rd T-61st T-24th T-21st T-35th T-49th T-141st
M E E T
T H E
D a n i e l Sophomore
•
6-1
•
210
•
F R O G S
J e n n e v r e t Sandviken, Sweden
•
Bessemer Sandviken
2 0 0 9 T h e P r e s t i g e a t P G A We s t To u r n a m e n t C h a m p i o n 2009-10 • Freshman Season ennevret tied a program record in his first season with the Frogs by becoming the fastest golfer in TCU history to claim an individual tournament title... captured The Prestige at PGA West crown in his second collegiate tournament, which ties a program record held by TCU teammate Johan de Beer - who also won The Prestige at PGA West in his second collegiate tournament... recorded the title at The Prestige at PGA West following a 12-under-par score of 204 (69-67-68), including a 5-under-par score of 67 in the second round of action... finished fifth overall at the NCAA Central Regional Championships following a 5-under-par score of 211 (66-72-73), including a career-best 6-under-par score of 66 in the first round of action... finished fifth overall at the National Invitational Tournamentwith a 1-under-par score of 215 (72-74-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 in the final round of action... recorded six sub-70 rounds during his rookie campaign, which ranked first among all players on the roster... competed in all 12 tournaments this past season where he recorded a 74.92 strokes average in 36 rounds of action... tied for 29th overall at the Isleworth Collegiate Invitational with a score of 227 (72-78-77)... finished 29th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships with a 54hole score of 222 (75-78-69), including a 2-under-par score of 69 in the final round of action.
J
Amateur Highlights Jennevret guided the Swedish National Team to the European Boys' Championship during the 2008 campaign where he was his home country's top individual, finishing fourth overall... guided the Swedish National Team to the 2008 TOYOYA Junior Golf World Cup Championships after finished 12th overall with an 8-under-par score of 280 (68-75-69-68)... led the Swedish National Team to the 2009 TOYOTA Junior Golf World Cup Championships after finishing second overall in one of the most prestigious junior tournaments in the world.
Off the Links Jennevret is the son of Monica Jennevret... born on January 10, 1990... majoring in general studies.
Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Best Finish
2009-10
12
36
2,697
74.92
66
204
6
1
2
0
1st | Prestige
Totals
12
36
2,697
74.92
66
204
6
1
2
0
1st | Prestige
This is TCU Golf
20
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Freshman Season PING/Golfweek Preview The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Collegiate Invitational Las Vegas Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
77 - 71 - 79 - 227 69 - 67 - 68 - 204 72 - 78 - 77 - 227 77 - 72 - 76 - 225 77 - 82 - 78 - 237 79 - 77 - 82 - 238 72 - 74 - 69 - 215 80 - 81 - 81 - 242 72 - 75 - 75 - 222 75 - 78 - 69 - 222 66 - 72 - 73 - 211 78 - 78 - 71 - 227
+11 -12 +11 +9 +21 +22 -1 +29 +6 +9 -5 +11
T-32nd 1st T-29th 52nd T-72nd T-53rd T-5th T-74th T-43rd 29th T-5th T-116th
M E E T
T H E
F R O G S
Johnny Antle
Max Bichsel
Freshman • 6-2 • 190
Junior • 6-0 • 165
Graham, Texas
Cranbury, New Jersey
Graham High School
The Peddie School
Amateur Highlights
Amateur Highlights
ntle notched silver medal honors at the 2009 AJGA Bob Estes Tournament where he recorded a threeround score of 213 (68-75-70) en route to finishing one shot back of the individual champion... recorded a top-30 showing at the West Texas Amateur after finishing with a score of 218 (71-73-74) over 54 holes of action...earned all-state recognition during his junior and senior campaigns... competed in both golf and cross country during his prep career at Graham High School.
A
ichsel enjoyed an impressive career during his first three seasons at The Peddie School in Cranbury, N.J. where he helped his squad record a championship at the Garden State Cup after firing a teambest 73 over 18 holes... guided his pre team to a Mid-Atlantic Prep League Golf Championship during his sophomore campaign followed by a third-place finish in the league during his junior season... finished second at the Fidelity Investments Junior Championship where he posted a 54-hole score of 214 (75-70-69).
B
Off the Links
Off the Links
Antle is the son of Bob Antle and Michelle Lowrey... born on May 20, 1991... has one brother, Robert... father, Bob, was a member of the Baylor men's golf program... majoring in general studies.
Bichsel is the son of Michael and Kathy Bichsel... born on July 5, 1990... has one sister Alexa... majoring in pre-business.
Will Christensen
Matt Johnson
Senior • 5-9 • 140
Senior • 6-2 • 170
Midland, Texas
Fort Worth, Texas
Trinity School of Midland
Country Day School
Amateur Highlights
Amateur Highlights
product of Trinity School of Midland, Christian earned all-state laurels by the Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools... captured the Texas Christian Athletic League state championship in each of his final three seasons at the Trinity School of Midland... garnered all-district, all-region and all-state accolades in TAPPS 3A in each of his last three campaigns... captured the Sandhills Invitational by 12 strokes during his senior season.
A
ohnson was a four-year lettermen at Country Day School in Fort Worth where he captured the St. Stephen’s Golf Championship as well as the Shady Oaks Junior Club Championships during his senior campaign... selected as the first alternate at the U.S. Junior Amateur Championships during his junior season... earned one letter in volleyball during his junior season as well as one letter on the soccer field in his senior campaign at Country Day School.
Off the Links
Off the Links
Christiansen is the son of Doug and Cheryl Christiansen... born on June 16, 1988... has one brother, Daniel... majoring in communications.
Johnson is the son of Mark and Christina Johnson... born on May 22, 1989... has two sisters, Christin and Katie... majoring in advertising and public relations.
J
Ryan Myers
Eduardo Perez
Senior • 6-3 • 175
Junior • 5-7 • 160
Flint, Texas
Miraville, Ecuador
Odessa College
Pendleton School
Amateur Highlights
Amateur Highlights
yers was selected by the Golf Coaches Association of America as a first team NJCAA Ping AllAmerican... guided Odessa College to its second consecutive Texas Junior College Golf Championship in 2008... led the Wranglers to a third-place showing at the 2007 NJCAA National Championships... selected to play for Team USA at the World University Golf Championships in South Africa... recorded individual victories at the NTPGA Tournament of Champions and IJGT Brookhaven Tournament.
M
erez was a member of an Ecuador Amateur Team that competed in the South American Open Championships on four occasions as well as a member of the Open Team that competed at the World Amateur Championships in Puerto Rico... claimed the gold medal at the Club Champion at the 2008 President's Cup at the Quito Tennis & Golf Club... captured the 2007 Ecuador Junior Open title... claimed top honors at the U.S. Kids World Championships as well as the 2004 Peruvian Junior Championships.
P
Off the Links
Off the Links
Myers is the son of Terry and Susan Myers... born on December 7, 1987... has one sister, Macy... majoring in communications with a special emphasis in human relations.
Perez is the son of Eduardo Perez and Adriana Hoyos... born on January 3, 1989... majoring in pre-business.
Ian Phillips Freshman • 6-3 • 165 Acworth, Georgia Harrison High School Amateur Highlights hillips garnered silver medal honors on two occasions during the 2009 season at the Junior Peach Blossom and Marietta Junior Classic... finished 11th overall at the Burgett H. Mooney, Jr. Rome Classic... selected as the Atlanta Junior Player of the Year during his senior campaign... recorded three bronze medal showings during the 2008 season at the West Lake Junior Classic, Burgett H. Mooney, Jr. Rome Classic and Huntsville Junior Invitational.
P
Off the Links Phillips is the son of John and Mary Phillips... born on December 27, 1991... has one brother, Jack... majoring in general studies.
This is TCU Golf
22
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
M E E T
T H E
Tr a v i s Graduated
•
5-9
•
160
•
F R O G S
Wo o l f
F o r t W o r t h , Te x a s
•
Paschal High School
2010 All-Mountain West Conference Selection 2009-10 • Senior Season
2006-07 • Freshman Season
n his final season with the Frogs, Woolf posted one of his best overall seasons as the Fort Worth native was selected to the PING All-Central Region Team as well as the All-Mountain West Conference squad... competed in 11 tournaments this past season where he led the Frogs with a 73.24 strokes average... recorded seven top-25 finishes this past season, including a pair of top-10 showings... finished seventh overall at The Prestige at PGA West following a three-round score of 214 (72-75-67), including a 5-under-par score on the final 18 holes... finished seventh overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships with an even-par score of 213 (71-72-70)... notched a tie for 12th overall at the National Invitational Tournament with a score of 216 (72-70-74) and finished tied for 13th overall at the Isleworth Intercollegiate following a tournament tally of 221 (69-79-73)... notched a 14th-place showing at the NCAA Central Regional Championships at The Traditions Club in Bryan, Texas, with a 1-under-par score of 215 (69-75-71), including a 3-under-par score of 69 in the first round of action... finished 18th overall at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational with a 1-under-par score of 215 (75-71-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 on the final 18 holes of action... finished his senior season with a career-best 73.24 strokes average for the Frogs.
During his freshman season, Woolf exploded onto the scene in his debut for the Frogs by shooting a thenschool-record score of 64 in the third round of the UH Hilo Intercollegiate… opened that tournament with a round of 69 to become the first TCU golfer under Montigel to shoot a sub-70 round in his inaugural tournament with the Purple and White… notched a season-best 15th-place showing at the UH Hilo Intercollegiate with a 6under-par tournament score of 204 (69-71-64)… tied for 17th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships with a 3-over-par score of 216 (70-76-70)… notched a 20th-place showing in his third collegiate tournament at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate with a 36-hole score of 145 (74-71)… selected to the 200607 Spring Academic All-Mountain West Conference Team for the first time in his Frogs’ career.
I
2008-09 • Junior Season The Fort Worth native capped off his junior campaign with a selection to the Cleveland Golf/Srixon Academic All-American squad... recorded his best finish of the 2008-09 campaign with a fifth-place showing at The Prestige at PGA West following a 54-hole score of 217 (75-72-70)... recorded a spot in the top-20 in six tournaments, including three top-10 showings... garnered sixth-place honors at the Columbia Invitational with a 54-hole score of 226 (78-77-71) en route to leading the Frogs to a tournament crown... finished seventh overall at the Kansas Invitational with a score of 218 (76-70-72)... posted his best round of the season with a 3-under-par score of 67 at the TCU-Arizona Dual Match... finished in the top-20 in all four fall tournaments, including three top-10 showings... finished 16th overall at the ASU Thunderbird Invitational with a 1-over-par score of 214 (71-71-72) over 54 holes of competition... tied for 20th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships with a 3over-par score of 216 (72-74-70), including a 70 on the final 18 holes of action... posted a 17th-place showing at the Hartford Hawks Invitational with a 2-over-par score of 146 (72-74)... competed in 13 tournaments during the 2008-09 campaign... awarded with the Ben Hogan/Colonial Scholarship during the fall semester.
Amateur Highlights Woolf competed in the 2008 North & South Amatuer at Pinehurst where he finished sixth overall with a 1-underpar score of 140 (68-72) en route to advancing in match play... defeated David Byrne in the first round by a 5&4 count in the first round before falling in the Round of 16... tied for third overall at the 2008 Texas State Amateur... advanced to the second round of match play at the 2007 North & South Amateur at Pinehurst… tied for 30th overall among 200 golfers at the 2007 Dixie Amateur… reached the match-play portion of the 2007 Cotton States Amateur… tied for 3rd overall at the 2006 EDS Byron Nelson Junior Championships… selected as a Future World Collegian Tournament (FWCT) All-American… captured gold medal accolades at the FWCT Bear Creek Junior Golf Challenge… earned runner-up laurels at the FWCT La Cantera Golf Classic... notched a sixth-place showing at the 2005 FWCT Bayonet Junior Golf Invitational.
High School A product of Paschal High School, Woolf helped his prep squad capture the Texas 5A State Championship during his senior campaign.
Off the Links Woolf is the son of Dr. Mark and Debbie Woolf... born on July 15, 1986... has one brother, Jordan, who was a member of the TCU men’s golf program... majoring in finance.
2007-08 • Sophomore Season Woolf competed in all 12 tournaments where he recorded a strokes average of 74.63 over the course of 35 rounds of competition... selected as an Academic All-Mountain West Conference award winner for the first time in his career... posted three finishes in the top-10, including a career-best runner-up accolade at the MacDonald Cup where he notched a score of 143 (70-73) en route to guiding the Frogs to their first tournament title of the season... tied for 10th overall at the Mountain West Conference Championships where he collected a 2-over-par score of 215 (71-73-71) en route to helping the Frogs finished with silver medal laurels at the conference championships... tied for 10th overall, which was the top finish for the Frogs, at the Carpet Capital Collegiate where he notched an even-par score of 216 (72-72-72)... tied for 18th overall in the first tournament of the season at the Inverness Intercollegiate where he collected a score of 220 (71-76-73)... recorded a season-best score of 210 at the UH Hilo Invitational where he fired an even-par score of 210 (69-71-70). Season
Tourns.
Rounds
Strokes
Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
2009-10
11
33
2,417
73.24
67
213
5
0
2
4
Best Finish T-7th | 2x
2008-09
13
35
2,601
74.31
67
214
2
0
3
3
T-5th | Prestige
2007-08
12
35
2,612
74.63
69
210
2
0
3
1
T-2nd | M-Cup
2006-07
8
20
1,481
74.05
64
204
2
0
0
3
T-15th | UH Hilo
Totals
44
123
9,111
74.07
64
210
11
0
8
11
T-2nd | M-Cup
Meet the Frogs
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
27
Career Tournaments 2009-10 • Senior Season PING-Golfweek Preview The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Invitational National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
78 - 80 - 69 - 227 72 - 75 - 67 - 214 69 - 79 - 73 - 221 78 - 75 - 74 - 227 74 - 74 - 77 - 225 72 - 70 - 74 - 216 79 - 72 - 74 - 225 75 - 71 - 69 - 215 71 - 72 - 70 - 213 69 - 75 - 71 - 215 76 - 70 - 73 - 219
+11 -2 +5 +11 +9 E +12 -1 E -1 +3
T-32nd 7th T-13th T-54th T-21st T-12th T-26th T-18th T-7th T-14th T-58th
76 - 70 - 72 - 218 72 - 74 - 146 75 - 72 - 70 - 217 78 - 77 - 71 - 226 79 - 74 - 77 - 230 77 - 83 - 72 - 232 67 73 - 77 - 73 - 223 71 - 71 - 72 - 214 77 - 76 - 153 72 - 74 - 70 - 216 77 - 82 - 73 - 232 77 - 71 - 79 - 227
+2 +2 +1 +13 +14 +16 -3 +7 +1 +9 +3 +16 +14
T-7th T-17th T-5th T-6th T-65th T-48th
71 - 76 - 73 - 220 72 - 72 - 72 - 216 70 - 73 - 143 83 - 76 - 73 - 232 69 - 71 - 70 - 210 85 - 83 - 73 - 241 69 - 70 - 78 - 217 72 - 77 - 73 - 222 77 - 80 - 77 - 234 73 - 84 - 73 - 230 71 - 73 - 71 - 215 78 - 74 - 80 - 232
+7 E +3 +16 E +25 +1 +6 +21 +20 +2 +18
T-18th T-10th T-2nd T-75th T-26th T-71st T-38th T-39th T-63rd T-66th T-10th T-89th
69 - 71 - 64 - 204 80 - DQ - 76 - DNF 74 - 71 - 145 73 71 - 74 - 74 - 219 73 - 78 - 78 - 229 70 - 76 - 70 - 216 87 - 73 - 79 - 239
-6
T-15th DNF T-20th
2008-09 • Junior Season Kansas Invitational Hartford Hawks Invitational The Prestige at PGA West Columbia Invitational UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Invitational TCU-Arizona Dual Match National Invitational Tournament ASU Thunderbird Invitational Texas A&M Aggie Invitational Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships NCAA National Championships
T-43rd T-16th T-49th T-20th T-34th T-104th
2007-08 • Sophomore Season Inverness Intercollegiate Carpet Capital Collegiate MacDonald Cup The Prestige at PGA West UH Hilo Invitational Braveheart Classic Fresno State Lexus Classic National Invitational Tournament Morris Williams Intercollegiate U.S. Intercollegiate Championships Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships
2006-07 • Freshman Season UH Hilo Intercollegiate USC Collegiate Invitational Morris Williams Intercollegiate TCU-Arizona Dual National Invitational Tournament U.S. Intercollegiate Championships Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Central Regional Championships
+1 +1 +3 +13 +3 +23
T-34th T-43rd T-17th T-95th
SEASON REVIEW
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
S C O R E C A R D
Travis Woolf
Tom Hoge
Scott Roudebush
Eli Cole
Johan de Beer
Pontus Gad
Daniel Jennevret
PING/Golfweek Preview
78 - 80 - 69 - 227 T-32nd
79 - 80 - 74 - 233 T-57th
78 - 79 - 84 - 241 72nd
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
72 - 74 - 72 - 218 4th
77 - 71 - 79 - 227 T-32nd
The Prestige at PGA WEST
72 - 75 - 67 - 214 7th
74 - 78 - 72 - 224 T-37th
74 - 75 - 74 - 223 T-34th
74 - 69 - 78 - 221 T-26th
68 - 73 - 71 - 212 T-3rd
78 - 74 - 69 - 221 T-26th
69 - 67 - 68 - 204 1st
Isleworth Intercollegiate
69 - 79 - 73 - 221 T-13th
73 - 78 - 77 - 228 T-33rd
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
76 - 80 - 76 - 232 T-50th
77 - 71 - 84 - 232 T-50th
72 - 78 - 77 - 227 T-29th
UH Hilo Intercollegiate
78 - 75 - 74 - 227 T-54th
76 - 77 - 74 - 227 T-54th
75 - 79 - 79 - 233 T-77th
74 - 79 - 80 - 233 T-77th
79 - 74 - 71 - 224 T-50th
82 - 76 - 74 - 232 T-74th
77 - 72 - 76 - 225 52nd
John Hayt Invitational
74 - 74 - 77 - 225 T-21st
77 - 77 - 72 - 226 T-27th
Did Not Compete
74 - 76 - 75 - 225 T-21st
73 - 75 - 77 - 225 T-21st
77 - 77 - 77 - 231 53rd
77 - 82 - 78 - 237 T-72nd
Las Vegas Invitational
Did Not Compete
76 - 76 - 76 - 228 T-19th
79 - 82 - 78 - 239 T-57th
Did Not Compete
68 - 76 - 78 - 222 T-5th
83 - 81 - 76 - 240 T-61st
79 - 77 - 82 - 238 T-53rd
National Invitational Tournament
72 - 70 - 74 - 216 T-12th
78 - 68 - 71 - 217 T-18th
72 - 74 - 76 - 222 T-36th
Did Not Compete
68 - 71 - 77 - 216 T-12th
74 - 77 - 69 - 220 T-24th
72 - 74 - 69 - 215 T-5th
Morris Williams Intercollegiate
79 - 72 - 74 - 216 T-26th
77 - 75 - 77 - 229 T-47th
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
75 - 71 -73 - 219 T-5th
70 - 75 - 78 - 223 T-21st
80 - 81 - 81 - 242 T-74th
Texas A&M Invitational
75 - 71 - 69 - 215 T-18th
80 - 69 - 73 - 222 T-43rd
79 - 74 - 71 - 224 T-54th
73 - 77 - 71 - 221 T-38th
76 - 74 - 72 - 222 T-43rd
Did Not Compete
72 - 75 - 75 - 222 T-43rd
MWC Championships
71 - 72 - 70 - 213 T-7th
72 - 74 - 69 - 215 T-14th
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
75 - 77 - 68 - 220 T-23rd
77 - 75 - 77 - 229 T-35th
75 - 78 - 69 - 222 29th
NCAA Regional Championships
69 - 75 - 71 - 215 T-14th
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
74 - 77 - 74 - 225 T-43rd
71 - 67 - 72 - 210 4th
71 - 78 - 77 - 226 T-49th
66 - 72 - 73 - 211 T-5th
NCAA National Championships
76 - 70 - 73 - 219 T-58th
Did Not Compete
Did Not Compete
74 - 76 - 78 - 228 T-124th
74 - 73 - 72 - 219 T-58th
80 - 77 - 75 - 232 T-141st
78 - 78 -71 - 227 T-116th
Season Review
26
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
F I N A L
S T A T I S T I C S
2009-10 Final Statistics Player
Tourn.
Rounds
Strokes
Stroke Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Travis Woolf
11
33
2,417
73.24
67
213
5
0
2
4
Best Finish
Johan de Beer
11
33
2,421
73.36
67
210
5
0
4
1
4th (NCAA Regional)
Tom Hoge
11
33
2,464
74.67
64
215
4
0
0
4
T-14th (MWC Champs.)
Daniel Jennevret
12
36
2,697
74.92
66
204
6
1
2
0
1st (The Prestige)
Eli Cole
6
18
1,353
75.17
69
221
1
0
0
0
T-21st (John Hayt)
Pontus Gad
11
33
2,504
75.88
69
218
1
0
1
0
4th (PING/Golfweek Pre.)
Scott Roudebush
6
18
1,382
76.78
71
222
0
0
0
0
T-34th (The Prestige)
Totals
12
204
15,238
74.70
66
204
22
1
9
9
1st (The Prestige)
Player
Tourn.
Rounds
Strokes
Stroke Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Travis Woolf
8
24
1,755
73.13
69
213
2
0
1
3
Johan de Beer
9
27
1,977
73.22
67
210
4
0
3
1
4th (NCAA Regional)
Tom Hoge
7
21
1,564
74.48
68
215
3
0
0
3
T-14th (MWC Champs.)
T-7th (Two Times)
2010 Spring Statistics Best Finish T-7th (MWC Champs.)
Eli Cole
5
15
1,132
75.47
71
221
0
0
0
0
T-21st (John Hayt)
Daniel Jennevret
9
27
2,039
75.52
66
211
3
0
2
0
T-5th (Two Times)
Pontus Gad
8
24
1,833
76.38
70
220
0
0
0
0
T-21st (Morris Williams)
Scott Roudebush
4
12
918
76.50
71
222
0
0
0
0
T-36th (Nat. Inv. Tourn.)
Totals
9
150
11,218
74.79
66
210
12
0
6
7
4th (NCAA Regional)
Player
Tourn.
Rounds
Strokes
Stroke Avg.
Low 18
Low 54
Sub-70
Wins
2nd-10th
11th-20th
Daniel Jennevret
3
9
658
73.11
67
204
3
1
0
0
1st (The Prestige)
Travis Woolf
3
9
662
73.56
67
214
3
0
1
1
7th (The Prestige) T-26th (The Prestige)
2009 Fall Statistics Best Finish
Eli Cole
1
3
221
73.67
69
221
1
0
0
0
Johan de Beer
2
6
444
74.00
68
212
1
0
1
0
T-3rd (The Prestige)
Pontus Gad
3
9
671
74.56
69
218
1
0
1
0
4th (PING/Golfweek Pre.)
Tom Hoge
4
12
900
75.00
64
215
1
0
0
1
T-17th (Western Refining)
Scott Roudebush
2
6
464
77.33
74
223
0
0
0
0
T-34th (The Prestige)
Totals
3
54
4,020
74.44
64
204
10
1
3
2
1st (The Prestige)
Frogs vs. Opponents Air Force Alabama Arizona Arizona State Arkansas Auburn Augusta State BYU Baylor Cal State - East Bay California Central Florida Clemson Coastal Carolina Colorado Colorado State Duke East Tennessee State Florida Florida State Furman Georgetown Georgia Georgia Southern Georgia Tech Hawai’i Indiana Illinois Jackson State
1 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 4 1 1 3 1 1 2 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 1
0 2 0 5 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 3 2 1 0 2 0 2 0 1 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1.000 .333 1.000 .167 .000 1.000 .000 .000 .800 1.000 .500 1.000 .500 1.000 1.000 .667 .250 1.000 .250 .000 .000 1.000 .500 1.000 .333 1.000 .500 .500 1.000
Kansas State Kent State Kentucky LSU Long Beach State Mercer Middle Tennessee State New Mexico North Carolina North Carolina State North Florida Notre Dame Oklahoma State Oregon Oregon State Penn State Pepperdine Purdue Rice Rhode Island SMU San Diego San Diego State San Francisco San Jose State Sonoma State South Carolina Stanford Tennessee
1 2 1 2 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 3 1 1 1 3 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1
0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 5 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 3 2
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1.000 .667 1.000 .500 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 1.000 .500 .333 1.000 .286 .000 .000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .500 .000 .000 1.000 1.000 .000 .250 .333
Texas Texas A&M Texas Tech Tulsa UAB UCLA UNLV USC UTEP UTSA UC Davis UH Hilo UT Chattanooga Utah Vanderbilt Virginia Washington Wichita State Wyoming
1 0 2 3 1 1 0 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 2 1 2
5 6 5 1 0 3 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
.167 .000 .286 .750 1.000 .250 .125 .167 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .400 1.000 1.000
Season Review
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
27
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
T O U R N A M E N T
R E S U L T S
PING/Golfweek Preview Olympic Course at Gold Mountain • Bremerton, Washington • September 27-28, 2009
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. T-8. T-8. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Oklahoma State Washington Arizona State North Carolina State Texas A&M New Mexico USC TCU UNLV LSU Kent State Alabama Colorado State UT Chattanooga Indiana
TCU Final Results 290 - 287 - 285 - 862 295 - 294 - 295 - 884 300 - 293 - 296 - 889 297 - 301 - 295 - 893 302 - 300 - 293 - 895 304 - 297 - 295 - 896 305 - 287 - 305 - 897 305 - 304 - 294 - 903 309 - 289 - 305 - 903 299 - 293 - 316 - 908 301 - 303 - 305 - 909 305 - 295 - 311 - 911 305 - 300 - 309 - 913 306 - 297 - 314 - 917 319 - 301 - 313 - 933
-2 +20 +25 +29 +31 +32 +33 +39 +39 +44 +45 +47 +49 +53 +69
4.
Pontus Gad
72 - 74 - 72 - 218
+2
T-32.
Travis Woolf
78 - 80 - 69 - 227
+11
T-32.
Daniel Jennevret
77 - 71 - 79 - 227
+11
T-57.
Tom Hoge
79 - 80 - 74 - 233
+17
72.
Scott Roudebush
78 - 79 - 84 - 241
+25
he TCU men's golf team moved up six spots on the final day of action at the PING/Golfweek Preview finishing tied for eighth overall at the Gold Mountain Golf Complex in Bremerton, Wash.
T
The Frogs - who entered the day in 14th place - posted a team score of 294 en route to finishing with a total tally of 903 (305-304-294). Oklahoma State captured the team championship with a score of 862 while Washington (884), Arizona State (889), North Carolina State (893) and Texas A&M (895) rounded out the top five. Pontus Gad was the Frogs' top performer as the TCU newcomer finished fourth overall with a three-round score of 218 (72-74-72). Travis Woolf notched the Frogs' best round of the day as the Fort Worth native posted a 69 on the final nine holes of action en route to tying for 32nd overall with a score of 227 (78-80-69). Freshman Daniel Jennevret also finished tied for 32nd overall after collecting a score of 227 (77-71-79). Tom Hoge finished tied for 57th overall with a score of 233 (79-80-74) while Scott Roudebush finished 72nd overall with a tally of 241 (78-79-84).
The Prestige at PGA West Stadium Course at PGA West • La Quinta, California • October 11-13, 2009
Team Results 1. 2. 3. T-4. T-4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
TCU Stanford Washington UCLA USC San Diego Pepperdine UC Davis Vanderbilt Central Florida Notre Dame Long Beach State Hawai’i
TCU Final Results 289 - 285 - 276 - 850 282 - 296 - 288 - 866 297 - 285 - 287 - 869 280 - 299 - 293 - 872 294 - 287 - 291 - 872 290 - 293 - 296 - 879 297 - 299 - 294 - 880 297 - 302 - 294 - 883 205 - 307 - 293 - 885 297 - 297 - 294 - 888 299 - 302 - 294 - 895 308 - 309 - 300 - 917 312 - 321 - 306 - 939
-14 +2 +5 +8 +8 +15 +16 +19 +21 +24 +31 +53 +75
1.
Daniel Jennevret
69 - 67 - 68 - 204
-12
T-3.
• - Johan de Beer
68 - 73 - 71 - 212
-4
7.
Travis Woolf
72 - 75 - 67 - 214
-2
T-26.
Eli Cole
74 - 69 - 78 - 221
+5
T-26.
Pontus Gad
78 - 74 - 69 - 221
+5
T-34.
• - Scott Roudebush
74 - 75 - 74 - 223
+7
T-37.
Tom Hoge
74 - 78 - 72 - 224
+8
or the second consecutive season, the TCU men's golf team captured the tournament championship at The Prestige at PGA West after running around from the field by 16 strokes on Tuesday in La Quinta, Calif.
F
The Horned Frogs finished the tournament with a team score of 14-under-par 850 (289-285276) to capture their first championship of the season while Stanford (866), Washington (869), UCLA (874) and USC (874) rounded out the top-five. In addition, the Frogs had the individual tournament champion as Daniel Jennevret posted a 12-under-par score of 204 (69-67-68) to win the title by six strokes. Jennevret held a fourstroke advantage heading into the third round of action and posted a 4-under-par score of 68 on the final 18 holes to secure the tournament championship. De Beer - who was competing as an individual - finished third overall with a three-round score of 212 (68-73-71). The TCU sophomore notched a 1-under-par score of 71 on the final 18 holes of action. Travis Woolf recorded his first top-10 showing of the season as the TCU senior finished seventh overall with a 2-under-par score of 214 (72-75-67), including a tournamentbest 5-under-par 67 on the final day of action. Eli Cole and Pontus Gad each finished tied for 26th overall following a 5-over-par score of 221. Scott Roudebush - who was competing as an individual - finished tied for 34th overall with a score of 223 (74-75-74) while Tom Hoge finished tied for 37th overall with a score of 224 (74-78-72).
Isleworth Collegiate Invitational Isleworth Country Club • Windermere, Florida • October 25-27, 2009
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. T-13. T-13. 15.
Oklahoma State Florida Stanford Georgia Alabama South Carolina TCU Texas Tech Illinois East Tennessee State Clemson Arizona State Central Florida Washington Kentucky
TCU Final Results 291 - 289 - 301 - 881 292 - 292 - 302 - 886 289 - 300 - 299 - 888 304 - 297 - 292 - 893 299 - 293 - 304 - 896 302 - 301 - 295 - 898 290 - 306 - 303 - 899 296 - 303 - 301 - 900 306 - 297 - 298 - 901 309 - 299 - 300 - 908 307 - 298 - 304 - 909 301 - 307 - 304 - 912 308 - 298 - 307 - 913 308 - 301 - 304 - 913 317 - 311 - 301 - 929
+17 +22 +24 +29 +32 +34 +35 +36 +37 +44 +45 +48 +49 +49 +65
T-13.
Travis Woolf
69 - 79 - 73 - 221
+5
T-29.
Daniel Jennevret
72 - 78 - 77 - 227
+11
T-33.
Tom Hoge
73 - 78 - 77 - 228
+12
T-50.
Johan de Beer
76 - 80 - 76 - 232
+16
T-50.
Pontus Gad
77 - 71 - 84 - 232
+16
he TCU men's golf program finished seventh overall following a third-round score of 303 on Tuesday at the Isleworth Collegiate Invitational in Windermere, Fla.
T
The Horned Frogs posted a tournament tally of 899 (290-306-303) while finishing three strokes outside the top-five. Oklahoma State captured the Isleworth Collegiate Invitational with a score of 881 while Florida (886), Stanford (888), Georgia (893) and Alabama (896) rounded out the top-five. Travis Woolf posted a 5-over-par score of 221 (69-79-73), including a team-high score of 73 in the final round of action, en route to tying for 13th overall. Daniel Jennevret finished tied for 29th overall with a score of 227 (72-78-77) while Tom Hoge finished one stroke behind his teammates with a score of 228 (73-78-77) en route to tying for 33rd overall. Johan de Beer and Pontus Gad each finished tied for 50th with a score of 232.
Season Review
28
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
T O U R N A M E N T
R E S U L T S
UH Hilo Intercollegiate Mauna Lani North Course • Kohala Coast, Hawai’i • February 3-5, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. Stanford 297 - 283 - 286 - 866 +2 T-2. Oregon 291 - 290 - 288 - 869 +5 T-2. Washington 291 - 287 - 291 - 869 +5 4. Texas 297 - 292 - 281 - 870 +6 5. Oklahoma State 299 - 285 - 287 - 871 +7 6. Georgia Tech 304 - 291 - 282 - 877 +13 7. Texas Tech 296 - 298 - 287 - 881 +17 8. UCLA 288 - 301 - 296 - 885 +21 9. USC 293 - 301 - 292 - 886 +22 T-10. Arizona State 313 - 298 - 278 - 889 +25 T-10. Florida State 306 - 302 - 281 - 889 +25 12. Oregon State 302 - 298 - 294 - 894 +30 13. San Francisco 312 - 294 - 290 - 896 +32 14. TCU 310 - 297 - 293 - 900 +36 15. Colorado 304 - 306 - 293 - 903 +39 Rest of the Field - 16. UC Davis (904); 17. San Jose State (913); 18. Hawai’i (923); 19. Sonoma State (936); 20. Rhode Island (939); 21. UH Hilo (949); 22. Cal State East Bay (969).
T-50.
Johan de Beer
79 - 74 - 71 - 224
+8
52.
Daniel Jennevret
77 - 72 - 76 - 225
+9
T-54.
Travis Woolf
78 - 75 - 74 - 227
+11
T-54.
Tom Hoge
76 - 77 - 74 - 227
+11
T-74.
Pontus Gad
82 - 76 - 74 - 232
+16
T-77.
• - Scott Roudebush
75 - 79 - 79 - 233
+17
T-77.
• - Eli Cole
74 - 79 - 80 - 233
+17
he TCU men's golf team finished 14th overall in its first tournament of the spring season with a team score of 900 at the Mauna Lani Invitational at the Mauna Lani North Course in Kohala Coast, Hawai'i.
T
The Horned Frogs posted a team score of 293 in the third and final round of action and finished 11 strokes outside of the top-10 of the tournament. Stanford captured the team championship with a score of 866 while Oregon (869), Washington (869), Texas (870) and Oklahoma State (871) rounded out the top-five. Johan de Beer was the Frogs' top performer at the Mauna Lani Invitational as the TCU sophomore notched a three-round score of 224 (79-74-71), including a team-best 71 on the final day of action. Daniel Jennevret notched a three-round score of 225 (77-72-76) and finished 52nd overall while Travis Woolf and Tom Hoge finished tied for 54th overall with a score of 227 with both golfers shooting a 74 on the final 18 holes of action. Pontus Gad finished with for 74th overall with a score of 232 (82-76-74) while Scott Roudebush and Eli Cole - who were both competing as individuals - finished tied for 77th overall with a score of 233.
John Hayt Collegiate Invitational Sawgrass Country Club • Jacksonville, Florida • February 28 - March 2, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. T-5. T-5. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
North Florida LSU Duke Alabama Tennessee Tulsa Florida Furman TCU Georgia Southern Central Florida Coastal Carolina UAB North Carolina State Mercer
288 - 294 - 294 - 876 304 - 293 - 291 - 888 294 - 291 - 304 - 889 307 - 291 - 297 - 895 304 - 297 - 297 - 898 303 - 293 - 302 - 898 310 - 293 - 296 - 899 296 - 297 - 307 - 900 298 - 302 - 301 - 901 301 - 295 - 306 - 902 304 - 292 - 309 - 905 307 - 296 - 304 - 907 313 - 298 - 299 - 910 312 - 298 - 304 - 914 312 - 312 - 307 - 931
+12 +24 +25 +31 +34 +34 +35 +36 +37 +38 +41 +43 +46 +50 +67
T-21.
Eli Cole
74 - 76 - 75 - 225
+9
T-21.
Johan de Beer
73 - 75 - 77 - 225
+9
T-21.
Travis Woolf
74 - 74 - 77 - 225
+9
T-27.
Tom Hoge
77 - 77 - 72 - 226
+10
53.
• - Pontus Gad
77 - 77 - 77 - 231
+15
T-72.
Daniel Jennevret
77 - 82 - 78 - 237
+21
he Horned Frogs concluded their second tournament of the spring season following a ninth-place showing at the John Hayt Collegiate Invitational at the Sawgrass Country Club in Jacksonville, Fla.
T
The Frogs posted a three-round score of 901 (298-302-301) following a team score of 301 on the final nine holes of action. North Florida captured the team championship with a 54-hole score of 876 while LSU (888), Duke (889), Alabama (895) and Tennessee (898) rounded out the top-five. Travis Woolf, Johan de Beer and Eli all tied for the highest finish for the Frogs as the TCU teammates all posted a 9-over-par score of 225 en route to finishing 21st overall. Junior Tom a notched a score of 226 (77-77-72) en route to tying for 27th overall and posting the Frogs' best third round score of even-par 72. Daniel Jennevret finished 72nd overall with a three-round score of 237 (77-82-78), and Pontus Gad - who was competing as an individual - finished 53rd with a score of 231 (77-77-77).
Las Vegas Invitational Southern Highlands Country Club • Las Vegas, Nevada • March 12-14, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results T-1. T-1. T-3. T-3. 5. 6. 7. 8. T-9. T-9. 11. T-12. T-12. 14. 15.
• - UNLV UCLA USC Texas A&M Texas Tech Arizona State Texas TCU Georgia Tech Tennessee Oklahoma State Georgia New Mexico Florida Arizona
296 - 297 - 306 - 899 294 - 306 - 299 - 899 296 - 307 - 305 - 908 295 - 307 - 306 - 908 304 - 304 - 303 - 911 305 - 303 - 305 - 913 297 - 320 - 302 - 919 302 - 310 - 308 - 920 300 - 322 - 306 - 928 302 - 313 - 313 - 928 302 - 321 - 309 - 932 298 - 322 - 315 - 935 305 - 316 - 314 - 935 292 - 326 - 319 - 937 303 - 315 - 320 - 938
+35 +35 +44 +44 +47 +49 +55 +56 +64 +64 +68 +71 +71 +73 +74
T-5.
Johan de Beer
68 - 76 - 78 - 222
+6
T-19.
Tom Hoge
76 - 76 - 76 - 228
+12
T-53
Daniel Jennevret
79 - 77 - 82 - 238
+22
T-57.
Scott Roudebush
79 - 82 - 78 - 239
+23
T-61.
Pontus Gad
83 - 81 - 76 - 240
+24
he Horned Frogs posted a tournament score of 920 en route to finshing eighth overall at the Southern Highlands Collegiate Master's at the Southern Highlands Golf Club in Las Vegas.
T
The Frogs recorded a score of 308 on the final 18 holes of action and notched a score of 920 (302-310-308) over the three-day event. UNLV captured the tournament title following a suddent death playoff with UCLA after notching a score of 899 while USC (908), Texas A&M (908) and Texas Tech (911) rounded out the top-five. Johan de Beer finished as the Frogs' top performer as the TCU sophomore notched a threeround score of 222 (68-76-78) en route to finishing tied for fifth overall. Tom Hoge recorded his best finish of the spring campaign as the TCU junior tied for 19th overall with a tournament tally of 228 (76-76-76). Daniel Jennevret finished tied for 53rd overall with a score of 238 (79-77-82). Scott Roudebush finished one stroke back of his TCU teammate with a score of 239 (79-8278) en route to finishing tied for 57th overall, and Pontus Gad notched a score of 240 (83-8176), which tied for 61st overall.
Season Review
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
29
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
T O U R N A M E N T
R E S U L T S
National Invitational Tournament Omni National Golf Resort • Tucson, Arizona • March 17-18, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. T-8. T-8. 10. 11. 12. 13.
TCU Texas SMU Arizona California Colorado State Tulsa Baylor New Mexico Texas Tech Purdue Wyoming UTEP
286 - 283 - 283 - 852 291 - 288 - 283 - 862 293 - 294 - 278 - 865 293 - 284 - 290 - 867 294 - 293 - 283 - 870 297 - 293 - 283 - 873 294 - 297 - 287 - 878 289 - 292 - 298 - 879 294 - 296 - 289 - 879 294 - 298 - 291 - 883 299 - 290 - 295 - 884 306 - 305 - 296 - 907 302 - 308 - 301 - 911
-12 -2 +1 +3 +6 +9 +14 +15 +15 +19 +20 +43 +47
T-5.
Daniel Jennevret
72 - 74 - 69 - 215
-1
T-12.
Johan de Beer
68 - 71 - 77 - 216
E
T-12.
Travis Woolf
72 - 70 - 74 - 216
E
T-18.
Tom Hoge
78 - 68 - 71 - 217
+1
T-24.
Pontus Gad
74 - 77 - 69 - 220
+4
T-36.
Scott Roudebush
72 - 74 - 76 - 222
+6
he Horned Frogs captured their second tournament title of the 2009-10 campaign as TCU notched a 10-stroke victory at the National Invitational Tournament at the Tucson National Golf Resort.
T
The Frogs posted a score of 852, including 5-under-par score of 283 on the final 18 holes, while Texas (862), SMU (865), Arizona (867) and California (870) rounded out the top-five. Daniel Jennevret was the Frogs' top performer after finishing tied for fifth following a 1-underpar score of 215 (72-74-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 on the last 18 holes of action. Johan de Beer - who entered the final round tied for the tournament lead - finished 12th overall with an even-par score of 216 (68-71-77). Teammate Travis Woolf also notched an ever-par score of 216 (72-70-74) en route to tying with de Beer for 12th overall. Tom Hoge concluded the National Invitational Tournament with a 1-over-par score of 217 (78-68-71), including a score of 5-under-par over the final 36 holes, to finish tied for 18th overall. Newcomer Pontus Gad notched a score of 220 (74-77-69), including a 3-under-par score on the final 18 holes of action en route to tying for 25th overall. Scott Roudebush - who was competing as an individual - finished tied for 36th overall with a score of 222 (72-74-76).
Morris Williams Intercollegiate UT Golf Club • Austin, Texas • April 5-6, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Georgia Texas Texas A&M Texas Tech Arkansas New Mexico TCU Tulsa Oklahoma State Pepperdine LSU SMU Kansas State Baylor UTSA
287 - 307 - 284 - 878 292 - 287 - 300 - 879 298 - 294 - 291 - 883 287 - 299 - 298 - 884 294 - 299 - 293 - 886 281 - 299 - 310 - 890 301 - 293 - 302 - 896 305 - 294 - 299 - 898 299 - 301 - 301 - 901 299 - 299 - 309 - 907 292 - 298 - 322 - 912 304 - 303 - 309 - 916 302 - 307 - 310 - 919 305 - 306 - 311 - 922 323 - 315 - 322 - 960
+26 +27 +31 +32 +34 +38 +44 +46 +49 +55 +60 +64 +67 +70 +108
T-5.
Johan de Beer
75 - 71 - 73 - 219
+6
T-21.
Pontus Gad
70 - 75 - 78 - 223
+10
T-26.
Travis Woolf
79 - 72 - 74 - 225
+12
T-47.
Tom Hoge
77 - 75 - 77 - 229
+16
T-74.
Daniel Jennevret
80 - 81 - 81 - 242
+29
he TCU men's golf program collected a seventh-place showing at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate following a three-round score of 896 at the UT Golf Club in Austin, Texas.
T
The University of Georgia came away with the tournament title following a 54-hole team score of 878 while Texas (879), Texas A&M (883), Texas Tech (884) and Arkansas (886) rounded out the top five. Johan de Beer was the Frogs' top performer as the TCU sophomore tied for fifth overall with a three-round tally of 219 (75-71-73), including a 1-over-par 73 in the final round of action. Pontus Gad finished tied for 21st overall with a score of 223 (70-75-78) while teammate Travis Woolf notched a score of 225 (79-72-74) en route to tying for 26th overall. Tom Hoge finished tied for 47th overall with a three round score of 229 (77-75-77), and Daniel Jennevret finished tied for 74th overall with a score of 242 (80-81-81).
Texas A&M Aggie Invitational The Traditions Golf Club • Bryan, Texas • April 17-18, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.
Texas A&M Oklahoma State Texas Tech San Diego State Texas TCU Baylor New Mexico SMU Kent State Colorado UTSA
346 - 351 - 345 - 1,042 355 - 357 - 351 - 1,063 354 - 359 - 354 - 1,067 356 - 362 - 369 - 1,987 359 - 368 - 365 - 1,092 375 - 363 - 356 - 1,094 366 - 377 - 352 - 1,095 364 - 369 - 363 - 1,096 366 - 374 - 360 - 1,100 374 - 365 - 366 - 1,105 376 - 368 - 366 - 1,110 377 - 377 - 379 - 1,133
-38 -17 -13 +7 +12 +14 +15 +16 +20 +25 +30 +53
T-18.
Travis Woolf
75 - 71 - 69 - 215
-1
T-38.
Eli Cole
73 - 77 - 71 - 221
+5
T-43.
Daniel Jennevret
72 - 75 - 75 - 222
+6
T-43.
Johan de Beer
76 - 74 - 72 - 222
+6
T-43.
Tom Hoge
80 - 69 - 73 - 222
+6
T-54.
Scott Roudebush
79 - 74 - 71 - 224
+8
he TCU men's golf program posted a three-round score of 1,094 en route to finishing sixth overall at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational at The Traditions Golf Club in Bryan, Texas.
T
The Frogs posted a third round tally of 356 in the six-man, five count format at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational. The host-program Texas A&M captured the tournament crown with a score of 1,042 while Oklahoma State (1,063), Texas Tech (1,067), San Diego State (1,087) and Texas (1,092) rounded out the top-five. Travis Woolf was the Frogs' top golfer at the Texas A&M Aggie Invitational as the Fort Worth standout recorded a 1-under-par score of 215 (75-71-69), including a 3-under-par score of 69 in the final round of action. Eli Cole finished 38th overall following a score of 221 (73-77-71), including a 1-under-par score of 71 on the final 18 holes of action. Johan de Beer, Tom Hoge and Daniel Jennevret each tied for 43rd overall with a score of 222, and Scott Roudebush notched a score of 224 (79-74-71) en route to finishing tied for 54th overall.
Season Review
30
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
2 0 0 9 - 1 0
T O U R N A M E N T
R E S U L T S
Mountain West Conference Championships Tucson National Golf Resort • Tucson, Arizona • May 6-8, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
Colorado State San Diego State UNLV BYU TCU Air Force Wyoming New Mexico Utah
283 - 274 - 277 - 834 285 - 277 - 285 - 847 290 - 271 - 288 - 849 287 - 279 - 288 - 854 293 - 298 - 276 - 867 304 - 292 - 291 - 887 303 - 299 - 290 - 892 311 - 289 - 293 - 893 305 - 304 - 302 - 911
-18 -5 -3 +2 +15 +35 +40 +41 +59
T-7.
Travis Woolf
71 - 72 - 70 - 213
E
T-14.
Tom Hoge
72 - 74 - 69 - 215
+2
T-23.
Johan de Beer
75 - 77 - 68 - 220
+7
29.
Daniel Jennevret
75 - 78 - 69 - 222
+9
T-35.
Pontus Gad
77 - 75 - 77 - 229
+16
he TCU men's golf team finished fifth overall following a team score of 867 at the Mountain West Conference Championships at the Tucson National Golf Resort in Tucson, Ariz.
T
The Frogs posted their best score of 276 in the third round of action, which was the lowest team score of the afternoon. Colorado State came away with the conference title as the Rams posted a score of 834 while San Diego State (847), UNLV (849), BYU (854) and TCU (867) rounded out the top five. Travis Woolf was the Frogs' top performer as the TCU senior finished seventh overall with a three-round score of 213 (71-72-70). Tom Hoge finished 14th overall with a score of 215 (72-74-69), including a 2-under-par score of 69 in the third round of action. Johan de Beer notched a 23rd-place showing with a 54-hole score of 220 (75-77-68), including a team-low 68 in the third round. Daniel Jennevret recorded a score of 222 (75-78-69) en route to finishing tied for 29th overall while Pontus Gad tied for 35th overall with a score of 229 (77-75-77).
NCAA Central Regional Championships The Traditions Golf Club • Bryan, Texas • May 20-22, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. T-5. T-5. 7. 8. T-9. T-9. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Texas Tech Texas A&M TCU North Florida Georgia Baylor Pepperdine Tulsa Auburn Wichita State Rice North Carolina Georgetown Jackson State
282 - 284 - 285 - 851 277 - 288 - 287 - 852 277 - 291 - 290 - 858 280 - 298 - 281 - 859 294 - 291 - 284 - 869 291 - 289 - 289 - 869 286 - 288 - 303 - 877 292 - 288 - 299 - 879 288 - 290 - 302 - 880 283 - 290 - 307 - 880 299 - 284 - 306 - 889 301 - 311 - 298 - 910 303 - 299 - 313 - 915 325 - 348 - 310 - 983
-13 -12 -6 -5 +5 +5 +13 +15 +16 +16 +25 +46 +51 +119
4.
Johan de Beer
71 - 67 - 72 - 210
-6
T-5.
Daniel Jennevret
66 - 72 - 73 - 211
-5
T-14.
Travis Woolf
69 - 75 - 71 - 215
-1
T-43.
Eli Cole
74 - 77 - 74 - 225
+9
T-49.
Pontus Gad
71 - 78 - 77 - 226
+10
CU posted a third-place finish Saturday in the final round at the NCAA South Central Men’s Golf Championships at the Traditions Golf Club, securing its second-straight berth in the NCAA Championships.
T
The NCAA bid marks the 15th in program history and the fifth this decade. The Horned Frogs will compete in the national tournament June 1-6 at The Honors Course in Ooltewah, Tenn. TCU concluded Saturday’s final round in the same position that it opened the day, finishing the tournament with a six-under-par 858. No. 10 Texas Tech claimed the regional title while finishing the weekend at -13, while No. 3 Texas A&M finished runner-up at -12. Two Frogs placed among the field’s top-10 competitors. Sophomore Johan de Beer earned fourth place overall for the weekend at -6 (210) after shooting an even-par 72 Saturday. He finished only three strokes back of the regional champion, Georgia’s Russell Henley (-9). TCU freshman Daniel Jennevret, the tournament’s co-leader after day one, tied for fifth place at -5 (211) after a one-over-par final round of 73. Senior Travis Woolf logged TCU’s top final-round score of 71 (-1) to climb into a tie for 14th place at day’s end with a one-under-par total of 215. Sophomore Eli Cole tied for 44th with a nine-over-par 225 following Saturday’s 74 (+2), while freshman Pontus Gad shot 77 (+5) in his final round to tie for 50th at +10 (226) on the weekend.
NCAA National Championships The Honors Course • Ooltewah, Tennessee • June 1-6, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. Oklahoma State 283 - 284 - 283 - 850 2. Florida State 283 - 279 - 292 - 854 3. Georgia Tech 290 - 282 - 286 - 858 4. Washington 289 - 288 - 283 - 860 5. Oregon 284 - 294 - 283 - 861 6. • - Augusta State 287 - 288 - 288 - 863 7. Texas Tech 302 - 285 - 280 - 867 T-8. Stanford 292 - 288 - 288 - 868 • - Won NCAA National Championship in Match Play
-14 -10 -6 -4 -3 -1 +3 +4
T-58.
Johan de Beer
74 - 73 - 72 - 219
+3
T-58.
Travis Woolf
76 - 70 - 73 - 219
+3
T-116.
Daniel Jennevret
78 - 78 - 71 - 227
+11
T-124.
Eli Cole
74 - 76 - 78 - 228
+12
T-141.
Pontus Gad
80 - 77 - 75 - 232
+16
he TCU men's golf program finished 27th overall at the NCAA National Championships at The Honors Course in Ooltewah, Tenn., following a three-round score of 889.
T
The Horned Frogs posted a score of 291 on the final 18 holes of action en route to finishing with a 54-hole score of 889 (302-296-291). Travis Woolf and Johan de Beer both finished tied for 60th overall following an indentical score of 219. De Beer notched an even-par score of 72 on the final 18 holes of action while Woolf posted a 1-over-par score of 73 on Thursday afternoon. Daniel Jennevret recorded a score of 227 (78-78-71), including a 1-under-par score of 71 on Thursday afternoon, en route to finishing tied for 116th overall. Eli Cole notched a 54-hole score of 228 (74-76-78) and tied for 125th overall while Pontus Gad finished tied for 141st overall following a score of 232 (80-77-75).
Did Not Advance to Match Play T-8. San Diego (868); T-8. Arizona State (868); T-11. Florida (869); T-11. Virginia (869); 13. Texas A&M (871); 14. North Florida (872); 15. USC (874); T-16. Clemson (875); T-16. Oregon State (875); T16. UCLA (875); 19. Illinois (876); 20. Kent State (877); T-21. Texas (879); T-21. UNLV (879); 23. California (880); 24. LSU (883); T-25. Baylor (884); T-25. Tennessee (884); T-27. TCU (889); T-27. Duke (889); 29. Penn State (898); 30. Georgia Southern (905)
Oklahoma State finished first overall in the preliminary rounds following a 14-under-par score of 850 while Florida State (854), Georgia Tech (858), Washington (860) and Oregon (861) round out the top-five. All five teams along with Augusta State, Texas Tech and Stanford round out the three remaining teams that advance to match play.
Season Review
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
31
2 0 1 0 - 1 1
R o s t e r
& S c h e d u l e
Alphabetical Roster Name Johnny Antle Max Bichsel Will Christensen Eli Cole Johan de Beer Pontus Gad Tom Hoge Daniel Jennevret Matt Johnson Ryan Myers Eduardo Perez Ian Phillips Scott Roudebush
Ht. 6-2 6-0 5-9 5-7 6-0 6-4 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-3 5-7 6-3 6-1
Wt. 190 175 140 145 180 200 175 210 175 175 160 165 180
Cl. Fr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Sr. Sr. Jr. Fr. Sr.
Hometown Graham, Texas Cranbury, New Jersey Midland, Texas Beverly Hills, California Pretoria, South Africa Linkoping, Sweden Fargo, North Dakota Sandviken, Sweden Fort Worth, Texas Flint, Texas Miraville, Ecuador Acworth, Georgia Austin, Texas
Last School Graham High School The Peddie School Trinity School of Midland Harvard-Westlake High School Pretoria Boys’ High School Klippans Gymasieskola Fargo South High School Bessemer Sandviken Country Day School Odessa College Pendleton School Harrison High School Austin High School
Johan de Beer
2010-11 Schedule September 27-28
PING/Golfweek Preview
Stillwater, Oklahome
The Prestige at PGA West Isleworth Collegiate Invitational
Palm Springs, California Orlando, Florida
UH Hilo Intercollegiate John Hayt Collegiate Invitational
Kamuela, Hawai’i Jacksonville, Florida
Las Vegas Invitational Desert Shootout National Invitational Tournament
Las Vegas, Nevada Goodyear, Arizona Tucson, Arizona
Morris Williams Intercollegiate Texas A&M Aggie Invitational
Austin, Texas College Station, Texas
Mountain West Conference Championships NCAA Regional Championship
Tucson, Arizona TBA
NCAA National Championship
Stillwater, Oklahoma
October 10-12 24-26
February 2-4 27-1
March 11-13 17-19 21-22
April 4-5 16-17
May 5-7 18-20
June 1-6
2009-10 Golfweek/Sagarin Final Rankings Rank 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
Program Oklahoma State Washington Texas A&M Stanford Augusta State Florida Oregon Texas UCLA Texas Tech USC Illinois Georgia Georgia Tech Arizona State Florida State Clemson UNLV South Carolina North Florida Virginia TCU Oregon State San Diego State Duke
Sagarin Rating 69.96 70.32 70.36 70.47 70.57 70.67 70.72 70.76 70.79 70.89 70.93 70.95 71.01 71.04 71.10 71.10 71.10 71.16 71.17 71.28 71.32 71.34 71.42 71.45 71.49
Events 13 12 13 11 12 13 15 14 12 12 12 13 11 12 12 13 12 13 11 14 13 12 14 13 12
Tom Hoge
Scott Roudebush Season Review
32
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
P R O G R A M H I S TO RY
H I S T O R Y
O F
S U C C E S S J.J. Henry 1998 Golfweek’s National Collegiate Golfer of the Year
RICH TRADITION By the Numbers
21 1 53
The number of consecutive NCAA Central Regional Appearances that the Frogs have made. TCU is one of only four programs in the country to make 21 straight NCAA regional appearances with the same coach. TCU head men’s golf coach Bill Montigel is the only golf coach (or any coach) in the country that has been named Coach of the Year in four separate NCAA Division I conferences. The number of all-conference selections that the Frogs have had in their program history. Under Montigel, the Frogs have had 39 all-conference performers, including two during the 2009-10 campaign.
Adam Rubinson 2002 and 2003 All-American
9
The number of conference championships that the Frogs have had in their program history. TCU has captured eight of nine conference championships with Montigel as the head men’s golf coach.
5
Montigel has guide five players to Conference Golfer of the Year accolades. During one stretch, the Frogs had three straight Conference USA Golfers of the Year in J.J. Killeen, Adam Meyer and Adam Rubinson.
15
The number of NCAA National Championship appearances that the Frogs have made during their program history. The longest streak for the Frogs during that span is five consecutive from 1994-98.
25
The Frogs have had 25 All-Americans in their program history, including four golfers that earned the post-season accolades on more than one occasion. J.J. Henry is the program’s lone three-time All-American.
Jim Sorenson, Bill Woodley, Pete Jordan 1986 All-American Award Winners Program History
34
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
H I S T O R Y
O F
S U C C E S S
1986 Southwest Conference Champions
1997 Western Athletic Conference Champions
1998 Western Athletic Conference Champions
2001 Conference USA Champions
2002 Conference USA Champions
2003 Conference USA Champions
2004 Conference USA Champions
2005 Conference USA Champions
2009 Mountain West Conference Champions Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
35
T H E
P G A
T O U R J.J. Henry PGA Tour
ON THE TOUR PGA Tour Highlights enry has been a standout on the PGA Tour for the previous nine seasons... partcipated as a member of the 2006 U.S. Ryder Cup Team and 2006 World Cup Team... captured his first PGA Tour event at the 2006 Buick Championship, making him the first state-born player to win the championship and 11th golfer in the 55-year history of the tournament to claim their first title.... recorded 25 top-10 finishes during his standout career... recorded a pair of top-10 finishes and eclipsed the $1-million mark for the second consecutive season during the 2007 campaign.
H
enry recorded a banner campaign where he finished 29th overall on the PGA TOUR Money List after accumulating over $2-million in prize money... competed as part of the World Cup Team where he teamed with Stewart Cink at the Barbados World Cup... competed in 28 tournaments where he made the cut in 20 events en route to securing five top-10 finishes and nine top-25 showings.
H
TCU Highlights enry became the first golfer in TCU history to be selected as the Golfweek/Taylor Made Co-College Player of the Year after the Frog senior earned runner-up laurels at the 1998 NCAA National Championships... recorded a four-round score of 16-under-par 272 (67-6770-68) en route to missing out on the national crown by one stroke to James McLean of the University of Minnesota.
H
enry was selected as the Western Athletic Conference Golfer of the Year after capturing the conference tournament individual crown... recorded a hole-in-one on the 17th hole in the final round of action to seal the individual title as well as give the Frogs the back-to-back conference team championships... selected as a first team All-American as well as a first team AllWestern Athletic Conference award winner... became the first-ever golfer in TCU history to earn three trips to the All-American Team as well as a trio of accolades in conference competition.
H
Program History
36
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
F U T U R E
P G A
S T A R S
David Schultz
Drew Laning
J.J. Killeen
Sal Spallone
Bret Guetz
Nationwide Tour
Nationwide Tour
Nationwide Tour
Nationwide Tour
Nationwide Tour
TOUR FUTURES
Adam Rubinson
Colby Beckstrom
Adam Meyer
Gateway Tour
Gateway Tour
Gateway Tour
Franklin Corpening
Drew Stoltz
James Sacheck
Gateway Tour
Gateway Tour
Gateway Tour Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
37
P A S T
P G A
S T A R S Charles Coody
Don Massengale
1971 The Master’s Champion • 1971 U.S. Ryder Cup Team
1967 PGA Championship Runner-Up
fter finishing a fine collegiate career at TCU in 1960, Charles Coody joined the PGA Tour in 1963 where his career highlight would be capturing the 1971 Master’s Championship. A three-time winner of the PGA Tour, Coody was a member of the 1971 U.S. Ryder Cup Team.
D
A
The former TCU standout captured a pair of victories during the 1966 season at the Bing Crosby National Pro-Am and The Canadian Open en route to finishing 27th overall on the money list that campaign. Massengale finished among the top-60 on the money list on the PGA Tour on four occasions.
Coody – who was diagnosed with polio at the age of 13 – joined the Champions Tour during the 1987 season where he has accumulated 12 victories during his career on the senior circuit. The former TCU standout captured the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf on three occasions as well as claimed four victories during the 1991 season, including the Chrysler Cup and NYNEX Commemorative.
on Massengale was a standout for the TCU men’s golf program during the 1950s and joined the PGA Tour following his graduation in 1960. He narrowly missed becoming the first Majors champion in TCU history as he was defeated in an 18-hole playoff by Don January for the 1967 PGA Championship title.
A 16-time Majors competitor, Massengale played on the Champions Tour full-time from 1987 to 1996 where he collected a pair of victories at the 1990 Grand Rapids Open and 1992 Royal Caribbean Classic. During his career on the Senior PGA Tour, Massengale amassed over $1-million in prize winnings. Massengale passed away in January of 2007.
A winner of over $4-million on the Champions Tour, Coody captured the 1997 MasterCard Champions Championship and finished second overall at the 1991 Senior Players Championship. Coody has been inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame and Texas Golf Hall of Fame.
PA S T P G A S TA R S Pete Jordan
Dan Jenkins
14 Seasons on PGA Tour
Best-Selling Author • Pulitzer Prize Nominee
ete Jordan – a 1986 All-American for the TCU men’s golf program – has made nearly 300 appearances on the PGA Tour during his 14-year professional career. The former TCU standout recorded his best finish at the British Columbia Open where he notched silver medal laurels by virtue of a sudden-death playoff hole.
P
A winner of over $2-million on the PGA Tour, Jordan’s biggest purse came at the 2001 John Deere Classic where he earned a paycheck of $190,400 after finishing third overall. Jordan also finished fourth overall at the FedEx St. Jude Classic in 2000 as well as a pair of top-10 showings during the 1999 campaign at the John Deere Classic and Canon Greater Hartford Open where he earned fifth and sixth-place honors, respectively. Jordan notched four runner-up showings during his career on the Nationwide Tour, and he collected his best finish at a Major Championship during the 1995 U.S. Open where he tied for 21st overall.
fter serving as the team captain for the Horned Frogs’ men’s golf program for three seasons, Dan Jenkins graduated from TCU in 1953. After graduation, Jenkins became a legendary sportswriter for the Dallas Times Herald, Sports Illustrated and Golf Digest.
A
An author of over 18 books, seven of Jenkins novels have been best sellers, and three of them were made into movies, including “Dead Solid Perfect,” “Semi-Tough” and Baja Oklahoma.” The former TCU captain was a seven-time recipient of the “Best Story of the Year Award” selected by the Golf Writers Association of America and six-time “Best Story of the Year Award” winner by the Texas Sportswriters Association. Jenkins has been induced into the World Sportswriters Hall of Fame, National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame, Texas Golf Hall of Fame and TCU Letterman’s Hall of Fame. His other awards include the Jack Nicklaus Memorial Golf Journalism Award and PGA Lifetime Achievement Award in Journalism to name a few.
Program History
38
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
N C A A
C H A M P I O N S H I P
H I S T O R Y
1980 NCAA National Championships Ohio State Scarlet Course 1. 2. 3. T-4. T-4. 6. 7. 8. 9. T-10. T-10. T-12. T-12. 14. 15.
Oklahoma State BYU Oral Roberts TCU Ohio State Tennessee Georgia Southern USC Centenary Fresno State Florida Clemson Texas Florida State Texas A&M
•
Columbus, Ohio
•
May 28-31, 1980
TCU Final Results
Team Results 298 - 298 - 302 - 286 - 1,173 293 - 301 - 291 - 292 - 1,177 299 - 298 - 294 - 287 - 1,178 298 - 298 - 302 - 286 - 1,184 302 - 289 - 294 - 299 - 1,184 298 - 299 - 295 - 296 - 1,188 298 - 298 - 298 - 301 - 1,195 298 - 309 - 294 - 297 - 1,198 297 - 301 - 299 - 304 - 1,201 310 - 300 - 293 - 306 - 1,209 292 - 306 - 303 - 308 - 1,209 302 - 302 - 303 - 306 - 1,213 304 - 310 - 293 - 306 - 1,213 311 - 292 - 304 - 308 - 1,215 305 - 303 - 300 - 309 - 1,217
+21 +25 +26 +32 +32 +36 +43 +46 +49 +57 +57 +61 +61 +63 +65
Did Not Make the Cut
T-5.
David Sann
T-23.
Dave Davis
70 - 73 - 76 - 71 - 290 80 - 75 - 73 - 70 - 298
T-26.
Kevin Harrison
74 - 74 - 79 - 72 - 299
T-26.
Bjorn Svedin
76 - 76 - 74 - 73 - 299
T-80.
John Tetens
78 - 78 - 80 - 74 - 310
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Jay Don Blake (Utah State)
69 - 71 - 71 - 72 - 283
2.
Hal Sutton (Centenary)
72 - 71 - 70 - 70 - 283
3.
Rafael Alarcon (Oklahoma State)
70 - 72 - 72 - 71 - 285
4.
Bryan Norton (Oral Roberts)
74 - 73 - 72 - 69 - 288
T-5.
David Sann (TCU)
70 - 73 - 76 - 71 - 290
T-5.
Joe Rassett (Oral Roberts)
72 - 76 - 71 - 71 - 290
T-5.
Tim Norris (Fresno State)
73 - 77 - 66 - 74 - 290
T-8.
Bob Tway (Oklahoma State)
69 - 74 - 77 - 71 - 291
Fred Couples (Houston)
73 - 74 - 74 - 70 - 291
Bob Clampett (BYU)
72 - 80 - 70 - 70 - 292
Colorado (909), Wake Forest (910), Houston (912), San Jose State (914), Arizona T-8. State (916), Indiana (916), San Diego State (917), Weber State (919), Pacific 10. (920), UCLA (920), East Tennessee State (921), Ohio (926), Temple (928), Princeton (946), Connecticut (968)
1983 NCAA National Championships San Joaquin Country Club 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. T-8. T-8. T-10. T-10. 12. T-13. T-13. 15.
Oklahoma State Texas Houston Ohio State Clemson Georgia UCLA North Carolina Oklahoma BYU Texas A&M Fresno State Missouri Wake Forest Pacific
•
Fresno, California
•
June 8-11, 1983
TCU Final Results
Team Results 296 - 284 - 290 - 291 - 1,161 299 - 290 - 292 - 287 - 1,168 293 - 297 - 285 - 295 - 1,170 292 - 298 - 294 - 289 - 1,173 305 - 291 - 292 - 288 - 1,176 297 - 295 - 289 - 298 - 1,179 290 - 294 - 296 - 301 - 1,181 291 - 290 - 306 - 298 - 1,185 300 - 288 - 293 - 304 - 1,185 298 - 293 - 294 - 301 - 1,186 295 - 298 - 292 - 301 - 1,186 289 - 297 - 298 - 305 - 1,189 302 - 299 - 289 - 303 - 1,193 303 - 293 - 295 - 302 - 1,193 294 - 294 - 307 - 302 - 1,197
+9 +16 +18 +21 +24 +27 +29 +33 +33 +34 +34 +37 +41 +41 +45
Did Not Make the Cut Florida (896), Alabama (898), Ball State (900), USC (901), Florida State (902), Lamar (904), Oregon (907), Oral Roberts (909), San Diego State (909), Temple (909), San Jose State (910), TCU (911), Weber State (912), Bowling Green (915)
T-62.
Ryan Hill
73 - 73 - 76 - 80 - 302
MC.
Mike Tschetter
76 - 73 - 80 - 229
MC.
Jeff Hiemenz
73 - 78 - 78 - 229
MC.
Bjorn Svedin
79 - 79 - 76 - 234
MC.
Pete Jordan
78 - 77 - 80 - 235
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Jim Carter (Arizona State)
75-68-72-72 = 287
T-2.
Doug Harper (Fresno State)
69-71-74-73 = 287
T-2.
Scott Verplank (Oklahoma State)
72-69-74-72 = 287
T-2.
Paul Thomas (Texas)
73-68-74-72 = 287
T-5.
Peter Persons (Georgia)
72-71-73-72 = 288
T-5.
Bill Tuten (Houston)
73-71-70-74 = 288
T-5.
Brad Faxon (Furman)
74-68-69-77 = 288
8.
Sam Randolph (USC)
72-69-74-74 = 289
9.
Andrew Magee (Oklahoma State)
73-72-74-71 = 290
10.
Mark Brooks (Texas)
74-72-74-70 = 290
1986 NCAA National Championships Bermuda Run Country Club Wake Forest Oklahoma State Oklahoma BYU Houston Miami (Fla.) Lamar Arizona State USC LSU Florida North Carolina Fresno State Georgia Tech Ohio State Arkansas Texas Oregon TCU Furman
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
•
May 28-31, 1986
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. T-6. T-6. T-8. T-8. 10. 11. 12. T-13. T-13. T-13. 16. 17. 18. T-19. T-19.
•
286 - 290 - 302 - 278 - 1,156 289 - 284 - 289 - 298 - 1,160 286 - 289 - 296 - 292 - 1,163 298 - 285 - 287 - 297 - 1,167 296 - 286 - 300 - 287 - 1,169 288 - 294 - 291 - 297 - 1,172 292 - 294 - 291 - 297 - 1,172 294 - 291 - 294 - 295 - 1,174 297 - 290 - 291 - 296 - 1,174 292 - 296 - 293 - 294 - 1,175 294 - 293 - 302 - 287 - 1,176 293 - 293 - 301 - 290 - 1,177 292 - 296 - 300 - 292 - 1,180 296 - 294 - 298 - 292 - 1,180 304 - 293 - 289 - 294 - 1,180 299 - 294 - 295 - 295 - 1,183 304 - 288 - 292 - 303 - 1,187 293 - 298 - 303 - 298 - 1,192 302 - 300 - 293 - 307 - 1,202 293 - 305 - 296 - 308 - 1,202
+4 +8 +11 +15 +17 +20 +20 +22 +22 +23 +24 +25 +28 +28 +28 +31 +35 +40 +50 +50
T-24.
Jim Sorenson
T-87.
Gavin Munro
72 - 76 - 69 - 74 - 291 77 - 74 - 74 - 77 - 302
T-98.
Pete Jordan
76 - 76 - 74 - 79 - 305
T-102.
Joe Beck
77 - 74 - 79 - 77 - 307
T-115.
Steve Reding
79 - 79 - 76 - 83 - 317
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Scott Verplank (Oklahoma State)
68 - 68 - 73 - 73 - 282
2.
Mike Standly (Houston)
72 - 71 - 73 - 70 - 286
T-3.
Emlyn Aubrey (LSU)
74 - 70 - 73 - 70 - 287
T-3.
Nacho Gervas (Georgia Tech)
72 - 70 - 74 - 71 - 287
T-3.
Peter Persons (Georgia)
73 - 72 - 71 - 71 - 287
T-3.
Andy Zullo (Florida)
73 - 71 - 70 - 73 - 287
T-3.
Carito Villaroman (Weber State)
73 - 70 - 70 - 74 - 287
T-8.
Jim Benepe (Northwestern)
72 - 72 - 71 - 73 - 288
T-8.
George Daves (Oregon)
71 - 71 - 75 - 71 - 288
T-8.
Eduardo Herrera (BYU)
75 - 70 - 65 - 78 - 288
Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
39
N C A A
C H A M P I O N S H I P
H I S T O R Y
1991 NCAA National Championships Poppy Hills Golf Club
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. T-9. T-9. T-9. 12. 13. 14. T-15. T-15.
Oklahoma State North Carolina Arizona State Wake Forest BYU Georgia Tech USC UNLV Arkansas Texas UTEP Central Florida Clemson N.C. State New Mexico South Carolina
•
Monterrey, California
•
June 5-8, 1991
TCU Final Results 300 - 280 - 294 - 287 - 1,161 298 - 286 - 287 - 297 - 1,168 309 - 283 - 289 - 284 - 1,175 298 - 285 - 302 - 295 - 1,180 295 - 295 - 297 - 298 - 1,185 303 - 292 - 302 - 291 - 1,188 299 - 295 - 302 - 294 - 1,191 309 - 292 - 305 - 285 - 1,191 312 - 292 - 297 - 291 - 1,192 304 - 296 - 297 - 295 - 1,192 301 - 296 - 295 - 300 - 1,192 305 - 295 - 297 - 298 - 1,195 312 - 287 - 301 - 296 - 1,196 302 - 300 - 300 - 295 - 1,197 310 - 295 - 295 - 300 - 1,200 310 - 295 - 295 - 300 - 1,200
+9 +16 +23 +28 +33 +36 +38 +39 +40 +40 +40 +43 +44 +45 +48 +48
T-16.
Chad Magee
79 - 69 - 73 - 73 - 294
T-81.
Charlie Stevens
77 - 74 - 78 - 76 - 305
T-127.
Ben Bangert
77 - 77 - 77 - 81 - 312
T-142.
Tony Aguilar
81 - 80 - 75 - 79 - 315
T-145.
Ren Budde
85 - 81 - 78 - 72 - 316
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Warren Schutte (UNLV)
72 - 70 - 74 - 67 - 283
2.
David Duval (Georgia Tech)
76 - 70 - 71 - 69 - 286
3.
Franklin Langham (Georgia)
72 - 69 - 71 - 75 - 287
T-4.
Craig Hainline (Oklahoma State)
74 - 72 - 71 - 72 - 289
T-4.
David Bishop (UTEP)
72 - 74 - 69 - 74 - 289
T-4.
Manny Zerman (Arizona)
76 - 72 - 70 - 71 - 289
T-4.
Phil Mickelson (Arizona State)
74 - 70 - 70 - 75 - 289
T-4.
Tom Scherrer (North Carolina)
75 - 71 - 71 - 72 - 289
Did Not Make the Cut
9.
Hans Albertsson (Wake Forest)
76 - 69 - 74 - 71 - 290
Arizona (1,201), Northwestern (1,201), Florida (1,206), Oklahoma (1,207), Georgia (1,210), SMU (1,212), Ohio State (1,215), UCLA (1,215), TCU (1,216), Rice (1,218), Miami, Ohio (1,225)
T-10.
Jeff Lee (Oklahoma)
73 - 71 - 75 - 72 - 291
T-10.
Jim Lemon (Arizona State)
75 - 70 - 68 - 78 - 291
T-10.
Scott DeSerrano (Oklahoma State)
79 - 69 - 73 - 70 - 291
1992 NCAA National Championships UNM Championship Course 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Arizona Arizona State Oklahoma State UNLV Georgia Tech Texas Florida Arkansas Stanford New Mexico Alabama Clemson Houston Oklahoma Central Florida
•
Albuquerque, New Mexico
•
June 3-6, 1992
TCU Final Results
Team Results 286-284-274-285=1,129 276-288-286-286=1,136 282-291-289-282=1,134 284-297-279-290=1,150 289-294-284-284=1,151 291-292-283-286=1,152 286-291-288-290=1,155 304-281-282-289=1,156 286-297-279-296=1,158 295-286-289-281=1,161 294-283-293-293=1,163 293-292-285-296=1,166 286-295-293-294=1,168 289-287-294-301=1,171 291-292-297-304=1,184
-23 -16 -14 -2 -1 E +3 +4 +6 +9 +11 +14 +16 +19 +32
Did Not Make the Cut TCU (586), Virginia (586), Wisconsin (586), Fresno State (586), San Jose State (587), BYU (587), LSU (588), North Carolina (590), Wake Forest (591), East Tennessee State (592), Kent State (592), Ohio State (594), South Carolina (595), UC Irvine (606), Rice (619)
T-10.
Charlie Stevens
MC.
Ren Budde
69 - 69 - 76 - 71 - 285 76 - 73 - cut - 149
MC.
Mike Flynn
74 - 76 - cut - 150
MC.
Doug Roecker
76 - 75 - cut - 151
MC.
Robert Boisvert
77 - 81 - cut - 158
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Phil Mickelson (Arizona State)
2.
Harry Rudolph (Arizona)
63 - 65 - 69 - 74 - 271 71 - 69 - 66 - 72 - 278
3.
Manny Zerman (Arizona)
72 - 70 - 67 - 70 - 279
4.
Jaxon Brigman (Oklahoma State)
72 - 72 - 69 - 69 - 282
5.
Justin Leonard (Texas)
72 - 71 - 70 - 69 - 282
6.
Notah Begay (Stanford)
72 - 75 - 64 - 72 - 283
7.
Patrick Lee (Oklahoma)
71 - 67 - 73 - 73 - 284
8.
Mike Weir (BYU)
70 - 72 - 72 - 70 - 284
9.
Todd Fischer (San Francisco)
68 - 72 - 70 - 64 - 284
T-10.
Charlie Stevens (TCU)
69 - 69 - 76 - 71 - 285
T-10.
Deane Pappas (Arkansas)
74 - 71 - 69 - 71 - 285
T-10.
Ed Fryatt (UNLV)
70 - 74 - 68 - 73 - 285
1994 NCAA National Championships Stonebridge Country Club
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. T-7. T-7. T-9. T-9. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Stanford Texas Florida Arkansas Oklahoma State Georgia Tech Auburn UNLV Arizona State Clemson North Carolina East Tennessee State Kent State Arizona Wake Forest
•
McKinney, Texas
•
June 1-4, 1994
TCU Final Results 292 - 273 - 282 - 282 - 1,129 293 - 281 - 279 - 280 - 1,133 288 - 282 - 279 - 287 - 1,136 279 - 288 - 282 - 289 - 1,138 286 - 286 - 277 - 291 - 1,140 296 - 274 - 277 - 298 - 1,145 287 - 294 - 281 - 287 - 1,149 290 - 284 - 289 - 286 - 1,149 292 - 283 - 285 - 291 - 1,151 294 - 283 - 284 - 291 - 1,151 290 - 285 - 284 - 294 - 1,154 287 - 290 - 286 - 295 - 1,158 292 - 289 - 283 - 296 - 1,160 293 - 288 - 290 - 294 - 1,165 296 - 285 - 297 - 289 - 1,167
-23 -19 -16 -14 -12 -7 -3 -3 -1 -1 +2 +6 +8 +13 +15
MC.
Andy Aduddell
73 - 72 - 145
MC.
Deron Zinnecker
74 - 73 - 147
MC.
Robert Boisvert
75 - 73 - 148
MC.
Mike Flynn
74 - 82 - 156
Ben Bangert
78 - 82 - 160
MC.
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Justin Leonard (Texas)
71 - 68 - 63 - 69 - 271
2.
Alan Bratton (Oklahoma State)
70 - 67 - 66 - 73 - 276
T-3.
Mark Swygert (Clemson)
70 - 72 - 65 - 70 - 277
T-3.
Will Yanagisawa (Stanford)
72 - 71 - 70 - 64 - 277
T-5.
Notah Begay (Stanford)
72 - 62 - 73 - 73 - 280
T-5.
Stewart Cink (Georgia Tech)
75 - 67 - 65 - 73 - 280
T-7.
Todd Dempsey (Arizona State)
70 - 71 - 66 - 74 - 281
Did Not Make the Cut
T-7.
Harrison Frazar (Texas)
74 - 68 - 74 - 65 - 281
Florida State (582), Fresno State (585), SMU (588), Houston (589), Virginia Tech (589), Santa Barbara (590), LSU (591), New Mexico (592), Colorado (593), Oregon State (594), San Jose State (595), TCU (596), Miami, Ohio (598), Oklahoma (598), Augusta State (602)
T-7.
Chris Riley (UNLV)
70 - 69 - 75 - 67 - 281
10.
Christian Chernock (SMU)
72 - 67 - 72 - 73 - 284
Program History
40
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
N C A A
C H A M P I O N S H I P
H I S T O R Y
1995 NCAA National Championships Ohio State Scarlet Course
Team Results 1. * - Oklahoma State 2. Stanford 3. Texas 4. Arizona State 5. USC 6. California 7. Florida State T-8. North Carolina State T-8. Ohio State 10. Arizona 11. Tulsa 12. New Mexico 13. Florida 14. Houston 15. UNLV * - won playoff
•
Columbus, Ohio
•
May 31-June 3, 1995
TCU Final Results 291 - 292 - 287 - 286 - 1,156 289 - 292 - 286 - 289 - 1,156 289 - 296 - 282 - 290 - 1,157 288 - 300 - 289 - 287 - 1,164 295 - 293 - 281 - 296 - 1,165 292 - 295 - 288 - 291 - 1,166 289 - 293 - 292 - 294 - 1,168 293 - 291 - 294 -292 - 1,170 296 - 290 - 296 - 288 - 1,170 294 - 290 - 291 - 296 - 1,171 291 - 294 - 298 - 293 - 1,176 298 - 284 - 305 - 295 - 1,182 299 - 290 - 305 - 290 - 1,184 304 - 280 - 294 - 308 - 1,186 295 - 290 - 300 - 302 - 1,187
+4 +4 +5 +12 +13 +14 +16 +18 +18 +19 +24 +32 +34 +36 +37
MC.
Doug Roecker
MC.
Brent Wolf
71 - 75 - 146 73 - 76 - 149
MC.
Andy Aduddell
75 - 76 - 151
MC.
Grady Girard
77 - 74 - 151
MC.
Deron Zinnecker
75 - 78 - 153
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Chip Spradin (Auburn)
T-2.
Ted Purdy (Arizona)
67 - 71 - 70 - 75 - 283 74 - 70 - 70 - 70 - 284
T-2.
Chris Tidland (Oklahoma State)
69 - 69 - 72 - 74 - 284
4.
Chris Wollmann (Ohio State)
70 - 73 - 71 - 71 - 285
T-5.
Joey Snyder (Arizona State)
71 - 74 - 69 - 72 - 286
T-5.
Tiger Woods (Stanford)
73 - 72 - 70 - 71 - 286
T-5.
Chad Wright (USC)
71 - 73 - 67 - 75 - 286
T-8.
Dennis Hillman (Tulsa)
73 - 68 - 75 - 71 - 287
Did Not Make the Cut
T-8.
Scott Johnson (Arizona State)
72 - 72 - 74 - 69 - 287
Auburn (592), Kansas (592), Tennessee (592), North Carolina (593), Clemson (594), TCU (595), Oklahoma (596), Wake Forest (596), Augusta (598), East Tennessee State (599), Iowa (600), Kent State (603)
T-8.
Garrett Willis (East Tennessee St.)
72 - 70 - 76 - 69 - 287
1996 NCAA National Championships The Honors Course
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. T-6. T-6. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Arizona State UNLV East Tennessee State Stanford Arizona Florida New Mexico Oklahoma State USC San Jose State Arkansas SMU Texas Clemson Kansas
•
Ooltewah, Tennessee
•
May 29-June 1, 1996
TCU Final Results 286 - 300 - 295 - 305 - 1,186 291 - 296 - 299 - 303 - 1,189 303 - 294 - 301 - 306 - 1,204 292 - 304 - 303 - 306 - 1,205 303 - 301 - 297 - 306 - 1,207 296 - 300 - 312 - 304 - 1,212 300 - 304 - 302 - 306 - 1,212 298 - 308 - 299 - 310 - 1,215 303 - 296 - 303 - 314 - 1,216 302 - 300 - 303 - 315 - 1,220 301 - 300 - 298 - 322 - 1,221 306 - 300 - 307 - 309 - 1,222 297 - 307 - 308 - 312 - 1,224 306 - 296 - 307 - 318 - 1,227 298 - 306 - 315 - 329 - 1,248
+34 +37 +52 +53 +55 +60 +60 +63 +64 +68 +69 +70 +72 +75 +96
T-13.
J.J. Henry
MC.
Doug Roecker
74 - 74 - 74 - 74 - 296 81 - 73 - 154
MC.
Grady Girard
85 - 73 - 158
MC.
Alberto Ochoa
78 - 81 - 159
MC.
Brent Wolf
78 - 84 - 162
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Tiger Woods (Stanford)
69 - 67 - 69 - 80 - 285
2.
Rory Sabbatini (Arizona)
70 - 70 - 74 - 75 - 289
T-3.
Darren Angel (Arizona State)
72 - 74 - 69 - 76 - 291
T-3.
Mike Ruiz (Arizona State)
71 - 74 - 74 - 72 - 291
T-5.
Tim Clark (N.C. State)
70 - 77 - 71 - 74 - 292
T-5.
Brad Elder (Texas)
71 - 68 - 76 - 77 - 292
7.
Lewis Chitengwa (Virginia)
77 - 72 - 68 - 76 - 293
Did Not Make the Cut
8.
Rob McMillan (New Mexico)
75 - 71 - 75 - 73 - 294
North Carolina (608), North Carolina State (610), TCU (612), Pacific (612), Wake Forest (612), Texas A&M (614), South Carolina (616), Tennessee (617), Pepperdine (618), Miami, Ohio (622), Oklahoma (622), Florida State (623), Alabama (627), Penn State (630)
T-9.
Joey Maxon (Clemson)
74 - 70 - 73 - 78 - 295
T-9.
Ted Oh (UNLV)
72 - 74 - 70 - 79 - 295
T-9.
Keith Nolan (East Tennessee St.)
76 - 71 - 76 - 72 - 295
T-9.
Steve Scott (Florida)
75 - 73 - 77 - 70 - 295
1997 NCAA National Championships Conway Farms Golf Course
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. T-5. T-5. T-7. T-7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Pepperdine Wake Forest Clemson Ohio State Arizona State Oklahoma State TCU Northwestern Houston North Carolina New Mexico East Tennessee State Texas A&M USC Florida
•
Lake Forest, Illinois
•
May 28-31, 1997
TCU Final Results 287 - 288 - 286 - 287 - 1,148 290 - 295 - 287 - 279 - 1,151 291 - 287 - 291 - 284 - 1,153 283 - 289 - 286 - 287 - 1,154 299 - 281 - 288 - 288 - 1,156 286 - 298 - 283 - 289 - 1,156 290 - 292 - 289 - 287 - 1,158 282 - 289 - 292 - 295 - 1,158 289 - 284 - 297 - 290 - 1,160 283 - 295 - 281 - 298 - 1,167 289 - 298 - 295 - 287 - 1,169 286 - 289 - 295 - 300 - 1,170 286 - 297 - 300 - 289 - 1,172 289 - 295 - 290 - 299 - 1,173 292 - 295 - 297 - 291 - 1,175
-4 -1 +1 +2 +4 +4 +6 +6 +8 +15 +17 +18 +20 +21 +23
Did Not Make the Cut
T-17.
J.J. Henry
T-20.
Brent Wolf
72 - 68 - 76 - 71 - 287 74 - 74 - 70 - 71 - 289
T-36.
Alberto Ochoa
70 - 76 - 72 - 74 - 292
T-52.
Deron Zinnecker
74 - 76 - 74 - 71 - 295
T-58.
Sal Spallone
74 - 74 - 73 - 76 - 297
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Charles Warren (Clemson)
71 - 68 - 73 - 67 - 279
2.
Brad Elder (Texas)
71 - 69 - 67 - 72 - 279
T-3.
Jason Gore (Pepperdine)
65 - 72 - 71 - 72 - 280
T-3.
Keith Nolan (East Tennessee St.)
71 - 66 - 69 - 74 - 280
5.
Mike Walton (Pepperdine)
70 - 71 - 72 - 68 - 281
T-6.
Michael Capone (Wake Forest)
75 - 70 - 71 - 68 - 284
T-6.
Richard Coughlan (Clemson)
71 - 72 - 68 - 73 - 284
T-6.
Bryant McKellar (Auburn)
75 - 69 - 70 - 70 - 284
Arkansas (589), Auburn (589), LSU (590), San Jose State (590), Texas (591), T-6. South Carolina (592), UNLV (593), Drake (594), Virginia (594), Michigan (597), T-10. T-10. Arizona (598), UCLA (598), Tennessee (599), Duke (605), Washington (617) T-10.
Rory Sabbatini (Arizona)
71 - 72 - 73 - 68 - 284
Tim Clark (N.C. State)
67 - 73 - 73 - 72 - 285
Chris Hannell (Arizona State)
76 - 67 - 70 - 72 - 285
Scott Johnson (Arizona State)
73 - 69 - 72 - 71 - 285 Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
41
N C A A
C H A M P I O N S H I P
H I S T O R Y
1998 NCAA National Championships UNM Championship Course
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. T-8. T-8. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
UNLV Clemson Georgia Tech Oklahoma State Arizona State Ohio State Minnesota UCLA Houston Auburn South Carolina TCU Miami (Ohio) Florida California
•
Albuquerque, New Mexico
•
May 27-30, 1998
TCU Final Results 284 - 269 - 276 - 289 - 1,118 283 - 278 - 278 - 282 - 1,121 281 - 277 - 286 - 278 - 1,122 278 - 286 - 278 - 285 - 1,127 289 - 282 - 283 - 276 - 1,130 284 - 286 - 280 - 285 - 1,135 296 - 275 - 283 - 283 - 1,137 289 - 275 - 284 - 294 - 1,142 294 - 276 - 287 - 285 - 1,142 290 - 283 - 285 - 287 - 1,145 285 - 281 - 284 - 296 - 1,146 290 - 282 - 290 - 286 - 1,148 286 - 283 - 290 - 292 - 1,151 282 - 288 - 287 - 297 - 1,154 290 - 277 - 290 - 298 - 1,155
-34 -31 -30 -25 -22 -17 -15 -10 -10 -7 -6 -4 -1 +2 +3
T-2.
J.J. Henry
67 - 67 - 70 - 68 - 272
T-55.
Alberto Ochoa
73 - 70 - 75 - 73 - 291
T-65.
Scott Volpitto
75 - 74 - 72 - 72 - 293
T-70.
Sal Spallone
75 - 71 - 75 - 73 - 294
T-74.
Grady Girard
75 - 74 - 73 - 74 - 296
NCAA Individual Results 1.
James McLean (Minnesota)
T-2.
J.J. Henry (TCU)
71 - 66 - 65 - 69 - 271 67 - 67 - 70 - 68 - 272
T-2.
Chris Berry (UNLV)
70 - 68 - 67 - 67 - 272
T-2.
Charles Warren (Clemson)
69 - 68 - 67 - 70 - 272
T-2.
Joel Kribel (Stanford)
69 - 67 - 68 - 68 - 272
6.
Bryce Molder (Georgia Tech)
68 - 68 - 68 - 69 - 273
T-7.
Matt Kuchar (Georgia Tech)
69 - 67 - 70 - 70 - 276
Did Not Make the Cut
T-7.
Tim Clark (North Carolina State)
68 - 72 - 69 - 67 - 276
New Mexico (574), Georgia (575), North Carolina State (576), Northwestern (577), Nebraska (578), East Tennessee State (579), Fresno State (580), Southeastern Louisiana (582), Kent State (583), North Carolina (585), UC Santa Barbara (589), Oregon (590)
T-7.
Darren Angel (Arizona State)
73 - 67 - 71 - 65 - 276
10.
Joey Maxon (Clemson)
69 - 71 - 70 - 68 - 278
2000 NCAA National Championships Grand National Country Club • 1. * - Oklahoma State 2. Georgia Tech 3. Arizona 4. Houston 5. Texas 6. UNLV 7. Clemson 8. Northwestern 9. Kent State 10. North Carolina 11. TCU 12. Minnesota 13. Fresno State 14. Auburn 15. Wake Forest * - won in playoff
Auburn, Alabama
•
May 31-June 3, 2000
TCU Final Results
Team Results 281 - 276 - 275 - 284 - 1,116 280 - 282 - 278 - 276 - 1,116 286 - 289 - 269 - 274 - 1,118 284 - 289 - 277 - 272 - 1,122 272 - 286 - 277 - 290 - 1,125 286 - 287 - 277 - 281 - 1,131 291 - 287 - 277 - 278 - 1,133 287 - 293 - 279 - 280 - 1,139 288 - 283 - 279 - 291 - 1,141 288 - 282 - 278 - 295 - 1,143 289 - 289 - 281 - 287 - 1,146 290 - 290 - 282 - 287 - 1,149 293 - 285 - 279 - 297 - 1,154 290 - 288 - 288 - 295 - 1,161 292 - 290 - 295 - 292 - 1,169
-36 -36 -34 -30 -27 -21 -19 -13 -11 -9 -6 -3 +2 +9 +1
T-20.
Andy Doeden
T-38.
Bret Guetz
72 - 71 - 69 - 71 - 283 74 - 72 - 72 - 69 - 287
T-38.
Aaron Hickman
70 - 72 - 71 - 74 - 287
T-68.
Jamie Kellam
73 - 74 - 69 - 79 - 295
T-77.
Scott Volpitto
76 - 76 - 76 - 73 - 301
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Charles Howell (Oklahoma State)
67 - 66 - 63 - 69 - 265
2.
Chris Morris (Houston)
71 - 69 - 67 - 66 - 273
T-3.
Jess Daley (Northwestern)
69 - 70 - 69 - 67 - 275
T-3.
Ricky Barnes (Arizona)
70 - 68 - 68 - 69 - 275
T-3.
David Gossett (Texas)
63 - 70 - 66 - 76 - 275
6.
Matt Weibring (Georgia Tech)
71 - 71 - 67 - 67 - 276
T-7.
Andy Sanders (Houston)
74 - 70 - 67 - 66 - 277
T-7.
Luke Donald (Northwestern)
70 - 72 - 68 - 67 - 277
Did Not Make the Cut
9.
James Driscoll (Virginia)
68 - 71 - 71 - 68 - 278
Georgia (582), California (583), East Tennessee State (583), Mississippi State (584), New Mexico (584), Kansas (585), Georgia State (587), Oklahoma (588), Pepperdine (588), Arizona State (589)
T-10.
Michael Kirk (UNLV)
70 - 72 - 68 - 69 - 279
T-10.
Jeremy Anderson (UNLV)
69 - 68 - 69 - 73 - 279
2002 NCAA National Championships Ohio State Scarlet Course
Team Results 1. 2. T-3. T-3. 5. 6. 7. 8. T-9. T-9. T-11. T-11. T-11. T-14. T-14.
Minnesota Georgia Tech Clemson Texas Augusta State N.C. State Purdue Pepperdine Arizona Tulsa TCU Florida Washington Colorado Toledo
•
Columbus, Ohio
•
May 27-30, 2002
TCU Final Results 284 - 289 - 283 - 278 - 1,134 277 - 286 - 290 - 285 - 1,138 286 - 277 - 298 - 281 - 1,142 291 - 275 - 290 - 286 - 1,142 289 - 283 - 290 - 281 - 1,143 286 - 281 - 292 - 285 - 1,144 284 - 287 - 293 - 281 - 1,145 284 - 288 - 286 - 288 - 1,146 282 - 290 - 288 - 290 - 1,150 281 - 289 - 284 - 296 - 1,150 283 - 283 - 293 - 293 - 1,152 283 - 286 - 291 - 292 - 1,152 279 - 291 - 285 - 297 - 1,152 280 - 293 - 296 - 284 - 1,153 283 - 281 - 294 - 295 - 1,153
-2 +2 +6 +6 +7 +8 +9 +10 +14 +14 +16 +16 +16 +17 +17
T-2.
Adam Rubinson
69 - 67 - 72 - 69 - 277
T-38.
Bret Guetz
70 - 70 - 74 - 73 - 287
T-74.
Andy Doeden
71 - 74 - 73 - 74 - 292
T-111.
J.J. Killeen
74 - 72 - 74 - 77 - 297
T-142.
Steve Shuert
73 - 78 - 74 - 78 - 303
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Troy Matteson (Georgia Tech)
2.
Adam Rubinson (TCU)
73 - 66 - 70 - 67 - 276 69 - 67 - 72 - 69 - 277
3.
Hunter Mahan (Oklahoma State)
68 - 71 - 67 - 72 - 278
T-4.
Graeme McDowell (UAB)
71 - 67 - 67 - 74 - 279
T-4.
Justin Smith (Minnesota)
69 - 70 - 71 - 69 - 279
T-6.
Justin Walters (N.C. State)
70 - 67 - 71 - 72 - 280
T-6.
Nick Watney (Fresno State)
72 - 68 - 70 - 70 - 280
Did Not Make the Cut
T-8.
D.J. Trahan (Clemson)
71 - 66 - 78 - 66 - 281
Oklahoma State (1,154), North Carolina (1,155), Illinois (1,158), Baylor (1,160), Virginia Tech (1,161), Fresno State (1,162), Georgia (1,162), UNLV (1,167), Pacific (1,169), Texas Tech (1,169), New Mexico (1,170), UAB (1,176), Auburn (1,182), Georgia Southern (1,182), VCU (1,191)
T-8.
Matt Anderson (Minnesota)
73 - 71 - 71 - 66 - 281
T-8.
Michael Beard (Pepperdine)
71 - 72 - 67 - 71 - 281
T-8.
Par Nilsson (Oklahoma State)
71 - 73 - 68 - 69 - 281
T-8.
Ryan Moore (UNLV)
72 - 69 - 68 - 72 - 281 Program History
42
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
N C A A
C H A M P I O N S H I P
H I S T O R Y
2004 NCAA National Championships Homestead Cascades Course
Team Results 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. T-6. T-6. 8. 9. 10. T-11. T-11. 13. 14. 15.
California UCLA Arizona Texas Georgia Tech Florida Washington Kentucky BYU Pepperdine Georgia State Georgia Oklahoma State Texas A&M Penn State
•
Hot Springs, Virginia
•
June 1-4, 2004
TCU Final Results 279 - 289 - 287 - 279 - 1,134 289 - 283 - 275 - 293 - 1,140 292 - 281 - 283 - 292 - 1,148 288 - 286 - 289 - 286 - 1,149 289 - 285 - 287 - 290 - 1,151 285 - 289 - 284 - 294 - 1,152 289 - 282 - 285 - 296 - 1,152 283 - 286 - 283 - 303 - 1,155 280 - 290 - 291 - 295 - 1,156 295 - 276 - 289 - 300 - 1,160 292 - 280 - 297 - 292 - 1,161 285 - 302 - 284 - 290 - 1,161 292 - 289 - 289 - 294 - 1,164 291 - 292 - 284 - 300 - 1,167 289 - 291 - 290 - 300 - 1,170
+14 +20 +28 +29 +31 +32 +32 +35 +36 +40 +41 +41 +44 +47 +50
MC.
Adam Meyer
66 - 76 - 74 - 216
MC.
David Schultz
74 - 71 - 74 - 219
MC.
Colby Beckstrom
72 - 73 - 78 - 223
MC.
Stephen Polanski
69 - 78 - 78 - 225
MC.
J.J. Killeen
75 - 72 - 78 - 225
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Ryan Moore (UNLV)
67 - 70 - 64 - 66 - 267
T-2.
Bill Haas (Wake Forest)
70 - 68 - 67 - 68 - 273
T-2.
Chris Nallen (Arizona)
69 - 67 - 67 - 70 - 273
4.
Michael Putnam (Pepperdine)
74 - 65 - 67 - 70 - 276
5.
Travis Johnson (UCLA)
69 - 68 - 68 - 72 - 277
T-6.
John Holmes (Kentucky)
71 - 69 - 67 - 72 - 279
T-6.
Mark Leon (Penn State)
69 - 69 - 70 - 71 - 279
Did Not Make the Cut
T-8.
Jason Hartwick (Texas)
70 - 68 - 72 - 71 - 281
USC (871), Purdue (871), Clemson (872), New Mexico (876), TCU (877), Auburn (879), Arizona State (879), Oklahoma (879), Kent State (881), Toledo (884), SMU (887), Wichita State (887), Vanderbilt (891), North Carolina (892)
T-8.
Matt Wells (Kentucky)
68 - 68 - 68 - 77 - 281
T-10.
Jeff Hood (California)
65 - 71 - 77 - 69 - 282
T-10.
Peter Tomasulo (California)
72 - 73 - 70 - 67 - 282
T-10.
Shiv Kapur (Purdue)
72 - 68 - 70 - 72 - 282
2009 NCAA National Championships Inverness Country Club
Team Results 1. Oklahoma State 288 - 280 - 281 - 849 2. Arizona State 294 - 281 - 287 - 862 T-3. USC 305 - 281 - 279 - 865 T-3. Arkansas 297 - 283 - 285 - 865 T-3. Washington 293 - 286 - 286 - 865 6. Michigan 296 - 285 - 287 - 868 T-7. • - Texas A&M 298 - 276 - 295 - 869 T-7. Georgia 288 - 286 - 296 - 860 9. TCU 299 - 285 - 289 - 873 T-10. Georgia Tech 301 - 285 - 288 - 874 T-10. Central Florida 300 - 283 - 291 - 874 12. Tennessee 294 - 289 - 292 - 875 13. San Diego 293 - 293 - 291 - 877 14. Duke 297 - 285 - 296 - 878 15. Alabama 298 - 288 - 293 - 879 • - Won national championship in Match Play Round
•
Toledo, Ohio
|
May 26-30, 2009
TCU Final Results -3 +10 +13 +13 +13 +16 +17 +17 +21 +22 +22 +23 +25 +26 +27
Rest of the Field
T-3.
Tom Hoge
70 - 70 - 70 - 210
T-30.
James Sacheck
75 - 73 - 70 - 218
T-89.
Johan de Beer
77 - 71 - 77 - 225
T-104.
Scott Roudebush
82 - 73 - 72 - 227
T-104.
Travis Woolf
77 - 71 - 79 - 227
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Matt Hill (North Carolina State)
69 - 69 - 69 - 207
2.
Kyle Stanley (Clemson)
72 - 71 - 66 - 209
T-3.
Tom Hoge (TCU)
70 - 70 - 70 - 210
T-3.
Rickie Fowler (Oklahoma State)
72 - 70 - 68 - 210
T-3.
Tim Glissmeyer (USC)
74 - 70 - 66 - 210
6.
Alexander Sitompul (Michigan)
72 - 69 - 70 - 211
T-7.
Blayne Barber (UCF)
75 - 69 - 68 - 212
T-7.
Morgan Hoffman (Oklahoma State)
72 - 69 - 71 - 212
T-9.
Brian Harman (Georgia)
71 - 71 - 71 - 213
Russell Henley (Georgia)
71 - 67 - 75 - 213
Jesper Kennegard (Arizona State)
72 - 69 - 72 - 213
Nick Taylor (Washington)
70 - 70 - 73 - 213
T-9. South Carolina (885), Iowa (887), UT Chattanooga (888), Florida (889), Stanford (891), Illinois (892), Oregon (897), Texas Tech (900), UCLA (900), Ohio State T-9. T-9. (901), Texas (903), Wake Forest (904), Virginia (904), Northwestern (908)
2010 NCAA National Championships The Honors Course
Ooltewah, Tennessee
•
June 1-5, 2010
TCU Final Results
Team Results 1. Oklahoma State 283 - 284 - 283 - 850 2. Florida State 283 - 279 - 292 - 854 3. Georgia Tech 290 - 282 - 286 - 858 4. Washington 289 - 288 - 283 - 860 5. Oregon 284 - 294 - 283 - 861 6. • - Augusta State 287 - 288 - 288 - 863 7. Texas Tech 302 - 285 - 280 - 867 T-8. Arizona State 286 - 292 - 290 - 868 T-8. San Diego 294 - 282 - 292 - 868 T-8. Stanford 292 - 288 - 288 - 868 T-11. Florida 287 - 289 - 293 - 869 T-11. Virginia 300 - 280 - 289 - 869 13. Texas A&M 285 - 304 - 282 - 871 14. North Florida 292 - 293 - 287 - 872 15. USC 295 - 290 - 289 - 874 • - Won national championship in Match Play Round
•
-14 -10 -6 -4 -3 -1 +3 +4 +4 +4 +5 +5 +7 +8 +10
Rest of the Field
T-58.
Johan de Beer
T-58.
Travis Woolf
74 - 73 - 72 - 219 76 - 70 - 73 - 219
T-116.
Daniel Jennevret
78 - 78 - 71 - 227
T-124
Eli Cole
74 - 76 - 78 - 228
T-141.
Pontus Gad
80 - 77 - 75 - 232
NCAA Individual Results 1.
Scott Langley (Illinois)
T-2.
Alex Ching (San Diego)
69 - 66 - 73 - 208
T-2.
Peter Uihlein (Oklahoma State)
69 - 68 - 71 - 208
4.
Diego Velasquez (Oregon State)
71 - 72 - 66 - 209
5.
Henrik Norlander (Augusta State)
68 - 69 - 73 - 210
T-6.
Drew Kittleson (Florida State)
70 - 70 - 71 - 211
T-6.
John Hahn (Kent State)
72 - 70 - 69 - 211
T-6.
John Peterson (LSU)
73 - 68 - 70 - 211
T-9.
Ben Martin (Clemson)
70 - 72 - 70 - 212
T-9.
Chris Williams (Washington)
72 - 71 - 69 - 212
Eugene Wong (Oregon)
69 - 72 - 71 - 212
Gregor Main (UCLA)
71 - 69 - 72 - 212
Clemson (875), Oregon State (875), UCLA (875), Illinois (876), Kent State (877), Texas (879), UNLV (879), California (880), LSU (883), Baylor (884), Tennessee T-9. T-9. (884), Duke (889), TCU (889), Penn State (898), Georgia Southern (905)
70 - 68 - 68 - 206
Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
43
A L L - A M E R I C A N
H I S T O R Y
Kevin Harrison
Dave Davis
David Sann
Second Team All-American • 1980
Third Team All-American • 1980
Honorable Mention All-American • 1980
junior college All-American in 1977-78 at Paris Junior College, Kevin Harrison was familiar with national recognition prior to coming to TCU. He continued to add to his trophy case by becoming a second team All-American during his senior season for the Horned Frogs.
ave Davis put together a solid senior season in 1979-80 where he earned AllAmerican accolades along the way. The third-team selection finished tied for 23rd at the NCAA Championships with a 10-over-par score of 298.
Harrison led the Frogs’ 1979-80 team in scoring average with 72.90 and also had four sub-70 rounds. Surprisingly, Harrison was never TCU’s highest-placing participant in any tournament of the season.
Davis was the Frogs’ most consistent golfer during the campaign where he recorded TCU’s low score in six of 10 events, including the first four of the spring season.
It was his fifth-place tie with a 290 score at the NCAA Championships that officially earned him All-American laurels - but it was his steady play over the final five tournaments that solidified him as a star.
Harrison shot rounds of 74, 74, 79 and 72 at the 1980 NCAA Championships en route to an 11-over-par 299 and a 26th-place tie.
Davis’ three-round 217 at the SWC Tournament was the Frogs’ best score and led TCU to a second-place finish. Davis then turned in a stellar performance at the NCAAs to help TCU to finish fourth in the nation.
Beginning with his leading score 215 at the Morris Williams Intercollegiate in March, Sann posted a solid finishing run of five straight events. For the season, Sann averaged 73.40 strokes per round.
Pete Jordan
Jim Sorenson
Charlie Stevens
Third Team All-American • 1986
Second Team All-American • 1986
Honorable Mention All-American • 1992
A
D
ete Jordan - a four-year lettermen - joined Sorenson as an All-American on the 1986 Southwest Conference championship team. Jordan, who received third team mention, later earned his PGA Tour card where he was active for over a decade.
Jordan, who participated in the NCAA Championships as a freshman in 1983, returned to the NCAAs in 1986 and finished in a tie for 98th individually en route to helping the Frogs to a 19th-place national finish.
D
im Sorenson - a senior transfer from Texas Lutheran - joined the Frogs with NAIA AllAmerican honors already under his belt.
P
Jordan also was a unanimous choice to the AllSouthwest Conference squad as he helped the 1986 TCU squad to its first conference title in its 61 years of men’s golf.
avid Sann was one of three TCU golfers to find his way onto the All-America team following the 1979-80 campaign. Sann came alive in the spring semester to earn his way on the All-America roster.
riginally a walk-on at the University of Oklahoma, Charlie Stevens turned into one of TCU golf program’s most valuable finds.
J
After winning the 1985 Butler National Invitational during the fall season, Sorenson went on to lead TCU as the individual medalist at two more events in the Spring of 1986. His biggest win came at the Southwest Conference Championships where his individual title helped the Horned Frogs to their first-ever conference title and earned him a spot on the All-SWC squad. After a team-best 24thplace finish at the NCAAs, Sorenson became a second team AllAmerican.
O
After transferring to TCU, the Wichita, Kan., native proved to be the leader of the Horned Frog squad that finished third at the Southwest Conference Tournament and competed at the 1992 NCAA Championships. Stevens was the only TCU individual who made the cut at the 1992 NCAA National Championships that season. After 69s in the first two rounds, Stevens held on to snag 10th-place at three-under-par to gain honorable mention All-American status.
Chad Magee
J.J. Henry
Albert Ochoa
Honorable Mention All-American • 1990 Honorable Mention All-American • 1991
Honorable Mention All-American • 1996, 1997 First Team All-American • 1998
First Team All-American • 1997 Honorable Mention All-American • 1998
had Magee became the first TCU player to receive All-American honors twice in a career as he earned the national distinction following both the 1990 and 1991 seasons.
C
Magee won one individual title in his two-year stint at TCU at the USA/Japan Friendship in Tokyo, Japan. With seven top-10 finishes in 1991, the All-SWC performer was one of TCU’s most consistent golfers. In 1990, Magee was the lone Frog to participate at the NCAA Championships where he finished 33rd overall, which made him the first TCU golfer to compete at NCAAs as an individual. The next season, he led TCU by tying for 16th place at the NCAA Championships.
ith 11 career top-10 finishes - one of the most productive golfers in TCU history is the Frogs’ lone three-time All-American J.J. Henry. His 14th-place landing at the NCAA Championships in 1996 and his 17th-place finish in 1997 earned him honorable mention All-America status during his sophomore and junior campaigns.
W
Henry won the individual and team titles at the 1998 Western Athletic Conference Championships - thanks to a hole-in-one on the second-tolast hole. His second-place finish by one stroke at the 1998 NCAA Championships is the highest for a TCU individual and helped him snare first-team All-American honors. That season, Henry was selected as the Western Athletic Conference Golfer of the Year.
lbert Ochoa was named a first-team All-American following his sophomore season of 1996-97 after he finished 36th overall at the NCAA Championships that season.
A
Ochoa ended the 1997 season as the second-ranked college player in the country en route to earning the Western Athletic Conference’s Golfer of the Year. As a result, Ochoa became TCU’s inaugural first team AllAmerican at the end of the 1997 season. In 1998, Ochoa - along with WAC Golfer of the Year J.J. Henry - led the Frogs to their second consecutive WAC title where he was named honorable mention All-American.
Program History
44
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
A L L - A M E R I C A N Bret Guetz
H I S T O R Y
Adam Rubinson
David Schultz
Third Team All-American • 2002
Honorable Mention All-American • 2002 Third Team All-American • 2003
ret Guetz put together one of the most decorated seasons in TCU golf history in 2001-02. The senior earned third team All-American mention while also being honored as an Academic All-American. In doing so, he became the first Horned Frog golfer ever to achieve both honors in the same year.
dam Rubinson enjoyed a stellar junior season that was capped off by a runner-up finish at the 2002 NCAA Championships. Rubinson finished just one stroke behind the tournament champion, but following the event, he received honorable mention All-American accolades.
A
A
That season, Guetz won back-to-back tournaments in April, including an individual victory at the Conference USA Championships.
His second-place finish matched J.J. Henry’s runner-up showing in 1998 as the best NCAA individual finish ever by a TCU golfer.
Schultz was selected to the Conference USA All-Decade Team in 2005 after receiving first team All-Conference USA accolades during his career with the Frogs. Schultz earned PING South Central All-District honors in each of his three seasons with the Frogs.
Adam Meyer
J.J. Killeen
James Sacheck
Third Team All-American • 2005
Honorable Mention All-American • 2009
B
Third All-American • 2004 espite playing just three semesters for the Frogs after transferring from Baylor, Meyer made an indelible stamp at TCU as he was selected as a third team All-American during his senior season.
Honorable Mention All-American • 2003
n 2005, Killeen became just the third athlete and first golfer in school history to compete on four conference championship teams. In addition, the Conference USA Golfer of the Year earned third team All-American accolades for his individual achievements.
transfer from Colorado State, Schultz competed in 49 tournaments, including 36 with the Frogs where he received honorable mention All-American laurels after the 2003 season.
acheck earned honorable mention All-American laurels for the first time in his career and was also cited with PING All-Central Region and All-Mountain West Conference accolades as a senior.
D
I
S
Meyer - the 2004 Conference USA Golfer of the Year - won the individual crown by nine shots at the league championships and helped TCU pick up its fourth straight conference title.
Killeen carried a career-best 72.09 average as a senior where he finished among the field’s top-20 in all but two events.
The TCU senior was selected as the Mountain West Conference Golfer of the Month during the Spring 2009 season and finished the season by collecting nine top-20 showings.
Tom Hoge Honorable Mention All-American • 2009 oge was selected as an honorable mention All-American for the first time in his career following the 2009 NCAA National Championships where the TCU sophomore finished third overall.
H
Hoge became the second sophomore to ever earn All-American honors for the Frogs, joining current PGA standout J.J. Henry - who earned the distinction during the 1996 season.
Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
45
T O U R N A M E N T
H I S T O R Y
NCAA National Championship History
Conference History
Team Championships
1948
5th
Southwest Conference
1980
4th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1983-84
1949
5th
Southwest Conference
1983
MC
San Joaquin Country Club
Fresno, California
1983 | F
1950
5th
Southwest Conference
1986
T-19th
Bermuda Run Country Club
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
1951
6th
Southwest Conference
1991
MC
Poppy Hills Golf Club
Monterrey, California
1952
6th
Southwest Conference
1992
MC
UNM Championship Course
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1984 | F
UT Pan American Invitational
1953
4th
Southwest Conference
1994
MC
Stonebridge Country Club
McKinney, Texas
1985 | S
Arizona Wildcat Invitational
1954
4th
Southwest Conference
1995
MC
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1955
5th
Southwest Conference
1996
MC
The Honors Course
Ooltewah, Tennessee
1956
5th
Southwest Conference
1997
T-7th
Conway Farms Golf Course
Lake Forest, Illinois
1986 | S
Baylor Invitational
1957
7th
Southwest Conference
1998
12th
UNM Championship Course
Albuquerque, New Mexico
1986 | S
Southwest Conference Championships
1958
3rd
Southwest Conference
2000
11th
Grand National Country Club
Auburn, Alabama
1959
2nd
Southwest Conference
2002
T-11th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1960
2nd
Southwest Conference
2004
MC
Homestead Cascades Course
Hot Springs, Virginia
1961
5th
Southwest Conference
2009
9th
Inverness Country Club
Toledo, Ohio
1962
7th
Southwest Conference
1963
7th
Southwest Conference
2010
27th
The Honors Course
Ooltewah, Tennessee
1964
3rd
Southwest Conference
1965
2nd
Southwest Conference
1966
5th
Southwest Conference
1967
7th
Southwest Conference
1968
6th
Southwest Conference
1969
6th
Southwest Conference
1970
7th
Southwest Conference
1971
5th
Southwest Conference
1972
5th
Southwest Conference
1973
7th
1974
6th
1975
Texas Wesleyan/Pecan Plantation Invitational
1984-85
1985-86
1989-90
NCAA Regional Championship History
1990 | S
Louisiana Classic
1993-94 1993 | F
Harvey Penick Intercollegiate
1994 | S
Ron Smith/USF Invitational
1990
12th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1991
5th
Hillcrest Country Club
Bartlesville, Oklahoma
1992
10th
Stonebridge Country Club
McKinney, Texas
1993
T-15th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1994
9th
Oklahoma City Country Club
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
1995
T-10th
Bentwater Country Club
Montgomery, Texas
1996
T-8th
UM Golf Course
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Southwest Conference
1997
2nd
OU Golf Course
Norman, Oklahoma
1997-98
Southwest Conference
1998
4th
Oak Hills Country Club
San Antonio, Texas
1997 | F
The Topy Cup
9th
Southwest Conference
1999
13th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
1997 | F
Golf World/Palmetto Dunes Invitational
1976
9th
Southwest Conference
2000
8th
Victoria Country Club
Victoria, Texas
1998 | S
Western Athletic Conference Championships
1977
5th
Southwest Conference
2001
22nd
Karsten Creek Golf Course
Stillwater, Oklahoma
1978
5th
Southwest Conference
2002
8th
Pleasant Valley County Club
Little Rock, Arkansas
1979
3rd
Southwest Conference
2003
16th
Colbert Hills Golf Club
Manhattan, Kansas
1980
2nd
Southwest Conference
2004
T-5th
Birck Boilermaker Kampen Course West Lafayette, Indiana
1981
5th
Southwest Conference
2005
T-17th
Warren Golf Course
South Bend, Indiana
1982
6th
Southwest Conference
2006
13th
Sand Ridge Golf Course
Chardon, Ohio
1983
5th
Southwest Conference
2007
25th
Rich Harvest Links
Sugar Grove, Illinois
2001 | F
The Ridges Intercollegiate
1984
5th
Southwest Conference
2008
T-19th
Ohio State Scarlet Course
Columbus, Ohio
2001 | F
49er Collegiate Classic
1985
5th
Southwest Conference
2009
T-4th
Karsten Creek Golf Course
Stillwater, Oklahoma
2002 | S
Conference USA Championships
1986
1st
Southwest Conference
2010
3rd
The Traditions Club
Bryan, Texas
1987
5th
Southwest Conference
2002-03
1988
8th
Southwest Conference
2002 | F
OU Sooner Invitational
1989
9th
Southwest Conference
2002 | F
The Prestige at PGA West
1990
2nd
Southwest Conference
2003 | S
Conference USA Championships
1991
2nd
Southwest Conference
1992
3rd
Southwest Conference
2003-04
1993
2nd
Southwest Conference
2004 | S
1994
5th
Southwest Conference
1995
3rd
Southwest Conference
2004-05
1996
4th
Southwest Conference
2005 | S
National Invitational Tournament
1997
1st
Western Athletic Conference
2005 | S
Conference USA Championships
1998
1st
Western Athletic Conference
1999
5th
Western Athletic Conference
2000
3rd
Western Athletic Conference
2007 | F
The MacDonald Cup
2001
1st
Western Athletic Conference
2008 | S
National Invitational Tournament
2002
1st
Conference USA
2003
1st
Conference USA
2008-09
2004
1st
Conference USA
2008 | F
The Prestige at PGA West
2005
1st
Conference USA
2008 | F
Columbia Invitational
2006
5th
Mountain West Conference
2009 | S
Mountain West Conference Championships
2007
3rd
Mountain West Conference
2008
2nd
Mountain West Conference
2009-10
2009
1st
Mountain West Conference
2009 | F
The Prestige at PGA West
2010
5th
Mountain West Conference
2010 | S
National Invitational Tournament
1959 Team
1979 Team
1995-96 1995 | F
UT Pan American Intercollegiate
1996-97 1996 | F
Golf World/Palmetto Dunes Invitational
1997 | S
Western Athletic Conference Championships
2000-01 2000 | F
The Ridges Intercollegiate
2001 | S
Western Athletic Conference Championships
2001-02
Conference USA Championships
2007-08
Program History
46
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
A L L - A M E R I C A N 2009-10 Johan de Beer Travis Woolf
PING All-Central Region Team All-Mountain West Conference PING All-Central Region Team All-Mountain West Conference
1997-98 J.J. Henry
Albert Ochoa
H I S T O R Y
Golfweek/Taylor Made College Player of the Year Western Athletic Conference Golfer of the Year All-Western Athletic Conference All-Western Athletic Conference
Individual Medalists 1980-81 1981 | S
Brion Carlson
Southwest Spring Classic
1982 | S
Jeff Hiemenz
Border Olympics
1982 | S
Jeff Hiemenz
North Texas Invitational
1983 | F
Mike Tschetter
TWU/Pecan Plantation Invit.
1983 | F
Kelly Holmes
TWU/Pecan Plantation Invit.
1984 | S
Ron English
Abilene Intercollegiate
Brad Wilhite
Arizona Invitational
1985 | F
Jim Sorenson
Butler Invitational
1986 | S
Jim Sorenson
Baylor Invitational
Chad Magee
USA/Japan Friendships
Robert Boisvert
Harvey Penick Intercollegiate
1995 | F
Grady Girard
UTPA Intercollegiate
1995 | F
Brent Wolf
Harvey Penick Intercollegiate
1997 | F
J.J. Henry
PING/NCAA Preview
1997 | F
Alberto Ochoa
Savane All-America Invit.
1998 | S
J.J. Henry
WAC Championships
1981-82 2008-09 Tom Hoge James Sacheck
Johan de Beer Travis Woolf Bill Montigel 2007-08 Franklin Corpening 2006-07 Robby Ormand 2004-05 J.J. Killeen
Colby Beckstrom David Schultz Drew Stoltz Bill Montigel 2003-04 Adam Meyer
Colby Beckstrom J.J. Killeen David Schultz Bill Montigel 2002-03 Adam Rubinson Colby Beckstrom Adam Meyer David Schultz Bill Montigel 2001-02 J.J. Killeen Andy Doeden Bret Guetz Adam Rubinson Bill Montigel 2000-01 Adam Rubinson Scott Volpitto 1999-00 Andy Doeden Aaron Hickman
PING Honorable Mention All-American PING Honorable Mention All-American PING All-Central Region Team All-Mountain West Conference All-Mountain West Conference Cleveland Golf/Srixon Academic All-American Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year
J.J. Henry Bill Montigel 1995-96 Grady Girard J.J. Henry Brent Wolf
Western Athletic Conference Golfer of the Year All-Western Athletic Conference All-Western Athletic Conference Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
All-Mountain West Conference
Conference USA Golfer of the Year PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA PING All-South Central Region Team Conference USA Coach of the Year
Conference USA Golfer of the Year PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA TCU Co-Male Athlete of the Year PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA All-Conference USA PING All-South Central Region Team All-Conference USA Conference USA Coach of the Year
Conference USA Golfer of the Year All-Conference USA Conference USA Freshman of the Year All-Conference USA All-Conference USA Conference USA Coach of the Year
Conference USA Freshman of the Year All-Conference USA All-Conference USA All-Conference USA Conference USA Coach of the Year
All-Western Athletic Conference All-Western Athletic Conference
All-Western Athletic Conference All-Western Athletic Conference
NCAA National Championships • Individual Chad Magee James Sacheck
Tapron Springs, Florida West Lafayette, Indiana
1994-95 Doug Roecker Deron Zinnecker 1993-94 Robert Boisvert Mike Flynn
1985 | S All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
1985-86
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
1990-91 1990 | F
1992-93 Doug Roecker
All-Southwest Conference
1991-92 Ren Budde Charlie Stevens
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
1993-94 1993 | F 1995-96
1990-91 Chad Magee
All-Southwest Conference
1989-90 Chad Magee Mark Massengale Bill Montigel
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference Southwest Conference Coach of the Year
1986-87 Gavin Munro
All-Southwest Conference
1985-86 Pete Jordan Jim Sorenson
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
1984-85 Pete Jordan 1983-84 Bjorn Svedin Mike Tschetter 1982-83 Bjorn Svedin 1981-82 Jeff Hiemenz Bjorn Svedin
1983-84
1984-85
All-Mountain West Conference
Conference USA All-Decade Team Adam Meyer 2003-04 Adam Rubinson 1999-01-02-03 David Schultz 2003-04-05
1990 2008
1996-97 Albert Ochoa
1997-98
All-Southwest Conference
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
All-Southwest Conference
2000-01 2001 | S
Bret Guetz
C-USA Championships
2001 | F
Steve Shuert
The Ridges Intercollegiate
2002 | S
Bret Guetz
ASU Thunderbird Invitational
2002 | F
David Schultz
The Ridges Intercollegiate
2002 | F
Adam Rubinson
Western Refining Classic
2003 | S
Adam Meyer
Taylor Made Intercollegiate
2003 | S
David Schultz
ASU Thunderbird Invitational
Colby Beckstrom
The Prestige at PGA West
Drew Stoltz
C-USA Championships
2006 | F
Jon McLean
Inverness Intercollegiate
2006 | F
Franklin Corpening Memphis Intercollegiate
2007 | S
Robby Ormand
MWC Championships
2008 | F
Johan de Beer
The Prestige at PGA West
2008 | F
Tom Hoge
Columbia Invitational
Daniel Jennevret
The Prestige at PGA West
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04 2003 | F
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
2004-05 2005 | S
1980-81 Brion Carlson 1977-78 Bobby Baugh Mark Knutson
All-Southwest Conference
All-Southwest Conference All-Southwest Conference
2006-07
2008-09
2009-10 2009 | F Program History
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
47
A L L - T I M E
L E T T E R M E N
-H-
-A-
-M-
-S-
ADAMS, Slade
1993-94
HALLMARk, Trey
1987
MiLES, Tom
2006-07-08
STEvENS, Charlie
1991-92
ADUDDELL, Andy
1994-95-96
HANAHAN, James
1950
MONTgOMERy, Jack
1961-62-63
STOLTz, Drew
2004-05-06-07
AMMON, Ryan
2006-07
HARRiSON, Michael
1988-89
MOORE, Will
1993-94
SvEDiN, Bjorn
1980-81-82-83
ANkERSON, Eric
1988
HARRiSON, Kevin
1980-81
MUNRO, Gavin
1986-87
SWiFT, Grover
1951-52
HASTiNgS, Harold
1949
MULLARky, Kelly
1983-84-85-86
-B-
HENRy, J.J.
1994-96-97-98
MURCHiSON, Bill
1974-75-76-77
BAkER, Seth
1996
HERzOg, Pat
1981-82
MURRAy, Ben
2007
BAUgH, Bobby
1977-78-79-80
HiCkEy, James
1949
BANgERT, Ben
1994
HiCkMAN, Aaron
1999-00-01
BARBER, Craig
1982
HiEMENz, Jeff
1980-81-82-83
NELSON, Jim
BEASLEy, Benton
1939-40-41
HOERA, Art
1954
BECk, Joe
1985-86
HOgE, Tom
BECkSTROM, Colby
2003-04-05
BENESH, Kevin
1981
BOzARTH, Mickey
1955
BOiSvERT, Robert
1994
BRyAN, Rick
1972-73
BUDDE, Ren
1989-90-91-92
-TTATE, Mike
1978-79
TATUM, Bill
1950-51-52
TETONS, John
1980-81
1969
THOMPSON, J.W.
1934
NEWCOMER, Robert
1969
TiMiNg, Ben
1988
2008-09-10
NiCkENS, Chris
1994
TROUT, Marc
1973
HOLMES, Kelly
1984
NORMAN, Bud
1928-29
TSCHETTER, Mike
1982-83-84-85
HUFF, Kenny
1981
NORRiS, Jim
1931
TURNER, Dave
1964-65-66
HULL, Everett
1956
TWEDELL, Jack
1979
-N-
-O-
-J-
OCHOA, Albert
1996-97-98-99
ORMAND, Robby
2006-07-08-09
-V-
JACkSON, Gilbert
1938-39
JAURERNEk, Mark
2003-04
JENkiNS, Dan
1951-52
2003
JENNEvRET, Daniel
2010
PACE, Alvin
CARLSON, Brion
1979-80-81
JETTON, Dick
1952
PANTER, Jack
1934-35
CASON, Charles
1946
JOHNSON, Jerry
1958-59-60
PATTON, “Punk”
1950
WALkER, Webb
1946
COATES, Burch
1954-55
JONES, Bill
1961
PEARSON, LeeRoy
1968-69-70
WALkUP, Jimmy
1932-33-34-35
COLE, Eli
2010
JORDAN, Bob
1937-38-39
PEEBLES, Lee
1927
WALLiNg, Mike
1960-61-62
COODy, Charles
1957-58-59
JORDAN, Conway
1979
PHiLLiPS, Leland, Jr.
1962
WALSH, Bryan
2000
COOPER, Bo
1989-90-91-92
JORDAN, Peter
1983-84-85-86
Pigg, Drew
2003-04-05
WEATHERLy, A.D.
1931-32-33
CORPENiNg, Franklin
2005-06-07-08
JOSLiN, Leon
1948
POLANSki, Stephen
2001-02-03-04
WHEELiS, Steve
1967
CRAig, Don
1962
WHiTE, Wade
1994-95
CUNNiNgHAM, Bage
1961-62
WiLHiTE, Brad
1985-86-87
CUNNiNgHAM, Jimmy
1985-86-87
WiLLiAMS, Jack
1947
-CCAiN, Ben
-D-
-P-
-K2000-01
kELLAM, Kenneth
1963
kigHT, Jeff
1996
1998-99-00-01
vOSSLER, Andy
1971-72-73
vOSSLER, Eddie
1970-71-72-73
1935-36
-Q-
kELLAM, Jamie
vOLPiTTO, Scott
QUiNN, James
1976
-R-
-W-
WiLSON, Jimmy
1926-27
WiLSON, Mickey
1975
DANiELS, Chris
1988-89-90
kiLLEEN, J.J.
2002-03-04-05
RANkiN, W.F.
1940
WOLF, Brent
1995-96-97
DAviS, Dave
1980-81
kNAPPE, Alexander
2009
REDiNg, Steve
1985-86
WOOLF, Jordan
2008
DE BEER, Johan
2009-10
kNUTSON, Mark
1979
REvERCOMB, Ed,
1940-41-46
WOOLF, Travis
2007-08-09-10
DiCkiNSON, Ty
1964-66
kOCH, Carl
1960
REvERCOMB, Wilcie,
1947-48-49
WOOTEN, Brent
1941
DODgEN, Don
1968-70
RiCE, Robert
2005-06
DOEDEN, Andy
1999-00-01-02
RiEvE, Chris
1988
DUCkWORTH, Dick
1953-54-55
LACy, Jim
1947
RiTTER, Brad
1977-78-79
DUCkWORTH, R.J.
1934
LANiNg, Drew
2003-04-05-06
ROECkER, Doug
1995-96
LARSON, Mike
1981
ROgERS, Bill
1927
LAWSON, John
1964
ROUDEBUSH, Scott
2007-09-10
-E-
-L-
ELLiS, Henry
1969-70-71
LEiSS, David
1979
RUBiNSON, Adam
1999-01-02-03
ENCkE, Henry
1961
LiLLy, Danny
1979
RUDOLPH, Phil
1955-56
EvANS, Mike
1984
LOCkE, Steve
1974 SACHECk, James
2005-06-08-09
FikAR, Dean
1974-75
MACFARLAND, Sandy
1973
SALAzAR, Roger
1987
FiTzgERALD, Wallace
1939-41
MACkEy, Frank
1958-59-60
SANDS, Greg
1997-98
FLOWERS, Bill
1946
MACkEy, Graham
1953
SANN, David
1980-81
FLOyD, Frank
1935-36
MAgEE, Chad
1990-91
SCHULTz, David
2003-04-05
FLyNN, Michael
1994
MALONE, Bobby
1948-49
SExTON, Marion
1946
FOSTER, Johnny
1947
MALONE, Doyle
1948-49-50
SHiELDS, Gene
1952-53
FRANkS, Bert
1955
MARCiNOWSki, Jeff
2003-04-05-06
SHUERT, Steve
2000-01-02
MARx, Archer
1953
SikES, Bill
1954
-G-
1994-95-97
-S-
-M-
-F-
-ZziNNECkER, Deron
MASSENgALE, Don
1957-58-59
SikES, Bob
1938-41
gAD, Pontus
2010
MASSENgALE, Mark
1987-88-89-90
SiMON, Milton
1927
gARRETT, Jack
1946
McALPiNE, Craig
2000
SMiTH, Adam
2003
gATTi, Jerry
1972
McBRiDE, Jim
1936-37
SMiTH, Eddie
1963-64-65
giACHiNO, Nick
1974-75-76-77
McCHAREN, Bill
1947
SMiTH, Larry
1956
giBSON, Jack
1943
McCLANAHAN, Lacy
1938-39
SMiTH, Steve
1967-68-69
giBSON, Mike
1965-66
McCRARy, Mark
1977
SORENSON, Jim
1986
giDEON, Rhett
1940
McCULLOCH, Raymond
1931
SOULE, Ted
1995-96
giLLESPiE, Kyle
1940
McLEAN, Jon
2006-07
SPALLONE, Sal
1997-98-00
giRARD, Grady
1995-96-98-99
MEARES, Scott
1985-86
SPEiRS, Jesse
2006-07
gOggANS, Matthew
1995-96
MERRiTT, Bill
1967-68
SPiTLER, Doug
1962
gRiFFiN, Matt
1976
MEyER, Adam
2003-04
SPiTLER, Doug
1962
gRUNEWALD, Kevin
1974-75-76-77
MEyER, Bubba
1960
STARzEC, Joe
2003-04-05
gUETz, Bret
2000-01-02
MiLES, Eldridge
1956-57
STEgALL, Ron
1997
Program History
48
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
WELCOME TO TCU
T C U
O V E R V I E W
DISCOVER TCU’S
TCU: Ahead of the Curve CU is committed to creating a world-class, values-centered university experience. With $515-million of construction in recent years, TCU offers a vibrant living and learning community; mentoring faculty; scores of opportunities to develop leadership skills on campus; and an endowment listed 62nd among colleges and universities in the country.
T
It’s a friendly and diverse campus. Students benefit from the strengths and resources of larger institutions but in a small college environment. They can choose from 100 undergraduate areas of study, participate in innovative programs such as entrepreneurship and nurse anesthesia, and take part in service learning. With a 14:1 student/faculty ratio and a teacher-scholar model that results in close, mentoring relationships, TCU fosters discovery, creativity and leadership. It’s a culture that enables the search for meaning and success. A TCU education is more than the sum of semester hours - it’s an exciting living and learning experience that grows from the mission: “to educate individuals to think and act as ethical leaders and responsible citizens in the global community.”
TCU: Then and Now CU was founded in 1873 by Addison and Randolph Clark in Thorp Spring, Texas, as AddRan Male and Female College. The school was chanced to AddRan Christian University in 1889 followed by a location change to Waco in 1895.
T
In 1902, the name was once again changed to Texas Christian University and was relocated to downtown Fort Worth in 1910 when the college in Waco was burned. In 1911, Texas Christian University opened three new buildings on the present campus, which has been a part of community for almost a century. Today, TCU emcompasses 271 acres in a residental neighborhood five miles from downtown Fort Worth - a welcoming city with a vibrant mix of commerce, culture as well as entertainment. In recent years, TCU has invested over $360-million in new facilities in addition to upgrades to residence halls, classrooms and laboratories. Prior to the beginning of the 2008-09 academic campaign, TCU had completed or in the midst of construction in over $155-million in new buildings and renovations.
Welcome to TCU
50
15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
T C U
O V E R V I E W
GLOBAL MISSION
14:1 11
The average student-to-teacher ratio at TCU. Entering the Fall 2009 semester, TCU had 8,853 students enrolled with 506 full-time faculty members. The ranking of TCU’s Neeley School of Business according to The Wall Street Journal as one of the top U.S. MBA programs in the country during the 2009-10 academic year.
53 39,030
5,609
The total number of undergraduate population that are from the State of Texas. Known as one of the top universities in Texas, 65 percent of students call The Lone Star State home.
2,107
17
TCU is the largest of 17 colleges and universities associated with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), a community embracing both faith and reason.
2
98
Teacher preparation programs are accredited, and pass rates average above 98 percent. Graduates are in demand throughout the entire region with a 100 percent hire rate.
6,200
The percentage of freshmen that were enrolled prior to the Fall 2009 semester that were ranked in the top-20 percent of their high school classes. The annual estimated cost of a TCU education entering the 2009-10 academic campaign. The estimated annual cost includes tuition, books and fees along with room and board. The number of bachelor’s degrees that were awarded during the 200910 academic campaign. Graduates received their degrees in 101 different undergraduate majors. The Department of Communication Studies has two faculty members ranked in the top-100 all-time active and prolific scholars in the field. Dr. Ralph R. Behnke is ranked in the top-10 in the field. The staff of the nationally-recognized William L. Adams Center for Writing conducts more than 6,200 face-to-face and online tutoring sessions a year to help students improve their writing proficiency. Welcome to TCU
21 CONSECUTIVE NCAA REGIONAL APPEARANCES
51
T C U
O V E R V I E W Brown-Lupton University Union
CAMPUS GROWTH
TCU Barnes & Noble Bookstore
Meyer-Martin Athletic Complex
Amon G. Carter Hall
Newest Additions of the TCU Campus Sam Baugh Indoor Practice Facility & Cox Field The climate-controlled practice area encloses an 80-yard field, with a regulation 52-yard width, and two full end zones and allows TCU sports teams an area in which to practice, regardless of weather. J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation Education Complex The complex comprises a complete renovation of the Bailey Building and construction of the Betsy and Steve Palko Hall and provides 13 classrooms with the latest teaching technology, a 150-seat auditorium, four conference rooms and 30 faculty/staff offices. Residence Halls Amon G. Carter Hall and Kellye Wright Samuelson Halls opened in the fall of 2007 while Teresa and Luther King Hall and Mary and Robert J. Wright Hall opened in spring of 2008. TCU Barnes & Noble Bookstore The two-story bookstore is the largest of its kind in Texas and features retail merchandise, books, textbooks, student supplies, lounge and reading areas, and a cafe with indoor and outdoor seating. Brown-Lupton University Union At the base of the Campus Commons, the new union houses the University's main dining facility, a 600-seat ballroom, a 350-seat auditorium, a retail copy center, the campus post office and more.
Clark Hall Renovation The formerly all-male residence hall underwent renovations to provide 214 bed spaces in a mixture of room types. The building also boasts new common areas, study areas and improved accessibility at the entrances. Dutch Meyer Athletic Complex and Abe Martin Academic Enhancement Center The facilty sits atop the Walsh Complex in Amon G. Carter Stadium. The area features academic and team meeting space, a team community area, 250 club seats, six luxury suites to go along a unique view of Amon G. Carter Stadium during all TCU football games. Jarvis Hall Renovation The formerly all-female residence hall underwent renovations to house university offices previously located in the Brown-Lupton Student Center including the Office of Religious and Spiritual Life, University Career Services, International offices, music classrooms and more. Clarence and Kerry Scharbauer Hall In spring 2008, TCU Trustees voted to demolish the old Brown-Lupton Student Center and rebuild it as academic space. The new structure is designed to more efficiently house several academic units such as AddRan College of Liberal Arts and the John V. Roach Honors College. Welcome to TCU
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O V E R V I E W
TCU SUCCESS
2
The Frogs were one of two NCAA Division I programs (Florida) in the country to be ranked in the top-10 in football, have a baseball team in the College World Series and have won an NCAA national title in another.
1
The TCU women’s rifle program became the first all-female squad to capture a NCAA National Championship in 2010. The Frogs hosted the NCAA Championships and came away with the overall team title.
4
The TCU men’s golf program is only one of four programs in the country to have reached 21 consecutive NCAA Regional Championship appearances with the same coach.
1
The TCU women’s volleyball program earned its first-ever berth to the NCAA Tournament where the Frogs defeated Rice University in the first round of tournament competition.
7
The TCU women’s golf program is only one of seven programs in the country to have recorded a top-20 finish at the NCAA Championships in each of the last four campaigns.
9
The TCU women’s basketball program reached its ninth NCAA Tournament bid in the last 10 seasons. The Frogs notched a 9th-seed and squared-off against Dayton in the first round of action.
10
The TCU football program was recently ranked 10th on ESPN’s Top-10 College Football Programs of the 2000s. This past season, the Frogs finished third in the BCS rankings and earned their first trip to a BCS Game.
4
The TCU women’s equestrian program recorded its highest finish ever at the Varsity Equestrian National Championships by finishing fourth overall. This was the highest team finish for the Frogs in program history.
1
The TCU baseball program recorded its first-ever trip to the College World Series after defeating the University of Texas in the Super Regionals. The Frogs made it to the finals of their bracket before falling to UCLA.
1
The TCU Sports Medicine staff was recognized by its Mountain West Conference colleagues as the league’s staff of the year. The Frogs’ staff is led by Chris Hall, who is in his 25th season with the University. Welcome to TCU
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D A L L A S / F O R T
W O R T H
M E T R O P L E X
IN THE HEART OF
Fort Worth: No Place Like Home
The Heart of Sports
ort Worth continues to wear its cowboy heritage and exude a prop-your-feet-up-and-stayawhile spirit. Smiles and nods are the norm. Yet as much as Fort Worth began on the open range, it thrives more today as a cosmopolitan city. It marries a proud cowboy heritage with a distinct sophistication that sets the city apart.
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While The Metroplex is known for housing a team in each of the four major professional sports leagues, it is also the home to many professional organizations as well as some of the biggest sporting events of the year.
Downtown Fort Worth is a mere five miles away from the TCU campus. Sundance Square invites patrons to enjoy the 20-block entertainment and shopping venue. Where else can you take your pick of more than 25 upscale eateries, see a movie, attend a play, listen to a symphony or dance under the stars - all within walking distance from one another?
Team Dallas Cowboys Dallas Mavericks Dallas Stars FC Dallas Texas Rangers
Professional Sports Teams League Founded venue NFL 1960 Texas Stadium NBA 1980 American Airlines Center NHL 1993 American Airlines Center MLS 1996 Pizza Hut Park MLB 1972 Rangers Ballpark in Arlington
Team Dallas Desperados Frisco RoughRiders Fort Worth Cats Texas Brahmas
Other Professional Teams League Founded venue AFL 2002 American Airlines Center Texas League 2003 Dr. Pepper Ballpark AAIPBL 2001 LaGrave Field CHL 2007 NYTEX Sports Centre
Every year, over 7.5-million people visit Fort Worth bringing approximately $900-million to the local economy. Whether it is enjoying a stroll through The Sanctuary of Senses in the Botanic Garden or attending the rodeo inside of the largest honkey-tonk bar in the world of Billy Bob’s, Fort Worth showcases why it’s considered one of “America’s Most Liveable Communities” on a daily basis. There is no place like home to those who live in Fort Worth while visitors are surprised and impressed with what the area has to offer, which is why they continue to come back.
Welcome to TCU
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
D A L L A S / F O R T
W O R T H
M E T R O P L E X
THE METROPLEX
6.3
According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s July 1, 2008 estimate, the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex has a population of over 6,300,000 million residents, making it the fourth-largest area in the country.
1,150
The average number of commercial flights that fly in and out of the DFW International Airport on a daily basis. The DFW International Airport flies to at least 85 cities daily.
13
The Metroplex is one of 13 areas in the country to have a team in each of the four major professional leagues - Dallas Cowboys (NFL), Dallas Mavericks (NBA), Texas Rangers (MLB) and Dallas Stars (NHL)
1849
Fort Worth was established in 1849 as an Army outpost overlooking the Trinity River.The city was named in honor of Major General William Worth.
7
TCU is located in the seventh-largest media market in the country. The Frogs are covered daily by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which has been recognized as one of the nation’s top-10 sports pages in the nation.
9,286
The DFW Metroplex encompasses 9,286 square miles of total area with 8,991 square miles of land and 295 square miles of water. The Metroplex is larger than the states of Rhode Island and Connecticut COMBINED.
1,500
There are over 1,500 churches in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. Over 59 religious groups are represented on the TCU campus with the largest representation in Roman Catholic, Methodist and Baptist.
1
The DFW Metroplex was ranked as the fastest-growing city in the country with over one-million residents by CNNmoney.com. The population in 2008 of the Metroplex increased by 162,250 residents.
360
There are approximately 360 restaurants in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. The French Room located in Dallas has been featured as one of the top-10 American restuarants by the 2008 Zagot Dining Journal.
12
The Metroplex is made up of 12 counties: Collin, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Ellis, Hunt, Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall, Tarrant and Wise. TCU is located in Tarrant County. Welcome to TCU
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T C U
C H A N C E L L O R BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Chairman
J. Luther King, Jr.
Vice Chairman
Clarence Scharbauer III
Secretary
Karen M. Baker
Term Expires Spring 2010 Allie Beth Allman (Dallas)
Jerrol J. Ray (Austin)
Brenda A. Cline (Fort Worth)
Roy C. Snodgrass III (Austin)
Ronald W. Clinkscale (Fort Worth)
William E. Steele III (Fort Worth)
Lou Hill Davidson (Washington, D.C.)
J. Roger Williams (Austin)
Mark L. Johnson (Fort Worth)
John Wooldridge (Houston)
J. Roger King (Scottsdale, Ariz.)
Term Expires Spring 2011 F. Howard Walsh, Jr. (Fort Worth)
Alan D. Friedman (Dallas)
Ann Jones (Albany)
Patricia Penrose Schieffer (Washington, D.C.)
J. Kelly Cox (Midland)
Matthew K. Rose (Fort Worth)
Kay Fortson (Fort Worth)
Mary Ralph Lowe (Fort Worth)
Dr. Victor J. Boschini Chancellor
Ex-Officio Members
nyone arriving on the TCU campus can see firsthand the results of Chancellor Victor J. Boschini’s leadership. Construction is underway on the $100-million Campus Commons project, located across Stadium Drive from Daniel-Meyer Coliseum. Designed to enhance the TCU experience for students, the Commons will comprise four residence halls housing more than 600 students.
Regional Minister • Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the Southwest
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Work has finished on the J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation Education Complex. This project includes a renovation of the Bailey Building and the addition of the Betsy and Steve Palko Hall. Athletics is also a beneficiary of the building boom. A new indoor practice facility will benefit the Horned Frogs’ Division I teams as well as the campus intramural program.
Dani L. Cartwright (Fort Worth)
R. Vance Dell (Fort Worth) President • TCU Alumni Association
Further assuring TCU’s forward momentum, TCU has added more than 40 faculty positions over the past three years, improving the already low 14:1 student/faculty ratio. Facilities and academic initiatives grew from Vision in Action - a major strategic planning effort Dr. Boschini launched after becoming TCU’s 10th chancellor in 2003. The future promises the implementation of other initiatives identified during the strategic planning process. Each fall, the Chancellor keeps his finger on the pulse of the campus by teaching an academic course - The American University Experience - in the School of Education. It’s a natural. He not only holds the rank of professor of education, but also brings an extensive background in higher education administration to the classroom. He served as president of Illinois State University and held key administrative positions at Butler and Indiana universities. Dr. Boschini maintains a high profile in the world of higher education. He is chair elect of the NAICU (National Association of Independent Colleges & Universities) board of directors, and also serves on the board of ICUT (Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas). He serves as president of the executive board of the Mountain West Athletic Conference and is a member of the executive committee of the Texas Campus Compact. Acknowledging his leadership and service, Indiana University recognized Chancellor Boschini with the School of Education’s 2005 Distinguished Alumni Award. The Chancellor is well-known among TCU’s alumni and friends as well as greater community. He serves on the boards of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, Van Cliburn Foundation and Safe City Commission. Dr. Boschini is a member of the Board of Trustees of Brite Divinity School. When TCU recruited Victor Boschini, the University got the added bonus of the Boschini family, including his wife, Megan McAuliffe Boschini, and daughters, Elizabeth Anne, Mary Catherine and Margaret Ellen, and, son, Edward Mark. Welcome to TCU
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D I R E C T O R
O F
A T H L E T I C S
"I am thrilled to be appointed TCU's athletics director," said Del Conte. "Athletics plays a vital role in the entire university experience and as such, it must remain an integral part of TCU's strategic direction. Doing so enhances and supports not only the student-athlete experience but also the collegiate experience of all TCU students.” “This program enjoys invaluable community involvement and support, has a history of excellence steeped in tradition and continues building its reputation on a national level. I look forward to carrying forward the great momentum that is clearly visible throughout the TCU athletic program." Prior to Rice, Del Conte was the senior associate athletics director for external operations and sports programs for the University of Arizona in Tucson. In that role, Del Conte had responsibility for the planning, management and oversight of the day-to-day operation for the department of intercollegiate athletics. Del Conte also functioned as the chief financial officer for the department; managed external operations; had oversight and management of all contracts, ticket sales, broadcast rights fees, corporate sponsorships, and trademarks and licensing; and oversight of all facility construction. The TCU Director of Athletics has served on various professional committees and associations including the Division 1A Directors' Association and the National Association of Directors of Athletic Development. Del Conte received a bachelor's of arts degree in sociology from the University of California, Santa Barbara and a master's of education, administration and supervision, from Washington State University in Pullman, Washington. Del Conte is married to Dr. Robin Ward and has two daughters.
Chris Del Conte Director of Athletics hris Del Conte was appointed the new Director of Athletics at TCU on Oct. 21, 2009. Del Conte joined the Horned Frog family after serving as the director of athletics for Rice University. He brought 19 years of intercollegiate athletics experience to TCU.
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During his tenure as director of athletics at Rice, Del Conte had responsibility for 16 intercollegiate programs, 350 student-athletes, along with coaches and staff. Del Conte also designed, developed and managed the Rice Vision for the Second Century Campaign, which has raised over $90 million to date. Del Conte secured significant funds to build athletic facilities such as the Tudor Fieldhouse and Youngkin Center for Student Athlete Excellence, and also raised $4 million for upgrades to the football stadium. Del Conte also secured a marketing sponsorship and broadcast rights contract for Rice and maintained a focus on student-athlete academic achievement, resulting in numerous public recognition awards from the NCAA for the academic progress rate of student-athletes. "We conducted a thorough national search, reviewed numerous résumés and ultimately found a stellar professional with the expertise and background to continue guiding our athletic program toward excellence," said TCU Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. "Christopher has extensive experience and proven ability in collegiate athletics and academic administration. He has successfully served in leadership positions in athletic programs throughout the country and guided the development of strategic partnerships, negotiated and managed key contracts, advanced student-athlete academic achievement, and ensured that athletics remained integrated with the strategic direction of each university he served."
Athletics Administration
Davis Babb
Ross Bailey
Jack Hesselbrock
Kim Johnson
Scott Kull
Andrea Nordmann
Rhonda Hatcher
Associate Athletics Director
Associate Athletics Director
Associate Athletics Director
Associate Athletics Director
Associate Athletics Director
Associate Athletics Director
Faculty Athletics Representative Welcome to TCU
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A C A D E M I C
E X C E L L E N C E Travis Woolf 2009 Cleveland Golf/Srixon Academic All-American
EXCELLENCE IN
Tom Hoge
Drew Stoltz
Deron Zinnecker
Mountain West Conference All-Scholar Team
2006 Academic All-Mountain West Conference
1997 Academic All-American
2.980
The cumulative grade point average for the Horned Frog student-athletes during the 2010 spring semester, which was the highest since reporting began in the Fall of 1998.
3.042
The cumulative grade point average for the TCU men’s golf program through the 2008 fall semester. The Frogs had 12 members of the team post a 3.0 or higher grade point average during the spring semester.
15
Athletic programs that collected a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or higher during the fall semester; compared to five teams that reached that mark during the 2003 fall semester.
22
The number of student-athletes that were named recipients of the spring 2010 TCU Scholar Award, which recognizes full-time students who boast a perfect 4.0 grade point average.
45
The number of student-athletes that were selected to the Mountain West Conference All-Academic Team during the 2009 fall semester, which was the highest fall semester number since joining the conference.
83
The number of present and former student-athletes that earned their degrees from TCU during the 2009-10 academic campaign. Two of those recipients were part of the NCAA Degree Completion Award.
104
During the last two semesters, the Horned Frogs have seen 104 studentathletes earn Mountain West Conference All-Academic Team recognition for their efforts in the classroom.
980
56
The percentage of Horned Frog student-athletes that recorded a grade point average of 3.0 or higher during the 2009 fall semester. Also, 42 percent of Horned Frogs posted a grade point average of 3.20 or higher.
57
The APR score for the TCU Athletics Department for the 2008-09 academic campaign, which is the highest APR in TCU Athletics history. The APR for the newest four-year rolling average is a 973. The number of Horned Frogs selected to the 2009-10 Mountain West Conference Scholar-Athlete Team, which recognizes student-athletes that recorded a 3.5 or higher GPA during both the fall and spring semesters. Welcome to TCU
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
A C A D E M I C
E X C E L L E N C E Grady Girard 1997 and 1998 Academic All-American
THE CLASSROOM Schools and Collegs AddRan College of Liberal Arts MAJORS - Anthropology; Criminal Justice; Economics; English; Geography; History; International Economics; Modern Language Studies; Philosophy; Political Science; Pre-Law Track; Pre-Major Track; Religion; Sociology; Spanish and Latin American Studies; and Writing
College of Communication MAJORS - Strategic Communication (Advertising/Public Relations); Broadcast Journalism; News Editorial; Film, Television and Digital Media; Communication Studies; and International Communications
The School for Classical and Contemporary Dance MAJORS - Art Education; Art History; Ballet and Modern Dance; Fashion Merchandising; Graphic Design; Interior Design; Music; Choral Studies; and Theatre
College of Education MAJORS - Education (Early Childhood | Middle School | Secondary)
Neeley School of Business MAJORS - Business (Accounting); Electronic Business; Entrepreneurial Management (Finance); Finance/Real Estate; Marketing; and Supply and Value Chain Management
College of Science and Engineering MAJORS - Astronomy; Biology; Biochemistry; Chemistry; Computer Information Technology; Computer Science; Engineering; Environmental Science; Environmental Earth Resources; Geology; Math; Neuroscience; Nutritional Sciences; Physics; Pre-Health Professions Track
Harris College of Nursing and Health Sciences MAJORS - Athletic Training; Habilitation of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing; Health and Fitness; Movement Science; Nursing, Accelerated;
Bret Guetz
Physical Education; Psychosocial Kinesiology; Social Work; and Speech Language Pathology
2002 TCU Chancellor’s Award
Athletic Academic Services Office
Chris Uchacz
Judy Golden
Shawn Worthen
Kelle Branting
Kathy Raines
Wendy Farrens
Breanne O’Connor
Director
Assistant Director
Assistant Director
Assistant Director
Life Skills Coordinator
Graduate Assistant
Graduate Assistant Welcome to TCU
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S P O R T S
M E D I C I N E
A TOUCH OF CARE TCU Athletic Training: A Touch of Care he TCU Athletic Training and medical staffs play a major role in maintaining the health and physical wellbeing of all Horned Frog student-athletes. The aim is to provide the highest level of sports medicine care so those that don the Purple and White can keep themselves on the playing field.
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At TCU, student-athletes can expect to receive the best treatment possible by one of the top athletic training staffs in the country. The Horned Frogs have six full-time athletic trainers to go along with one full-time physician, one part-time nutritionist, four graduate assistants and at least 30 student athletic trainers. In addition, the TCU athletic training staff works hand-and-hand with some of the best physicians in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex in order to provide the student-athletes with the best possible care in their biggest time of need. Entering his 25th Anniversary with the TCU Athletics Department, it’s hard to find a more respected or experienced Director of Sports Medicine than Chris Hall. The TCU Director of Sports Medicine is responsible for the coordination of all athletic training efforts for the over 400 student-athletes that represent the Horned Frogs. The Frogs have made student-athlete care a priority by making Dr. Sam Haraldson one of the few full-time doctors in collegiate athletics and employing a nutritionist in Amy Goodson, who works with the department to help TCU student-athletes eat right on a daily basis. The Walsh Center Athletic Training Room is located in the Walsh Athletic Complex, which features multiple treatment tables and full-size whirlpool tanks to provide the latest techniques in care for the Frog studentathletes. In addition, the Walsh Athletic Complex received a newly-remodeled rehabilitation room that includes state-of-the-art equipment ensuring the all Horned Frogs will return to the field in the quickest and safest manner.
Sports Medicine • Athletic Training Staff
Dr. Sam Haraldson
Chris Hall
David Gable
Valerie Tinklepaugh
Junko Yazawa
Danny Wheat
Lauren Crawford
Team Physician
Director of Sports Medicine
Associate Director
Assistant Athletic Trainer
Assistant Athletic Trainer
Assistant Athletic Trainer
Assistant Athletic Trainer Welcome to TCU
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
C O M M U N I T Y
S E R V I C E
A HELPING HAND
Giving Back to the DFW Community he TCU Department of Intercollegiate Athletics is dedicated to supporting the community that supports the Horned Frogs. Playing for the Frogs means being in the headlines, but it also gives student-athletes an opportunity to give back to the community.
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Participating in community service projects at TCU not only enhances a student-athletes’ collegiate experience, but it also expands their character. Student-athletes gain a sense of selfworth, but also experience personal satisfaction and growth from volunteering their time to the community that looks at them as bigger than life.
TCU Community Projects Below is a list of some of the community projects participated in by TCU student-athletes: • Boys & girls Clubs of greater Fort Worth - An organization dedicated to providing enriching programs for youths from disadvantaged circumstances to develop the qualities needed to become responsible citizens. • Susan g. komen Foundation - A foundation dedicated to the education and research about causes, treatments and the search for the cure of breast cancer.
H.O.P.E. Farm - An organization that provides opportunities for inner-city boys in the Dallas/Fort Worth community.
•
The Dallas/Fort Worth community receives a tremendous benefit from the help of the Frog student-athletes, but in return, feel a special relations with those that they support donning on the Purple and White uniforms. TCU student-athletes realize how fortunuate they are to be donning the colors of Fort Worth’s team, and in return, they are encouraged to respond to a community that admires them while learning the valuable lessons that they will carry with them for the rest of their lives.
SuperFrog Reading Challenge - TCU student-athletes and SuperFrog visit the involved elementary schools in both the fall and spring semesters for a program intended to encourage students in Fort Worth elementary schools to read.
•
Habitat for Humanity - TCU student-athletes have built several houses in the Fort Worth community as part of Habitat for Humanity.
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Welcome to TCU
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T C U
F A C I L I T I E S
T C U FA C I L I T I E S First Class Facilities ommitment is the key word when it comes to TCU Athletics, and in no area is that word more evident than in the facilities improvements planned and completed for the athletics programs. This year, the Horned Frogs opened their newest facility in the Dutch Meyer Athletic Complex and Abe Martin Academic Enhancement Center for the nationally-ranked TCU football team, which was opened in August 2008.
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Prior to the opening up football’s newest facility, the $7-million Sam Baugh Indoor Practice Facility and Cox Field opened in the summer of 2007 and became widely-recognized around the country as the model for future indoor practice facilities. Lupton-Brown Stadium In addition to the upgrades in football facilities, TCU has taken pride in its ability to provide all student-athletes the opportunity to play and practice on some of the finest facilities in the country. Horned Frog athletes have seen multiple facility upgrades in recent years in the $7-million LuptonBrown Stadium for the nationally-ranked TCU baseball program as well as the $5-million Schollmaier Basketball Complex, which is a brand-new, state-of-the-art practice facility for the men’s and women’s basketball programs. The TCU men’s and women’s tennis, track and field, women’s soccer, volleyball and swimming and diving programs have also seen individual facility improvements since 2000, and a multi-million dollar Olympic Sports Complex, which will be the home of several programs, is one of many projects in the works for the future of TCU’s athletics programs.
Daniel-Meyer Coliseum
Sam Baugh Indoor Practice Facility • Cox Field
Garvey-Rosenthal Soccer Stadium Welcome to TCU
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES
U N I V E R S I T Y
R E C R E A T I O N
C E N T E R
CAMPUS FITNESS
University Recreation Center ne of the most popular additions to the TCU campus is the University Recreation Center, which sits adjacent to the DanielMeyer Coliseum and also plays home to the TCU women’s volleyball and men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams. Open to TCU students, the University Recreation Center provides memberships to alumni and community members.
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The University Recreation Center has a fitness center with cardio-machines as well as free weights while providing students with the adventure of a climbing wall and the relaxation of sitting at the pool on a hot Texas afternoon. The University Recreation Center has something to offer everyone as students, alumni and community members have the option to have a certified personal trainer or a massage from one of the certified massage therapists. A popular activity among the TCU community is the Challenge Course, which is a program designed to allow individuals to participate and experience activities that cause them to reflect and learn about their relationships to others and to learn about their own abilities and limitations. The Challenge Course is based on an experiential education model of education, and participants learn by personally challenging themselves to go beyond perceived boundaries, to think in new ways, and to work with others to solve problems. Welcome to TCU
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A T H L E T I C S
C O M P L I A N C E
Prospects
Boosters
Who is a Prospective Student-Athlete (Prospect)? You are a prospect if you have started classes for the ninth grade. Before the ninth grade, you may become a prospect if a university provides you (or your family or friends) any financial aid or other benefit that is not usually provided to prospective student-athletes.
Who is a "booster"? A "booster" is known in NCAA terms as a "representative of the institution's athletics interests." You become a booster if:
How do I know if I’m being recruited? There are several ways to be recruited: (1) A coach may provide you with an official paid visit to view the campus, (2) a coach may arrange an in-person, off-campus meeting with you (or your family), or (3) a coach or staff member may call you (or your family) on more than one occasion for the purpose of recruitment. Only coaches and athletic department staff can be involved in the recruiting process. Athletic representatives are prohibited from contacting a prospective student-athlete or members of his/her family by telephone, letter or in-person for the point of encouraging participation in athletics at TCU. Please contact the coaching staff if you know of a prospect that may have the interest and ability to participate in intercollegiate athletics at TCU. The coach can then take appropriate action.
What is Considered “Being Recruited?” A prospect is considered recruited if a coach, staff member or representative of the institution’s athletic interest attempts to persuade a prospect (or family member) to enroll at their institution and participate in the athletics program. A student is considered “recruited” if any of the following actions are taken: (1) the institution provides the prospect with an “official visit” (i.e. expenses paid) to its campus; (2) a coach arranges for an in-person, off-campus (home or prospect’s school) encounter with the prospect; (3) transportation to campus by a coach or booster; and/or (4) receiving more than one telephone call from a coach for recruiting purposes.
What is a Contact? A contact is any face-to-face encounter between a prospect or the prospect’s parent(s) or legal guardian and an institutional staff member or athletic representative during which any dialogue occurs in excess of an exchange of greeting. NOTE: At the Division I level, athletic representatives (boosters) may not contact you for the purpose of recruiting.
• • • • •
you have ever been a member of any organization promoting TCU Athletics, you have ever made any donation to the Frog Club, TCU Athletics or any TCU booster group, you have ever assisted in evaluating or recruiting prospective student-athletes, you have ever assisted in providing benefits to enrolled student-athletes or their families, you have promoted TCU Athletics in any other manner.
NCAA Bylaw 13.02.13.1 mandates that when you become a booster, you retain that identity for the rest of your life. As a representative of TCU's athletics interests, you are bound by NCAA rules. TCU is responsible for your actions.
The Initial-Eligibility Clearinghouse What is the Initial-Eligibility Clearinghouse? The NCAA Initial-Eligibility Clearinghouse is an organization that works with the NCAA to determine a student’s eligibility for athletics partcipation in his or her first year of collegiate enrollment. Students who want to participate in college sports during their first year of enrollment must register with the Clearinghouse. How do I register with the Clearinghouse? Log on to www.ncaaclearinghouse.net and select prospective student-athletes. Complete the registration and print the transcript release form, sign it and give it to your high school guidance counselor. When you register, be sure to compete the amateurism questionnaire as well.
What can TCU Offer You to Attend? You (or your family) may not receive any benefit, inducement, or arrangements (e.g. cash, clothing, cars, gifts, loans, etc…) to encourage you to sign a National Letter of Intent. TCU may offer you a one-year scholarship that covers room and board, tuition and fees, and required course-related books, or any part of these. NOTE: TCU can recommend that this aid is renewed each year, as is the general practice at the institution, but this renewal is not guaranteed.
Correspondence and Recruiting Materials How and When May a Prospect be Contacted? In all sports, a prospect may not be contacted in-person, off-campus until their senior year in high school. Prospects may not receive correspondence until their junior year in high school with the exception of men’s basketball (June 15th after sophomore year). University questionnaires and camp brochures may be sent prior to a prospect’s junior year.
What can TCU send me? A Division I institution may provide you with the following materials for general correspondence, including letters, U.S. Postal Service postcards and institutional note cards and materials printed on plain white paper with black ink; business cards; e-mails; NCAA education information; and pre-enrollment information subsequent to signing a National Letter of Intent with the University.
When May a Prospect Visit an Institution? Prospects may visit an institution’s campus at their own expense (“unofficial visit”) and receive complimentary passes to an athletic contest anytime except during “dead periods.” Check with the institution for dates. There is no limit to the number of times a prospect may visit a campus at his/her own expense. Prospects may receive an expense paid visit (“official visit”) only after they have begun classes for their senior year and have registered with the NCAA Eligibility Center and submitted transcripts and test scores to the institution. Prospects are limited to a maximum of five official visits.
Institutional Control "Institutional control" of athletics is a fundamental requirement of NCAA rules. The NCAA constitution provides that each institution shall be responsible for ensuring that student-athletes, members of the institution's staff and other individuals or groups that represent the institution's athletics interests comply with all applicable NCAA regulations. Because of the complexity of NCAA rules, this document does not include all applicable situations and should not be relied upon exclusively.
Athletics Compliance Staff
Contact Information NCAA 700 W. Washington Street Indianapolis, Indiana 46206 (317) 917-6222 www.ncaa.org
Andrea Nordmann
John Cunningham
Becky Holmes
Stephanie Key
Associate Athletics Director
Director
Assistant Director
Administrative Assistant
Mountain West Conference 15455 Gleneagle Drive - Suite 200 Colorado Springs, Colorado 80921 (719) 488-4040 www.TheMWC.com
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15 NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP APPEARANCES