There were a lot of surprising results on quarterfinal/semifinal day in the NCAA Championship Tuesday at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa’s North Course in Carlsbad, Calif.
But there was nothing surprising about Auburn, No. 1 in the Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings and the top seed following 72 holes of stroke play, winning two matches and reaching the Final Match for the second time in three years.
On the other side of the bracket, though, it was an entirely different story as Big Ten champion UCLA, No. 30 in the Scoreboard rankings, stunned Texas, No. 3 in the Scoreboard rankings, 3-2, in the quarterfinals in the morning and then rolled to a 3.5-1.5 decision over Arizona, No. 12 in the Scoreboard rankings, in the semifinals in the afternoon to earn a spot in the Final Match opposite Auburn.
UCLA is living proof that you just need to find a way, any way, to get into the match-play bracket in the NCAA Championship and then see what happens.
The Bruins survived a playoff among four teams for the final two spots in the match-play bracket Monday. A day later they were preparing to face Auburn for a national championship.
It will be a tall task for UCLA, but the Bruins got on a roll when they won the Big Ten crown at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club’s Witch Hollow Course in North Plains, Ore. and just kept it going all the way to the Final Match at La Costa.
Auburn, a Southeastern Conference power, earned its spot in the Final Match by ending the title defense of Big 12 champion Oklahoma State by a deceiving 5-0 margin.
After the Tigers rolled to a 3.5-1.5 victory over Stanford, an Atlantic Coast Conference representative and No. 15 in the Scoreboard rankings, in their morning quarterfinal match, they drew the Cowboys, No. 5 in the Scoreboard rankings, in the afternoon semifinals.
With UCLA taking most of the drama out of its victory over Arizona in the other semifinal, The Golf Channel broadcast spent most of its time with the marquee matchup between Auburn’s Jackson Koivun, a junior from Chapel Hill, N.C. and No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), and Oklahoma State’s Preston Stout, a junior from Richardson, Texas and No. 3 in the WAGR. And rightfully so.
Earlier in the day it was announced that Koivun was the winner of Fred Haskins Award, presented by Stifel, for the second time in his brilliant three-year run at Auburn.
A day earlier, Stout nailed down the NCAA individual crown with a 14-under-par 274 total over four rounds over the 7,548-yard, par-72 North Course layout.
They were teammates when the United States defeated Great Britain & Ireland, 17-9, in the Walker Cup Match last summer the Cypress Point Club on northern California’s Monterey Peninsula.
If you squinted real hard into the future, it wasn’t difficult to envision Koivun and Stout battling it out down the stretch of some major championship.
Ultimately, the match didn’t matter as Koivun held a 1-up advantage over Stout on the finishing hole when Koivun’s teammate, Cayden Pope, a junior from Lexington, Ky. and No. 47 in the WAGR, sealed the deal for the Tigers with a 3 and 2 victory over Filip Fahlberg-Johnsson, a sophomore from Sweden.
The reality is that this Auburn team is deep and battle-tested.
The Tigers put a point on the board when Logan Reilly, a precocious freshman from Lovettsville, Va., cruised to a 7 and 5 victory over Eric Lee, a junior from Fullerton, Calif. and No. 27 in the WAGR.
It had been Lee who earned the clinching point for the Cowboys in their victory over Virginia in the Final Match a year ago at La Costa.
Josiah Gilbert, a junior from Millbrook, Ala. and No. 12 in the WAGR, rolled to a 4 and 3 decision over Ethan Fang, a junior from Plano, Texas and No. 8 in the WAGR.
Fang, also a member of the winning U.S. Walker Cup team at Cypress Point, became the first American to capture the title in the Royal & Ancient’s Amateur Championship since 2007 last summer at the Royal St. George’s Golf Club.
Auburn’s other talented freshman, Jake Albert of Blacksburg, Va., was credited with a 1-up victory over Gaven Lane, a senior from Argyle, Texas and No. 71 in the WAGR, for the Tigers’ final point. It had been a close match with Albert holding a 1-up lead through 17 holes when Pope clinched the victory for Auburn.
In the other semifinal, UCLA got full points from Big Ten champion Josh Kim, a freshman from Danville, Calif., Taylor Loree, a freshman from Kula, Hawaii, and Alex Papayoanou, a junior from The Woodlands, Texas, in its victory over Big 12 runnerup Arizona, which had been on a bit of a heater of its own at La Costa.
Kim pulled out a 1-up decision over Taishi Moto, a sophomore from Japan, Loree was a 3 and 2 winner over Tianyi Xiong, a junior from China, and Papayoanou closed it out for UCLA with a 2 and 1 victory over William Wistrand, a freshman from Sweden.
Filip Jakubcik, a senior from the Czech Republic and No. 6 in the WAGR, accounted for Arizona’s lone full point as he earned a 3 and 2 win over Kyle An, a junior from Alisa Viejo, Calif.
Baylor Larabee, a sophomore from Ferndale, Wash. who has been UCLA’s best player this week at La Costa, was tied with Zach Pollo, a sophomore from Rocklin, Calif. and No. 52 in the WAGR, through 17 holes when the outcome was assured in the Bruins’ favor.
Auburn’s Reilly had clinched the Tigers’ 3.5-1.5 victory over Stanford in the morning quarterfinals with a 2 and 1 victory over Dean Greyserman, the Cardinal’s senior leader from Boca Raton, Fla. and No. 93 in the WAGR.
Koivun suffered a 2-up setback at the hands of Nathan Wang, a senior from Fremont, Calif., but his Auburn teammates picked him up.
Albert, Reilly’s fellow freshman, cruised to a 6 and 5 verdict over Ethan Gao, a junior from Alpharetta, Ga., and Gilbert, a native of Australia who has been really solid for the Tigers at La Costa, claimed a 3 and 2 victory over Jay Leng, a sophomore from San Diego, Calif.
Pope was deadlocked with Edan Gui, a freshman from Atherton, Calif., through 15 holes when Reilly’s win clinched the overall victory for Auburn.
The shot of the day for UCLA was Papayoanou’s long eagle putt that rattled into the cup and gave him a stunning victory over Texas’ Daniel Bennett, a sophomore from South Africa and No. 15 in the WAGR, on the 20th hole of the match.
Papayoanou’s bomb was the key to the Bruins’ 3-2 upset of the Longhorns, an SEC power. Every player in the Texas lineup was in the WAGR’s top 100, but it didn’t seem to matter to UCLA.
UCLA got another huge win from Larabee, who edged Christaan Maas, a senior from South Africa and No. 4 in the WAGR, 1-up.
An got the clinching point for the Bruins with a 1-up victory over Matt Comegys, a graduate student from Van Alstyne, Texas and No. 82 in the WAGR.
Two of Texas’ big guns delivered full points for the Longhorns as Tommy Morrison, a senior from Dallas, Texas and No. 18 in the WAGR, claimed a 3 and 2 victory over Kim, and Luke Potter, a senior from Encinitas, Calif. and No. 20 in the WAGR, earned a 4 and 3 decision over Loree.
Oklahoma State had a surprisingly easy time in ousting SEC power Florida, No. 2 in the Scoreboard rankings, 3-2, in the morning quarterfinals.
Lane clinched the victory for the Cowboys with a 2 and 1 victory over Jack Turner, a junior from Orlando, Fla. and No. 25 in the WAGR.
Lee fueled a fast start for Oklahoma State as he put an early point on the board with a 6 and 4 victory over Luke Poulter, a junior from Orlando, Fla. and No. 9 in the WAGR.
Stout delivered the other full point for the Cowboys with a 1-up victory over Matthew Kress, a senior from Saratoga, Calif. and No. 38 in the WAGR. Stout had built a big lead and held on for the win.
Zack Swanwick, a sophomore from New Zealand and No. 50 in the WAGR, earned a full point for the Gators when he rallied to knock off Fang on the 19th hole.
Parker Sands, a senior from Edmond, Okla. and No. 38 in the WAGR, picked up the other full point for Florida with a 3 and 2 decision over Fahlberg-Johnsson.
Arizona reached the semifinals with a 3-2 victory over Vanderbilt, No. 11 in the Scoreboard and the fourth of the SEC teams that made up half of the match-play bracket.
Pollo clinched the victory as he went extra holes to defeat Vanderbilt’s veteran senior Wells Williams, a senior from West Point, Miss. and No. 29 in the WAGR, on the 20th hole.
Moto delivered a full point for the Wildcats with a 4 and 3 victory over Chase Nevins, a junior from Great Falls, Va.
Xiong had the other full point for Arizona with his 3 and 2 decision over Jon Ed Steed, a freshman from Enterprise, Ala.
Vanderbilt’s other freshman standout, Will Hartman of Marvin, N.C., capped a huge week at La Costa by taking down Arizona’s senior leader Jakubic with a decisive 6 and 5 victory.
Ryan Downes, a sophomore from Longmeadow, Mass., accounted for the Commodores’ other full point with a 4 and 3 victory over Wistrand.