2014 NCAA Division I men's golf championship

The 2014 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship was a golf tournament contested from May 23–28, 2014 at the Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson, Kansas.[1] It was the 76th NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship. The tournament was hosted by Wichita State University.[2] The Alabama Crimson Tide won their second consecutive championship.

2014 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship
Tournament information
DatesMay 23–28, 2014
LocationHutchinson, Kansas, U.S.
CoursePrairie Dunes Country Club
Statistics
Par70
Length6,598 yards (6,033 m)
Field156 players, 30 teams
Champion
Team: Alabama
Individual: Cameron Wilson, Stanford
Team: 4–1 (def. Oklahoma State)
Individual: 204 (−6)
 2013
2015 

Regional qualifying tournaments

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  • The five teams with the lowest team scores qualified from each of the six regional tournaments for both the team and individual national championships.
  • The lowest scoring individual not affiliated with one of the qualified teams in their regional also qualified for the individual national championship.
Regional nameGolf courseLocationQualified teams
Auburn RegionalAuburn University ClubAuburn, AlabamaAlabama, Auburn, Kennesaw State, Texas, Virginia Tech
Columbia RegionalThe Club at Old HawthorneColumbia, MissouriArkansas, Iowa State, LSU, Missouri, Oklahoma State
Raleigh RegionalLonnie Poole Golf CourseRaleigh, North CarolinaFlorida State, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Texas A&M, Washington
Sugar Grove RegionalRich Harvest FarmsSugar Grove, IllinoisCalifornia, Illinois, Purdue, Southern California, UAB
Eugene RegionalEugene Country ClubEugene, OregonHouston, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Stanford
San Antonio RegionalBriggs Ranch Golf CourseSan Antonio, TexasGeorgia, Georgia State, SMU, UCLA, Vanderbilt

Venue

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This is the first NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship held at the Prairie Dunes Country Club in Hutchinson, Kansas, located about an hour north of Wichita. This is the second time the tournament has been hosted by Wichita State University; the last time the Shockers hosted was in 1963.

Team competition

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Leaderboard

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  • Par, single-round: 280
  • Par, total: 840
PlaceTeamRound 1Round 2Round 3TotalTo par
1Stanford281267279827−13
T2Alabama274278284836−4
LSU279278279
4Oklahoma State277279284840E
5Georgia Tech277282282841+1
6UCLA279284281844+4
T7SMU275285285845+5
Illinois285280280
9South Carolina272292282846+6
10Houston284285279848+8

Source:[3]

Match play bracket

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  • The eight teams with the lowest total scores after the first three rounds of play advanced to the match play bracket.
Quarterfinals
May 27, morning
Semifinals
May 27, afternoon
Final
May 28
         
1 Stanford 3
8 Illinois 2
1 Stanford 2
4 Oklahoma State 3
4 Oklahoma State 4
5 Georgia Tech 0
4 Oklahoma State 1
2 Alabama 4
3 LSU 4
6 UCLA 1
3 LSU 1
2 Alabama 4
2 Alabama 3
7 SMU 2

Individual competition

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  • Par, single-round: 70
  • Par, total: 210*
PlacePlayerUniversityScoreTo par
1Cameron Wilson^Stanford71-63-70=204−6
2Ollie SchniederjansGeorgia Tech71-65-68=204−6
T3David BooteStanford73-67-65=205−5
James RossHouston70-69-66=205
Robby SheltonAlabama72-65-68=205
T6Denny McCarthyVirginia65-71-70=206−4
Seth ReevesGeorgia Tech66-72-68=206
Benjamin TaylorLSU71-67-68=206
T9Brian CampbellIllinois70-74-63=207−3
Sebastian CappelenArkansas68-71-68=207
Lorens ChanUCLA70-70-67=207
Bryson DeChambeauSMU69-69-69=207
Toni HakulaTexas72-68-67=207
Ryan ZechMissouri70-69-68=207

Source:[4]
* Originally scheduled for four rounds (72 holes), shortened to 54 holes due to weather delays.[5]
^ Wilson won on third hole of sudden-death playoff.[6]

References

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