CENTRAL — The Southern Wesleyan Golf team just couldn't make anything happen the past two days at the National Christian College Athletic Association Championship and settled for a 12th place finish in the 18 team field.
Joshua Ivy had the most consistent scoring rounds for the Warriors, shooting rounds of 78, 76, and 77 to finish the tournament in a tie for 27th place with a total score of 231. Teammate Pieter Martin also shot 231 for the three rounds, improving his score each round as he followed up an opening round of 80 with rounds of 76 and 75. Also competing for the Warriors were Jayson Cronk (241), Steven Bryant (251), and Cody Edwards (251).
Dallas Baptist was crowned the 2009 National Champions after firing a team score of 880 to finish 12 strokes ahead of second place Malone University. Colorado Christian's Jon Klingensmith was the tournament's individual medalist, shooting rounds of 71, 69, and 72 to finish the tournament at 4-under par which was two strokes better than Dallas Baptist's Will Dusenbury.
The Warriors will conclude their fall season at the Wilmington Island Club Intercollegiate Tournament, hosted by Savannah College of Art and Design. The tournament will be held on Oct. 26 and 27.
NCCAA Championship
Hombre Golf Club - Panama City Beach, Fla.
1. Dallas Baptist 880
2. Malone 892
3. Colorado Christian 901
4. Southeastern 907
5. North Greenville 910
6. Indiana Wesleyan 917
7. Cedarville 920
8. Campbellsville 934
9. The Master's 939
10. King 941
11. Olivet Nazarene 946
12. Southern Wesleyan 950
13. Bethel (Ind.) 953
14. Spring Arbor 957
15. Central Baptist 961
16. Simpson 965
17. Southwestern Christian 977
18. Mid-America Christian 1016
Comments
Readers are solely responsible for the content of the comments they post here. Comments are subject to the site's terms and conditions of use and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of Upstatetoday.com. Readers whose comments violate the terms of use may have their comments removed or all of their content blocked from viewing by other users without notification. Please read our entire posting policy before commenting.Post your comment
Commenting requires free upstatetoday.com registration.