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USA Today Sports Media Group
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Cameron Jourdan

NCAA Men’s Golf Championship: Ross Steelman fuels Georgia Tech’s strong start and more from Friday’s first round

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — For the last two years, Grayhawk Golf Club’s Raptor Course has proved a stern test for the best men’s college golfers, and it remained so Friday.

The opening round of the NCAA Men’s Golf Championship teed off Friday, and scoring conditions were difficult. A reminder, for the men, Grayhawk plays as a par-70 (not like the par-72 it did for the women) and at 7,289 yards.

Last year, Vanderbilt, North Carolina and Oklahoma were at 14 over following four rounds of stroke play. This year, it looks like that score could be in play again with the golf course expected to play more difficult as the week goes on.

No team shot under par in the morning wave, though Georgia Tech was able to card an even-par round.

Golfweek/Sagarin rankingsMen’s team | Men’s individual
NCAA Leaderboard: Team | Individual

Here’s a look at what happened during the first round of the men’s NCAA Championship:

Ross Steelman takes command

In four rounds last year at the NCAA Men’s Golf Championship, Ross Steelman made only three birdies. He didn’t make any on the back nine.

It took Steelman only four holes Friday to match his entire total from 72 holes last season.

The senior at Georgia Tech birdied three of his first four holes and added three more on the back nine in his opening-round 64, which is the lowest score recorded in the first round at Grayhawk the past three years. He didn’t have a bogey and was in control from his opening tee shot.

“I hit a 4-iron a lot further than I thought I could on 1,” Steelman said. “Hit a pitching wedge to maybe 20 feet and made a good putt to start it off.”

More college: How hard is it to win an NCAA title?

Steelman said he continued to remind himself par was a good score. And his 64 was a great one on a difficult Friday.

Following the morning wave, Steelman’s 6 under was two shots in front of the closest chasers, which include Arkansas’ Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira, New Mexico’s Matthew Watkins and Vanderbilt’s Cole Sherwood.

Steelman’s experience at Grayhawk was pivotal to his fast start, and he’s confident after the opening 18.

“Kind of knowing what to expect for 12 months coming into it is huge,” Steelman said. “You kind of come in hearing the horror stories of how hard it is and seeing it on TV. Just being able to know what lies in front of you and know that it’s not impossible.”

Georgia Tech starts strong

Georgia Tech has been one of the hottest team in the country coming into the NCAA Championships, with victories at the ACC Championship and the Salem Regional. That’s why the heat was no bother to the Yellowjackets on Friday.

They shot even-par 280 in the opening round, with Steelman’s 64 leading the way.

No other team in the morning wave shot better than 1 over.

“Sometimes the first (round) is the hardest one to play because you’ve waited all year for this moment,” Georgia Tech coach Bruce Heppler said. “To get off to a pretty good start is certainly very helpful.”

Five-bag Bartley Forrester had the next best round at 1-over 71. Connor Howe added a 2-over 73, and Christo Lamprecht was the final counting score at 3-over 73.

Heppler said his team’s record is a lot better than it looks on paper. With numerous runner-up finishes before the recent hot streak, he’s confident where his team is positioned.

“It’s really just turned into five guys who can score,” Heppler said. “It’s just finally getting all five guys playing at the same time.”

Pepperdine in the early mix

It should be no surprise to see Pepperdine near the top of the leaderboard at Grayhawk.

The Waves won the title in 2021 and made match play last year, falling in the semifinals to Arizona State.

Another year is here, and Pepperdine is lurking near the top of the leaderboard after the opening round. Of teams who teed off in the morning wave, the Waves shot 1 over and were behind only Georgia Tech and tied with Arkansas.

The most impressive part is only two players from Pepperdine’s lineup in 2022 are with the team at Grayhawk this season. William Mouw and Derek Hitchner each shot 3-over 73 on Friday, and it was the fresh faces who carried the Waves.

Roberto Nieves fired a 2-under 68 to lead Pepperdine. Luke Gifford and Sam Choi added rounds of even-par 70. And by the end of the first round, the Waves will be near the top, a sight other teams have gotten familiar with at Grayhawk.

Vanderbilt conquers afternoon wave

Vanderbilt came to Grayhawk as the top-ranked team in the country for the second straight year. Playing in the afternoon and tougher wave in the opening round, there’s no doubt coach Scott Limbaugh would have taken any round near even par.

Well, the Commodores nearly did that.

Vanderbilt sits T-4 after the opening round, two shots behind Georgia Tech, and carded the lowest round of any team in the afternoon wave along with Texas Tech and North Carolina. Had it not been for a William Moll double on his final hole of the day, the ninth, Vanderbilt would be at even par and tied for the lead.

Sophomore Gordon Sargent, the reigning NCAA individual champion, started slowly with three bogeys and no birdies after his first 15 holes, but he birdied Nos. 7 and 8 and sits at 1 over after the opening round.

Cole Sherwood led Vanderbilt with a 4-under 66 that included five birdies on his back nine, including three straight on Nos. 6-8. Reid Davenport shot even-par 70, and Moll finished with a 75.

2022 finalists struggle

Texas won the national championship in 2022. Arizona State was the runner-up.

And if either of those teams wants to make match play, they have a lot of work to do.

Texas, with four new players in its lineup including three freshmen, shot 15-over 295 in the first round. That puts the Longhorns in 27th, better than only three teams.

Arizona State, also the host school, shot 1-over 291. The Sun Devils are in 21st.

Now, if there is a silver lining, it’s both teams played in the late wave and will get to go out early on Saturday, which is the easier of the two. Grayhawk is notorious for becoming much more difficult in the afternoon because of the increasing winds and dried-out conditions.

But both will need to make a move, and quick.

Jose Luis Ballester shot 1 under for Arizona State, and Preston Summerhays was 1 over. the next three scores? 5 over, 6 over and 7 over.

For Texas, freshman Christiaan Maas shot 2-over 72, which was the Longhorns’ only score better than 4 over.

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