NCAA men's regionals: Full fields, previews for all six sites
The NCAA announced Wednesday afternoon the 81-team field for the 2025 NCAA Division I men's golf regionals. Each of the six regionals will feature 13 to 14 teams and five or 10 individuals not on advancing teams. Among those teams are 28 conference champions and 53 at-large programs.
The regionals will be contested May 12-14 with the top five teams from each regional advancing along with the highest finishing individual not on an advancing team.
Thirty teams will comprise the field for the NCAA Championship, which begins May 23 at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California.
Reigning NCAA champion Auburn is the No. 1 overall seed this year. The Tigers are joined by five other top seeds, four of which hail from the SEC – Oklahoma State, Ole Miss, Texas, Arizona State and LSU.
Clemson and Loyola Marymount were in position for an at-large, but both programs fell below the .500 mark, making them ineligible for postseason play. It's the first time in Clemson history that the Tigers have not qualified for a regional.
Here is a look at the full regional fields:
Auburn
Auburn University Club, Auburn, Alabama (Auburn)
TEAMS
1. Auburn
2. Texas A&M
3. UCLA [Big Ten Conference]
4. SMU
5. Georgia Tech
6. Oregon
7. Purdue
8. Little Rock [Ohio Valley Conference]
9. TCU
10. Charleston
11. New Mexico State
12. Loyola Maryland [Patriot League]
13. USC Upstate [Big South Conference]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Louis Anceaux, University of Louisiana Monroe
2. Claes Borregaard, Kennesaw State
3. Xing Luo, North Alabama
4. Thomas Schmidt, Arkansas State
5. Parker Claxton, Georgia Southern
6. Camden Braidech, Chattanooga
7. Yixiang Wang, Memphis
8. Jack Maxey, Arkansas State [Sun Belt Conference]
9. Jeep Patrick, Presbyterian [Big South Conference]
10. Jonathan Xoinis, UT Martin [Ohio Valley Conference]
Urbana
Atkins Golf Club, Urbana, Illinois (Illinois)
TEAMS
1. Oklahoma State [Big 12 Conference]
2. North Carolina
3. Illinois
4. Texas Tech
5. Long Beach State [Big West Conference]
6. UNLV
7. Houston
8. Marquette [Big East Conference]
9. Troy
10. Pacific
11. NC State
12. Illinois State [Missouri Valley Conference]
13. Wright State [Horizon League]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Hunter Thomson, Michigan
2. Jack Schoenberger, Kentucky
3. Paul Beauvy, Iowa State
4. Patton Samuels, Austin Peay
5. Anthony Delisanti, Valparaiso
6. Clay Merchent, Indiana
7. Ryan Ford, Cincinnati
8. Ben Cors, Dayton [Atlantic 10 Conference]
9. Titus Boswell, IU Indy [Horizon League]
10. Trey Wall, Murray State [Missouri Valley Conference]
Tallahassee
Seminole Legacy Golf Club, Tallahassee, Florida (Florida State)
TEAMS
1. Ole Miss
2. Florida State
3. San Diego State [Mountain West Conference]
4. Georgia
5. Louisville
6. Northwestern
7. Notre Dame
8. New Mexico
9. USC
10. Michigan State
11. Furman
12. Augusta [Southland Conference]
13. Davidson [Atlantic 10 Conference]
14. Florida A&M [Southwestern Athletic Conference]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Malan Potgieter, Louisiana
2. NaShawn Tyson, Florida Atlantic
3. Hugo Thyr, South Alabama
4. Niilo Maki-Petaja, Louisiana Tech
5. Gaspar Glaudas, Stetson [ASUN Conference]
Reno
Montreux Golf and Country Club, Reno, Nevada (Nevada)
TEAMS
1. Texas
2. Virginia [Atlantic Coast Conference]
3. Alabama
4. Duke
5. Mississippi State
6. Brigham Young
7. San Diego
8. Santa Clara
9. California
10. Grand Canyon
11. Sam Houston [Conference USA]
12. East Tennessee State [Southern Conference]
13. Central Arkansas [ASUN Conference]
14. Fairfield [Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Dane Huddleston, Utah Valley [Western Athletic Conference]
2. Baron Szeto, Cal Poly
3. Max Schliesing, UTEP
4. Tegan Andrews, Cal State Fullerton
5. Dylan Teeter, UTEP
Bremerton
Gold Mountain Golf Club, Bremerton, Washington (Washington)
TEAMS
1. Arizona State
2. Florida [Southeastern Conference]
3. Utah
4. South Carolina
5. South Florida
6. Colorado
7. Charlotte [American Athletic Conference]
8. Kansas
9. Colorado State
10. Kansas State
11. Elon [Coastal Athletic Association]
12. Coastal Carolina [Sun Belt Conference]
13. Oral Roberts [The Summit League]
14. Seattle U [Western Athletic Conference]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Sam Renner, Washington State
2. Lukas Boandl, Rice
3. Mason Snyder, Loyola Marymount
4. Cade Anderson, Loyola Marymount
5. Daniel Zou, Rice
Amherst
Poplar Grove Golf Club, Amherst, Virginia (Liberty)
TEAMS
1. LSU
2. Oklahoma
3. Vanderbilt
4. Pepperdine [West Coast Conference]
5. Tennessee
6. Arizona
7. Stanford
8. Wake Forest
9. Arkansas
10. Florida Gulf Coast
11. Kent State [Mid-American Conference]
12. Princeton [The Ivy League]
13. Howard [Northeast Conference]
INDIVIDUALS
1. Andrew Swanson, Clemson
2. Kaleb Wilson, West Virginia
3. Ike Joy, Liberty
4. Emil Riegger, Maryland
5. Peicheng Chen, St. John's (New York)
6. Sakke Siltala, Texas State
7. Henric Bjelke, Campbell [Coastal Athletic Association]
8. Colin Dutton, UNCG [Southern Conference]
9. Alex Heard, UConn [Big East Conference]
10. Nolan Schuermann, Holy Cross [Patriot League]

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

40 minutes ago
Why thousands of NCAA athletes might wait over a year for share of $2.8 billion settlement
The attorney who negotiated the $2.8 billion legal settlement for the NCAA said Friday that thousands of former athletes due to receive damages could have to wait months or maybe more than a year to get paid while appeals play out. Rakesh Kilaru, who served as the NCAA's lead counsel for the House settlement that was approved last week, told The Associated Press an appeal on Title IX grounds filed this week will hold up payments due to around 390,000 athletes who signed on to the class-action settlement. He said he has seen appeals take up to 18 months in the California-based federal court where this case is playing out, though that isn't necessarily what he expects. 'I will say that we, and I'm sure the plaintiffs, are going to push,' Kilaru said. A schedule filed this week calls for briefs related to the appeal to be filed by Oct. 3. Kilaru doesn't expect anyone on the defendant or plaintiff side to file for extensions in the case 'because every day the appeal goes on is a day damages don't go to the student-athletes.' He said while the appeal is ongoing, the NCAA will pay the money into a fund that will be ready to go when needed. The other critical parts of the settlement -- the part that allows each school to share up to $20.5 million in revenue with current players and set up an enforcement arm to regulate it -- are in effect regardless of appeals. 'I think everyone thought it was important and good for this new structure to start working because it does have a lot of benefits for students,' Kilaru said. 'But it's very common for damages to be delayed in this way for the simple reason that you don't want to make payments to people that you can't recover' if the appeal is successful. A group of eight female athletes filed the appeal. Their attorney, Ashlyn Hare, said they supported settlement of the case 'but not an inaccurate one that violates federal law.' "The calculation of past damages is based on an error that ignores Title IX and deprives female athletes of $1.1 billion,' Hare said. Kilaru agreed with plaintiff attorneys who have argued that Title IX violations are outside the scope of the lawsuit. Other objections to the settlement came from athletes who said they were damaged by roster limits set by the terms. One attorney representing a group of those objectors, Steven Molo, said they were reviewing Wilken's decision and exploring options.


USA Today
3 hours ago
- USA Today
What happened when LSU and Arkansas played during the regular season?
What happened when LSU and Arkansas played during the regular season? An All-SEC matchup awaits LSU baseball in Omaha as it faces Arkansas to open the College World Series. Both sides will send their ace pitchers to the mound for Saturday's matchup in all-conference first-teamers in Kade Anderson and Zach Root. The Tigers took the first matchup between the pair in the regular season. The Razorbacks have yet to lose a game in the 2025 NCAA Tournament. They defeated Creighton twice and North Dakota State in the regional along with a two-game sweep of Tennessee in the Fayetteville Super Regional. All but one game was decided by four or more runs. LSU made things interesting in the Baton Rouge regional, needing a championship game-win over Little Rock to get through to super regional. The Tigers handled West Virginia inside Alex Box Stadium, earning them a chance to win their second national championship in three years. The regular season series in early May between LSU and Arkansas gave fans a bit of everything, from extra innings to a mercy rule. What happened during the regular season series between LSU and Arkansas? To start off the series in Baton Rouge, Anderson and Root took the mound on Friday. The Tigers' southpaw allowed three runs over 5.2 innings and struck out 10 while Root struck out six and gave up two runs. In the bottom of the tenth inning, Ethan Frey's sacrifice fly allowed Jared Jones to score from third base, sealing the 5-4 victory. LSU cemented the series win in seven innings on Saturday. In the 13-3 win, the Tigers clubbed four homers. Jake Brown went yard twice with five RBI while Frey batted in four runs on two hits. Anthony Eyanson picked up the win, hurling six scoreless innings with 11 strikeouts. Arkansas salvaged the series finale with a 7-4 win on Sunday. Three Razorbacks finished with two hits while their bullpen held off the LSU offense. Casan Evans, one of eight Tigers pitchers to see action, took the loss as he allowed four runs on seven hits over 3.2 innings.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rocket Classic field: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley, Min Woo Lee join PGA Tour in Detroit
The 2025 Rocket Classic just got a jolt of star power. The PGA Tour's annual stop in Detroit announced more player commitments Monday, June 2, for the tournament June 26-29 at Detroit Golf Club, with the headliners including U.S. Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley, Patrick Cantlay, Max Homa, Min Woo Lee, a fan favorite last year, Tom Kim and Aaron Rai. Advertisement Cantlay, No. 16 in the Official World Golf Ranking, and Bradley, No. 17, join Collin Morikawa, No. 4 in the world and a two-time major winner, to form a more robust 2025 field. Last year's tournament field did not have a player ranked among the world's top 20 for the first time in its six-year history, with Cameron Young the top player at No. 23. (Dustin Johnson at the 2019 Rocket was ranked No. 2 in the world, the highest-ranked golfer to ever play the tournament. He missed the cut.) Morikawa, the top-ranked player in this year's field, lost in heartbreaking fashion in his only appearance in Detroit in 2023 to Rickie Fowler in a three-man playoff. Patrick Cantlay putts on the 5th green during Round 1 of the Rocket Mortgage Classic at the Detroit Golf Club in Detroit on Thurs., July 28, 2022. Cantlay finished tied for second in 2022, his lone appearance in Detroit, five strokes behind winner Tony Finau. Bradley tied for 21st in 2023 and tied for 14th in 2021. Lee and Rai finished tied for second last year. Advertisement Australia's Cam Davis is the defending champion, rallying to win last year on Akshay Bhatia's shocking three-putt. Davis is the only two-time Rocket winner in Detroit. Cam Davis lifts up the trophy to celebrate winning Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club in Detroit on Sunday, June 30, 2024. Others in the field include past Rocket champions Davis (2024, 2021), Fowler (2023), Finau (2022) and Nate Lashley (2019), along with veterans Zach Johnson and Brandt Snedeker. Bryson DeChambeau, the tournament's 2020 winner, remains barred from playing on the PGA Tour after defecting to rival LIV Golf in 2022. Also in this year's field is NCAA Division 1 individual champion Michael La Sasso, an Ole Miss junior. More commitments will take place up until a week before the tournament, when the 150-plus-man field begins to finalize, including the winner of The John Shippen on June 21-22 at Detroit Golf Club. Sixteen Black golfers will compete over 36 holes for one spot into the Rocket Classic. Advertisement The Tour's seventh playing of the tournament at the Donald Ross-designed Detroit Golf Club has a $9.6 million purse. Right after this year's tournament, Detroit Golf Club will undergo a $16 million renovation under the direction of architect Tyler Rae. More than 100 trees will be removed, native grasses and ditches will be added, greens will be moved and enlarged and bunkers will be added. The changes, the first major transformation of the club's North Course since it opened more than a century ago, will be revealed at the 2026 Rocket Classic. Follow the Detroit Free Press on Instagram (@detroitfreepress), TikTok (@detroitfreepress), YouTube (@DetroitFreePress), X (@freep), and LinkedIn, and like us on Facebook (@detroitfreepress). Stay connected and stay informed. Become a Detroit Free Press subscriber. Advertisement Submit a letter to the editor at and we may publish it online or in print. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Rocket Classic field 2025: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley commit