It gets even better.
That's because the college player will play his own ball, with the players scoring lowest earning an exemption into the Northern Trust Open, which begins three days later at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif. You can bet that O.D. Vincent, the Tournament Director of that PGA Tour event, a former golf coach at Washington and UCLA, had more than a little to do with this unique opportunity coming to fruition.
“We are excited to launch the Northern Trust Open Collegiate Showcase and are thrilled with the caliber of players who are giving back to their schools by participating,” said Vincent in a press release. “Our goal is to promote growth of the game by bringing more attention, and ultimately funds, to collegiate golf, and to offer another avenue for an up-and-coming collegiate player to experience the best the PGA Tour has to offer.”
How do the players feel about it? The local
universities, like UCLA and USC, are bound to
have
the most pressure on them.
"Playing in the event for me would be a dream come true since it's right in my backyard," UCLA junior Jonathan Garrick told Golfweek. "I've played that course [Riviera Country Club] many times when they have had the grandstands up and always wanted to be apart of the real deal. It's a special opportunity that us college players have never before gotten to experience. It's not often we get to play alongside Tour pros on such a world- class course, let alone compete for an exemption."
Wake Forest freshman Will Zalatoris, who will play with Bill Haas, was equally excited.
"Our coach told us at the beginning of the fall that the player with the lowest scoring average gets a spot in the field," Zalatoris told Golfweek. "I'm excited. ... It'll be a great test. It's a dream of mine to one day play on the PGA Tour and it'd mean a lot (to earn the exemption), but more than anything, being an 18-year-old punk, I'll be there to learn."
The pro and two amateurs will play best-ball for the chance to win $50,000 for that university's golf program. The team and player list follows. Click on the college player's name for a complete bio and rankings info. (At press time, Oklahoma State had yet to determine it's representative.)
- Oklahoma State – Morgan Hoffmann, TBD
- Wake Forest - Bill Haas, Will Zalatoris
- Kentucky – J.B. Holmes, Tyler McDaniel
- Texas A&M – Ryan Palmer, Greg Yates
- Arizona – Jim Furyk, George Cunningham
- Clemson – Ben Martin, Cody Proveaux
- UCLA - Kevin Chappell, Jonathan Garrick
- Pacific – James Field Jr., Byron Meth
- UC Riverside – Brendan Steele, David Gazzolo
- Pepperdine – Michael Putnam, Kevin DeHuff
- USC – Dave Stockton Jr., Rico Hoey
- Georgia – Harris English, Lee McCoy
- Oregon – Casey Martin, Brandon McIver
- Texas – Jordan Spieth, Kramer Hickok



