Charles Fischer Administrator No. 1 Share Posted 23 hours ago Ducks in the Hunt after 36 Holes in Baltimore BALTIMORE – The Oregon men’s golf team shot battled tough winds to climb into second place after two rounds at the Big Ten Championships. The Ducks moved two spots up the leaderboard after firing a 1-under 279 for the second day in a row at Baltimore Country Club and will enter Sunday’s final round with a shot at the Big Ten Title. Illinois leads the field at 8 under, six strokes ahead of Oregon. “We played really well today,” head coach Casey Martin said. “It was a tough finish once again, it got super windy at the end, but we have a chance tomorrow. It’s going to take some great golf but we have a chance.” Jay Gould-Healy and Greyson Leach continued to lead the Ducks in the second round. The pair is tied for third individually at 4 under after Leach turned in his second flawless scorecard in as many rounds and Gould-Healy shot in the red for the second day in a row. Omar Morales from UCLA leads the field at 7 under. How It Happened Teeing off on No. 1, Gould-Healy opened his round with a bogey but made three birdies before the turn. He played his back nine 1 over with two bogeys and a birdie to finish the day with a 1-under 69. Jay Gould-Healy Leach turned in an almost identical scorecard on Saturday as he did on Friday, finishing 2 under with 16 pars and two birdies. He capitalized on the par-4 5th and the par-5 12th to move into the top three. Aiden Krafft shot in the red for the first time in Baltimore, finishing with a 1-under 69. The junior was even at the turn after answering a bogey with a birdie. Sitting at 1 over through 14 holes, Krafft made birdie on two of his last four, including No. 18, to move into a tie for 22nd place. Ramil Saelim turned in a 3-over 73 for the Ducks’ final counting score. Duck Scorecard Big Ten Championships Baltimore Country Club – Par 70 (7,177 yards) 2. Oregon – 279-279 – 558 (-2) T3. Jay Gould-Healy – 67-69 – 136 (-4) T3. Greyson Leach – 68-68 – 136 (-4) T22. Aiden Krafft – 72-69 – 141 (+1) T72. Ramil Saelim – 74-73 – 147 (+7) T77. Eric Doyle – 72-76 – 148 (+8) Notable Gould-Healy is tied for third in the field with eight birdies so far this weekend, accounting for a third of Oregon’s 24 birdies … Leach leads the field with 32 pars … Leach needs just four more birdies to eclipse 400 in his UO career. Next Up Oregon will tee off at Baltimore Country Club to begin the final round of play at 6:40 a.m. PT, with UO’s final time going off at 7:20 a.m. Big Ten Network coverage begins at 10 a.m. 1 Mr. FishDuck Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Charles Fischer Author Administrator No. 2 Share Posted 3 hours ago Ducks finish fourth, but another former Pac-12 team wins it in UCLA! 1 Mr. FishDuck Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jon Joseph Moderator No. 3 Share Posted 31 minutes ago A brutal day for golf on the Baltimore Country Club course that was designed by noted golf architect A.W. Tillinghast and opened in 1898. Tillinghast was involved in the design of 256 golf courses, including US Open tracks Winged Foot, Bethpage Black, and Winged Foot in New York, and Oakland Hills in Michigan. Closer to Eugene, AW designed the Lake Merced, Presidio, and San Francisco Golf, Stanford Golf Course, and the original Monterey Peninsula golf course. courses. Today, 35 mph plus wind gusts made the course close to unplayable. Play was stopped for a few hours on Saturday due to the wind that made it impossible to mark a moving ball on the green. UCLA's Omar Morales at 7 under won the individual title. OBD's Grayson Leach finished 2nd at 4 under. Gutty effort by Leach, who shot even par, on a day when Leach and Morales were the only golfers to shoot par or better. UCLA Men’s Golf Wins First Big Ten Championship BIGTEN.ORG UCLA Men’s Golf Wins First Big Ten Championship Make no mistake, this was UCLA's first attempt to win the title as a B1G member. This was not the first Big Ten's first Men's Golf Championship. The first Big Ten Golf Championship was played in 1920. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...