It would have been easy to overlook Mississippi going into
the Southeastern Conference Championship, which wrapped up April 26th
at the Sea Island Golf Club’s Seaside Course on St. Simons Island, Ga.
Ole Miss was only No. 12 in the Scoreboard, powered
by clippd, rankings with four SEC rivals ranked higher, including No. 1 Auburn.
But there the Rebels were hoisting the SEC trophy a couple
of Sundays ago after they knocked off the aforementioned top-ranked Tigers,
3-2, in the semifinals a day earlier and then pulled out a 4-1 victory over
Florida in the final, the Gators then at No. 4 in the Scoreboard rankings and
having risen to No. 2 in the aftermath of the SEC Championship.
It was only the second SEC championship in the history of
the Ole Miss program and its first since the 1984 squad captured the program’s only other SEC crown.
Maybe some people dismissed Ole Miss’ chances when Michael La
Sasso, the NCAA individual champion a year ago at the Omni La Costa Resort
& Spa in Carlsbad, Calif., departed the program during the midseason pause
to join LIV Golf.
But, with Cameron Tankersly, a senior from Dickson, Tenn.
and No. 37 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), delivering the clinching
point in both the semifinal win over Auburn and in the final against Florida,
Ole Miss landed at the top of the heap of America’s deepest and most talented
collection of amateur golf talent.
You will be seeing many of the top-10 finishers in 54 holes
of qualifying for stroke play at Sea Island, which concluded April 24th,
on PGA Tour leaderboards in the next decade or so.
As I wade my way through five days of high-level play in the
SEC Championship, the bids to the NCAA regionals will be released, so I’ll work
them into this post. Trust me, most of these SEC teams will be headed for the
regionals, which tee off May 18.
Tankersley held on for a 1-up victory over Parker Sands, a
senior from Edmond, Okla., that sealed the deal in the final for Ole Miss and
capped a 3-0 march through match play for Tankersley.
Tom Fischer, a senior from Birmingham, Ala. and No. 26 in
the WAGR, put a point on the board for Ole Miss as he rolled to a 5 and 4
decision over Zack Swanwick, a sophomore from New Zealand and No. 51 in the
WAGR. That also capped a 3-0 run through the match-play bracket for the red-hot
Fischer.
Swanwick was one of the heroes as a freshman in Florida’s
run to the SEC title a year ago at Sea Island.
Ole Miss’ other full point came from Collins Trolio, a
junior from West Point, Miss., as he, too, capped a 3-0 run in match play with
a 4 and 3 victory over Matthew Kress, a senior from Saratoga, Calif. and No. 45
in the WAGR.
Collins’ older brother Cohen, a senior from West Point,
Miss. and No. 53 in the WAGR, finished in a deadlock with Florida’s Jack Turner,
a junior from Orlando, Fla. and No. 24 in the WAGR.
Cohen Trolio had led the way for the Rebels in qualifying
for match play as he finished in a tie for third place with a 10-under 200
total over the 7,055-yard, par-70 Seaside Course layout.
Cohen Trolio had set the tone for the week for Ole Miss when
he torched the Seaside Course layout with a sizzling 6-under 64 in the opening
round.
Daniel Tolf, a freshman from Sweden, battled Luke Poulter, a
junior from Orlando, Fla. and No. 18 in the WAGR, to a tie. But who are we
kidding, Poulter is the son of U.S. Ryder Cup nemesis Ian Poulter, and is very
much a Brit, despite his current address in Orlando.
Tankersley, Fischer and Cohen Trolio were in the lineup for
Old Miss in a hard-fought loss to eventual national champion Oklahoma State in
the NCAA Championship semifinals a year earlier at La Costa.
Ole Miss was awarded a No. 2 seed in the Bermuda Run
Regional. Florida is one of four SEC teams to earn No. 1 seeds out of the six
regionals as the Gators are headed for the Columbus Regional.
A day before its victory over Florida, Ole Miss booked its
spot in the final with an epic 3-2 triumph over top-ranked Auburn, Tankersley
finishing it off with a 1-up decision over Josiah Gilbert, a junior from
Millbrook, Ala. and No. 14 in the WAGR.
But probably the turning point in the Rebels’ run to the SEC
Championship was Collins Trolio taking down Jackson Koivun, a junior from
Chapel Hill, N.C. and the No. 1 player in the WAGR, by making seven birdies on
his way to a 2 and 1 victory.
A day earlier, Koivun had added a final round of 7-under 63
to the back-to-back 64s he had posted in the first two rounds as he captured
his third straight SEC crown by seven shots with a remarkable 19-under 191
total.
Koivun became just the second player in the storied history
of the SEC to earn a third straight individual crown, joining LSU’s B.R.
McLendon, who accomplished the feat from 1965 to 1967. Yeah kids, that was long
before the Internet.
Koivun’s 191 total broke the SEC record of 192 established
by Alabama’s Bobby Wyatt in 2014. It was Koivun’s sixth victory in the
wraparound 2025-2026 season.
Fischer added the other full point for Ole Miss with a 3 and
1 victory over Cayden Pope, a junior from Lexington, Ky. and No. 48 in the
WAGR.
Not that Auburn went without a fight.
Logan Reilly, a freshman from Lovettsville, Va., earned a 2
and 1 decision over Tolf, and Jake Albert, a freshman from Blacksburg, Va., claimed
a 3 and 2 victory over Cohen Trolio.
Koivun and Gilbert are holdovers from Auburn’s run to its
first national title two springs ago at La Costa. Koivun, Gilbert and Pope were
in the lineup for the Tigers’ gut-wrenching loss to Virginia in the
quarterfinals a year ago at La Costa.
Auburn, the top seed in the Athens Regional, is going to a
tough out if it can earn a spot in the match-play bracket as May Madness in
NCAA golf plays out this month.
Florida earned its spot in the SEC title match for a second
straight spring with a 3.5-1.5 victory over Texas, which began the week at No.
3 in the Scoreboard rankings and dropped a spot to No. 4 following its
semifinal setback at the hands of the Gators.
It was a rematch of a quarterfinal match last spring at La
Costa when Florida edged Texas to reach the NCAA Championship semifinals.
Turner clinched the spot in the SEC final for Florida with a
2 and 1 victory over senior Tommy Morrison, the tall Texan from Dallas who is
No. 14 in the WAGR.
Swanwick put a point on the board for the Gators with a 3
and 2 victory over Daniel Bennett, a sophomore from South Africa and No. 15 in
the WAGR.
Sands earned another full point for Florida with a 4 and 3
verdict over Luke Potter, a senior from Encinitas, Calif. and No. 30 in the
WAGR.
Kress’ match with Matt Comegys, a graduate student from Van
Alstine, Texas and No. 88 in the WAGR, went into the books as a tie, although
Kress took a 1-up lead to the 18th hole when Turner assured the
outcome in Florida’s favor.
The lone point for Texas came from Christian Maas, a senior
from South Africa and No. 4 in the WAGR, as he captured a 4 and 3 win over
Florida’s Poulter.
Texas also earned No. 1 seed as it will get to stay home in
Texas at the Bryan Regional.
Ole Miss began its march to the SEC title with a 4.5-.5
victory over Texas A&M, which moved up from No. 30 to No. 26 in the
Scoreboard rankings after a solid showing at Sea Island.’
Fischer earned a 3 and 2 decision over Jaime Montojo, a
senior from Spain, Tankersley claimed a 4 and 3 victory over the Aggies’ Aaron
Pounds, a junior from The Woodlands, Texas, Collins Trolio pulled out a 2 and 1
verdict over Shiv Parmar, a freshman from Selma, Texas, and Cohen Trolio edged
Wheaton Ennis, a senior from Eagle, Idaho and No. 81 in the WAGR, 2-up.
Tolf battled Kris Kuvaas, a junior from Houston, Texas, to a
draw.
Texas A&M will be seeded fifth as it plays host in the
Bryan Regional.
The results of qualifying for match play gave us a pretty
juicy quarterfinal matchup between Florida and Oklahoma, like Texas, in just
its second season in the SEC.
But Florida was never really threatened by the Sooners in a
3-2 victory that sent the Gators into the semifinals.
Turner rolled to a 5 and 4 victory over Coltrane Mittag, a
freshman freshman from Ashland, Neb., Sands cruised to a 5 and 3 decision over Clark
Van Gaalen, a sophomore from Turlock, Calif. and No. 57 in the WAGR, and Kress
nailed down the clinching point with a 3 and 2 win over P.J. Maybank III, a
junior from Cheboygan, Mich.
Jase Summy, a senior from Keller, Texas and No. 5 in the
WAGR, earned a point for Oklahoma as he edged Swanwick, 1-up. Summy was the
runnerup in the individual standings in stroke play as he finished seven shots
behind Koivun with a 12-under 198 total.
Ryder Cowan, a junior home boy from Edmond, Okla., and No.
25 in the WAGR, earned the other point for the Sooners as he pulled out a 1-up
decision over Poulter.
Oklahoma, which dropped a spot in the Scoreboard rankings
from No. 16 to No. 17 in the aftermath of the SEC Championship, was seeded
third in the Corvallis Regional.
Auburn, after earning the top seed in the match-play bracket
with a 39-under 801 total that was six shots clear of Florida, stormed into the
semifinals with a 3.5-1.5 victory over South Carolina.
Reilly earned the clinching point with a birdie on the 19th
hole of his match against Marek Fleming, a sophomore from Tomball, Texas. Pope
and Gilbert were also winners for Auburn.
A day earlier, South Carolina had earned the final spot in
the match-play bracket in a three-way playoff with Arkansas and Georgia.
The Gamecocks, who moved up a spot in the Scoreboard
rankings from No. 39 to No. 38 following the SEC Championship, are headed for
the Columbus Regional, where they will be the seven seed.
Texas earned its spot in the semifinals with a 3.5-1.5
victory over Mississippi State in the last of the quarterfinal matches.
Bennett got the clincher for the Longhorns with a 2 and 1
decision over Jackson Skinner, a freshman from Birmingham, Ala. Potter and
Comegys also earned full points for Texas.
Mississippi State, which moved up a spot from No. 41 to No. 40
in the Scoreboard rankings following its strong showing at Sea Island, is headed
for the Bermuda Run Regional, where it will be seeded seventh.
Auburn, behind Koivun’s dominant individual performance,
captured the top seed in the match-play bracket as the Tigers opened with an
11-under 269 and added a 16-under 264 in the second round that gave them a
five-shot lead over Texas entering the final round.
Auburn closed with a 12-under 268 for a 39-under 801 total.
Gilbert gave Auburn a second finisher inside the top 10 as
he ended up among a group of five players tied for seventh place at 8-under
202.
After opening with a 2-under 68, Gilbert contributed a
sparkling 5-under 65 to Auburn’s strong second-round showing before closing
with a 69.
Florida was right with Auburn the whole way as the Gators
matched the Tigers’ opening round of 11-under 269 and added a 9-under 271 in
the second round before closing with a solid 13-under 267 to earn runnerup
honors with a 33-under 807 total.
Turner led the way for the Gators as he opened with a
sizzling 6-under 64, added a 68 in the second round before matching par in the
final round with a 70 that enabled him to join the quintet tied for seventh
place at 8-under.
Texas put together back-to-back 11-under 269s in the first
two rounds before closing with an 8-under 272 to finish three shots behind
Florida with a 30-under 210 total.
Maas led the way for the Longhorns as he opened with a
4-under 66 and added back-to-back 67s in the last two rounds to join Ole Miss’
Cohen Trolio and Alabama’s William Jennings, a sophomore from Greenville, S.C. and
No. 38 in the WAGR, in the trio tied for third place at 10-under 200.
Ole Miss began its journey toward an SEC Championship by
grabbing the lead with a spectacular opening round of 15-under 265, the low
team round of the tournament.
The Rebels added a 6-under 274 in the second round before
closing with a 1-over 281 to finish 10 shots behind Texas in fourth place with
a 20-under 820 total. The first order of business at Sea Island was making
match play and Ole Miss easily cleared that hurdle.
It was Cohen Trolio, the veteran senior, who led the way for
the Rebels. After opening with that sizzling 6-under 64, Cohen Trolio matched
par in the second round with a 70 before closing with a 66 that left him among
the trio tied for third place in the individual standings at 10-under.
Texas A&M finished four shots behind Ole Miss in fifth
place with a 16-under 824 total as the Aggies added a 10-under 270 in the
second round to their opening-round 274 before matching par in the final round
with a 280.
Parmar led the way for Texas A&M as he opened with a
sparkling 6-under 64 and added a 67 in the second round before closing with a 1-over
71 that left him in the group tied for seventh place at 8-under.
Mississippi State finished two shots behind Texas A&M in
sixth place in qualifying for match play with a 14-under 826 total. The MSU
Bulldogs opened with a 9-over 271 and added a 7-under 273 in the second round
before closing with a 2-over 282.
Mississippi State was led by Dain Richie, a graduate student
from New Berlin, Ill. who finished among the gang of five that shared seventh
place at 8-under. After opening with a 5-under 65, Richie added a 69 in the second round before closing with a 68.
Oklahoma flashed its talent with an opening round of
14-under 266 that left it just a shot behind Ole Miss. The Sooners struggled a
little after that, adding a 3-under 277 in the second round before closing with
a 4-over 284 to finish a shot behind Mississippi State in seventh place with a
13-under 827 total.
Oklahoma's Summy only trailed Koivun, his teammate on last summer’s
winning U.S. Walker Cup side at the iconic Cypress Point Club on northern
California’s Monterey Peninsula, by a shot going into the final round after
Summy rattled off back-to-back 5-under 65s in the first two rounds.
Summy closed with a 2-under 68 to finish alone in second
place, six shots behind Koivun’s blistering pace, with a 12-under 198 total.
South Carolina snuck into the match-play bracket by
surviving a playoff with Arkansas and Georgia as each landed on 12-under 828
after 54 holes of stroke play.
The Gamecocks opened with an 8-under 272 and added a 276 in
the second round before matching par in the final round with a 280.
Frankie Harris, a redshirt senior from Boca Raton, Fla., led
the way for South Carolina as he was the final member of the fivesome tied for
seventh place at 8-under. Harris ripped off back-to-back 4-under 66s in the
first two rounds before matching par in the final round with a 70.
South Carolina got a birdie from Brock Blais, a junior from
Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., at the 14th hole, and another birdie from
Talan Harrison, a freshman from Kannapolis, N.C., at 16 that enabled the
Gamecocks to finish 1-under in the five-hole playoff (holes 14 through 18) and
grab the final spot in the match-play bracket.
It was a disappointing week for Arkansas as the Razorbacks
came into the SEC Championship at No. 5 in the Scoreboard rankings and fell a
spot to No. 6 after failing to earn a spot in the match-play bracket.
Still, Arkansas has been so good throughout the 2025-’26
season that it was still rewarded with the SEC’s fourth top seed, this one in
the Corvallis Regional.
Georgia, which maintained its No. 25 spot in the Scoreboard
rankings in the aftermath of the SEC Championship, will be the five seed as the
UGA Bulldogs will play the host at the Athens Regional at their UGA Golf
Course.
Backing up Koivun and Gilbert for Auburn was Pope, who
finished among the group tied for 13th place with a 6-under 204
total. After matching par with a 70 in the opening round, Pope tallied a
sparkling 5-under 65 in the second round before closing with a solid 69.
Reilly contributed a 3-under 67 to Auburn’s quick start in
the opening round and matched par in the second round with a 70 before closing
with a 69 to finish in the group tied for 24th place with a 4-under
206 total.
Rounding out the Auburn lineup was Albert as he contributed
a 3-under 67 to the Tigers’ strong final-round effort to finish among the group
tied for 45th place with a 1-over 211 total. Albert had matched par
in the opening round with a 70 before adding a 4-over 74 in the second round.
Jennings led the way for Alabama as he opened with a
sizzling 6-under 64 and only trailed Koivun by two shots going into the final
round after he added a 66 in the second round. Jennings matched par in the
final round with a 70 to join Texas’ Maas and Ole Miss’ Cohen Trolio in the
trio tied for third place at 10-under.
The Crimson Tide, who dropped back from No. 17 to No. 20
in the Scoreboard rankings in the aftermath of the SEC Championship, finished
in 11th place in the team standings, six shots behind the trio tied
for eighth, with a 6-under 834 total.
Sophomore Nick Gross, the PIAA Class AAA champion in 2021 as
a sophomore at Downingtown West, was in the Alabama lineup at Sea Island and
finished among the group tied for 41st place with an even-par 210
total.
Gross, one of the best players ever produced by District
One, opened with a 3-under 67 and added a 3-over 73 in the second round before
matching par in the final round with a 70.
Alabama is headed for the Marana Regional at The Gallery
Golf Club near Tucson, Ariz., where the Crimson Tide will be the four seed.
Should be considerably warmer than it was for Alabama at the
Reno Regional a year ago, where the Crimson Tide failed to advance to NCAA
Championship in weather that included 50 mph winds that halted play in the
opening round and a delay to the start of resumption of play to allow overnight
snow to melt. Just your basic weather nightmare.
Georgia was led at Sea Island by James Earle, a sophomore
from Jupiter, Fla. who was the picture of consistency with three straight
3-under 67s over the Seaside Course that left him alone in sixth place in the
individual standings with a 9-under 201 total.