Not to say the Waves didn't have the firepower to maintain their lofty national presence, as transfers Sam Choi, Luke Gifford and Roberto Nieves joined stalwarts William Mouw and Derek Hitchner to form a talented lineup that Beard knew was going to take some time to gel.
Well, the new look Waves came of age this week, winning The Prestige at PGA West in wire-to-wire fashion. Pepperdine's 8-under team total of 844 in trying conditions at La Quinta resulted in a six-shot win over No. 6 Texas Tech (-2; 850) and No. 5 Stanford (+5; 857). Behind a 2-under 69 by Hitchner, Pepperdine carded a 6-over team score of 290 on Wednesday to hold off Texas Tech, which was 4-over on the day.
In a battle between the top two amateurs in the world, Texas Tech's Ludvig Aberg came from two strokes off the pace at the start of the day to overtake Stanford's Michael Thorbjornsen to win his third consecutive Prestige individual title at 6-under 207.𝙏𝙃𝙍𝙀𝙀 𝙋𝙀𝘼𝙏
— Texas Tech Men’s Golf (@TexasTechMGolf) February 23, 2023
Luvdvig goes back-to-back-to-back at The Prestige holding off No. 2 Michael Thorbjornsen and William Mouw of Pepperdine pic.twitter.com/RBWgmbBzgM
One can only wonder how many more times Aberg and Thorbjornsen will come down the stretch of a tournament with a championship hanging in the balance during their careers. The top two amateurs in the world, along with Pepperdine's Mouw, staged a three-way battle for the individual title which no one seemed to be able to get firmly in their grasp.
At 7-under, Thorbjornsen took a one-stroke lead into the final round over Mouw and was two strokes clear of Aberg and Loyola Marymount's Tony Hendricks, who both sat at 5-under. Thorbjornsen's lead wasn't so insurmountable to say it was his tournament to lose, but unfortunately the 2021 Western Amateur champion did just that.
Thorbjornsen found himself tied with Aberg at 9-under after 14 holes and despite a bogey on the 15th, was still clinging to a one-stroke advantage after Aberg suffered a double bogey on the same hole.
However, a rollercoaster inward nine caught up with the Wellesley, Mass. native at the most inopportune time, as the Stanford junior saw the title slip from his hands after suffering back-to-back double bogeys on holes 16 and 17 which left him with a 3-over round of 74.
The beneficiary of Thorbjornsen's demise was Aberg whose pars on 16 and 17 led to a four-shot swing, which was enough to secure the championship, even with a bogey on the final hole.
Mouw got to 8-under for the tournament after a birdie on the 12th, but three dropped shots over the last six holes led to a 1-over round of 72 and a second-place finish at 5-under 208. Thorbjornsen finished in third place, two strokes back at 4-under 209.
