Friday, May 9, 2025
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Haas makes strong start in Myrtle Beach PGA Tour event

A former Wake Forest golfer with strong ties to the Triad got off to a great start Thursday at the Myrtle Beach Classic, the PGA Tour’s secondary event this weekend.

Bill Haas, a former Wake star and the nephew of coach Jerry Haas, was 4-under-par through his first 10 holes in the first round at The Dunes Golf and Beach Club, and near the top of the leaderboard.

But the 2011 FedExCup winner, who has struggled in the past decade while suffering injuries and surviving a car crash that killed one person involved, finished with seven pars and his sole bogey of the round at the Dunes Club’s par-3 ninth for 68 and a tie for 32nd.

Haas, only 42, has missed the cut in his four previous PGA Tour starts this year.

Brandt Snedeker, who shot 59 on his way to the 2018 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club and is a favorite at the Greensboro tournament, shot 73.

Like Haas, Snedeker has struggled in recent years, playing the previous two seasons on medical exemptions. Snedeker has made seven cuts in nine starts in 2025.

Webb Simpson, another struggling player with strong Wyndham and N.C. ties, withdrew from the field before the round.

Mackenzie Hughes shot 63 to take the 18-hole lead.

Triad golfers finish season with Virginia Tech

Virgina Tech, with two Triad golfers, finished ninth Wednesday in the NCAA Gold Canyon Regional.

Morgan Ketchum of Winston-Salem shot 5-over-par 221 for the Arizona tournament to finish in a tie for 20th. Emily Mathews of Mebane posted 231. Virginia Tech missed qualifying for the NCAA Championship by 15 strokes.

Newton, Wilson lead Oak Grove to regional title

Lincoln Newton shot 67 Tuesday to share medalist honors and Aidan Wilson shot 68 to lead Oak Grove to the Class 3A Midwest Regional team title at Monroe Country Club. Talan Harrison of Northwest Cabarras also shot 67.

With a 293 total, the Grizzlies won by a whopping 24 strokes over Lake Norman Charter. Piedmont claimed the third and a qualifying spot by two shots over Ledford at next week’s 3A state championship at Gates Four Country Club in Fayetteville.

Southern Alamance qualified for the 3A state championship with a second-place finish at in the Mideast Regional at Keith Hills Golf Club in Buies Creek. Landon Linch shot 73 to lead the Patriots.

Triad individual qualifiers for the 3A state championship include Hamilton Plunkett and Tyler Clayton of Western Alamance, Colton Slack and Connor Vernon of Ledford, Timothy Klein of Williams, Sirr Hill of Ben L. Smith and Daniel Dean of Rockingham County.

TriadGolf.com previously listed a partial list of individual qualifiers for Class 1A, 2A and 4A. Several others qualified, including Trevor Fowler, and Joey Pritchard of Southeast Alamance, Tatum North and Levi Harrison of West Stokes and William Floyd of West Davidson in 2A; and Sawyer Slate of South Stokes and Tyler Gee of Eastern Randolph in 1A.

Badgett, Bowman, Harvey win medalist honors at prep regionals

Pennson Badgett won medalist honors Tuesday, East Surry to a berth in the 2A state championship at Pilot Knob Park and Cameron Harvey of Northwest Guilford shared medalist at Stonebridge Golf Club in Monroe in the 4A Midwest Regional.

Brandon Bowman led Mt. Airy to the 1A Midwest Regional title by winning medalist honors with 66 at Cedarbrook. Bishop McGuinness finished third to join the Granite Bears next week at Longleaf in Southern Pines.

Badgett shot 68 as the Cardinals finished second on their home course behind Salisbury, advancing to next week’s 2A Championship at Pinehurst No. 6. North Surry finished third to advance as well.

Harvey and Chase McEvoy of Marvin Ridge shot 67 at Stonebridge. Marvin Ridge won the regional with West Forsyth and Grimsley also earning berths at the 4A state championship at Pinehurst No. 2 and No. 8. Connor Lynde of Reagan shot 74 to qualify as an individual.

Wake women win Lubbock Regional

Carolina Chacarra shot 7-under-par 209 to win medalist honors at the NCAA Regional in the Rawls Course at Texas Tech in Lubbock.

With a 2-under team total, the Demon Deacons beat Texas by four shots. Chloe Kovelesky finished third for Wake at 2-under; Anne-Sterre Den Dunnen tied for eighth at 2-over; and Macy Pate tied for 19th at 5-over.

Julia McLaughlin of High Point, playing at an individual at Lubbock, tied for 24th at 7-over. North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke and Campbell failed to advance as teams from regionals.

Dustin Johnson gets invitation to Quail Hollow

Dustin Johnson received a special invitation to play in the PGA Championship next week at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, according to the field released Tuesday by the PGA of America.

Johnson, a Columbia, South Carolina native, plays on the LIV Tour and does not meet any of the criteria for entry. Johnson’s five-year exemption for winning the 2020 Masters has run out. He was runner-up in the 2019 and 2020 PGA Championship.

In 2010, a two-stroke penalty for grounding his club in a bunker during the final round of the PGA Championship cost him a spot in a playoff.

Johnson has struggled this season, placing in the top 10 in only seven LIV Tour events this season. He missed the cut at last month’s Masters.

Other LIV Golf players in the field include Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm, Sergio Garcia, Tyrrell Hatton, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed, Cameron Smith and Joaquin Niemann. PGA Tour member Rickie Fowler also received a special invitation.

Bunker changes underway at Bryan Park

The courses at one of the Triad’s top public golf facilities will receive some changes this summer.

Sand bunkers will be replaced with grass on a few holes at Bryan Park’s Champions and Players courses.

Changes are already visible at No. 11 on the Champions course, where sand that had guarded the dogleg right on the par-4 has been taken out. The mud currently on a bank over a hazard will soon be replaced by grass.

Other changes TriadGolf.com has learned include the removal of sand on a bunker behind the ninth green at Players. Sand will be removed at least one other area at Bryan Park.

Wake women sent to Texas regional

The Wake Forest women’s golf team is seeded No. 2 behind Texas in the May 5-7 NCAA Regional in Lubbock, Texas, in assignments announced by the NCAA. Julia McLaughlin of High Point University, the individual champion of the Big South Conference tournament, will play in Lubbock as an individual.

The top five teams and the top individual in the six regionals will advance to the NCAA Championship. North Carolina is seeded third at Norman, Oklahoma, where the top seeded teams are Stanford and Northwestern. Virginia Tech, with Triad golfers Morgan Ketchum and Emily Mathews, was sent to Arizona. N.C. State will play at Charlottesville, Virginia.

Elway agent’s death reaffirms danger of golf carts with this former victim

The golf cart accident that killed John Elway’s agent Jeff Sperbeck over the weekend was a tragic fluke.

But it should serve as a reminder that golf carts can be dangerous if driver and passenger are not careful. As someone who spent eight hours in an emergency room with a broken nose and ripped rotator cuff, I know all about the danger.

Granted, Elway wasn’t driving on the course. According to reports, he was leaving a post-event party at a music festival when Sperbeck fell out and hit his head on the asphalt.

But it doesn’t take a party to make carts dangerous. Less than three years ago, I was thrown from a cart at Mountaire Aire Golf Club in West Jefferson when I applied the breaks (I didn’t slam them) while going downhill, but straight, on a wet fairway, only a few minutes after an afternoon shower.

I really don’t know why the cart skidded out of control, eventually falling on top of me on the ninth fairway. Fortunately my teenaged son, in the passenger seat, was able to step out, and was unhurt.

At the time, I didn’t know which was worse: the embarrassment or the pain.

To add insult to injury, when my son drove me back to the clubhouse, we met a cart attendant unaware of our spill. The young man told us he was headed back out on the course — he had missed us on his first trip — to warn golfers about the danger of the carts on the wet fairways.

I had to have surgery on my rotator cuff, which couldn’t be repaired. Next, came several weeks of therapy.

In case you’re wondering, there was no lawsuit. North Carolina is a contributory negligence state, requiring a plaintiff to be completely blameless.

Believe me, I’m not trying to compare a death to an inconvenient injury. But Sperbeck’s death is a horrible example of potential dangers involving golf carts.

Wake men assigned to regional in Virginia; UNC, N.C. State to Illinois

Wake Forest, Elon, North Carolina, N.C. State, Duke and UNC Charlotte each received bids Wednesdayto the NCAA Men’s Regionals. The six regionals will be held May 12-14 with the top five teams and top individuals advancing to the NCAA Championship.

Wake, the seventh-ranked team in its regional led by LSU, and UNC Greensboro’s Colin Dutton, competing as an individual, will play at Poplar Grove Golf Course in Amherst, Virginia. UNC, a No. 2 seed behind Illinois, and N.C. State will be sent to Urbana, Illinois. Elon and Charlotte will go to Bremerton, Washington. Duke was assigned to Reno, Nevada.