Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Prairie View A&M Men, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Women capture 34th PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship titles

Prairie View A&M Men, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Women capture 34th PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship titles

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Prairie View A&M University golf coach Kevin Jennings has an expansive history with what is now the PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship. He played in the event when it was the National Minority College Championship while he still was a high school student, competed as a college player and coached Talladega College to a title in what was then the NAIA Division for smaller schools. Never before had he won the Men’s Division 1 title at PGA WORKS, however. Until Wednesday. On a windy and difficult day on one of the toughest, most historic tracks on the PGA TOUR – the daunting Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass – Jenning’s Panthers came from behind, first catching Howard University and then holding off hard-charging Alabama State to capture the title. Prairie View, three-time champions of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), shot 18-over 306 on the Stadium on Wednesday, an effort bettered only by Alabama State (303). Florida A&M and Howard, the 36-hole leader, finished third and fourth, respectively. “I put on the back of our t-shirts, ‘Trust the Process,’ and it’s strange how things work out from time to time,” Jennings said. “Yeah, it’s a great feeling. … It just feels great to be with these guys and have some success. This is a good group.” In the Women’s Team Division, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi cruised to a 28-shot victory over Delaware State. The Islanders shot 24-over 312 on the Dye’s Valley Course, led by Lucy Martinez, who shot a final-round 74. Delaware State’s Baipor Khunsi (5-over 221) was the division’s medalist, edging Madison Lake (Texas A&M Kingville) by four shots. “Yesterday, when we played the Stadium, I was walking the fairway of 16 and saw all the people and the cameras, and I was like, ‘I feel like I’m on the PGA TOUR,” said Martinez, a sophomore from Aguascalientes, Mexico. “It was so awesome.” Phu Khine, a junior at UNC-Wilmington from Myanmar, shot 76 on the Stadium for a three-round total of 2-over 218 to win the Women’s Individual title, while Khavish Varadan of University of Alabama-Birmingham won the Men’s Individual crown. Varadan, a freshman, had not seen the Stadium Course since competing on it four years ago in the Junior Players Championship when he was 17. He would put together the most impressive stretch of the week. Teeing off on the 10th hole at the Stadium Course early Wednesday, in winds blowing to 15 mph, he played his first eight holes in 5 under par. He got up and down for birdie at the par-5 11th; birdied 13 (8 feet) and 15 from in tight; got up and down from the left side of the par-5 16th for birdie; and hit a knocked-down gap wedge that released to 8 feet at the island 17th. The birdie putt had 3 feet of break in it, and Varadan poured it in, building on the success of going to the arm-lock putting style at the recent Conference USA Championship, where he was runner-up. “He has broken through that glass barrier with his putting, and that was holding him back,” said UAB assistant coach Ryan Heisey. What impressed Heisey most about Varadan? “I’m real impressed with how calm he stays, even when he got into some places out there that were not ideal. He just focuses on the next shot. Calm. That’s how he is. You can’t tell if he is 5 under or 5 over out there, and that’s a good quality to have.” Even with a bogey at 18, Varadan turned in 32, leaving his closest competitor, 36-hole co-leader Timothius Tamardi (Appalachian State) five shots behind. Varadan went to his final hole (the par-5 ninth) at 4 under, tried to reach the green in two, clipped a tree, got a bad kick and finished with a double to shoot his second 2-under 70 on the Stadium. The last hole did little to dampen his spirits. He didn’t have much time to celebrate. He had an 8 a.m. tee time on Thursday at a U.S. Open local qualifier in Panama City. “You know your game is good when you’re playing well on golf courses like this,” said Varadan, who is from Malaysia. “I really wanted to test myself this week. I’m pretty impressed … It wasn’t my best stuff, but finishing under par on a golf course like this, it’s a bit of good golf.” The Men’s Division II Team Division went to Alabama’s Miles College, which placed three players, including medalist Anthony Lumpkin (76–231), inside the top 10. Medalist in the Men’s Division 1 field was Howard’s Gregory Odom Jr., who competed this week after losing his father, Greg Sr., to liver complications back home in Memphis on Saturday. Odom, a junior, told his coach he wanted to stay and compete, and his mom thought it was best, too. It is the first title of any kind for Howard, which restarted its golf program just 13 months ago with the financial backing of NBA All-Star Steph Curry. Coach Sam Puryear has experienced many victories at many levels of college golf, but said none had made him prouder than seeing Odom win. He shot 74 on the Stadium Wednesday, finishing his week at 4-over 220. “Not another player in this field carried a more heavy heart than this kid,” Puryear said of Odom, who was his very first Bison recruit. “To do what he did and hold your emotions in to the end, how do you do that? I just don’t know what’s better than that. There were 23 teams and 52 individual players competing in five divisions at this week’s PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship, which brings together Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions and Minority Serving Institutions. This was the 35th edition of the event, with the 2020 PWCC canceled because of COVID-19. On Sunday, student-athletes took part in a Career Expo at the new PGA Tour Headquarters. It was the final stop of the spring for many teams, but Prairie View A&M isn’t done with its season, as Wednesday afternoon it received its Regional bid to the NCAA Championships, representing the SWAC. The Panthers will play May 17-19 at the University of New Mexico, with momentum on their side. Coach Jennings boarded a charter bus with the team on Wednesday evening in Ponte Vedra Beach, hoping to get as far as Mobile, Ala., to break up the 14-hour ride home to Texas. For Jennings, the journey will be extra special having that PGA WORKS Collegiate Championship trophy by his side. It had been a week he won’t forget. Given the venue and the overall spirit of the competition, it was that kind of week for many student-athletes, too.

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A name to remember: Gotterup in contention at the DeereA name to remember: Gotterup in contention at the Deere

SILVIS, Ill. — The teenaged kid from Little Silver, N.J., was just another name on the lesson schedule when Jason Birnbaum checked in for work at his indoor learning center at Manhattan Woods Golf Club on a crisp January afternoon in 2013. A couple of 120 miles-per-hour swings later, Birnbaum knew Chris Gotterup’s was a name he would remember. When a 42-foot eagle putt at TPC Deere Run’s 14th hole briefly vaulted him into a share of his first lead on the PGA TOUR early Friday afternoon, Gotterup similarly let the golf world know his is a name it may be hearing a lot for a good long while. The reigning Jack Nicklaus Award winner out of the University of Oklahoma, Gotterup parred his way home from No. 14, missing a downhill 3-footer for birdie at the home hole, and posted a 10-under midway total that puts him squarely in the weekend hunt at the John Deere Classic. “Yeah, happy to get to 10,” said the rookie professional making his fifth start on TOUR this year on a John Deere Classic tournament sponsor’s exemption. “I had good look at 17. And then 18, I actually did everything perfectly and just misread the putt. “So it is what it is. You pick up some where you don’t expect to and lose some where you don’t expect to also. I’m pleased to be where I am at.” Great expectations ofttimes fizzle, but Gotterup is the latest young player to hit the TOUR with big talent, and, like two-time John Deere Classic winner Jordan Spieth and others before him, he could be the newest young pro to use the Deere as a launching pad to stardom. “His game is as ready for big-time pro golf as anybody I have been around,” declared Ryan Hybl, who has seen his share of TOUR-ready players as the ninth-year head coach at Oklahoma and as an assistant coach and player at the University of Georgia before that. “His ball-striking is TOUR quality and his driving can be unbeatable at times. More importantly, he is gritty and he believes he is supposed to be there, which is high on the value chart.” The grittiness isn’t always evident in Gotterup’s outwardly laconic demeanor. Morton Gotterup once said that as a junior golfer his son was more likely to wonder what he’d order at Taco Bell post-round than to follow his competitors to the range. Even Birnbaum, the accomplished instructor who continues to help Gotterup hone his big swing, suggested rolling out of bed for early tee TOUR times may be Gotterup’s biggest professional challenge. “It’s not like he can’t sleep,” said the swing coach. “He’s unfazed by all this.” Yet, behind all that “chill” is a cool and very confident competitor who’s willing to put in the work required to harness his powerful game. “He’s extremely focused,” said Birnbaum, whose clientele also includes such accomplished professionals as Roberto Diaz, Oliver Wilson, Alexandre Rocha, Julieta Granada and past PGA TOUR winner Jim McGovern. “The Taco Bell comment is funny and it’s not totally inaccurate. But he’s practicing and he’s working hard as well.” Over the past nine years, Gotterup has pushed that 120 mph swing speed that still is the fastest Birnbaum has seen in a teen to a high of 133 mph. “And that’s the fastest I’ve seen for a TOUR pro,’’ Birnbaum said. En route to a T35 finish at last week’s Traveler’s Championship, Gotterup led the field with an average of 328.5 yards over eight measured drives, which was 12 yards beyond Rory McIlroy’s average for the week. Friday at Deere Run, he set up his eagle at the short 14th with a drive of 351 yards, birdied the par-5 second after a drive of 354 yards, and settled for easy pars after respective tee shots of 353 yards on 15 and 368 on 9. 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A big Deere finish could go a long way toward earning a spot in the Korn Ferry Tour qualifying tournament later this year. A Top 10 would book a start at next week’s Barbosal Championship, and Gotterup also has a chance to earn one of the Open Championship berths available to the three highest Top 10 JDC finishers not otherwise exempt for the year’s final major in two weeks at fabled St. Andrews. With a sponsor’s exemption awaiting in the end-of-the-month Rocket Mortgage Classic, that amounts to a busy July. Rather than sweat the future, though, Gotterup will chill. “I just am worried about getting some rest this afternoon,” he said Friday. “I don’t think too far ahead. Usually when you think too far ahead bad things happen in the present. I’m just going to focus on this week, and whatever comes from it, comes from it.”

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How to watch AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Round 1: Live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Round 1: Live scores, tee times, TV times

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