

NAME CL. EXP. HOMETOWN (HIGH SCHOOL/PREVIOUS SCHOOL)
Nicholas Arcement Gr. 3L Thibodaux, Louisiana (E Learning Academy)
Alfons Bondesson Jr. TR Vallda, Sweden (Katrinelundsgymnasiet/Missouri)
Connor Cassano Fr. HS Shreveport, Louisiana (Loyola College Prep)
Matthew Dodd-Berry Jr. TR Wirral, England (Wirral Grammar School/East Tennessee St.)
Luke Haskew Jr. 2L Baton Rouge, Louisiana (University Lab HS)
Dylan Kayne Fr. HS Paarl, South Africa (Paarl Boys’ School)
Algot Kleen Sr. TR Fiskebackskil, Sweden (Korrespondensgymnasiet/ East Tennessee St.)
Noah McWilliams So. 1L Benton, Louisiana (Benton HS)
Jay Mendell So. 1L Lafayette, Louisiana (Ascension Episcopal HS)
Arni Sveinsson Fr. HS Garðabær, Iceland (Fjölbrautaskólinn í Garðabæ)
Holden Webb So. HS Shreveport, Louisiana (Loyola College Prep)
HEAD COACH: Jake Amos (Augusta State ‘10), 1st at LSU
ASSISTANT COACH: Jace Long (Missouri ‘13) 1st year at LSU
ASSISTANT COACH: Cody Carroll (North Florida ‘22) 1st year at LSU
ROSTER BY HEIGHT
NAME HEIGHT
Connor Cassano 6-4
Luke Haskew 6-3
Dylan Kayne 6-2
Matthew Dodd-Berry 6-0
Noah McWilliams 6-0
Arni Sveinsson 6-0
Holden Webb 6-0
Algot Kleen 5-9
Alfons Bondesson 5-8
Jay Mendell 5-7
Nicholas Arcement 5-5
ROSTER BY CLASS
SENIORS/ GRADUATE
Nicholas Arcement
Algot Kleen
JUNIORS
Alfons Bondesson
Matthew Dodd-Berry
Luke Haskew
SOPHOMORES
Jay Mendell
Noah McWilliams
Holden Webb
FRESHMAN
Connor Cassano
Dylan Kayne
Arni Sveinsson
ROSTER BY COUNTRY
UNITED STATES
Nicholas Arcement
Connor Cassano
Luke Haskew
Noah McWilliams
Jay Mendell
Holden Webb
SOUTH AFRICA
Dylan Kayne
ICELAND
Arni Sveinsson
ENGLAND
Matthew DoddBerry
SWEDEN
Alfons Bondesson
Algot Kleen
Jake Amos, who guided East Tennessee State to four-straight NCAA Championship appearances, is in his first season as LSU head men’s golf coach.
He was named to the position on May 29, 2024. The native of Leicester, England brings a new enthusiasm and drive to an LSU golf program that is looking to add to its historic success. He showed those characteristics in the fall, leading LSU to two team victories with his golfers earning multiple titles.
Amos, a two-time finalist for the NCAA Division I Dave Williams Coach of the Year Award, led the Buccaneers to three victories and seven top-three finishes in 2024, including a fourth-straight Southern Conference Championship and a 12th place finish at NCAA Championships, ETSU’s best showing since 2001.
The Bucs appearance in the last four NCAA championship made them only one of nine Division I programs to make the event.
At ETSU, Amos coached four NCAA All-Americans and eight East All-Region selections, as well as three conference Players of the Year, three conference Freshman of the Year and 15 All-Conference honorees.
As a program, ETSU saw unprecedented success under his leadership, capturing 13 team wins and 13 individual victories in five seasons. Amos was also named 2024 Southern Conference Coach of the Year, his
winning the award in both 2021 and 2022.
Amos was a part of the ETSU program for six years, the last five as head coach.
ETSU was ranked as high as No. 8 in the country during the 2023-24 season, while the Bucs registered nine top-five finishes in 13 tournaments played.
Amos also brings SEC coaching experience, helping lead the University of South Carolina to back-to-back NCAA Regional appearances as an associate head coach from 2016-18.
From 2014-16, Amos was a member of the Purdue golf staff as an assistant coach, helping lead the Boilermakers to one of their best runs in program history with back-toback NCAA regional appearances and one national championship appearance. In 2015-16, Purdue won three tournaments and finished the season ranked 32nd, which marked their highest ranking since 2005.
In both stints at South Carolina and Purdue, Amos was named a finalist for the Jan Strickland Assistant Coach of the Year Award.
Prior to his time at Purdue, Amos served as an assistant coach at South Florida from 2013-14, leading the Bulls to the NCAA Regionals, finishing the year ranked No. 33 in the country. Amos also helped coach Chase Koepka – brother of Brooks Koepka – to PING All-American honors, which marked the first USF player to earn the accolade since 1989.
Amos played three years collegiately at Augusta University, winning the 2010 NCAA Division III Men’s Golf Championship, marking their first title in program history. He was named 2007 Peach Belt Freshman of the Year, AllAmerica second team, All-America Freshman
team, All-Region team selection and an NCAA Regional medalist.
Following his collegiate career, Amos spent three seasons playing professional golf on the Web.com Tour and throughout Europe and Asia.
He and his teammates were recently unducted into the 2025 inaugural Augusta State Athletics Hall of Fame class.
He and his wife, Dani, have two sons, Jenson King and Jasper Lewis.
Jace Long, a Level I PGA Associate and former All-America golfer at Missouri, joined the staff for the 2024-25 season.
Long comes to the LSU program after three seasons at Marquette where he served as assistant coach for two years before a promotion to associate head coach in 2023-24. In three years at Marquette, Long mentored players who accounted for 12 All-Big East Conference honors, including the 2023-24 Big East Golfer of the Year, Max Lyons.
Long was part of the 2022-23 Big East Coaching Staff of the Year after the Golden Eagles won the conference title and appeared in an NCAA Regional. Marquette finished fourth in the Big East Championships that season.
Regional individual event in 2011 as a sophomore. He was a three-time PING All-Region selection, earned first-team all-conference honors in both 2012 and 2013, and earned his All-America honors in 2011.
Long claimed a school record 11 individual titles and captained 14 team titles during his collegiate career and was one of four collegiate men’s golfers to represent the United States at the 2011 World University Games, finishing 15th overall.
Long graduated from Missouri in 2013 with a bachelor’s degree in general studies and was a two-time academic honor roll selection.
In 2020, Long married the former Mikala Lohe.
Marquette golfers claimed Big East individual championship honors in 2021 and 2023 under Long.
Prior to joining the Marquette staff, Long served as an assistant golf professional and player development coach in The Colony, Texas, at the Golf Clubs at the Tribute.
The native of Dixon, Missouri, was a professional golfer from 2013-20 after finishing up an all-America career at the University of Missouri.
As a professional, Long made multiple appearances on the Web.com Tour with a top showing of seventh place at Wichita’s Air Capital Classic in 2013. He won the Missouri Open Championship that same year. Long also competed on the PGA Tour Canada in 2015 and earned multiple top-10 finishes on the All-Pro Tour.
While at Mizzou, Long was ranked as high as No. 13 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings and reached first in the College Golf ranking during his senior year. He won the NCAA Southeast
Cody Carroll, a native of Jacksonville, Fla., is in his first year as assistant coach at LSU.
Carroll joined the LSU Men’s Golf program after a five-year playing career at the University of North Florida (2018-23). Carroll finished his career totaling 48 tournament appearances with his best finish a second-place total at the 2019 Shoal Creek Invitational.
He was a two-time member of Atlantic Sun Conference Championship team in 2019 and again in 2022. Carroll was also the 2019 Atlantic Sun Freshman of the Year and ended his North Florida career with 33 rounds under par.
Carroll will assist LSU Men’s Golf with player development and individual tournament performances along with other coaching duties.
Carroll graduated from North Florida in 2022 with a bachelor’s degree in finance and earned his master’s degree in business administration in 2023. His younger brother, Chase, currently plays for the University of North Florida men’s golf team.
UNIVERSITY
Location: Baton Rouge, La.
Founded / Enrollment: 1860 / 34,290
Nickname: Tigers
President: Dr. William F. Tate IV
Faculty Representative: Dr. Lori Martin
ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT
Director of Athletics: Scott Woodward
Chief of Staff Andrea Tepe
Executive Deputy Director of Athletics: Verge Ausberry
Esecutive Deputy Director of Athletics/COO: Keli Zinn
Deputy AD/Rev. Generation/Sports Adm.: Clay Harris
Deputy AD Leadership/Strategy Lori Williams
Sr. Associate AD/SWA: Miriam Segar
Sr. Associate AD/Facility Ops/Events Dan Gaston
Sr. Associate AD/Health and Wellness Shelly Mullenix
Sr. Associate AD/External Affairs Zach Greenwell
Sr. Associate AD/CFO Matt LaBorde
Exe. Assoc. AD/Compliance Steve Lautz
MEN’S GOLF
Head Coach: Jake Amos (Augusta State ‘10) Years at LSU: 1st
Assistant Coach: Jace Long (Missouri ‘13) Years at LSU: 1st
Assistant Coach: Cody Carroll (North Florida ‘22) Years at LSU: 1st
Director of Ops Katie O'Brien (LSU, '98)
Years at LSU: 16th
COMMUNICATIONS
Associate AD/Communications: Michael Bonnette
Sr. Associate Director/Men’s Golf: Kent Lowe
Lowe office/cell: 225-241-4360
Lowe Email Address: clowe@lsu.edu
The 2024-25 LSU Men’s Golf Record Book is a production of LSU Athletics Communications/Creative Services. Edited by Kent Lowe, Robert Quiroga and Todd Politz. Photography by LSU Photo Services. Thanks to the PGA, Korn Ferry Tour, Getty Images, Peter Nguyen and Mitchell Scaglione for their assistance.
Sept. 6-8 Visit Knoxville Collegiate -Loudon, Tenn.
Sept. 21-23 Valero Texas Collegiate-San Antonio, Texas.
Sept. 30 - Oct. 2 Blessings Collegiate InvitationalFayetteville, Ark.
Oct. 19-21 Fallen Oak Collegiate Invitational -- Saucier, Miss.
Nov. 2-4 Ka’Anapali Classic -Maui, Hawaii
Feb. 10-12 Puerto Rico Classic -Rio Grande, Puerto Rico
Mar. 10-11 Louisiana Classics Lafayette, La.
Mar. 17-18 Pauma Valley Invitational -Pauma Valley, Calif.
Apr. 6-8 Calusa Cup. -- Naples, Fla.
Apr. 14-15 Invitational at the Ford -Savannah, Ga.
Apr. 23-27 SEC Championships -St. Simon’s Island, Ga.
May 12-14
May 23-28
NCAA Regionals -- TBA
NCAA Championships -Carlsbad, Calif.
Leo Johansson
Tournament Date Rds Scores Par Rank R.E. Lamkin 3/4-5
Noah McWilliams
Tournament
Golfweek Kickoff 9/4-5 3 283-271-290 -- 844 -20 1/12
Valero Tex. Chal. 9/9-11 3 301-280-285 -- 866 +2 6/12
SEC Match Play 9/25-27 3 280-282-288 -- 850 -2 10/14
Jackson Stephens 10/9-11 3 269-279-284 -- 832 -32 4/7
Everett Buick 10/16-17 3 277-292-273 -- 842 -22 1/15
Hal Williams 2/12-13 3 282-276-272 -- 830 -22 2/14
R.E. Lamkin 3/4-5 3 286-295-292 -- 873 +9 13/16
Louisiana Classics 3/11-12 3 286-279-290 -- 855 -9 3/15
The Hootie 3/24-26 3 284-278-287 -- 849 -15 1/15
The Aggie 4/6-7 4 302-303-294 -- 899 +35 4/12
SEC Championship 4/24-26 3 293-286-295 -- 874 +34 13/14
NCAA Regional 5/13-15 3 295-289-284 -- 868 +4 5/14
NCAA Stroke Play 5/24-27 3 301-306-296 -- 903 +39 18/30
SEASON TOTALS 39 11185 strokes-286.79 avg.
Drew Doyle
Tournament Date
Rds Scores Par Rank
Valero Tex. Chal. 9/9-11 3 75-70-70 -- 215 -1 T14/72
SEC Match Play 9/25-27 3 71-71-73 -- 215 +2 N/A
Hal Williams 2/12-13 3 75-68-69 -- 212 -22 T21/80
R.E. Lamkin 3/4-5 3 70-72-74 -- 216 +9 T39/95
Louisiana Classics 3/11-12 3 75-71-68 -- 214 -9 T11/88
The Hootie 3/24-26 3 72-69-70 -- 211 -15 T4/81
The Aggie 4/6-7 4 72-75-75 -- 222 +35 T12/76
SEC Championship 4/24-26 3 78-0-0 -- 78 +34 N/A
SEASON TOTALS 22 1583 Strokes -- 71.95 Avg.
Connor Gaunt
Tournament Date Rds Scores Par Rank
Golfweek Kickoff 9/4-5 3 71-66-75 -- 212 -4 T5/82
Valero Tex. Chal. 9/9-11 3 73-68-70 -- 211 -5 4/72
SEC Match Play 9/25-27 3 68-74-68-- 210 -3 N/A
Jackson Stephens 10/9-11 3 64-70-69 -- 203 -13 T3/42
Everett Buick 10/16-17 3 69-74-66 -- 209 -7 T3/84
Hal Williams 2/12-13 3 72-67-65 -- 204 -9 2/80
R.E. Lamkin 3/4-5 3 77-80-72 -- 229 +13 86/95
Louisiana Classics 3/11-12 3 69-72-73 -- 214 -2 T11/88
The Hootie 3/24-26 3 69-69-73 -- 211 -5 T4/81
The Aggie 4/6-7 4 78-76-73 -- 227 +11 T25/76
SEC Championship 4/24-26 3 71-70-70 -- 211 +1 T30/65
NCAA Regional 5/13-15 3 68-73-70 -- 211 -5 T5/68
NCAA Stroke Play 5/24-27 3 75-72-69-74 -- 290 +2 T18/156
SEASON TOTALS 40 2842 Strokes -- 71.05 Avg.
Luke Haskew
Tournament Date Rds Scores Par Rank
Golfweek Kickoff 9/4-5 3 77-75-79 -- 231 +15 60/82
Jackson Stephens 10/9-11 3 73-63-73 -- 209 -7 16/42
Everett Buick 10/16-17 3 71-74-73 -- 218 +2 T38/84
R.E. Lamkin 3/4-5 3 74-75-74 -- 223 +7 T71/95
Louisiana Classics 3/11-12 3 78-76-75 -- 229 +13 79/88
SEC Championship 4/24-26 3 0-69-73 -- 142 +2 N/A
NCAA Regional 5/13-15 3 75-74-80 -- 229 +13 T56/68
NCAA Stroke Play 5/24-27 3 74-77-76 -- 227 +11 T86/156
SEASON TOTALS 23 1708 Strokes -- 74.26 Avg.
Alex Price
Cohen Trolio
Holden Webb
Lance Yates
Sam Burns of Shreveport, spent only two seasons as a member of the LSU golf team, but he made his mark on the program and has continued on to great success on the PGA Tour.
Burns came to LSU prior to the 2015-16 season after a stellar career at Calvary Baptist where he was a threetime individual state champion and earned AJGA Player of the Year honors in 2014.
Before turning pro following his sophomore season in the summer of 2017, Burns finished his career with a 71.13 scoring average in 27 tournaments. He set the LSU singleseason scoring record with a career-low 70.05 stroke average in 2016-17.
He was named the top player in college golf that season being named the NCAA Division I Jack Nicklaus National Player of the Year and a unanimous PING FirstTeam All-America by the Golf Coaches Association of America. Burns was also named the SEC Player of the Year and a First-Team All-SEC selection in 2017.
Burns was the first Tiger to earn the title of SEC POY since 1991 and the sixth recipient in school history.
The two-time All-America also earned PING Honorable Mention All-America honors as a freshman in 2015-16. Burns won four tournament titles at LSU with 15 top 10s in his 27 tournament appearances.
The Nicklaus Trophy was presented to Burns in conjunction with the legend’s annual Memorial Tournament. Burns became the first LSU Tiger to be named the national college golf Player of the Year.
Among his four victories in 2016-17 was at the NCAA Baton Rouge regional that helped send the Tigers back to the NCAA Championships once again. Burns opened with a 7-under 65 and finished with a winning 4-under 212 for 54 holes at the University Club in a battle of the nation’s top two players – Burns and Oregon’s Wyndham Clark, who finished one shot back.
Burns turned pro in the fall of 2017. He earned Web. com Tour status for 2018 with his T10 finish at the final stage of Web.com Qualifying. After a T2 finish in an early Web.com stop, he was able to play the PGA Tour’s Honda Classic where he famously finished T7, playing with Tiger Woods in the final round.
Burns first professional win came at the 2018 Savannah Golf Championship on the Web.com Tour where he birdied each of the final three holes. He would earn his
His first of five PGA wins came in May 2021 at the Valspar Championship in Florida when Burns fired a 3-under par 68 in the final round for a three-shot win over Keegan Bradley. Burns shared the 54-hole lead with Bradley after rounds of 67, 63 and 69. His 8-under 63 in the second round, featured a clean card with eight birdies.
He would win his second tournament that October at the Sanderson Farms Championship at 22-under par 266 which made him the victor over Nick Watney and Cameron Young (-21). Burns fired rounds of 68, 66, 65 and 67.
Burns had eight top 10 finishes on the PGA Tour in 2021 and finished No. 18 in the FedEx Cup.
In a two-month period in 2022, Burns had two more Tour wins, starting with his defense of the Valspar Championship. Burns drained a 32-foot putt to defeat Davis Riley on the second playoff hole of the day at the Copperhead Course.
Then Burns won his fourth PGA title at the prestigious Charles Schwab Challenge at the Colonial Golf Club in Fort Worth, Texas. This time he made a 38-foot putt from just off the green in a playoff to gain the win over Scottie Scheffler. Burns overcame a seven-stroke deficit to win, matching Nick Price in 1994 for largest comeback in a final round to win at Colonial.
His fifth and most recent title came in the 2023 World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play at the Austin (Texas) Country Club. With the win in the WGC event, he earned a five-year PGA Tour exemption through 2027. Burns soundly beat Cameron Young in the champi-
onship match, 6&5. Burns advanced to the championship match after a 1UP win in 21 holes over Scheffler.
Burns has played in 18 professional major championships, including six U.S. Opens and three Masters. His best finish in a major was in 2024, finishing T9 in the U.S. Open.
On the PGA Tour, Burns as of January 2025, has earned just under $29 million on the PGA Tour.
Burns has been a part of team events since his junior golf days, earning a spot on the winning U.S. Junior Ryder Cup in 2014 and in his sophomore year at LSU, playing on the U.S. winning Arnold Palmer Cup in 2017.
Professionally, Burns earned his spot on the 2023 Ryder Cup team and has been on the winning American team in the 2022 and 2024 President’s Cup.
Don’t be surprised if you are at Tiger Stadium, the Maravich Center or Alex Box Stadium and you see golf star David Toms walking around or sitting in the crowd.
If LSU is competing in anything, there is a good chance he will be in attendance rooting on his alma mater if his schedule allows him that luxury. He loves LSU that much.
From his days as a six-time winner at LSU, including the SEC Championship, and multiple first-team All-America honors, Toms took his talent’s to professional golf and once established, became a star, winning 13 times on the PGA Tour with professional major titles on the PGA and Champions Tour.
Toms was at LSU from 1986-89, winning the SEC Championship in 1987, and in his final season, won three titles in 1989.
In 1991, Toms finished T23 at the PGA Tour qualifying school to earn his first full tour card for the 1992 season. But the Monroe native, who eventually set up his home base in Shreveport, struggled early on making cuts and lost his Tour card for the 1995 season.
However, this golfer found his game again on the Nike Tour in 1995, winning twice and earning the chance to go back to the PGA Tour in 1996.
He won for the first time in 1997 at the Quad City Classic by three shots over now TV analyst Brandel Chamblee. One year later came his first visit to Augusta National and The Masters where he recorded his best finish in a major to that point at T6.
More wins came at the Sprint International and at the
Buick Challenge in 1999 and in 2000, he won in a suddendeath playoff at the Michelob Championship at Kingsmill. He also showed again he could battle with the best in the majors, finishing T4 in The Open Championship. It would be just a prelude to 2001.
The 2001 season saw Toms win three more times, but his most important win came when he scored his first major championship triumph in the PGA Championship. Toms won by one stroke over Phil Mickelson. Toms had the highlight moment in the third round when he posted a hole-in-one on the par 3 15th hole.
His winning score at the Atlanta Athletic Club of 265 was the lowest 72-hole score recorded to that date in a major championship.
ship.
Toms continued to win six more times on the Tour, including the WGC Match Play Championship in 2005. But after his win in the Sony Open in Hawaii in 2006, it would be five years before his 13th and final Tour win at the Colonial in Fort Worth.
As of Jan. 2025, Toms is 24th all-time in money won in the PGA Tour with just under $42 million.
Toms, now 58, has also made his mark on the PGA Champions Tour with four victories, most notably, his 2018 win in the U.S. Senior Open at the famed Broadmoor Golf Club in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Toms tallied a four-round total of 3-under par 277 (70-7166-70).
He would also score wins in St. Louis at the Ascension Charity Classic, defeating Dicky Pride in a playoff after shooting 10-under 203.
His other two wins came in March 2023, as Toms won two-of-the-first-five events on the Champions schedule.
Overall, in the four PGA Majors, he has made 62 appearances and in addition to his win in the PGA Championship, he has six total top 5 finishes.
He has also represented the United States on multiple occasions including the Ryder Cup in 2002, 2004 and 2006; and, the President’s Cup in 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2011. He was a part of three wins and a tie in the President’s Cup.
The 2025 Southeastern Conference men’s golf championship will return to its longtime home of St. Simons Island, Georgia, April 23-27, and the Seaside Golf Club for five days of competition that will include team stroke and match play and 54 holes that will determine the individual conference champion.
St. Simons Island has been the host for the Championships every tournament of this century (since 2001) with the exception of the pandemic year when the 2020 championships were canceled.
The Seaside Golf Club and its Seaside 18 has been the venue every year except 2008 and 2009 when the Frederica Golf Club hosted the SEC Championship.
A Tom Fazio re-design of the 1929 classic by famous golf course architects Harry S. Colt and Charles Alison, today’s course ties the original Seaside with the old Marshside course, transforming two nines from “18 holes that didn’t match into 18 matchless holes,” according to Sea Island touring professional Davis Love III.
LSU won in St. Simons in 2015 as a team and finished tied for third (advancing to the quarterfinal match in the match play era) in 2018 and 2022. The Tigers did not qualify for match play in either 2023 or 2024.
The men’s SEC Tournament has a rich history dating back to 1937 and it all started in Baton Rouge at the old LSU Golf Course where the first three league championships were decided.
The title was decided over 36 holes in those days with the singles title decided by match play those first three years before being decided in stroke play.
After three years in Baton Rouge, the event moved to the Athens Country Club in 1940 where LSU would win again. LSU’s program in the 1940s full of players
that would go on to success professionally, would win again in Athens in 1942 before the tournament was suspended by the United States continued involvement in World War II.
When the tournament resumed in 1946 in Athens, the Tigers would win three more events in 1946, 1947 and 1948. The most unusual was in 1946 when LSU won a playoff 18 holes with host Georgia for the title.
LSU would bring home two titles in the 1950s (1953, 1954) and three in the 1960s (1960, 1966, 1967) with the 1966 event returning to Baton Rouge and the LSU Golf Course.
The Tigers would next capture titles in 1986 and 1987 in Florence, Alabama before a drought that ended in 2015 with a match play triumph that was the 16th LSU title in its men’s golf history.
LSU would win the individual title 15 times starting with Henry Castillo, who won the 1938 in match play and repeated in 1940 in stroke play.
Highlighting the individual champions from LSU were Eddie Merrins, who won the title in 1953 and 1954, when the title was decided at 72 holes. Then there was B.R. (Mac) McLendon who captured the individual title in 1965, 1966 and 1967.
There have been 15 medalists from LSU with golfing legend David Tom capturing the championship in 1987 (also a team championship year) with a score of at 13-under par 205.
This year again, the tournament will begin with threedays of 18-hole team qualifying, which for the first time will include all 16 SEC teams. After 54 holes, the top eight teams will advance to match play to determine the league title. The semifinal and championship matches will be televised on the SEC Network.
YR SITE
1937 Baton Rouge, La. 1st 614
1938 Baton Rouge, La. 1st 598
Henry Castillo won individual title, Def. Bert McDowell (LSU), 3&2
1939 Baton Rouge, La. 1st 600
1940 Athens, Ga. 1st 601
Henry Castillo won individual title (147)
1941 Athens, Ga. 2nd 618
Earl Stewart won individual title (142)
1942 Athens, Ga. 1st 597
1943-45 No Tournament (WWII)
1946 Athens, Ga. 1st 604
1947 Athens, Ga. 1st 633
Joe Moore wins individual title (148)
1948 Athens, Ga. 1st 303
1949 Athens, Ga. 6th 317
1950 Athens, Ga. 4th 1,259
1951 Athens, Ga. LSU Results Not Available
1952 Athens, Ga. 2nd 593
1953 Athens, Ga. 1st 586
Eddie Merrins wins individual title (286)
1954 Athens, Ga. 1st 576
Eddie Merrins wins individual title (284)
1955 Athens, Ga. 2nd 577
1956 Athens, Ga. 4th 603
1957 Athens, Ga. LSU Results Not Available
1958 Athens, Ga. 3rd 609
1959 Athens, Ga. 4th 624
1960 Athens, Ga. 1st 573
1961 Athens, Ga. 2nd 582
Howard Fraser wins individual title (281)
1962 Athens, Ga. 3rd 1,203
1963 Athens, Ga. n/a 616
1964 Athens, Ga. 2nd 602
1965 Athens, Ga. T3 596
BR McLendon wins individual title (282)
1966 Baton Rouge, La. 1st 854
BR McLendon wins individual title (210)
1967 Gainesville, Fla. 1st 872
BR McLendon wins individual title (212)
1968 Knoxville, Tenn. 9th 898
1969 Athens, Ga. 3rd 1,108
Vaughn Moise wins individual title (212)
1970 Pine Mountain, Ga. 2nd 1,106
1971 Pine Mountain, Ga. 4th 1,132
1972 Pine Mountain, Ga. 5th 1,159
1973 Pine Mountain, Ga. 4th 1,134
1974 Dothan, Ala. 2nd 1,128
1975 Dothan, Ala. 2nd 1,112
1976 Decatur, Ala. 3rd 1,101
1977 Decatur, Ala. 4th 1,092
1978 Birmingham, Ala. 3rd 1,164
1979 Birmingham, Ala. 5th 895
Wayne DeFrancesco wins individual title (212)
1980 Augusta, Ga. 6th 912
YR SITE FINISH SCORE
1981 Augusta, Ga. T3 887
John Salamone wins individual title (211)
1982 Augusta, Ga. 7th 904
1983 Augusta, Ga. 6th 898
1984 Augusta, Ga. 2nd 885
Emlyn Aubrey wins individual title (213)
1985 Florence, Ala. T6 899
1986 Florence, Ala. 1st 871
1987 Florence, Ala. 1st 869
David Toms wins individual title (205)
1988 Florence, Ala. 2nd 872
1989 Louisville, Ky. 2nd 890
1990 Madison, Miss. 9th 896
1991 West Point, Miss. 5th 879
1992 St. Francisville, La. T4 881
1993 Jacksonville, Fla. 4th 885
1994 Fairfield Glade, Tenn. 7th 889
1995 Nashville, Tenn. 7th 874
1996 Birmingham, Ala. 9th 883
1997 Opelika, Ala. 3rd 889
1998 Athens, Ga. 8th 588
1999 Lexington, Ky. T6 932
2000 Killen, Ala. 5th 882
2001 St. Simons Island, Ga. 8th 887
2002 St. Simons Island, Ga. T4 874
2003 St. Simons Island, Ga. 12th 917
2004 St. Simons Island, Ga. 8th 875
2005 St. Simons Island, Ga. T6 899
2006 St. Simons Island, Ga. 6th 868
2007 St. Simons Island, Ga. 9th 892
2008 St. Simons Island, Ga. T8 888
2009 St. Simons Island, Ga. T4 872
2010 St. Simons Island, Ga. 5th 856
2011 St. Simons Island, Ga. 5th 865
2012 St. Simons Island, Ga. 11th 877
2012 St. Simons Island, Ga. 11th 881
2014 St. Simons Island, Ga. 2nd 822
2015 St. Simons Island, Ga. 1st 827
2016 St. Simons Island, Ga. 5th 864
MATCH PLAY ERA (Top 8 after 54 holes move to Match Play)
2017 St. Simons Island, Ga. T5 837
Match Play – LSU lost to Alabama in QFs, 3.5-1.5
2018 St. Simons Island, Ga. T3 834
Quarterfinal – LSU d. A&M, 3-0
Semifinal – LSU lost to Auburn, 3-0
2019 St. Simons Island, Ga. 9th 857
2020 No Tournament (Covid-19)
2021 St. Simons Island, Ga. T5 850
Quarterfinal – LSU lost to Arkansas in QFs, 3-2
2022 St. Simons Island, Ga. T3 831
Quarterfinal – LSU d. Missouri in QFs, 3.5-1.5
Semifinal – LSU lost to Vandy, 3-2
2023 St. Simons Island, Ga. 12th 847
2024 St. Simons Island, Ga. 13th 874
The top collegiate golfers and future professional stars have been a showcase of the NCAA Championship for decades.
Now with match play and national television coverage on The Golf Channel, the level of intensity and golf at its highest level is a normal part of the event.
Throw in the second year at a fabulous, historic venue in Carlsbad, California at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa, and the ingredients are there for a fabulous week for men’s golf.
The LSU Tigers are hoping to experience again in 2025 as they did in 2024.
The format that is now the norm involves a cut after 54 holes to the top 15 teams and nine individuals not on those 15 teams. They play a final stroke play round to determine the national individual champion and the eight teams that will advance to match play.
To win the national championship, a team then has to win three best-of-five player matches over the course of two days.
LSU advanced to the championship round for the 40th time since 1939 in 2024, their first appearance since 2019. The Tigers advanced in the final qualifying spot from the Baton Rouge Regional at the University Club in Baton Rouge.
LSU, a winner of five national championships (1940, 1942, 1947, 1955 and 2015), advanced with a 54-hole regional total of 4-over 868 on rounds of 295-289-284. LSU was in 10th after one round but a very strong second round moved them to within one stroke of the cutline and then with the LSU crowd bringing them home, the team put together a solid under par round to secure the spot.
LSU senior Connor Gaunt advanced individually to the final stroke play round of the NCAA Championships and finished T18 in the field at 2-over 290 for the 72 holes. He was the first Tiger with a top 20 finish in the NCAAs since Sam Burns and Luis Gagne finished T13 in 2016.
The 2025 regional sites are: Illinois (Atkins Golf Club at the University of Illinois; Urbana, Illinois); Auburn (Auburn
University Club; Auburn, Alabama); Florida State (Seminole Legacy Golf Club; Tallahassee, Florida); Liberty (Poplar Grove Golf Course; Amherst, Virginia); Nevada (Montreux Golf Club; Reno, Nevada); and, Washington (Gold Mountain Golf Club; Bremerton, Washington).
The men’s championship will be conducted in Carlsbad, May 23-28.
LSU’s first team championship came one year after the NCAA took over the golf championships from the National Intercollegiate Golf Association. Both of LSU’s first two championships were shared titles – in 1940 with Princeton at Ekwanok Country Club in Manchester, Vermont; and, in 1942 with Stanford at the South Bend Country Club in South Bend, Indiana. At that time, the championship was a 36-hole stroke play event.
LSU captured by eight shots the 1947 championship at the University of Michigan Golf Course in Ann Arbor and then brought home their fourth title in 1955 at the Holston Hills Country Club in Knoxville, Tennessee.
It would be 60 years before the Tigers would bring home the team championship again, in 2015 in Bradenton, Florida at The Concession Golf Club. Just to get to the championships was a big part of the story as LSU rallied from 11 shots back entering the final round of the New Haven NCAA Regional, to advance in fifth place at The Course at Yale. LSU claimed the final spot for advancement to the championship event in the regional by one shot.
In the Championships, LSU finished seventh after 72 holes of stroke play to advance to match play where the Tigers took out in the best of five matches – Vanderbilt (3.5-1.5); Georgia (3.5-1.5) and then capture the championship, 4-1, over Southern California.
Now, under the direction of first-year head coach Jake Amos, the Tigers will be looking to return to the West Coast again to try for a national championship.
2024
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-18th/301-306-296 – 903
Omni La Costa Resort- Carlsbad, Ca.
T18. Connor Gaunt
T86. Luke Haskew
T113. Alex Price
T119 Jay Mendell
135. Lance Yates
2019
75-72-69-74 – 290
74-77-76 – 227
76-79-76 -- 231
76-78-78 – 232
76-85-76 -- 236
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-23rd/308-302-297 – 907
The Blessings Golf Course-Fayetteville, Ark.
T43. Philip Barbaree 76-74-73 – 223
T77. Luis Gagne 75-75-77 – 227
T77. Michael Sanders 80-76-71 -- 227
T119. Trey Winsted 77-80-77 -- 234
---- Garrett Barber ---77-76 – 153
---- Nathan Jeansonne 85-WD-WD
2017
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-9th/291-277-290-303 – 1,161
Rich Harvest Farms GC-Sugar Grove, Ill.
T23. Brandon Pierce
T32. Sam Burns
T43. Philip Barbaree
T47. Luis Gagne
T62. Eric Ricard
2016
73-68-74-74 – 289
71-69-75-76 – 291
74-68-71-81 – 294
73-75-70-77 – 295
75-72-75-76 – 298
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE (Qualifying)
LSU-3rd/286-282-283-285 – 1,136
Eugene Country Club-Eugene, Ore.
T13. Sam Burns
T13. Luis Gagne
74-68-69-73 – 284
70-70-73-71 – 284
T22. Eric Ricard 71-71-72-72 – 286
T26. Brandon Pierce 73-76-69-69 – 287
T60. Zach Wright 72-73-73-75 -- 293
MATCH PLAY QUARTERFINAL vs. Oregon
Oregon 3.5-LSU 1.5
Zach Wright (LSU) d. Edwin Yi (Ore.), 2&1
Sulman Raza (Ore.) d. Sam Burns (LSU), 2&1
Zach Foushee (Ore.) d. Brandon Pierce (LSU), 2Up
Aaron Wise (Ore.) d. Eric Ricard (LSU), 3&2
Luis Gagne (LSU) vs. Thomas Lim (Ore.), Halved
2015
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
(Qualifying)
LSU-7th/292-289-290-298 – 1,169
Concession Golf Club-Bradenton, Fla.
T11. Brandon Pierce 71-71-73-73 – 288
T11. Zach Wright 70-70-73-75 – 288
T27. Eric Ricard 72-74-68-78 – 292
80. Ben Taylor 79-74-76-82 – 311
81. Stewart Jolly 82-82-77-72 -- 313
MATCH PLAY QUARTERFINAL vs. Vanderbilt
LSU 3.5-VANDERBILT 1.5
1 Brandon Pierce (LSU) d. Theo Humphrey (VU), 1UP
2 Benjamin Taylor (LSU) d. Matthias Schwab (VU), 3&2
3 Zach Wright (LSU) d. Carson Jacobs (VU), 4&2
4 Eric Ricard (LSU) vs. Zack Jaworski (VU), Halved
5 Hunter Stewart (VU) d. Stewart Jolly (VU), 3&2
MATCH PLAY SEMIFINAL vs. UGA
LSU 3.5-GEORGIA 1.5
1 Brandon Pierce (LSU) vs. Sepp Straka (UGA), Halved
2 Ben Taylor (LSU) d. Zach Healy (UGA), 2UP
3 Zach Wright (LSU) d. Mookie DeMoss (UGA), 7&6
4 Eric Ricard (LSU) d. Greyson Sigg (UGA), 4&3
5 Lee McCoy (UGA) d. Stewart Jolly (LSU), 2&1
CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH vs. SOUTHERN
CAL
LSU 4-USC 1
1 Brandon Pierce (LSU) def. Rico Hoey (USC), 2&1
2 Ben Taylor (LSU) def. Bobby Gojuangco (USC), 1-UP
3 Zach Wright (LSU) def. Sean Crocker (USC), 3&2
4 Eric Ricard (LSU) def. Jonah Texeira (USC), 1-UP
5 Eric Sugimoto (USC) def. Stewart Jolly (LSU), 1-UP
2014
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE (Qualifying)
LSU-T2/279-278-279 – 836
Prairie Dunes Country Club-Hutchinson, Ka.
T6 Ben Taylor 71-67-68 – 206
T19 Smylie Kaufman 68-72-69 – 209
T19 Curtis Thompson 68-71-70 – 209
T55 Stewart Jolly 74-68-72 – 214
T105 Zach Wright 72-73-74 -- 219
MATCH PLAY QUARTERFINAL
LSU 4-UCLA 1
1. Curtis Thompson (LSU) d. Preson Valder (UCLA), 1UP
2. Ben Taylor (LSU) d. Anton Arboleda (UCLA), 4&3
3. Smylie Kaufman (LSU) d. Jonathan Garrick (UCLA), 2UP
4. Lorens Chan (UCLA) d. Stewart Jolly (LSU), 4&3
5. Zach Wright (LSU) d. Matt Pinizzotto (UCLA), 2&1
MATCH PLAY SEMIFINAL
Alabama 4-LSU 1
Bobby Wyatt (UA) def. Ben Taylor, 3&2
Robby Shelton (UA) def. Stewart Jolly (LSU), 2&1
Tom Lovelady (UA) def. Smylie Kaufman (LSU), 1 UP
Trey Mullinax (UA) def. Curtis Thompson (LSU), 4&2
Zach Wright (LSU) def. Cory Whitsett (UA), 1 UP
2013
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T23-285-282-287 – 854
Capital City Club-Alpharetta, Ga.
T60 Stewart Jolly 72-70-71 – 213
T69 Zach Wright 68-74-72 – 214
T93 Smylie Kaufman 77-68-71 – 216
T116 Andrew Presley 72-74-73 -- 219
T116 Curtis Thompson 73-70-76 -- 219
2011
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-21st-306-294-305 – 905
Karsten Creek Golf Club-Stillwater, Okla. 1 John Peterson 74-65-72 – 211
T88 Sang Yi 76-83-70 – 229
T125 Ken Looper 79-77-81 – 237
128 Austin Gutgsell 81-75-82 – 238
T141 Andrew Loupe 77-77-90 -- 244
2010
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-24th-303-290-290 – 883
Honors Course-Ooltewah, Tenn.
T6 John Peterson 73-68-70 – 211
T72 Andrew Loupe 75-72-74 – 221
T95 Clayton Rotz 77-73-74 – 224
T128 Austin Gutgsell 78-79-72 – 229
T135 Sang Yi 78-77-75 -- 230
1997
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T18-293-297 – 590
Conway Farms Golf Club-Lake Forest, Ill.
T30 Adam Manuel 69-74-73-75 – 291
MC P. J. Smith 68-76 – 144
MC Ian Kennedy 76-70 – 146
MC Jeremy Wilkinson 80-78 – 158
MC Trae Wieniewitz 82-77 -- 159
1994
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-22nd-300-291 – 591
Stonebridge Country Club-McKinney, Texas
MC Brian Bateman 71-74 – 145
MC Julio Nutt 75-70 – 145
MC Judge Little 76-73 – 149
MC Phil Schmitt 78-74 – 152
MC Scott Sterling 78-76 -- 154
1993
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T17-302-295 – 597
Champions Golf Club-Lexington, Kentucky
MC Brian Bateman 77-68 -- 145
MC Scott Sterling 73-74 – 147
MC Craig Webb 74-78 -- 152
MC Julio Nutt 78-75 -- 153
MC John Kendall 79-80 -- 159
1992
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-22nd-295-293 – 588
Championship Golf Club at UNMAlbuquerque, N.M.
T42 Rett Crowder 74-70-73-75 – 292
MC Craig Webb 73-74 – 147
MC Jason Larson 71-77 – 148
MC Julio Nutt 80-72 – 152
MC Scott Sterling 77-79 -- 156
1991
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-30th-314-303-304-307 – 1,228
Poppy Hills Golf Club-Pebble Beach, Ca.
T102 Jason Larson 77-80-74-77 – 308
T113 Perry Moss 79-76-76-79 – 310
T113 Scott Sterling 81-79-76-74 – 310
T119 Craig Webb 77-73-83-78 – 311
T137 Rett Crowder 83-75-78-78 -- 314
1989
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T8-291-295-288-289 – 1,173
Oak Tree Country Club-Edmond, Ok.
T8 David Toms 72-72-69-73 – 286
T17 Fredrik Lindgren 73-73-71-72 – 289
T27 Greg Lesher 72-76-72-73 – 293
T70 Perry Moss 74-74-76-81 – 305
88 Tim Logsdon 77-79-79-82 -- 317
1988
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-20th-304-300-303 – 907
North Ranch Country Club-Thousand Oaks, Ca.
T5 David Toms 76-70-74-68 – 288
T16 Greg Lesher 73-77-72-71 – 293
T19 Fredrik Lindgren 73-72-76-73 – 294
MC Michael Finney 82-81-85 -- 248
MC William Lanier 85-84-81 -- 250
1987
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T14-300-299-311-290 – 1,200
Ohio St. University Golf Course-Columbus, Ohio
16 Rob McNamara 73-74-74-72 – 293
T40 Greg Lesher 73-73-81-73 – 300
T45 David Toms 77-75-78-71 -- 301
T90 Tommie Mudd 77-77-80-74 – 308
T96 Michael Finney 78-77-79-75 -- 309
1986
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-10th-292-296-293-294 – 1,175
Bermuda Run Country Club-Winston Salem, N.C.
T3 Emlyn Aubrey 74-70-73-70 – 287
T32 Bob Friend 70-73-74-76 – 293
T81 Rob McNamara 75-78-72-75 – 300
T85 Tommie Mudd 75-76-77-73 – 301
T87 David Toms 73-77-74-78 -- 302
1985
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T9-299-300-296-301 – 1,196
Grenelefe CC-Haines City, Fla.
T10 Rob McNamara 71-73-74-73 – 291
T26 Emlyn Aubrey 77-74-71-75 – 297
T66 Bob Friend 76-78-75-74 – 303
T79 Tommie Mudd 77-75-76-79 -- 307
T86 Charles Robinson 75-78-80-79 -- 312
1984
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T6-287-297-291-287 – 1,162
Bear Creek Golf World-Houston, Texas
T15 Emlyn Aubrey 73-72-74-70 – 289 --- Scott Inman 71-76-73-73 - -293 --- Fred Dupre 70-77-71-75 – 293 --- Rob McNamara 73-78-73-71 – 295 --- Bob Friend 76-72-80-73 -- 301
1981
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-25th-302-300-300 – 902
Stanford University Golf Course-Palo Alto, Ca.
T26 John Salamone 72-75-75-70 – 292
MC Pete Bynum 75-76-72 – 223
MC Roy Biancalana 75-75-77 – 227
MC Fred Dupre 80-81-76 – 237
MC Rob Killeen 82-74-82 -- 238
1979
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-16th-301-312-304 – 917
Bermuda Run Country Club, WinstonSalem, N.C.
T3 Wayne DeFrancsco 72-72-71-80 – 295
MC Tico Hoffman 73-82-78 – 233
MC Billy Harris 82-77-77 – 236
MC Paul Guido 79-81-78 – 238
MC John Salamone 77-84-81 – 242
1976
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-27th-305-316-302-302 – 1,225
Championship Golf Club at New MexicoAlbuquerque, N.M.
90 Frank Gusmus 77-77-76-73 – 303
--- Louis Lee 76-80-75-75 – 306
--- Jim Holmes 77-79-75-74 – 305
--- Jim Adams 75-81-75-80 – 311
--- Steve Cromwell 77-78-79-78 -- 312
1975
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-13th-295-300-301-316 – 1,212
Ohio State University Golf CourseColumbus, Ohio
T14 Stan Lee
T21 Frank Gusmus
71-77-74-73 – 295
73-74-75-75 – 297 --- Jim Adams
77-74-77-82 – 310 --- Jim Holmes
1967
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-3rd-290-301 – 591
Shawnee Golf Club, Delaware, Pennsylvania
T8 Mac McLendon 73-74-70-73 – 290
T19 Randy Wolff 71-78-69-75 – 293
T50 Jimmy Day 72-75-77-76 – 300
1953
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-3rd-308-273 – 581
Broadmoor Golf Club, Colorado Springs, Colorado
--- Eddie Merrins 75-66 – 141
--- Tommy Morrow 77-69 – 146
--- Lamar Loe 77-70 – 147
74-80-75-81 – 310 --- Louis Lee
1974
78-75-81-76 -- 310
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T21-301-309 – 610
Carlton Oaks CC, Santee, Calif.
T30 Frank Gusmus
76-73-71-76 – 296
MC Stan Lee 76-75 – 151
MC Jim Adams 78-77 – 155
MC Shelby Houston 79-76 – 155
MC Dickie Clark 80-77 -- 157
1973
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-11th-29-286-297-316 – 1,191
Stillwater Country Club-Stillwater, Okla.
T26 Shelby Houston 72-75-70-76 – 293
T47 Dick Clark 7 2-71-76-78 – 297
T55 Mike Schroder 74-70-77-78 – 299
T65 Jim Adams 74-70-74-84 – 302
96 Frank Gusmus 76-77-77-89 -- 319
1970
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-31st-299-313 – 612
Ohio State University Golf CourseColumbus, Ohio
MC Marty Huguet 73-77 -- 150
MC Jim Wittenberg 74-79 -- 153
MC Mickey McDonald 74-80 – 154
MC Mike Drury 78-77 -- 155
MC Teddy Sliman 82-84 -- 166
1969
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T19-318-301 – 629
Broadmoor Golf Club, Colorado Springs, Colorado.
T24 Marty Huguet 85-69-78-83 -- 315
MC Vaughn Moise 80-79 – 159
MC Jim Wittenbreg 82-77 – 159
MC Johnny Laponzina 85-76 – 161
MC Bill Daigle 81-88 – 169
T61 Johnny Laponzina 74-74-77-77 – 302 --- Mike Keck
1966
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T8-305-302 – 607
Stanford University Golf Course, Palo Alto, California
T9 Mac McLendon
73-74-74-69 – 290
T40 Randy Wolff 77-72-78-74 – 301
MC Jimmy Day 76-79 – 155
MC James Danahy 79-76 – 155
MC Michael Thorp 80-76 -- 156
1956
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-9th-309-304 – 613
Ohio State Golf Course, Columbus, Ohio --Tommy Beard 76-74 – 150 --- Cecil Calhoun 77 --- Jim Mangum 78 --- Eddie Ross 78 --- Tommy Wulff 78 --- Scott Fraser 83
1955
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-1st-284-290 – 574
Holston Hills Country Club, Knoxville, Tennessee
T1 Johnny Pott 69-67 – 136 --- Jim Mangum 71-74 – 145 --- Scott Fraser 73-73 – 146 --- Cecil Calhoun 71-76 – 147 --- Tommy Beard --- Bill Dodson
*Pott lost in first round individual matchplay
1954
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-4th-287-295 – 582
Braeburn Country Club, Houston, Texas
T16 Johnny Pott 72-73 – 145
T16 Jim Mangum 77-68 – 145
T20 Cecil Calhoun 72-74 – 146
T20 Eddie Merrins 71-75 – 146
T20 Tommy Morrow 72-74 -- 146
*Calhoun finished 2nd and Merrins T3 in individual matchplay
--- Bert Weaver 79-78 – 157
--- Al Stall 82-75 – 157
--- Jack Doss 81
1952
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-7th-295-307 – 602
Purdue Golf Course, West Lafayette, Indiana
--- Eddie Merrins 72-76 – 148
--- Tommy Morrow 73-75 – 148
--- Bert Weaver 74-74 – 148
--- Lamar Loe 78-80 – 158
--- Don Parks 76-83 -- 159
*Merrins finished 2nd and Morrow T5 in individual matchplay
1948
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-2nd-290-298 – 588
Stanford Golf Course, Palo Alto, California
T1 Gardner Dickinson 71-68 – 139
--- Junius Herbert 74-74 – 148
--- Joe Moore 72-78 – 150
--- Luca Barbato 73-78 – 151
--- Wendell Barnes 76-77 – 153
--- Alfred (Bud) Timbrook 77-77 -- 154
1947
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-1st-301-305 – 606
Univ. of Michigan Course, Ann Arbor, Michigan
T2 Jack Coyle 76-72 – 148
--- Joe Moore 75-77 – 152
--- Jimmy Wittenberg 75-78 – 153
--- Gardner Dickinson 75-78 -- 153
--- Junius Herbert 77-78 – 155
--- Bud Timbrook 84-90 -- 174
*Coyle finished 2nd in individual matchplay
1946
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-5th-314-315 – 629
Springdale Golf Club, Princeton, New
Jersey
--- Jimmy Wittenberg 74-79-80-77 – 310
--- John (Sonny) Ellis 84-76-76-75 – 311
--- Bob Cole 77-76-80-82 – 315
MC Gardner Dickinson 79
MC Luca Barbato 88
WD Bud Timbrook 85
1943
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-3rd-621
Olympia Field CC, Olympia Fields, Illinois
-- John (Sonny) Ellis
-- Jimmy Wittenberg
-- Dale Morey
-- Marvin Wolfe
1942
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T1-292-298 – 590
South Bend CC, South Bend, Indiana
1 Earl Stewart 71-70 – 141
-- Dale Morey 72-74 – 146
-- Jack Killen 72-79 – 151
-- Jimmy Wittenberg 77-75 – 152
*Stewart lost in 3rd round and Morey lost in QFs of individual match play.
1941
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-2nd—294-305 – 599
Ohio State University GC, Columbus, Ohio
1 Earl Stewart 68-74 – 142
-- Dale Morey 71-73 – 144
-- Ben Downing 76-79 – 155
-- Jack Killen 78-79 – 157
-- George Sharp 79-WD
*Stewart won the NCAA individual championship in the 36-hole match play final.
1940
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T1—294-307 – 601
Ekwanok CC, Manchester, Vermont
T2 Bert McDowell 72-72 – 144
--Lee Ramsel 79-79 – 158
-- Henry Castillo 73-81 – 154
-- George Sharp 74-
-- Earl Stewart 75-
-- Dale Morey 78-84 – 162
*McDowell lost in 2nd round of individual match play.
1939
TEAM-FINISH/SCORE/SITE
LSU-T5—617
Wakonda CC, Des Moines, Iowa
-- Bert McDowell 76-73 – 149
-- Henry Castillo 77-74 -- 151
-- Lee Ramsel 78-75 – 153
-- Emile Zachariah 82-82 – 164
-- Albert Michael 78-89 – 167
-- Warren Renfrow 81-WD
-- Irving Campbell 86-WD
-- Gordon Lyons 81-WD
*McDowell and Ramsel lost in QFs of individual match play.
John Peterson, who was a senior at LSU in 2011, became just the third LSU player and the first in 70 years to capture the NCAA Division I Men’s Individual Championship at the Karsten Creek Golf Club in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Peterson posted a 54-hole score of 5-under par 211 to capture the championship.
After firing a competitive course record 7-under par 65 in the second round, Peterson finished with an even par 72 in the final round for a one-shot victory over UCLA’s Patrick Cantlay.
Peterson joined LSU greats Fred Haas, Jr. (1937) and Earl Stewart (1941) as individual championship tournament winners.
LSU made golf history that year with the Peterson victory as LSU became the first school during the history of the NCAA Championships to sweep the men’s and women’s individual crowns in the same season. Tiger freshman Austin Ernst took home the NCAA women’s crown some two weeks before in the event hosted at The Traditions Golf Club in College Station.
Making Peterson’s championship finish even more impressive was that he posted his score in the morning wave and had to wait as the challengers took aim at his 211 total.
He finished his round with a one-shot lead over Georgia Tech’s James White and a two-shot advantage over the contending trio of Cantlay, Harris English of Georgia and Luke Guthrie of Illinois.
After White made bogey on the par three third hole to drop to 3-under for the championship, no one at the top of the leaderboard would pull to within one shot of Peterson until the final group came to the par five 18th hole when Cantlay stood over a 16-foot eagle putt trailing Peterson by two shots.
The UCLA freshman was able to only make birdie to finish a shot behind Peterson at 4-under 212.
“This is an unbelievable feeling. I can’t really describe it. It hasn’t sunk in for me yet,” Peterson would say. “We went back to the hotel after the round. I just tried to keep my mind off of it as much as I could, but I had to charge up my phone because I was hitting refresh so many times.”
Peterson, playing in the first wave of the final day, started the round with a one-shot lead, but did not get off to a good start and turned in 4-over 40 after nine holes which dropped him to 10th place at 1-under par.
But he stormed back on the final nine holes to shoot a 4-under 32. Included in that was back-to-back birdies on the two closing holes, the par four 17th and the par five 18th holes. He used a 4-iron approach to seven feet to get the birdie on 17 and from the long rough in back of the 18th green, he chipped to five feet for his birdie putt.
It would be nearly six hours before Peterson would learn his fate and that the championship was his. He was actually on the driving range warming up for a potential playoff when the news came that he was the winner.
Peterson was expecting the playoff to happen after competing in three already in 2011. One of his playoffs was against a young Jordan Spieth to take home the Jones Cup prior to the start of the collegiate season.
“I knew he (Cantlay) was going to make that putt and we would be going to a playoff,” he said. “That is how this season has been for me this year.”
Peterson concluded his career by becoming the fifth three-time All-America in program history, joining Eddie Merrins (1952-54), B.R. McLendon (1965-67), Rob McNamara (1984-87) and David Toms (1986-89).
FRED HAAS, JR. (1937)
Haas won the championship two years prior to the NCAA taking over the college golf championship but Haas did win the championship tournament at Oakmont Country Club as held under the auspices of the National Intercollegiate Golf Association.
He won the championship in a 36-hole match over LSU teammate Paul Leslie, 5&3.
The previous year, Haas finished first in the stroke play qualifying of the championship, with rounds of 75-71, but lost that year to Leslie in the semifinal match, 5&4.
Haas was born in Portland, Arkansas and went on to score seven PGA wins. His first win in Memphis, as an amateur in 1945 snapped Byron Nelson’s 11-straight Tour wins. The member of the 1946 Ryder Cup team, had six top 10s in majors and won the 1966 PGA Seniors Championship.
to match play where he defeated Ray Brownell of Stanford, 3&1.
He officially became the first NCAA Individual champion for LSU. He would help the Tigers to the NCAA team championship in 1942.
Stewart, from Dallas, Texas, played on the PGA Tour in the 1950s and 1960s. He recorded three Tour wins and had a best major finish of T10 in the 1952 U.S. Open.
He was the head golf coach at SMU, 1975–1987. He won a national championship with the women’s team in 1979. In 1987, he was inducted into the National Golf Coaches Association Coaches Hall of Fame.
For the first time in 60 years, LSU was playing for the NCAA Golf championship in 2015. Tiger teams had won four previous championships, but not since 1955. And never in match play.
The entire road to a national championship was just a little crazy. That they got to The Concession in Bradenton, Florida to play in the tournament was a long shot when they entered the final round of their NCAA regional at New Haven, Connecticut 11 shots out of the final qualifying spot.
But the Tigers played their best and got that last qualifying spot and started fresh at the championship. Through 72 holes of stroke play, the Tigers achieved their first goal of making match play.
LSU shot rounds of 292-289-290-298 for a 17-over score of 1,169 over the difficult track and qualified in the seventh spot for match play.
Zach Wright and Brandon Pierce of LSU tied for 11th place in the individual competition to finish 72 holes at 1-over par 289. Eric Ricard finished at 4-over 292 to finish in a tie for 27th place.
LSU’s match play road was against familiar foes as they opened with No. 2 seed Vanderbilt. The Commodores put themselves near the top with a 3-under par round of 285 on the final day.
LSU 3.5-1.5 Vanderbilt
Pierce, Taylor and Zach Wright were the first Tigers off the tee in LSU’s national quarterfinal match against Vanderbilt, and each defeated their Commodore rival to send LSU back to the NCAA Match Play semifinals for the second-straight year.
Pierce won his match 1UP, while Taylor followed with a 3&2 victory and Wright would win the third point in the best-of-5 match with a 4&2 decision. LSU got another half point when Eric Ricard halved his match after 18 holes.
Pierce and Taylor never trailed in their matches.
Pierce took a 1UP lead on the third hole with a birdie,
before a bogey on the sixth hole evened the match. Backto-back birdies on the par 4 ninth and 10th holes gave the LSU side a 2UP lead with eight holes to play.
But the match turned back even as Pierce’s opponent made consecutive birdies on the par 4 15th and 16th holes. That set up the pivotal shot of the match as Pierce would chip in for eagle from 50-feet out on the par 5 17th and then a par on 18th sealed the match for the Tigers.
Taylor matched his Vandy opponent with a birdie at 15 and a par at No. 16 to clinch his 3&2 victory.
Wright, who won both of his matches in the NCAA Championships in 2014 when LSU reached the semifinals, rallied from 2Down in the quarterfinals after just four holes of play. He squared the match with pars on holes 5 and 6 and then won four straight holes on 13-16 to seal the match win for the Tigers.
After defeating the No. 2 seed in the quarterfinal round, the Tigers did the same thing to another member of the SEC and the No. 3 seed entering match play, the Georgia Bulldogs.
It was senior All-America Taylor who scored the deciding point for the Tigers which sent them into the NCAA Championship match as he finished with a strong back nine to record a 2UP victory.
Second Team All-SEC performers Ricard and Wright got LSU’s other counting full points. Wright was a 7&6 winner and Ricard came up 4&3 on the good side in his match to get LSU’s three points. Pierce made up a three-hole deficit on the back nine to finish his match all square.
Taylor’s match with Georgia star Zach Healy drew the most attention when it looked as it would be the potential clincher for the Tigers. All square going to the back nine, Taylor fell one hole behind after a double bogey on the 10th hole. The match was tied again on the 12th and Taylor made a six-foot par at the par 4 15th to take the lead.
The pair halved the 16th and 17th holes and Taylor clinched it with a superb approach from 196 yards out that ended up three-feet from the cup for a tap-in birdie and the 2UP victory for LSU’s third point.
“The front nine was a massive grind,” Taylor said of the match. “It was quite windy and really raining so it was pretty tough to win holes and not give any away. It cleared up on the back nine and we started hitting some proper golf shots. We had to go out and make birdies to win holes. The 17th was a good example because right when I made a birdie (Zach Healy) came back and made birdie to extend the match. (On 18), it was 196 yards downwind with the pin back left, and I just fired it right in there at the pin.”
Wright’s match was never in doubt as he took an early lead on the second hole and never looked back. It was the first of four straight holes he won. It was his fourth consecutive match play NCAA win over two years.
For the Tigers it was on to the finals against No. 5 seed USC.
LSU 4-1 USC
Pierce, Taylor, Wright, Ricard and Stewart Jolly had one goal on the final day of the NCAA Championships and that was to bring a golf title back to Baton Rouge for the first time in 60 years.
It was a challenge and did they ever respond. LSU won the NCAA trophy with a 4-1 victory over Southern California.
And, just as he did in the national semifinal match against Georgia, LSU’s senior All-America Taylor scored the deciding point by rolling in a nine-foot par putt at the par 4 18th hole to claim a 1UP victory and LSU’s fifth national championship.
Wright and Pierce had already clinched points for the Tigers. Pierce put the first point on the board with a 2&1 win, while Wright followed with a 3-and-2 victory.
In what would be the deciding match, Taylor found him-
self 1Down to his Trojan opponents after 16 holes, heading to the par 5, 17th hole. On what was very much a birdie hole, Taylor fired a four-iron approach from 258 yards to within five feet of the hole. He knocked the putt in for an eagle three to all square the match heading to 18.
“Surprisingly not too bad,” Taylor said of his nerves as he prepared to hit his second shot on 17. “Before I hit my shot Coach (Chuck Winstead) asked me, ‘Are you having fun?’ It was hard to say no because it was a lot of fun. It was a perfect club, a perfect yardage, and we knew it was going to be a good shot. To see it run up that tier and go to the back of that green by that back pin was pretty special.”
Southern Cal ended up with a bogey at the 18th hole and that opened the door for Taylor to seal the national title for the Tigers as he buried his par putt after leaving his first putt short of the cup from the back left side of the green.
“It was a perfect moment to end a perfect college career, and I couldn’t be happier … “At first on the birdie putt (on 18), we knew that a two-putt was likely going to be good enough to win the national championship, but it was obviously a very fast putt that I left short. I had that putt in the practice round, about 10 feet down the hill. We had the line and I just had to put a good stroke on it.”
Pierce and Wright both ended their time at Concessional Golf Club unbeaten in match play. Pierce won 2&1, while Wright won 3&2. Ricard was also unbeaten in his first NCAA Championship, winning 1UP in a match ended after 16 holes with the overall title decided.
“I’m just so proud of these guys,” said LSU head coach Chuck Winstead of his team winning the national championship. “It’s hard to get into a position to even have a chance to win this tournament, and then when you show up out here today and you still have the resolve to play the way we did, I’m very proud of the guys on this team.”
The story of the 2015 national championship in men’s golf is well known, but LSU’s golf success goes back to the 1940s and four more NCAA championships that in their day and even to this day, highlight the long success of the LSU golf program.
The first year of a four-year run, in which LSU finished first twice, second once and third once, 1940 saw the Tigers tie for the championship with Princeton in the 36-hole stroke play championship.
LSU, under Coach Maj. J Perry Cole, posted rounds of 294 and 307 for a 36-hole total of 601. The two winners were five shots better than Georgetown in third at 606. In all, 20 teams competed for the second official golf championship put on by the NCAA.
On the 1940 squad were Bert McDowell, Lee Ramsel, Henry Castillo, George Sharp, Earl Stewart and Dale Morey. Stewart in 1941 would win the NCAA individual championship.
After a second-place finish in 1941, the Tigers were able to play some of their best NCAA Championship golf to date in tying for the 1941 NCAA crown with Stanford. LSU shot rounds of 292 and 298 on the par 71 course to tie Stanford, the defending champion, at 590. It was LSU’s second title in four years of NCAA Championships with Stanford winning for the third time.
The members of the championship team were Earl Stewart, Dale Morey, Jack Killen and James (Jimmy) Wittenberg. For Stewart and Morey it was their second NCAA team championship in their LSU career.
For coach Maj. J. Perry Cole it was his second national championship.
The Tigers won their third NCAA Championship in the first nine years of the event and their first outright championship. LSU won the team title, eight strokes ahead of second-place Duke. The Tigers were coached to this title by T.P. Heard.
Besides being a national championship golf coach, Heard served as athletics director at LSU from 1931 until 1954. Heard was an early pioneer in the establishment of legal and honest athletic grants-in-aid and oversaw LSU’s entry into the Southeastern Conference as a charter member in 1933. In addition, he is the “father” of night football games at LSU and was a force behind three expansions of Tiger Stadium.
On that 1947 team were Jack Coyle, Joe Moore, James (Jimmy) Wittenberg (his second team title), Junius Herbert and Gardner Dickinson, who would go on to a lengthy professional career.
Led by Johnny Pott – medalist in these two “qualifying” rounds for the individual match play bracket – LSU won the 1955 title with a total of 574, nine strokes better than runner-up North Texas State. Jim Mangum (145), Scotty Fraser (146) and Cecil Calhoun (147) were also part of the Tigers’ NCAA Championship squad.
An interesting side fact for the event -- in 1955, LSU head coach Mike Barbato had qualified for the U.S. Open held at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. Though Barbato withdrew after shooting 46 on his first 9 on Thursday, he was not able to return to Baton Rouge in time to travel with the Tigers to Knoxville. Longtime athletic trainer and LSU Athletic Hall of Fame member Dr. Marty Broussard accompanied the team and brought home the title.
terfinal round of match play at the 1952 PGA Championship at the Big Spring Country Club in Jefferson County, Kentucky.
LSU great David Toms has claimed a school-record 11 top-10 finishes in major championships during his illustrious PGA Tour career, including a win at the PGA Championship in 2001.
Tiger great Jay Hebert was also crowned a PGA Champion during his professional career in 1960, while totaling 10 top-10 finishes in majors in a career that spanned nearly a quarter of a century.
The Masters (7)
All at Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia
PLACE PLAYER YEAR SCORE
9 David Toms 2007 70-78-74-72 – 294 +6
T8 David Toms 2003 71-73-70-74 – 288 E
T6 David Toms 1998 75-72-72-64 – 283 -5
T10 Gardner Dickinson 1973 74-70-72-75 – 291 +3
T10 Jay Hebert 1966 72-74-73-75 – 294 +6
T8 Jay Hebert 1959 72-73-72-73 – 290 +2
T9 Jay Hebert 1958 72-73-73-71 – 289 +1
10 Jay Hebert 1957 74-72-76-70 – 292 +4
10 Fred Haas, Jr. 1950 80-70-72-72 – 294 +6
The U.S. Open (11)
PLACE PLAYER YEAR SCORE LOCATION
T9 Sam Burns 2024 73-67-73-67 – 280 E Pinehurst No. 2, Pinehurst, N.C.
T4 John Peterson 2012 71-70-72-70 – 283 +3 Olympic Club, San Francisco, Calif.
T4 David Toms 2012 69-70-76-68 – 283 +3 Olympic Club, San Francisco, Calif.
T5 David Toms 2007 72-72-73-72 – 289 +9 Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa.
T5 David Toms 2003 72-67-70-71 – 280 E Olympia Fields CC, Matteson Ill.
T6 Gardner Dickinson 1967 70-73-68-73 – 284 +4 Baltusrol Golf Club, Springfield, N. J.
T9 Johnny Pott 1964 71-73-73-72 – 289 +9 Congressional CC, Bethesda, Md.
T9 Gardner Dickinson 1961 72-69-71-75 – 287 +7 Oakland Hills CC, Birmingham, Mich.
T7 Jay Hebert 1958 77-76-71-69 – 293 +13 Southern Hills CC, Tulsa, Oklahoma
T5 Fred Haas, Jr. 1954 73-73-71-72 – 289 +9 Baltusrol Golf Club, Springfield, N.J.
T9 Jay Hebert 1953 72-72-74-78 – 296 +8 Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa.
Atlanta Athletic Club, Johns Creek, Ga.
Atlanta Athletic Club, Johns Creek, Ga.
T8 Gardner Dickinson 1963 72-74-74-66 – 286 +2 Dallas Athletic Club, Dallas, Texas
10 Jay Hebert
1962 73-72-70-70 – 285 +5 Aronimink GC, Newtown Square, Pa.
T5 Johnny Pott 1961 71-73-67-71 – 282 +2 Olympia Fields CC, Olympia Fields, Ill.
1 Jay Hebert 1960 72-67-72-70 – 281 +1 Firestone Country Club, Akron, Ohio
T5 Jay Hebert 1958 68-71-73-73 – 285 +5 Lianerch Country Club, Havertown, Pa.
QF (7) Jay Hebert
1957 Lost 2&1
Miami Valley Golf Club, Dayton, Ohio
QF (T5) Fred Haas, Jr. 1952 Lost 2&1 Big Spring Country Club, Louisville, Ky.
THE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP (1)
T4 David Toms 2000 69-67-71-71 – 278 -10 Old Course, St. Andrews, Scotland MOST
DAVID TOMS - 11
PGA Chamionship (4) US Open (3) Masters (3) The Open (1)
JAY HEBERT - 10
PGA Chamionship (4) Masters (4) U.S. Open (2)
GARDNER DICKINSON - 5 PGA Chamionship (2) US Open (2) Masters (1)
FRED HAAS JR. - 3
PGA Chamionship (1) US Open (1) Masters (1)
Bold denotes NCAA Championship Qualification
* Bill Brogden coached fall; Dee Glueck first 3 spring. events, David Sigler named head coach for the remainder of year
^ Chuck Winstead coached fall; Andrew Nelson coached spring
Team 18-Hole Rounds (Related to Par)
Score Tournament Date Round
1 -25 (263) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 2nd
2 -23 (265) Turning Stone Intercollegiate 9/5/21 2nd
3 -21 (267) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 1st
-21 (267) San Diego Classic 3/7/22 1st
5 -19 (269) Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9/23 1st
-19 (265) The Prestige at PGA West 2/17/16 3rd
7 -17 (263) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/21/18 1st
-17 (271) Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23 2nd
-17 (271) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/6/19 3rd -17 (263) SEC Championships 4/27/14 3rd
11 -16 (268) Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/3/17 1st
-16 (268) Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/2/24 1st
-16 (272) NCAA Franklin Regional 5/17/16 2nd -16 (264) SEC Match Play-Medal Play 9/25/22 2nd -16 (272) Louisiana Classics 3/15/22 3rd
16 -15 (273) Louisiana Classic 3/14/22 1st
-15 (273) San Diego Classic 3/7/22 2nd
-15 (273) The Prestige at PGA West 2/18/15 3rd
-15 (273) Everett Buick GMC Classic 10/17/23 3rd
20 -14 (270) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/23/16 1st
-14 (274) Imperial Lakes Golf Classic 3/4/89 2nd
-14 (274) Puerto Rico Classic 2/11/25 2nd
-14 (274) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/25/16 3rd
-14 (274) NCAA Columbia Regional 5/17/14 3rd
25 -13 (275) Gary Koch Invitational 10/3/09 1st -13 (271) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/24/16 2nd
-13 (275) NCAA Stockton Regional 5/17/22 2nd
-13 (275) Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/14/21 3rd
Team Low 36-Hole Rounds (Related to Par)
Score Tournament
Date
1 -46 (267-263, 530) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5-6/19
2 -36 (267-273, 540) San Diego Classic 3/7-8/22
3 -28 (269-279, 548) Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9-10/23
4 -27 (270-271, 541) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/23-24/16
5 -25 (268-275, 543) Ka’anapali Collegiate 11/3-4/17
6 -23 (263-274, 537) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/21-22/18 -23 (268-269, 537) Visit Knoxville Collegiate 9/6-7/24 -23 (268-277, 545) Ka’anapali Collegiate 11/2-3/24
9 -22 (289-265, 554) Turning Stone Intercollegiate 9/5/21
-22 (283-271, 554) Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23
11 -20 (282-274, 556) Imperial Lakes Golf Classic 3/3-4/89
-20 (270-270, 540) Gator Invitational 2/12/21
-20 (284-274, 556) Puerto Rico Classic 3/3-4/25
15 -19 (277-280, 557) Chris Schenkel Invitational 4/26-27/85
-19 (273-284, 557) Louisiana Classics 3/14/22
17 -18 (278-280, 558) Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/11-12/22
-18 (276-282, 558) Mossy Oak Collegiate 4/3/23
19 -17 (279-280, 559) Henry Homberg Intercollegiate 3/20-21/87
-17 (283-276, 559) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/18/10
-17 (278-281, 559) Golfweek Conf. Challenge 9/14-17/14
-17 (276-275, 551) Vanderbilt Legends 10/25-26/20
23 -16 (288-272, 560) NCAA Franklin Regional 5/16-17/16
24 -15 (273-280, 553) Valspar Invitational at Floridian 3/23/15 -15 (279-282, 561) Louisiana Classics 3/10-11/25
Team Low 54-Hole Rounds (Related to Par) Score Tournament Date
1 -63 (267-263-271, 801) David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5-6/19
2 -41 (270-271-270, 811) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/23-25/19
3 -37 (267-273-287, 827) San Diego Classic 3/7-8/22
4 -35 (273-284-272, 829) Louisiana Classics 3/14-15/22
5 -33 (268-277-274, 819) Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/2-4/24
6 -32 (269-279-284, 832) Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9-10/23
7 -31 (268-275-278, 821) Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/3-5/17 -31 (282-274-277, 833) Puerto Rico Classic 2/10-12/25 9 -26 (277-284-265, 826) The Prestige at PGA West 2/16-18/15 10 -25 (288-272-279, 839) NCAA Franklin Regional 5/16-18/16 11 -24 (282-274-284, 840) Imperial Lakes Golf Classic 3/3-5/89 -24 (283-277-268, 828) Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic1 1/4-6/16
-24 (278-280-282, 840) Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/11-13/22 14 -23 (263-274-280, 817) Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/21-23/18 -23 (285-281-275, 841) Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/12-14/21 -23 (268-269-280, 817) Visit Knoxville Collegiate 9/6-8/24 17 -22 (277-292-273, 842) Everett Buick GMC Classic 10/16-17/23 -22 (282-276-272, 830) Hal Williams Collegiate 2/12-13/24 19 -21 (284-286-273, 843) The Prestige at PGA West 2/16-18/15 -21 (282-281-280, 843) David Toms Intercollegiate1 0/6-7/18 -21 (276-275-280, 831) Vanderbilt Legends 10/25-27/20 -21 (270-270-279, 819) Gator Invitational 2/12-13/21 23 -20 (283-271-290, 844) Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4-5/23
24 -19 (280-282-283, 845) Louisiana Classics 3/10-11/14 -19 (276-282-287, 845) Mossy Oak Collegiate 4/3-4/23
Team Low 72-Hole Rounds
Score Tournament Dates
1 +9 (291-277-290-303, 1161) NCAA Championships 5/26-29/17
2 +10 (287-297-291-287, 1162) NCAA Championships 5/23-26/84
3 +16 (286-282-283-285, 1136) NCAA Championships 5/27-30/16
4 +17 (292-289-290-298, 1169) NCAA Championships 5/29-6/1/15
5 +23 (292-296-293-294, 1175) NCAA Championships 5/28-31/86
6 +33 (286-299-298-302, 1185) All-American Intercollegiate 4/1-4/81
7 +44 (299-300-296-301, 1196) NCAA Championships 5/22-25/85
8 +45 (300-299-298-300, 1197) All-America Intercollegiate 4/4-7/79
9 +48 (300-299-311-290, 1200) NCAA Championships 6/10-13/87
10 +53 (291-295-288-299, 1173) NCAA Championships 6/8-10/89
11 +59 (299-291-308-313, 1211) All-American Intercollegiate 3/31-4/3/82
12 +76 (314-303-304-307, 1228) NCAA Championships 6/5-8/91
Score Name Tournament Dates Round
1. 63 (-9) Algot Kleen The Blessing Collegiate 10/2/24 3rd
63 (-9) Luke Haskew Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9/23 2nd
63 (-9) Luke Haskew Mossy Oaks Collegiate 4/3/2 2nd
63 (-9) Hayden White David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 2nd
63 (-9) Garrett Barber David Toms intercollegiate 10/5/19 2nd
62 (-9) Sam Burns Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic11/6/16 3rd
63 (-9) Tommie Mudd LSU National Invitational 10/8/85 2nd
Individual Low 54 Hole Rounds (Related to Par)
Score Name Tournament Date Round
1. 63 (-9) Algot Kleen The Blessing Collegiate 10/2/24 3rd
63 (-9) Luke Haskew Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9/23 2nd
63 (-9) Luke Haskew Mossy Oaks Collegiate 4/3/23 2nd
63 (-9) Hayden White David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 2nd
63 (-9) Garrett Barber David Toms intercollegiate 10/5/19 2nd
62 (-9) Sam Burns Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic11/6/16 3rd
63 (-9) Tommie Mudd LSU National Invitational 10/8/85 2nd 8. 64 (-8) Connor Gaunt Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9/23 1st
8.
64 (-8) Connor Gaunt Jackson Stephens Cup 10/9/23 1st
64 (-8) Michael Sanders Turning Stone Intercollegiate 9/5/21 2nd
64 (-8) Trey Winstead Tavistock Collegiate 10/22/19 3rd
62 (-8) Luis Gagne Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/21/18 1st
12.
64 (-7) Arni Sveinsson Ka’anapali Collegiate 11/2/24 1st
65 (-7) Noah McWilliams Valero Texas Collegiate 9/23/24 3rd
65 (-7) Alex Price Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23 3rd
65 (-7) Cohen Trolio Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23 2nd
65 (-7) Garrett Barber Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/11/22 1st
65 (-7) Drew Doyle NCAA Stockton Regional 5/17/22 2nd
65 (-7) Nicholas Arcement San Diego Classic 3/7/22 1st
65 (-7) Michael Sanders San Diego Classic 3/7/22 1st
65 (-7) Trey Winstead David Toms Intercollegiate 10/6/19 3rd
65 (-7) Trey Winstead David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 1st
65 (-7) Philip Barbaree David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 1st
64 (-7) Luis Gagne Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/3/17 1st
65 (-7) Sam Burns NCAA Baton Rouge Regional 5/15/17 1st
65 (-7) Sam Burns Carpet Capital Collegiate 9/10/16 2nd
65 (-7) Eric Ricard NCAA Franklin Regional 5/17/16 2nd
64 (-7) Nathan Jeansonne The Prestige at PGA West 2/17/16 3rd
65 (-7) Eric Ricard David Toms Intercollegiate 10/10/15 2nd
65 (-7) Myles Lewis The Prestige at PGA West 2/18/15 3rd
65 (-7) Austin Gutgsell LSU National Invitational 4/1/12 3rd
65 (-7) Smylie Kaufman Argent Financial Classic 3/11/12 1st
65 (-7) John Peterson NCAA Championships 6/1/11 2nd
65 (-7) Clayton Rotz SEC Championships 4/19/09 3rd
65 (-7) Jeremy Wilkinson Coca-Cola Tourn. Of Champ. 9/30/96 2nd
65 (-7) Scott Sterling Carpet Capital Collegiate 9/21/91 2nd
65 (-7) Perry Moss Southern Intercollegiate 11/11/90 3rd
65 (-7) Rett Crowder Taylor Made/Doral Park 2/25/90 3rd
65 (-7) Perry Moss Imperial Lakes Golf Classic 3/4/89 2nd
65 (-7) David Toms SEC Championships 5/17/87 3rd
64 (-8) Michael Sanders Turning Stone Intercollegiate 9/5/21 2nd
64 (-8) Trey Winstead Tavistock Collegiate 10/22/19 3rd
62 (-8) Luis Gagne Maui Jim Intercollegiate 9/21/18 1st 12. 64 (-7) Arni Sveinsson Ka’anapali Collegiate 11/2/24 1st
65 (-7) Noah McWilliams Valero Texas Collegiate 9/23/24 3rd
65 (-7) Alex Price Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23 3rd
65 (-7) Cohen Trolio Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 9/4/23 2nd
65 (-7) Garrett Barber Jim Rivers Intercollegiate 9/11/22 1st
65 (-7) Drew Doyle NCAA Stockton Regional 5/17/22 2nd
65 (-7) Nicholas Arcement San Diego Classic 3/7/22 1st
65 (-7) Michael Sanders San Diego Classic 3/7/22 1st
65 (-7) Trey Winstead David Toms Intercollegiate 10/6/19 3rd
65 (-7) Trey Winstead David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 1st
65 (-7) Philip Barbaree David Toms Intercollegiate 10/5/19 1st
64 (-7) Luis Gagne Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic 11/3/17 1st
65 (-7) Sam Burns NCAA Baton Rouge Regional 5/15/17 1st
65 (-7) Sam Burns Carpet Capital Collegiate 9/10/16 2nd
65 (-7) Eric Ricard NCAA Franklin Regional 5/17/16 2nd
64 (-7) Nathan Jeansonne The Prestige at PGA West 2/17/16 3rd
65 (-7) Eric Ricard David Toms Intercollegiate 10/10/15 2nd
65 (-7) Myles Lewis The Prestige at PGA West 2/18/15 3rd
65 (-7) Austin Gutgsell LSU National Invitational 4/1/12 3rd
65 (-7) Smylie Kaufman Argent Financial Classic 3/11/12 1st
65 (-7) John Peterson NCAA Championships 6/1/11 2nd
65 (-7) Clayton Rotz SEC Championships 4/19/09 3rd
65 (-7) Jeremy Wilkinson Coca-Cola Tourn. Of Champ. 9/30/96 2nd
65 (-7) Scott Sterling Carpet Capital Collegiate 9/21/91 2nd
65 (-7) Perry Moss Southern Intercollegiate 11/11/90 3rd
65 (-7) Rett Crowder Taylor Made/Doral Park 2/25/90 3rd
65 (-7) Perry Moss Imperial Lakes Golf Classic 3/4/89 2nd
65 (-7) David Toms SEC Championships 5/17/87 3rd
Individual Low 72 Hole Rounds (Related to Par)
Score Name Tournament Date
1 -1 (74-70-73-70, 287) Emlyn Aubrey NCAA Championships 5/28-31/86
2 E (71-71-73-73, 288) Brandon Pierce NCAA Championships 5/29-6/1/1
E (70-70-73-75, 288) Zach Wright NCAA Championships 5/29-6/1/15
4 +1 (73-72-74-70, 289) Emlyn Aubrey NCAA Championships 5/23-26/84
+1 (73-68-74-74, 289) Brandon Pierce NCAA Championships 5/26-29/17
6 +2 (75-72-69-74, 290) Connor Gaunt NCAA Championships 5/24-27/24
7 +3 (71-73-74-73, 291) Rob McNamara NCAA Championships 5/22-25/85
+3 (71-69-75-76, 291) Sam Burns NCAA Championships 5/26-29/17
9 +4 (76-70-74-68, 288) David Toms NCAA Championships 5/25-28/88
+4 (74-70-73-75, 292) Rett Crowder NCAA Championships 6/3-6/92
+4 (72-74-68-78, 292) Eric Ricard NCAA Championships 5/29-6/1/15
+4 (74-68-69-73, 284) Sam Burns NCAA Championships 5/27-30/16
+4 (70-70-73-71, 284) Luis Gagne NCAA Championships 5/27-30/16
14 +5 (74-71-71-77, 293) John Salamone A-A Intercollegiate 4/1-4/81
+5 (71-76-73-73, 293) Scott Inman NCAA Championships 5/23-26/84
+5 (70-77-71-75, 293) Fred Dupre NCAA Championships 5/23-26/84
+5 (70-73-74-76, 293) Bob Friend NCAA Championships 5/28-31/86
+5 (73-74-74-72, 293) Rob McNamara NCAA Championships 6/10-13/87
19 +6 (72-72-69-73, 286) David Toms NCAA Championships 6/8-11/89
+6 (71-71-72-72, 286 Eric Ricard NCAA Championships 5/27-30/16
+6 (74-68-71-81, 294) Philip Barbaree NCAA Championships 5/26-29/17
22 +7 (71-73-77-74, 295) John Salamone A-A Intercollegiate 4/4-7/79
+7 (72-72-71-80, 295) Wayne DeFrancesco NCAA Championships 5/23-26/79
+7 (69-76-78-72, 295) Pete Byman A-A Intercollegiate 4/1-4/81
+7 (75-67-79-74, 295) Roy Bianacalana A-A Intercollegiate 3/31-4/3/82
+7 (73-78-73-71, 295) Rob McNamara NCAA Championships 5/23-26/84
+7 (69-74-73-75, 291) Adam Manuel NCAA Championships 5/28-29/97
+7 (73-76-69-69, 287) Brandon Pierce NCAA Championships 5/27-30/16
+7 (73-75-70-77, 295) Luis Gagne NCAA Championships 5/26-29/17
Year-by-Year Stroke Average Leader (Min. 20 Rounds)
1935-36
Southern Intercollegiate
1936-37
SEC Championships
Southern Intercollegiate
1937-38
Southern Intercollegiate
SEC Championships
1938-39
SEC Championships
1939-40
SEC Championships
Southern Intercollegiate
NCAA Championships
1941-42
SEC Championships
Southern Intercollegiate
NCAA Championships
1945-46
SEC Championships
Southern Intercollegiate
1946-47
SEC Championships
NCAA Championships
1947-48
Gulf Coast Invitational
SEC Championships
Southern Intercollegiate
1948-49
Gulf Coast Invitational
1949-50
Gulf Coast Invitational
1952-53
SEC Championships
1953-54
Southern Intercollegiate
SEC Championships
1954-55
NCAA Championships
1955-56
All-America (Team Match)
1958-59
All-America (Two Ball)
1959-60
All-America (Team Match)
All-America (Best Ball)
All-America (Two Ball)
Southern Intercollegiate
SEC Championships
1960-61
LSU Invitational
1961-62
LSU Invitational
1963-64
Alvin Buckhaults Memorial
LSU Invitational
1964-65
Alvin Buckhaults Memorial
LSU Invitational
1965-66
LSU Invitational
Southern Intercollegiate
SEC Championships
1966-67
USM-B.O. Van Hook Invitational
L.R. Goldman Invitational
SEC Championships
1967-68
USM Invitational
1968-69
USM Invitational
1969-70
LSU Invitational
Tulane Invitational
Louisiana Intercollegiate
1970-71
McNeese Invitational
1971-72
Jim Corbett Classic
1972-73
Louisiana Intercollegiate
Port Malabar Invitational
Jim Corbett Classic
1973-74
Louisiana Intercollegiate
Jim Corbett Classic
1974-75
LSU Invitational
Centenary Fall Invitational
Jim Corbett Classic
1975-76
LSU-Tulane Invitational
Friendly Fort Lauderdale Classic
1976-77
Seminole Classic
Jim Corbett Classic
1977-78
Louisiana Intercollegiate
1978-79
USM-Broadwater Beach Invitational
1980-81
Seminole Classic – Tallahassee, Fla. 285-286-287 – 858 (T/21)
New Orleans Invitational – New Orleans, La. 285-300-294 – 879 (1/17)
1981-82
New Orleans Invitational – New Orleans, La. 301-293 – 594 (1/17)
1983-84
Yale Fall Intercollegiate – New Haven, Conn. 299-304-298 – 901 (T1/32)
Morton Braswell Intercollegiate –Shreveport, La.
283-296-297 – 876 (1/9)
Louisiana Intercollegiate – Florien, La. 449-459 – 908 (1/11)
Miami Invitational – Miami, Fla. 287-293-290 – 860 (1/15)
1984-85
USM-Laurel C.C. Invitational – Laurel, Miss. 292-281-297 – 870 (1/18)
UNO Invitational – New Orleans 288-286 – 574 (1/18)
1985-86
USM-Laurel C.C. Invitational – Laurel, Miss.
289-292-297 – 878 (1/11)
Gator Invitational – Gainesville, Fla.
283-278-279 – 840 (1/20)
Country Club of Jackson Invitational –Jackson, Miss.
287-296-292 – 855 (1/15)
SEC Championships – Killen, Ala.
290-296-283 – 869 (1/10)
1986-87
Country Club of Jackson Invitational –Jackson, Miss.
287-276-292 – 855 (1/15)
LSU National Invitational – Baton Rouge, La.
290-282-281 – 863 (1/12)
SEC Championships – Killen, Ala.
290-296-283 – 869 (1/10)
1987-88
Gator Invitational – Gainesville, Fla.
290-280-286 – 856 (1/19)
Jerry Pate Invitational – Pensacola, Fla.
287-291-301 – 879 (1/19)
1988-89
LSU National Invitational – Baton Rouge
283-290-289 – 862 (1/13)
Florida Southern Invitational – Mulberry, Florida
282-274-284 – 840 (1/24)
Golf Digest Collegiate Invitational –Woodlands, Texas
293-280-288 – 861 (1/15)
Chris Schenkel Invitational – Statesboro, Georgia
285-282-285 – 852 (1/18)
1990-91
Taylor Made Doral Park Intercollegiate –Doral, Florida
283-291-292 – 866 (1/18)
1991-92
Billy Hitchcock Intercollegiate – Opelika, Ala.
286-278-285 – 849 (1/12)
1993-94
Country Club of Louisiana Intercollegiate –Baton Rouge
300-290-289 – 879 (1/9)
Southeastern Intercollegiate – Montgomery, Ala.
285-287-292 – 864 (1/18)
Billy Hitchcock Intercollegiate – Opelika, Ala.
294-283-288 – 865 (1/12)
1994-95
Louisiana Classic – Lafayette, La.
286-292 – 578 (1/12)
All-American Intercollegiate – Mt. Prospect, Ill.
297-293-298 – 888 (1/16)
1995-96
ReliaStar Classic – Dellwood, Minnesota
300-293-281 – 874 (1/12)
Ping-Tulsa Invitational – Tulsa, Okla.
300-286-295 – 881 (1/12)
Blue-Gray Intercollegiate – Montgomery, Ala.
284-288-296 – 868 (1/18)
1998-99
The Bridges All-American – Gunter, Texas 288-293-294 – 875 (1/19)
2000-01
Tennessee Tournament of Champions –Knoxville, Tenn.
281-283-287 – 851 (1/14)
Country Club of Louisiana Intercollegiate –Baton Rouge
293-277-286 – 856 (1/15)
LSU Spring Invitational – Baton Rouge 301-281-290 – 873 (1/18)
2001-02
Gator Invitational – Gainesville, Fla.
289-277-280 – 846 (1/15)
LSU Spring Invitational – Baton Rouge 279 (1/20)
2002-03
LSU Spring Invitational – Baton Rouge 289-289-290 – 868 (1/18)
2003-04
Baylor Invitational – Waco, Texas 282-292-294 – 868 (1/14)
Country Club of Louisiana Intercollegiate –Baton Rouge
285-283-289 – 857 (1/15)
LSU Spring Invitational – Baton Rouge 288-285-278 – 851 (1/17)
2004-05
LSU Spring Invitational – Baton Rouge 292-290-283 – 865 (1/17)
2005-06
Shoal Creek Intercollegiate – Birmingham, Ala.
284-289-290 – 863 (1/15)
2008-09
Gopher Invitational – Mobile, Ala. 284-289-299 – 872 (T1/12)
John Hayt Invitational – Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
296-295-294 – 885 (1/15)
Reunion Intercollegiate – Madison, Miss. 297-299-293 – 889 (1/15)
2009-10
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 285-273-286 – 844 (1/14)
Louisiana Classics – Lafayette, La. 295-277-292 – 864 (1/15)
Hootie at Bulls Bay Intercollegiate –Awendaw, S. C.
288-278-279 – 845 (1/15)
2010-11
Gopher Invitational – Mobile, Ala.
301-281-287 – 869 (1/11)
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 283-276-289 – 848 (1/14)
Hootie at Bulls Bay Intercollegiate –Awendaw, S. C.
281-284-284 – 849 (1/15)
LSU National Invitational – Baton Rouge 295-294-297 – 886 (1/12)
2011-12
Louisiana Classics – Lafayette, La. 283-279-285 – 847 (1/15)
Argent Financial Classic – Birmingham, Ala. 292-284-284 – 860 (1/9)
LSU National Invitational – Baton Rouge 285-289-279 – 853 (1/12)
2012-13
Shoal Creek Intercollegiate – Birmingham, Ala.
286-290-288 – 864 (1/11)
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge, La.
295-302-300 – 897 (1/9)
2013-14
Aggie Invitational – Bryan, Texas
298-293-308 – 899 (T1/12)
2014-15
Golfweek Conference Challenge – Oak Hills, Iowa
278-281-290 – 849 (1/12)
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 302-294-295 – 891 (1/12)
Talis Park Challenge – Naples, Florida 286-276-276 – 838 (1/15)
SEC Championships – St. Simons Island, Georgia 274-272-281 -- 827
NCAA Championships – Bradenton, Fla. Won 3 matches to win the championship
2015-16
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 295-283-286 – 864 (1/14)
The Prestige at PGA West – LaQuinta, Calif. 277-284-265 – 826 (1/14)
Tiger Classic – Baton Rouge 287-283 – 570 (1/6)
2016-17
Maui Jim Intercollegiate – Scottsdale, Ariz. 270-271-270 – 811 (1/16)
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 279-292-282 – 853 (1/14)
The Prestige at PGA West – La Quinta, Calif. 277-284-265 – 826 (1/14)
Aggie Invitational – Bryan, Texas 282-283 – 565 (1/13)
Tiger Classic – Baton Rouge 295-287 – 582 (1/7)
NCAA Baton Rouge Regional 276-296-294 – 866 (1/14)
2017-18
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 288-277 – 565 (1/13)
Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic – Lahaina, Maui
268-275=278 – 821 (1/21)
Old Waverly Collegiate – West Point, Miss. 287-291-277 – 855 (1/15)
2018-19
David Toms Intercollegiate – Baton Rouge 282-281-280 – 843 (1/14)
The Prestige at PGA West – LaQuinta, California 279-280-279 – 838 (1/16)
2019-20
David Toms Intercollegiate – Shreveport, La. 267-263-271 – 803 (1/12)
2021-22
Jim Rivers Collegiate – Choudrant, La.
285-281-275 – 841 (1/21)
San Diego Classic – San Diego, Ca. 267-273-287 – 827 (1/16)
2023-24
Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff -- Cape Girardeau, Missouri
283-271-290 – 844 (1/12)
Everett Buick GMC Classic – Little Rock, Arkansas
277-292-273 – 842 (1/15)
The Hootie at Bulls Bay – Charleston, South Carolina
284-278-287 – 849 (1/15)
2024-25 (AS OF APRIL 22)
Visit Knoxville Collegiate - Loudon ,Tenn. 268-269-280 - 817 (1/16)
The Blessings Collegiate InvitationalFayetteville, Ark.
285-297-280 - 862 (1/10)
Louisiana Classics - Lafayette, La.
279-282-284 - 845 (1/12)
Pauma Valley Invitational - Pauma Valley, Calif.
275-277-273 - 825 (1/15
MOST TEAM WINS IN A YEAR
2016-17 – 6 wins
2014-15 – 5 wins
1959-60 – 5 wins
2011-12 – 4 wins
2010-11 – 4 wins
1988-89 – 4 wins
1985-86 – 4 wins
1983-84 – 4 wins
2024-25 - 4 wins
2017-18 – 3 wins
2015-16 – 3 wins
2011-12 – 3 wins
2008-09 – 3 wins
2003-04 – 3 wins
2000-01 – 3 wins
1993-94 – 3 wins
1995-96 – 3 wins
1974-75 – 3 wins
1972-73 – 3 wins
1966-67 – 3 wins
1965-66 – 3 wins
1941-42 – 3 wins
1939-40 – 3 wins
DAVID TOMS—6
206 Golf Digest Collegiate Invitational 1989
205 Imperial Lake Classic 1989
204 Gator invitational 1989
208 Jerry Pate Intercollegiate 1988
205 SEC Championships 1987
212 LSU National Invitational 1986
SAM BURNS – 4
212 NCAA Baton Rouge Regional 2017
206 Louisiana Classics 2017
201 All-America Golf Classic 2016
215 David Toms Intercollegiate 2016
LUIS GAGNE – 4
140 David Toms Intercollegiate 2017
215 David Toms Intercollegiate 2016
196 Maui Jim Intercollegiate 2016
143 Tiger Classic 2016
ROB MCNAMARA – 4
213 Miami-Doral Park National Inv. 1987
207 Country Club of Jackson Invitational 1985
139 UNO Invitational 1985
224 Louisiana Intercollegiate 1983
ZACH WRIGHT – 4
143 Tiger Classic 2016
211 Valspar Collegiate Invitational 2016
201 The Prestige at PGA West 2016
209 Louisiana Classics 2013
WAYNE DEFRANCESCO – 3
212 SEC Championships 1979
213 Louisiana Intercollegiate 1979
207 Palmetto Intercollegiate 1979
STEWART JOLLY – 3
207 Golfweek Conference Challenge 2015
210 Golfweek Conference Challenge 2014
210 Shoal Creek Intercollegiate 2013
STAN LEE – 3
210 Jim Corbett Classic 1975
205 Jim Corbett Classic 1974
213 Louisiana Intercollegiate 1974
ERIC RICARD – 3
215 David Toms Intercollegiate 2016
143 Tiger Classic 2016
206 David Toms Intercollegiate 2015
NICK ARCEMENT – 2
207 LaTour Intercollegiate 2024
203 San Diego Classic 2022
FRED DUPRE – 2
211 Morton Braswell Intercollegiate 1983
217 Y’all Invitational 1983
AUSTIN GUTGSELL – 2
207 LSU National Invitational 2012
206 David Toms Intercollegiate 2011
JOHN HUMPHRIES – 2
211 LSU Spring Invitational 2003
68 LSU Spring invitational 2002
LOUIS LEE – 2
221 Lamar Invitational 1977
291 Friendly Fort Lauderdale Classic 1976
JAY MENDELL – 2
210 The Hootie at Bulls Bay 2024
203 Hal Williams Collegiate 2024
ALAN MORGAN – 2
206 Country Club of La. Intercollegiate 2000
209 Coca-Cola Tournament of Champions 2000
PERRY MOSS – 2
205 LSU National Invitational 1990
141 Jack Nicklaus Intercollegiate 1990
JOHN PETERSON – 2
211 NCAA Championships 2011
214 John Hayt Invitational 2009
ANDREW PRESLEY – 2
220 David Toms Intercollegiate 2012
206 Louisiana Classics 2012
TREY WINSTEAD – 2
199 David Toms Intercollegiate 2019
209 David Toms Intercollegiate 2018
JIM ADAMS – 1
211 Louisiana Intercollegiate 1973
EMLYN AUBREY – 1
1984 SEC Championships 1984
BRIAN BATEMAN – 1
216 PING-Tulsa Invitational 1995
JACOB BERGERON – 1
140 David Toms Intercollegiate 2017
DICK CLARK – 1
294 Port Malabar Intercollegiate 1973
DREW DOYLE – 1
210 The Hayt 2022
MIKE DRURY – 1
278 LSU Invitational 1971
LUKE HASKEW – 1
210 Purdue Fall Invitational 2022
JIM HOLMES – 1
208 Jim Corbett Classic 1977
SHELBY HOUSTON – 1
209 All College Golf Classic 1973
NATHAN JEANSONNE – 1
135 Tiger Classic 2017
GREG LESHER – 1
207 LSU National Invitational 1988
DAVID LEVEILLE – 1
143 UNO Invitational 1982
MYLES LEWIS – 1
206 Louisiana Classics 2014
LANDON LYONS – 1
145 Mobile Bay Intercollegiate 2013
TOMMY MUDD – 1
210 Country Club of Jackson Invitational 1987
BRANDON PIERCE – 1
215 David Toms Intercollegiate 2016
ALEX PRICE – 1
205 Golfweek Collegiate Kickoff 2023
JOHN SALAMONE – 1
206 Seminole Intercollegiate 1981
MICHAEL SANDERS – 1
207 Turning Stone Intercollegiate 2021
SCOTT STERLING – 1
209 Southeastern Intercollegiate 1994
BEN TAYLOR – 1
2014 David Toms Intercollegiate 2014
CURTIS THOMPSON – 1
210 Shoal Creek Intercollegiate 2012
JAY TORDA – 1
216 Mardi Gras Tournament 1974
BECK TROUTMAN – 1
211 LSU Spring Invitational 2005
HEATH WEST – 1
68 LSU Spring Invitational (Weather) 2002
HAYDEN WHITE – 1
199 David Toms Intercollegiate 2019
JIMMY WITTENBERG – 1
181 McNeese Invitational (27 holes) 1971
MAJ. JAMES PERRY COLE SR.
1933-43
Coach of two national championship teams at LSU in 1940 and 1042
Tigers advanced to NCAA Championships 5 straight years, 1939-43
Won five SEC Championships – 1937, ’38, ’39, ’40, ‘42 12 wins as LSU head coach
MIKE DONAHUE
1944-45
Former head football coach at LSU
Also coached Tigers in baseball and tennis. Inducted College FB Hall of Fame, 1951
T. P. (SKIPPER) HEARD
1946-47
Athletics Director at LSU from 1931-54
1946 and 1947 teams won the SEC Championship
1947 team won the school’s third national championship 4 wins as LSU head coach
MIKE BARBATO
1948-1960
Named Course Pro at LSU “Westdale” Country Club in 1943
2011 inductee Gulf States PGA Hall of Fame. Was the coach of the 1955 national champions. Was unable to be with team because of qualifying for U.S. Open
Team trainer Dr. Marty Broussard led the team at the championships 16 wins as LSU head coach
FRED KNIGHT
1960-62
Served as co-coach with Harry (Red) Taylor
Then served 25 years as the golf pro at Bayou Country Club in Thibodaux, Louisiana
Was a private instructor at several courses in Arkansas after his retirement
2 wins as LSU head coach
HARRY (RED) TAYLOR
1960-67
Served as co-coach with Fred Knight from 1960-62. 10 wins as LSU head coach, including two SEC championships (1966-67)
CURTIS (C.D.) SMITH
1967-68
1 win as LSU head coach
TOMMY MARTTY
1968-70
Baton Rouge native, who studied at LSU
Left LSU for “professional” position at Winfield Pines Golf Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.
More recently GM of Woodforest Golf Club, Montgomery, Texas
2001 inductee into Gulf States PGA Hall of Fame
2 wins as LSU head coach
BEN FREEMAN, JR.
1970-71
3 wins as LSU head coach
BILL BROGDEN
1971-1976
11 wins as LSU head coach
Would leave LSU to serve as golf coach at Oral Roberts. Would later coach at Tulsa for 30 years (1986-2016)
Member Golf Coaches Association of America HOF
DEE GLUECK
1976-77
Interim head coach for three tournaments, Dec. 1976-March
1977
1 win as LSU head coach
Served for many years at LSU as University Architect, Asst. Vice Chancellor & Assoc. AD
DAVID SIGLER
1977-82
Came to LSU from position as head coach at Maryland 6 wins as LSU head coach
BUDDY ALEXANDER
1982-87
Served for a time as coach of both the men’s and women’s teams at LSU
Team won 1986 and 1987 SEC Championships
Won the 1986 U.S. Amateur; Played on 1987 Walker Cup Team
Left LSU to become head coach at Florida
Member Golf Coaches Association of America HOF
13 wins as LSU head coach
BRITT HARRISON
1987-99
17 wins as LSU head coach
Seven appearances in the NCAA Championships
Six top-five finishes in the SEC Championships
GREG JONES
1999-05
Served at South Alabama as head coach before coming to LSU
Four NCAA Regional appearances
CHUCK WINSTEAD
2005-23
All-time winning LSU coach with 41 team titles. Coach of the NCAA team champions in 2015 Coach of John Peterson, 2011 NCAA individual champion
National Coach of the Year, 2015 Named Director of Golf in summer of 2018. Golf letterman and LSU alum (1991)
ANDREW NELSON
2023-24
Served as interim coach after Chuck Winstead left the program
1 win as interim head coach
Led LSU to a qualifying spot in the NCAA Baton Rouge regional and the 2024 NCAA Championship
JAKE AMOS
2024-Present
Came to LSU after a successful career at East Tennessee State.
Member of NCAA Championship teams at Augusta University
Team
B.R. McLendon
Honorable Mention
B.R. McLendon Second Team
B.R. McLendon First Team
Randy Wolff
Honorable Mention
Emlyn Aubrey Third Team
Rob McNamara Honorable Mention
David Toms
Greg Lesher
Fredrik Lindgren
David Toms
Greg Lesher
David Toms
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
John
John
Ben
Curtis Thompson
Eric Ricard
Luis Gagne
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
1970 Tommy Evans Second Team
Vaughn Moise First Team
Jimmy Wittenberg First Team
1971 Mike Drury Second Team
1972
Jimmy Wittenberg First Team
Shelby Houston First Team
1974 Dick Clark First Team
Stan Lee First Team
1975 Jim Adams Second Team
Louis Lee Second Team
Stan Lee First Team
1976 Frank Gusmus Second Team
Louis Lee Second Team
1977 Steve Cromwell First Team
1978 Louis Lee Second Team
Gary Marlowe
1979
Second Team
Freshman of the Year
Wayne DeFrancesco First Team
John Salamone First Team
Player of the Year
1982 Dudley Bienvenu Second Team
1983 Emlyn Aubrey Second Team
Fred DuPre First Team
1984 Emlyn Aubrey First Team
Fred DuPre First Team
Rob McNamara Second Team Freshman of the Year
1985 Rob McNamara First Team
1986 Emlyn Aubrey First Team
Rob McNamara First Team
David Toms Freshman of the Year
1987 Rob McNamara First Team
Player of the Year
David Toms First Team
1988 Greg Lesher Second Team
David Toms First Team
Player of the Year
1989 Greg Lesher First Team
Fredrik Lindgren Second Team
David Toms First Team
1990 Greg Lesher
Perry Moss
Player of the Year
Second Team
Second Team
1991 Rett Crowder Second Team
Perry Moss First Team
Player of the Year
1992 Rett Crowder First Team
1993 Scott Sterling Second Team
1994 Brian Bateman Second Team
Scott Sterling First Team
1995 Brian Bateman Second Team
1996 Brian Bateman First Team
1997 P.J. Smith First Team
1998 P.J. Smith Second Team
1999 Jeremy Wilkinson Second Team
2000 Alan Morgan Second Team
2001 John Humphries Second Team
Alan Morgan First Team
2002 Nathan Goulding Second Team
Heath West Second Team
2003 John Humphries First Team
2004 Heath West Second Team
2005 Chris Wells Second Team
2007 Chris Wells Second Team
2008 Andrew Loupe All-Freshman Team
John Peterson All-Freshman Team
Clayton Rotz All-Freshman Team
2009 John Peterson First Team
Sang Yi All-Freshman Team
2010 Andrew Loupe First Team
2011 Andrew Loupe First Team
John Peterson First Team
2012 Andrew Presley Second Team
Sang Yi First Team
2013 Andrew Presley Second Team
Curtis Thompson First Team
2014 Stewart Jolly First Team
Curtis Thompson Second Team
2015 Stewart Jolly Second Team
Brandon Pierce Second Team
Eric Ricard Second Team
Zach Wright Second Team
2016 Zach Wright First Team
2017 Sam Burns First Team
Luis Gagne Second Team
2018 Luis Gagne First Team
Trey Winstead All-Freshman Team
Jacob Bergeron All-Freshman Team
2019 Luis Gagne Second Team
Philip Barbaree Second Team
2021 Garrett Barber Second Team
2022 Cohen Trolio All-Freshman Team
2024 Jay Mendell All-Freshman Team
AAdams, Jim (1973-74-75-76)
Adams, Wright Jr. (1934-37)
Aguilar Puertes, Hugo (2021)
Aitchison, David (2003)
Amerman, Wink (1999)
Anthony, Richard (1966)
Arcement, Nicholas (202122-23)
Aubrey, Emlyn (1983-84-85-86)
Aydlett, Brandon (2003-04-05)
BBarbaree, Philip (2017-18-19-20)
Barber, Garrett (2019-20-2122^-23)
Barsamian, Jarrod (2006-0708-09)
Bateman, Brian (1993-94-95-96)
Beard, Tommy (1953-54-55-56)
Beckers, Michael (2000)
Bergeron, Jacob (2018)
Biancalana, Roy (1980-81-82)
Bienvenu, Dudley (1982)
Bigham, Neil (1957)
Blaum, Brent (2007-10)
Bourgeois, Jason (1994)
Burns, Sam (2016-17)
Byman, Pete (1980-81-82-83)
CCaldwell, Bill (1972)
Caldwell, Blake (2015-16-17-18)
Calhoun, Cecil (1953-54-55-56)
Carmichael, Sam (1959-60-61)
Castillo, Henry (1938-39-40)
Castro, Franco (2012)
Clark, Dick (1972-73-74-75)
Clark, Frank (1950-51)
Cole, Henry (1965-66-67)
Collier, Jo (1971-72)
Cromwell, Steve (1976-77)
Crowder, Rett (1989-90-91-92)
Cuthbert, Tommy (1969)
DDaigle, William (Bill) (1968-69)
Day, Jimmy (1966-67-68)
DeBaus, Claude (1951)
DeFrancesco, Wayne (1979-80)
Dickinson, Gardner (1948)
Dodson, Bill (1957)
Doss, Jackie (1952)
Downie, Michael (1964-65)
Doyle, Drew (2021-22-23-24)
Dressler, Billy (2000-01)
Drury, Mike (1970-71-72)
DuPre, Fred (1980-81-83-84)
EElkins, Tommy (1965-66)
Ellis, Sonny (1948)
Ervin, Tucker (2002-03)
Essig, Don (1958-59-60)
Evans, Tommy (1970)
FFaulds, Thomas (1980)
Ferrell, William (1962-63)
Finkelstein, Maury (1962-63-64)
Finney, Michael (1987-88-89)
Fraser, Donald (1955-56-57)
Fraser, Howell (1960-61-62)
GGagne, Luis (2016-17-18-19)
Gatlin, Butch (1963-64)
Gaudin, Russ (1962-63-64)
Gaunt, Connor (2021-22-23-24)
Gonzales, Drew (2017-18-19-20)
Goodwin, Mark (1972)
Goulding, Nathan (2001)
Guido, Paul (1979)
Gusmus, Frank (1974-75-76)
Gutgsell, Austin (2010-11-12)
HHaas, Fred (1935-36-37)
Harrell, Bobby (1952)
Harris, Billy (1979-80)
Harris, Chad (1995)
Haskew, Luke (2023-24)
Hebert, Junius (1948)
Henriksen, Steve (1977-78)
Hitchcock, Brett (1998-99)
Hoffman, Tico (1977-78-79)
Holmes, Jim (1975-77)
Hoover, Tom (1962-63)
Horrell, Jason (2002-03-04)
Houston, Shelby (1973-74-75)
Huguet, Marty (1969)
Humphries, Earl (1971-72-73)
Humphries, Jason (1999-00)
Humphries, John (2000-0102-03)
IInman, Scott (1981-83-84)
JJeansonne, Nathan (2016-1718-19)
Johansson, Leo (2023-24)
Jolly, Stewart (2012-13-14-15)
Jones, Josh (2009-10)
Jones, Rhyne (2016-17)
Jordan, Mart (1950)
KKaufman, Jeff (1984)
Kaufman, Smylie (2012-13-14)
Keck, Mike (1966-67)
Kendall, John (1993-94)
Kennedy, Ian (1997-98)
Killeen, Rob (1981)
LLaBauve, Mike (1975)
Lach, Bryant (2007-08)
Lanahan, Andrew (2004-05-06)
Lanier, William (1988-89)
LaPonzina, Johnny (1967-6869)
Larson, Jason (1991-92)
Lee, Chip (2001-02)
Lee, Louis (1975-76-77-78)
Lee, Stan (1974-75)
Leoffler, Ed (1950)
LeSage, Tony (1951)
Lesher, Greg (1987-88-89-90)
Leveille, Brian (2010)
Leveille, Dave (1982-83)
Lewis, Myles (2012-13-14-15)
Lorio, Duane (1987)
Loupe, Andrew (2008-09-10-11)
Loupe, Chris (1999)
Love, Sam (1958-59-60)
Lyons, Eddie (1975-76)
Lyons, Landon (2013-14)
MMagee, Gary (1970)
Mangum, James (1954-55-56) Manuel, Adam (1996-97-98)
Marlowe, Gary (1979) Martin, Bill (1964)
Mason, Greg (2004)
McDonald, Chip (1995-96) McDonald, Maxwell (1968-6970)
McLendon, B.R. “Mac” (196566-67)
McNamara, Rob (1984-85-8687)
McWilliams, Noah (2024) Mendell, Jay (2024)
Merrins, Eddie (1952-53-54) Moise, Vaughn (1968-69-70) Morgan, Alan (2000-01)
Morrow, Tommy (1952-53-54)
Moss, Perry (1988-89-90-91) Mudd, Tommie (1984-85-86-87)
NNevils, Rich (1964-65)
Noonan, Brian (2006-07-08)
Nutt, Julio (1992-93-94)
OO’Neill, Jack (1960-61)
Osberg, Rick (1971)
PPark, Don (1952)
Peterson, John (2008-09-10-11)
Pierce, Brandon (2014-15-16-17)
Poerschke, Fred (1951)
Points, D.A. (1996-97)
Pollet, David (2003-04)
Pott, Johnny (1953-54-55)
Prather, Garrett (2000-01-0204)
Presley, Andrew (2011-12-13)
Price, Alex (2024)
Purnell, Andy (1987)
RRaulerson, Charles (1985)
Rheams, David (1955)
Ricard, Eric (2014-15-16-17) Rickles, Jay (1971-72)
Riemann, Jeff (2003-04-05)
Rivers, Jack (1971-72)
Ross, Eddie (1959-60-61)
Rotz, Clayton (2008-09-10-11)
Runion, Garrett (2004-05-08)
SSalamone, John (1978-79-8081)
Sample, John (1959-61-62)
Sanders, Michael (2019-20-2122^-23)
Shaw, Robert (1973)
Silvers, Mark (1965)
Sliman, Teddy (1970-71-72)
Smith, Aaron (2003-04-05-06)
Smith, P.J. (1995-96-97-98)
Spencer, John (1958-59-60-61)
Spiller, Lindsey (1975)
Sterling, Scott (1991-92-93)
Stewart, Earl (1940-41-42)
Stewart, Travis (1999)
Struthers, Brent (2005-06)
T
Taylor, Ben (2014-15)
Taylor, Craig (2000-01)
Thomas, Phil (1964)
Thompson, Curtis (2012-13-14)
Thornton, Pressly (1948)
Timbrook Bud (1948-49-50)
Todd, Ray (1959)
Toms, Carter (2017-18-19-20)
Toms, David (1986-87-88-89)
Torda, Jay (1975)
Trolio, Cohen (2022-23)
Troutman, Beck (2005-06-0708)
VVallillo, Michael (1998-99-2000)
WWeaver, Bert (1952-53)
Weaver, Bret (1978)
Webb, Chris (1985)
Webb, Craig (1990-92-93)
Webb, Holden (2024)
Wells, Chris (2005-06-07)
West, Heath (2002-03-04-05)
White, Hayden (2019-20-21-22) Wienerwitz, Trae, (1997-98) Wilkinson, Jeremy (1997-9899-2000)
Willie, Jep (1969)
Winstead, Trey (2018-19-2021^-22)
Winstead, Chuck (1991) Wittenberg, Jimmy (1969-70-71) Wolff, Randy (1965-66-67) Woollam, Chris (2019-20-2122^-23)
Wright, Zach (2013-14-15-16) Wulff, Tommy (1956-57-58)
YYates, Lance (2024)
Yerger, Dave (1986) Yi, Sang (2009-10-11-12)
^ Participated and met criteria, however, did not receive a letter award in this season as a maximum of four letter awards were issued by the National L Club.
Lindgren, Fredrik (1988-89)
Little, Judge (1994)
Loe, Lamar (1952-54)
Friend, Bob (1983-84-85-86)
Logsdon, Tim (1988-89)
Looper, Ken (2011)
Schmitt, Phil (1994-95-96)
Schroeder, Mike (1972-73-75)
Self, Neil (2002)
Sevier, Justin (2003-04)
Shaw, Jake (2004-05)
The LSU Communications Office would appreciate assistance in correcting errors or ommissions. Contact athletics@lsu.edu.
The LSU Golf teams have the privilege of calling The University Club home.
The course at the University Club was re-designed in 2009-10 under the guidance of LSU legend and PGA Tour pro David Toms and noted golf course architect Jim Lipe, who designed the original University Club in 1998. The course is carved into nearly 300 acres of land just seven miles south of the LSU campus on Nicholson Drive. It remains an impressive par 72 layout and a stern test that allows the Tigers to prepare for any kind of upcoming tournament.
The club hosted the 2024 NCAA Men's Golf Regional in May, 2024.
The challenging 18-hole course at University Club can play to 7,700 yards from its championship tees and features wide fairways bordered by pine hammocks and native grasses, in addition to 2,000 feet of bulkhead. Four additional sets of tees are also available for players of all ages and skill levels.
In addition, the course features challenging lake areas and trees throughout the course to provide a challenging test of golf for anyone playing the University Club.
Not only that, but the course now has one of the most impressive finishing holes in golf as the 18th hole features a new championship “Tiger” tee with a beautiful six-foot high wood bulkhead. The lake was expanded near the green, where an additional 180 feet of bulkhead was also added.
In the summer of 2011, the members of the University Club voted the 18th hole as the course’s “Signature Hole.”
The course was built on land donated to the Tiger Athletic Foundation and subsequently leased to The University Club. The original vision that drove University Club’s development was having a premier course that would provide a place for TAF members to play, as well as a home for
In April 2011, the LSU Golf House was given a well deserved renaming to the Mary and Woody Bilyeu Golf Practice Facility.
The Tiger Athletic Foundation paid tribute to the couple for their generous donation that helped redo the University Club, making the course more challenging for collegiate golfers. Playing on the course helped the LSU women to their best ever third-place finishes in both the 2011 and 2012 NCAA Championships and most recently appearances in the 2021, 2022 and 2023 and 2024 NCAA Championship. In the 2024 event, LSU advanced to match play for the first time and finished T5
The Tigers also captured their first SEC Championship in 30 years in 2022.
The facility features office and storage areas for both teams, indoor hitting bays, computer analysis stations and meeting and locker room space for both teams as well as graphic displays of the history of both golf programs through the years. The outdoor hitting area is expansive where players can work on all facets of their game.
The inside of the facility as well as the U-Club clubhouse has been updated to showcase the many highlights of the program over its history, including national and international events the Tigers have taken part in.
DATE CHAMPION MEDALIST
Apr. 21-22, 1961 (LGC) LSU (591) Howell Fraser, LSU (145)
Apr. 19-20, 1962 (LGC) LSU (578) Roy Pace, La. Tech (142)
Apr. 11-12, 1963 (LGC) Memphis St. (579) Buddy Short, ULL (138)
Mar. 26-27, 1964 (LGC) LSU (584) John Lamey, Alabama (142)
Apr. 15-16, 1965 (LGC) LSU (591) Pat O’Brien, McNeese St. (140)
Apr. 7-8, 1966 (LGC) LSU (577) B.R. McLendon, LSU (141)
Mar. 23-24, 1967 (LGC) Houston (849) B.R. McLendon, LSU (208)
Apr. 11-12, 1968 (LGC) Memphis St. (573) Jimmy Day, LSU (133)
Apr. 3-4, 1969 (LGC) Houston (849) John Mahaffey, Houston (208)
Nov. 4-6, 1969 (LGC) LSU (1,430) Gary Bennett, Memphis St. (279)
Oct. 30 - Nov. 1, 1970 (LGC) Houston (1,439) Jim McLean, Houston (282)
Oct. 22-24, 1971 (LGC) Houston (1,430) Mike Drury, LSU (278)
Oct. 27-29, 1972 (LGC) Houston (1,073) Bill Rogers, Houston (208)
Oct. 26-28, 1973 (LGC) Houston (1,076) Keith Fergus, Houston (212)
Oct. 25-27, 1974 (LGC) LSU (1,063) Bruce Douglass, Murray St (207)
Nov. 5-7, 1975^ (LCC) LSU (592) Allen Ritchie, Alabama (144)
Oct. 20-22, 1976 (SF) Houston (1,082) Jerry Anderson, Texas (212)
Oct. 19-21, 1977 (SF) Oklahoma St. (1,067) Mark Tinder, Oral Roberts (207)
Oct. 4-6, 1978 (SF) Oral Roberts (842) Mark Tinder, Oral Roberts (204)
Oct. 10-12, 1979 (SF) Houston (854) Hal Sutton, Centenary (208)
Oct. 8-12, 1980 (SF) Oral Roberts (858) Joe Rassett, Oral Roberts (206)
Oct. 7-9, 1981 (SF) UCLA (831) Jay Delsing, UCLA (202)
Oct. 6-8, 1982 (SF) Texas (562) Mark Brooks, Texas (138)
Oct. 5-7, 1983 (SF) Houston (847) John Slaughter, Houston (206)
Oct 3-5, 1984 (SF) Oklahoma (870) David Peege, Ole Miss (210)
Oct. 8-9, 1985 (SF) Florida (856) Philip Jonas, Lamar (206)
Sep. 30 - Oct. 1, 1986 (SF) LSU (863) David Toms, LSU (212)
Sep. 28-30, 1987 (SF) Arizona St. (1,091) Dave Miley, Ole Miss (210)
Sep. 27-28, 1988 (SF) LSU (862) Greg Lesher, LSU (207)
Oct. 3-4, 1989 (ET) Clemson (875) Oswald Drawdy, Clemson (209)
Oct. 16-17, 1990 (ET) Florida (846) Perry Moss, LSU (205)
Nov. 4-5, 1991 (ET) Florida (896) Carl Paulson, S. Carolina (215)
Apr. 2-3, 2011 (UC) LSU (886) Stephan Jaeger, Chatta (209)
Mar. 31 - Apr. 1, 2012 (UC) LSU (853) Austin Gutgsell, LSU (207).
Feb. 26-28, 2021 (UC) Illinois (876) Jackson Suber (Ole Miss) - 211 ^LSU-Tulane Invitational held in New Orleans at Lakewood Country Club
DATE CHAMPION MEDALIST
Mar. 13-14, 1970 Texas (1110) Vaughn Moise, LSU (215)
Mar. 12-13, 1971 Texas (1098) Howard Twitty, Ariz. St. (212)
Mar. 10-12, 1972 LSU (1469) Scott Nicholas, Tulane (284)
Mar. 30 - Apr. 1, 1973 LSU (1062) Eddie Lyons, UL-Monroe (211)
Mar. 29-30, 1974 LSU (1060) Stan Lee, LSU (205)
Mar. 7-9, 1975 LSU Juniors (1093) Stan Lee, LSU (210)
Ma. 18-20, 1977 LSU (1072) Jim Holmes, LSU (208)
All Tournaments held at the LSU Golf Course
DATE CHAMPION MEDALIST
Oct. 26-27, 2009 (CCLA) LSU (844) Jade Scott, Rice (204)
Oct. 18-19, 2010 (CCLA) LSU (848) Austin Gutgsell, LSU (206)
Oct. 17-18, 2011 (ST) Oklahoma (862) Andrew Noto, ULL(208)
Oct. 6-7, 2012 (UC) LSU (897) Andrew Presley, LSU (220)
Oct. 5-6, 2013 (UC) SELU (860) Grady Brame, SELU (209)
Oct. 4-5, 2014 (UC) LSU (891) Ben Taylor, LSU (214)
Oct. 10-11, 2015 (UC) LSU (864) Eric Ricard, LSU (206)
Oct. 8-9, 2016 (UC) LSU (853) Sam Burns, Luis Gagne,, Brandon Pierce, Eric Ricard, LSU (215)
Oct. 6-7, 2017 (UC) LSU (565) Luis Gagne & Jacob Bergeron (LSU), Lewis George (Central Ark.) 140
Oct. 6-7, 2018 (UC) LSU (843) Trey Winstead, LSU (209)
Oct. 5-6, 2019 (ST) LSU (801) Trey Winstead, Hayden White (LSU) 199
DATE
Nov. 1-2, 1993
CHAMPION MEDALIST
LSU (879) Ryan Perna, North Florida (215)
Oct. 31 - Nov. 1, 1994 Tennessee (884) Jamie Neher, Tennessee (213)
Oct. 30-31, 1995 Georgia (881) Simon Cooke, Virginia (214)
Oct. 28-29, 1996
Auburn (865) Michael Connell, Miss St. (207)
Oct. 27-28, 1997 Georgia (857) Jeremy Parrot, Georgia (207)
Oct. 26-27, 1998
E. Tenn. State (862) David Christensen, E.TSU (209)
Nov. 1-2, 1999 North Florida (880) David Bennett, UNF (211)
Oct. 30-31, 2000
LSU (856) Alan Morgan, LSU (206)
Oct. 29-30, 2001 UAB (856) Graeme McDowell, UAB (204)
Oct. 27-28, 2003
LSU (851) Michael Thompson, Tulane (207)
All Tournaments held at the Country Club of Louisiana
DATE CHAMPION MEDALIST
Mar. 5-6, 2001
Mar. 2, 2002
Mar. 1-2, 2003
Apr. 2-4, 2004
Apr. 1-3, 2005
LSU (873) David Inglis, Tulsa (211)
LSU (279) John Humphries & Heath West, LSU Codie Mudd, Miss St, Mark Sullivan, TUL Andreas Christensson (ORU), 68
LSU (868) John Humphries, LSU (211)
LSU (851) Michael Thompson, Tulane (207)
LSU (865) Beck Troutman, LSU (2111)
All Tournaments held at the University Club
DATE
Mar. 29, 2016
Apr. 13, 2017
CHAMPION MEDALIST
LSU (570) Luis Gange, Eric Ricard, Zack Wright, LSU (143)
LSU (582) Nathan Jeansome, LSU (135)
All Tournaments held at the University Club
UC - University Club
LGC - LSU Golf Course
SF - Sherwood Forest Country Club LCC - Lakewood Country Club
ET - English Turn Golf and Country Club CCLA - Country Club of Louisiana
ST - Southern Trace Country Club