- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Tigers Take A Wild, Historic Loop Around La Costa To Make NCAA Golf Cut; Round 4 Monday
by Staff Reporter
June 1, 20264 Comments

LSU Sports Photography
CARLSBAD, California – “Tigers never quit.”
That was part of LSU Coach Jake Amos’ message to his team prior to what appeared to be the final round of the season when LSU teed off here Sunday in the third round of the NCAA Division I Men’s Golf Championship at the OMNI La Costa Resort & Spa North Course.
The Tigers were tied for 27th, 20-over par after two rounds, and 17 shots behind the number at the 15 spot (+3) for the first cut after 54 holes.
What happened by the time early evening fell in the Pacific Time Zone was one of the most improbable comebacks by an LSU team in several years.
LSU posted the best round of the day by nine shots, posting an 18-under-par 270 to move up 15 places into a tie for 12th place at 2-over 866 and earning a spot in the final round of the championships on Monday afternoon.
The most stunned team had to be Pepperdine which since early afternoon had stood in 15th place at 4-over par for 54 holes. The Waves would finish in 16th place as LSU tied with San Diego, Tennessee and Stanford for 12th.
The amazing total of 18-under topped the school record mark for an NCAA Championship of 11-under par 277 in 2017 in round two at Sugar Grove, Illinois (Rich Harvest Farms Golf Club).
Leading the charge was England freshman Dan Hayes, who spurred by a rallying par after hitting in the water on his ninth hole of the day (the par-5 18th), birdied 5 of his last 6 holes to shoot an 8-under round of 64.
Hayes not only moved up 84 spots on the leaderboard to tied-32nd at 1-under 215, he posted the lowest NCAA Tournament round in school history, topping the mark of 65 (-7) by John Peterson in the 2011 championships in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
How wild and ridiculous was this comeback?
“I might be at a loss for words,” said Coach Amos. “We talked about just not quitting, and we kind of tried to play the golf course in different sections. Get off to hot start, survive 12 through 14, and we did that. It is just kind of the proudest I’ve ever been of any team. I booked our flights before the round. I’m just gonna tell you. But our message, seriously, was let’s just see what we can do. No pressure just be super aggressive. I think we were tentative in round one and we weren’t really clicking. Tigers don’t quit and we didn’t. We finally showed the firepower this team has.”
Hayes was 3-under par after eight holes, but his ninth hole, the par-5 18th was not looking good after a water ball. But a strong approach and short putt gave him a par and momentum heading to the front nine.
It all clicked for Hayes as he posted birdies on the fourth, fifth, par-5 sixth and seventh, before a great approach on the difficult ninth gave him a score of 31 on the final nine (holes 1-9) and the school mark.
“We’ve seen how good (Dan Hayes) has been all year and he’s been literally just waiting for a round like that,” said Coach Amos. “I’m delighted he got it today.”
“Coming down 18 (his ninth hole of the day), I made par with a seven iron for my fourth shot. I think that was when I kind of knew, I could take it low,” said Hayes. “I’ve been playing fine all week. I just knew we needed to make birdies. We were terrible the first round. I think everyone will say it, and we just knew we had to go low, and I think today there was no holding back. Like we had nothing to lose, and we know how good we are. Every single one of us can shoot seven, eight under, so when it all clicks, it clicks.”
“He’s never had a low one yet,” said Amos. “For him to finish it off in the biggest stage, a course record at La Costa, that’s going to be tough to beat. Not only that, it was in the afternoon. I could see a course record in the morning where it’s softer and no wind, but he played it in the teeth of the wind and that was awesome.”
The seventh-ranked Tigers brought it from all corners as Jay Mendell posted a 4-under 68 to move up 41 places in the standings and Matty Dodd-Berry and Arni Sveinsson both had 3-under par 69s. Mendell moved up 41 spots and Dodd-Berry 30 to finish 54 holes at T47 even par. Sveinsson moved up 44 spots.
LSU as a team had 28 birdies, led by the nine by Hayes. Mendell and Sveinsson each had six, Dodd-Berry 4 and Noah McWilliams 3. LSU has 53 birdies for the first three rounds, tied-fifth in the 30-team field. LSU is T4 on par-3 scoring at 3.03 (+2) and Hayes is the tournament leader on the par 4s at 3.77 (-7).
Even more impressive, after this comeback the Tigers are only three shots out of eighth place, which will be the cut after Monday’s round at 1-under par by Duke. Coach Amos now has to get his troops ready to go again.
“I mean, we’ve got the game plan already,” he said. “Just do the same again. The biggest thing now is just making sure our energy is good. Probably go to In-and-Out Burger again, same meal we had yesterday, and just try and keep the same energy going.”
No. 1 Auburn is the tournament leader at 22-under par, three shots up on Texas and its 10 shots back to Vanderbilt at -9.
LSU will start on hole 10 again on Monday at 10:41 Pacific Time, 12:41 p.m. Baton Rouge time.
The final round will be televised over-the-air by The GOLF Channel beginning at 2:30 p.m. PT (4:30 p.m. Baton Rouge time). Live scoring is available at Scoreboard.clippd.com.
NCAA DIVISION I MEN’S GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP
Carlsbad, California – OMNI La Costa Resort & Spa North Course
Third Round Team Results – Par 288-864
Top 15 advance to play on Monday
1 Auburn – 284-272-286 – 842 (-22)
2 Texas – 287-277-281 – 845 (-19)
3 Vanderbilt – 287-277-291 – 855 (-9)
T4 UCLA – 280-289-287 – 856 (-8)
T4 Arizona – 287-285-284 – 856 (-8)
T4 Oklahoma State – 295-274-287 – 856 (-8)
7 North Carolina – 287-288-283 – 858 (-6)
8 Duke – 286-286-291 – 863 (-1)
9 Oklahoma – 292-284-288 – 864 (E)
T10 Virginia – 288-284-293 – 865 (+1)
T10 Florida – 291-290-284 – 865 (+1)
T12 LSU – 303-293-270 – 866 (+2)
T12 San Diego – 286-291-289 — 866 (+2)
T12 Tennessee 292-287-287 — 866 (+2)
T12 Stanford 291-286-289 — 866 (+2)
— missed cut —
16 Pepperdine – 868 (+4)
17 Mississippi State – 871 (+7)
18 BYU – 873 (+9)
19 Arkansas – 874 (+10)
20 Georgia – 876 (+12)
21 Arizona State — 877 (+13)
22 Arkansas State — 879 (+15)
23 Purdue — 880 (+16)
24 Louisville – 881 (+17)
25 Texas A&M – 882 (+18)
T26 Ole Miss – 884 (+20)
T26 Chattanooga – 884 (+20)
28 Memphis – 887 (+23)
29 Southern California – 890 (+26)
30 Florida State – 899 (+35)
LSU Scores
T32 Dan Hayes – 76-75-64 – 215 -1
T47 Matty Dodd-Berry – 75-72-69 – 216 E
T47 Jay Mendell – 75-73-68 – 216 E
T72 Arni Sveinsson – 77-74-69 – 220 +4
T127 Noah McWilliams – 78-74-74 – 226 +10
That was part of LSU Coach Jake Amos’ message to his team prior to what appeared to be the final round of the season when LSU teed off here Sunday in the third round of the NCAA Division I Men’s Golf Championship at the OMNI La Costa Resort & Spa North Course.
The Tigers were tied for 27th, 20-over par after two rounds, and 17 shots behind the number at the 15 spot (+3) for the first cut after 54 holes.
What happened by the time early evening fell in the Pacific Time Zone was one of the most improbable comebacks by an LSU team in several years.
LSU posted the best round of the day by nine shots, posting an 18-under-par 270 to move up 15 places into a tie for 12th place at 2-over 866 and earning a spot in the final round of the championships on Monday afternoon.
The most stunned team had to be Pepperdine which since early afternoon had stood in 15th place at 4-over par for 54 holes. The Waves would finish in 16th place as LSU tied with San Diego, Tennessee and Stanford for 12th.
The amazing total of 18-under topped the school record mark for an NCAA Championship of 11-under par 277 in 2017 in round two at Sugar Grove, Illinois (Rich Harvest Farms Golf Club).
Leading the charge was England freshman Dan Hayes, who spurred by a rallying par after hitting in the water on his ninth hole of the day (the par-5 18th), birdied 5 of his last 6 holes to shoot an 8-under round of 64.
Hayes not only moved up 84 spots on the leaderboard to tied-32nd at 1-under 215, he posted the lowest NCAA Tournament round in school history, topping the mark of 65 (-7) by John Peterson in the 2011 championships in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
How wild and ridiculous was this comeback?
“I might be at a loss for words,” said Coach Amos. “We talked about just not quitting, and we kind of tried to play the golf course in different sections. Get off to hot start, survive 12 through 14, and we did that. It is just kind of the proudest I’ve ever been of any team. I booked our flights before the round. I’m just gonna tell you. But our message, seriously, was let’s just see what we can do. No pressure just be super aggressive. I think we were tentative in round one and we weren’t really clicking. Tigers don’t quit and we didn’t. We finally showed the firepower this team has.”
quote:The five LSU players in the play 5-count 4 format of college golf posted a combined 12-under par on holes 10-18 to start the day. This was the same nine holes that LSU started on in the first round on Friday and the five players posted 12-over par.
"It is just kind of the proudest I’ve ever been of any team. I booked our flights before the round. I’m just gonna tell you. But our message, seriously, was let’s just see what we can do."
- LSU Head Coach Jake Amos
Hayes was 3-under par after eight holes, but his ninth hole, the par-5 18th was not looking good after a water ball. But a strong approach and short putt gave him a par and momentum heading to the front nine.
It all clicked for Hayes as he posted birdies on the fourth, fifth, par-5 sixth and seventh, before a great approach on the difficult ninth gave him a score of 31 on the final nine (holes 1-9) and the school mark.
“We’ve seen how good (Dan Hayes) has been all year and he’s been literally just waiting for a round like that,” said Coach Amos. “I’m delighted he got it today.”
“Coming down 18 (his ninth hole of the day), I made par with a seven iron for my fourth shot. I think that was when I kind of knew, I could take it low,” said Hayes. “I’ve been playing fine all week. I just knew we needed to make birdies. We were terrible the first round. I think everyone will say it, and we just knew we had to go low, and I think today there was no holding back. Like we had nothing to lose, and we know how good we are. Every single one of us can shoot seven, eight under, so when it all clicks, it clicks.”
“He’s never had a low one yet,” said Amos. “For him to finish it off in the biggest stage, a course record at La Costa, that’s going to be tough to beat. Not only that, it was in the afternoon. I could see a course record in the morning where it’s softer and no wind, but he played it in the teeth of the wind and that was awesome.”
The seventh-ranked Tigers brought it from all corners as Jay Mendell posted a 4-under 68 to move up 41 places in the standings and Matty Dodd-Berry and Arni Sveinsson both had 3-under par 69s. Mendell moved up 41 spots and Dodd-Berry 30 to finish 54 holes at T47 even par. Sveinsson moved up 44 spots.
LSU as a team had 28 birdies, led by the nine by Hayes. Mendell and Sveinsson each had six, Dodd-Berry 4 and Noah McWilliams 3. LSU has 53 birdies for the first three rounds, tied-fifth in the 30-team field. LSU is T4 on par-3 scoring at 3.03 (+2) and Hayes is the tournament leader on the par 4s at 3.77 (-7).
Even more impressive, after this comeback the Tigers are only three shots out of eighth place, which will be the cut after Monday’s round at 1-under par by Duke. Coach Amos now has to get his troops ready to go again.
“I mean, we’ve got the game plan already,” he said. “Just do the same again. The biggest thing now is just making sure our energy is good. Probably go to In-and-Out Burger again, same meal we had yesterday, and just try and keep the same energy going.”
No. 1 Auburn is the tournament leader at 22-under par, three shots up on Texas and its 10 shots back to Vanderbilt at -9.
LSU will start on hole 10 again on Monday at 10:41 Pacific Time, 12:41 p.m. Baton Rouge time.
The final round will be televised over-the-air by The GOLF Channel beginning at 2:30 p.m. PT (4:30 p.m. Baton Rouge time). Live scoring is available at Scoreboard.clippd.com.
NCAA DIVISION I MEN’S GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP
Carlsbad, California – OMNI La Costa Resort & Spa North Course
Third Round Team Results – Par 288-864
Top 15 advance to play on Monday
1 Auburn – 284-272-286 – 842 (-22)
2 Texas – 287-277-281 – 845 (-19)
3 Vanderbilt – 287-277-291 – 855 (-9)
T4 UCLA – 280-289-287 – 856 (-8)
T4 Arizona – 287-285-284 – 856 (-8)
T4 Oklahoma State – 295-274-287 – 856 (-8)
7 North Carolina – 287-288-283 – 858 (-6)
8 Duke – 286-286-291 – 863 (-1)
9 Oklahoma – 292-284-288 – 864 (E)
T10 Virginia – 288-284-293 – 865 (+1)
T10 Florida – 291-290-284 – 865 (+1)
T12 LSU – 303-293-270 – 866 (+2)
T12 San Diego – 286-291-289 — 866 (+2)
T12 Tennessee 292-287-287 — 866 (+2)
T12 Stanford 291-286-289 — 866 (+2)
— missed cut —
16 Pepperdine – 868 (+4)
17 Mississippi State – 871 (+7)
18 BYU – 873 (+9)
19 Arkansas – 874 (+10)
20 Georgia – 876 (+12)
21 Arizona State — 877 (+13)
22 Arkansas State — 879 (+15)
23 Purdue — 880 (+16)
24 Louisville – 881 (+17)
25 Texas A&M – 882 (+18)
T26 Ole Miss – 884 (+20)
T26 Chattanooga – 884 (+20)
28 Memphis – 887 (+23)
29 Southern California – 890 (+26)
30 Florida State – 899 (+35)
LSU Scores
T32 Dan Hayes – 76-75-64 – 215 -1
T47 Matty Dodd-Berry – 75-72-69 – 216 E
T47 Jay Mendell – 75-73-68 – 216 E
T72 Arni Sveinsson – 77-74-69 – 220 +4
T127 Noah McWilliams – 78-74-74 – 226 +10
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here. Filed Under: LSU Sports
Popular Stories
Latest Headlines








