The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wiser Tech begins NCAA championsh­ip

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

A year ago, members of the Georgia Tech golf team arrived in Scottsdale, Ariz., with a most useful ally accompanyi­ng them to the NCAA championsh­ip — local knowledge. In January of that year, coach Bruce Heppler had brought the team to the Grayhawk Golf Club for seven rounds to learn the course that would host the NCAA championsh­ip later that year.

While Tech did reach the NCAA finals, the familiarit­y didn’t prove as beneficial as planned. In the heat and dry conditions of June, the course played much shorter than it had in the relative cool of January. The Yellow Jackets, a long-hitting bunch, were hitting through target areas on the course and had to adjust their strategy. Seeded 22nd of 30 teams, Tech did make a 15-team cut after three rounds, but did not advance to the eight-team match-play portion.

“They were just used to hitting driver on those holes, so the course changed completely,” Tech coach Bruce Heppler told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on this week. “I still think it helped us being familiar with the place for how we performed last year, but I think we’ll be a little more prepared for what (clubs) to use.”

The NCAA championsh­ip is back at Grayhawk, and so is Tech. The Jackets, along with Georgia and Georgia Southern, will begin pursuit of NCAA glory with the first round today. Tech is seeded 10th of 30 teams in the field, followed by UGA at No. 14 and Georgia Southern at No. 28. The Bulldogs are making their 50th appearance in the finals, the Jackets their 31st and the Eagles their 16th. UGA won national titles in 1999 and 2005.

Tech players have had low-iron clubs made for the event to hit off the tee. After using his driver only once in one of his four rounds at Grayhawk last year, Christo Lamprecht had a 3-iron club custom built for his 6-foot-8 frame that he’ll use to drive off the tee.

Lamprecht is one of three returning Jackets who played at Grayhawk last year, along with Connor Howe and Bartley Forrester. Benjamin Reuter and Ross Steelman fill out the five-man team. Lamprecht, Forrester and Howe were ALL-ACC selections.

“I feel like I’m much more of an all-around golfer this year than last year,” Lamprecht said. “I feel like last year, I wasn’t able to adapt to a course that didn’t suit me, and I feel like I’ve been working on different aspects of my game, so I feel a lot better about that. And as a team, I think we’re so much more ready to play there.”

Perhaps that adjustment will help the Jackets bring

home the lone item missing from their vast trophy case — a national championsh­ip. While Oklahoma and Oklahoma State are the favorites in the event, Heppler likes the team he’ll bring with him, calling the group “one of the best teams we’ve ever had” in his 27 years at Tech. Considerin­g that Heppler has taken 18 teams to the NCAA finals at Tech with 11 finishing in the top eight, it’s significan­t praise. The Jackets have won or shared the title at five tournament­s in 202122, including a tie for their NCAA region championsh­ip at Columbus, Ohio.

All 30 teams this weekend will play three rounds, with the top 15 teams advancing to a fourth round Monday. Out of the top 15, the top eight teams after the fourth round will advance to match play that begins Tuesday.

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