Orlando Sentinel

Gators in spotlight at NCAA golf regional

- By Edgar Thompson

GAINESVILL­E — The 2017 Florida Gators had talent, men’s golf coach J.C. Deacon knew.

What Deacon found out at the worst time a season ago, his team lacked toughness.

Deacon trusts that his current squad is wired differentl­y. The true test will come at this week’s NCAA regional at the Reunion Resort’s Watson Course in Kissimmee.

The Gators are the No. 2 seed behind Vanderbilt in the 14-team, three-day event hosted by No. 10 seed UCF. USF is the No. 4 seed.

The top five teams advance to the NCAA championsh­ip, slated for May 25-30 in Stillwater, Okla.

“I really believe in these guys,” Deacon said. “We’ve got a great team. I don’t think we’ve played our best golf yet.

“I’m expecting to see these next three weeks.”

Deacon had high hopes for last year’s squad, too.

The top seed in the West Lafayette (Ind.) Regional appeared on its way to the NCAA Championsh­ip until wet, windy and chilly conditions arrived on the final day and the Gators wilted.

Three players shot 80 or worse and no one threatened par as UF plummeted to eighth place and headed home.

“It was hard. There’s no doubt, it was cold, it was really windy, it was rainy,” Deacon recalled. “It was difficult.”

But as Deacon watched University of Illinois players wearing shirt sleeves and moving up the leaderboar­d, he knew things needed to change back in Gainesvill­e.

“It was a pretty soft team when I ultimately looked back on it,” Deacon said of the Gators. “It was a great it lesson for me as a coach and it was a great lesson for our program. You can’t just win on talent.”

Deacon looked to make life harder on his players when they returned to school in August.

Workouts were made more demanding and qualifying rounds were much more frequent, forcing players to earn a spot in the top five each week. Deacon, in his fourth season at UF, said he made a lot of coach’s picks during previous years.

“They weren’t just given anything,” Deacon said. “They had to earn it. This time of year is when it really is going to pay off.”

Deacon saw the dividends at the end of last month during the SEC Championsh­ips.

The Gators were tied for 12th among 14 teams after one round of qualifying but finished tied for second two days later. On the final day, four players shot in the 60s as UF passed 10 teams in a conference that would send every school to the NCAAs.

“That was a special day,” Deacon said. “These guys should know they can be the best of the best when they put their mind to it.”

Orlando’s Andy Zhang led the way with a 66 at the SECs to win the league’s individual title. The sophomore, who will turn profession­al at season’s end, now will return to the course where he grew up on the fourth hole and estimates he has played 1,000 times.

“He’s going to know course better than anyone in the tournament — that’s huge,” Deacon said. “But at the same time, you still have to put scores up and make the putts.”

Deacon expects nothing less from a collection he calls “five strong.” The top four scores count each day.

Zhang and junior Gordon Neale, who has a team-best 70.92 scoring average, have been UF’s most consistent players. Senior Alejandro Tosti was the 2017 SEC champion. Freshmen Joel Axlesen and Chris Nodi play like veterans.

The Gators are ranked No. 10 nationally and not viewed as a threat like last year’s squad. But Deacon believes his team is capable of bringing home the school’s first national title in 17 years.

“I’m telling you, we’ve got a great team,” he said. “We just have to go out and execute. I have a lot of faith in what these guys are going to do.”

 ?? COURTESY OF UAA ?? UF golf coach J.C. Deacon has high hopes the Gators will be tougher during the start of NCAA Tournament play.
COURTESY OF UAA UF golf coach J.C. Deacon has high hopes the Gators will be tougher during the start of NCAA Tournament play.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States