The heavily favored Waves turned Reflection Bay into their own personal prepping grounds for the upcoming NCAA Regionals, carding a 49-under score of 815 on rounds of 269-272-274 to win their third consecutive WCC title in wire-to-wire fashion. The Waves put a quick stronghold on the tournament after turning in 19-under 269 on Friday to open an eight-stroke lead over San Francisco, and then increased the margin to 15 on day 2 before winning by a 24-stroke margin over their closest pursuer, BYU. San Francisco finished third at 22-under, one stroke ahead of fourth place St. Mary’s.
Pepperdine’s Clay Feagler claimed WCC medalist honors for the second time in his career, defeating teammate Dylan Menante on the second playoff hole after both players finished at 11-under 205 in regulation.
“Our conference gets better every year, so to pull it out like this, it means more and more to the program and our players,” said Beard, last year’s national coach of the year. “We didn't know exactly what to expect from the course. We knew that if the wind was down it was scoreable. It was a great course. It was a great experience for us. It's a weird feeling when you have two players you want to win in the playoff, but they can't.
I'm really happy for Clay. Dylan's a great player, he's had such a great year, and I feel for him. But we're happy to win as a team and to have the individual winner is special.”
@PeppGolf set all sorts of tournament records en route to their 3rd straight #WCCsports title!
— West Coast Conference (@WCCsports) May 2, 2021
🗣 Hear from medalist @ClayFeagler and @CoachMBeard on the Waves' dominant win. pic.twitter.com/37sdUmz6mh
It was the fourth career win for the veteran Feagler, who also claimed top individual honors at the 2018 WCC Championships. “It's kind of crazy, winning it back in 2018 and I didn't know how big it was back then,” said the fifth-year senior. “But now being a two-time winner, it hits home more. You never want to face your teammate in a playoff, it's the worst thing possible, but I was glad to come out on top today ... The last four events we've been trending the right direction. We've been playing well. Going to Regionals, we need to keep playing consistent golf and keep our composure and try to get top five.” Junior Joe Highsmith, who was coming off a win at the Western Intercollegiate in April, shot a final round 66 and tied for third with a 10-under score of 206, along with BYU’s Craig Lundell and St. Mary’s Ethan Ashbrook.
Pepperdine senior Joey Vrzich also earned a top-10 finish, tying for seventh at 8-under 208 while teammate William Mouw tuned up for his Walker Cup appearance next week by tying for 13th with a 5-under score of 211.
Pepperdine figures to be a high seed then the NCAA Regional fields are announced on Wednesday on GOLF Channel. San Francisco, ranked 25th by Golfstat, will likely receive an at-large berth while San Diego (64th) also hopes to see its name revealed on Wednesday’s selection show.
Pepperdine Athletic Communications contributed to this report.
