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Golf to Defend ACC Title this Weekend
April 14, 2005
ACC Tournament Notes in PDF Format
Clemson Lineup for ACC tournament Brent Delahoussaye and Tanner Ervin will both play in their first career ACC
Tournament. Delahoussaye has played in a conference tournament in his career,
however, as he played in the 2002 Southeastern Conference Tournament for South
Carolina. He finished 36th with a 225 score. Ervin is a freshman and has played
in three tournaments this year for the Tigers. Last year he had a 206 score and the 10-under-par was good enough for second place. He lost the individual title by just one shot to Sean Moore of Wake Forest. The 206 score is the third best 54-hole score of Ferguson's career. He had a 204 at the Topy Cup in Japan in 2003 and a 205 at the Augusta State Invitational that same year. Both of those scores were also recorded on a par 72 course. Clemson Lineup for 2005 ACC tournament
Clemson Won 2004 ACC Tournament The performance was just one shot off the ACC Tournament record or 836 set
by the 1998 Clemson team at the same Old North State Club course at New London,
NC. It marked the second straight year that Clemson had won the ACC title, the
third time Clemson has won in back to back years under Head Coach Larry Penley.
It was the eighth ACC title overall for Penley, who was recently inducted into
the College Golf Hall ofFame. He led the Tigers to the 2003 NCAA Championship. The Demon Deacons ended the 54 holes at 19 under-par, good enough to win most years, but still well back of Clemson's team figure. Georgia Tech, who had a tournament best 274 team score on Sunday, finished third with an 848 team total. N.C State was fourth at 854, while North Carolina was fifth at 856. Duke, the only ACC team to defeat Clemson twice in 2003-04, was sixth at 857. Jones and Poole led Clemson with final round 69s, while Matt Hendrix and Jack Ferguson had 70s. Brian Duncan, who had a counting score each of the first two days, had a 74 on Sunday. Sunday's final round marked just the second time all year that Clemson had four players shoot under par on the same round. "We had everyone in the game today, that was important," said Penley. "Unlike yesterday, we got off to a slow start. But, we got it going on holes 4-13 and that got us a 10-stroke lead for most of the back nine. Ferguson was Clemson's top golfer for the tournament overall with a 10-under-par 206. He finished second to Wake Forest freshman Sean Moore, who beat him by a stroke. Moore made a birdie on the final hole, while Ferguson made a par. Ferguson was third last year and has now been Clemson's top golfer at the ACC Tournament two straight years. Hendrix finished with a 208 score for the 54 holes eight-under-par and tied for third. It was his sixth top 10 finish this year, his fourth top five finish in the spring. Poole finished sixth overall with a 210 total, six-under-par. It marked the first time since 2000 that Clemson had three players finish in the top six individually. Jones broke out of a slump with his 69 on Sunday. It was his low score in the last 19 rounds, dating to a 66 at the North Florida Collegiate on Feb. 9. It had been 11 rounds since he had broken par. Duncan finished with a 74 on Sunday to end the tournament with a 218 total, the same figure as Jones. Both players finish in a tie for 21st. Ferguson Has Played Well at ACC tournament For his six career rounds at the ACC Tournament, Ferguson has a 70.0 scoring average. He has shot at par or better in all six of his rounds, including a career best 67 in the second round last year. His 206 score last year at the ACC Tournament is the third best tournament score of his career, as is the 10-under par figure. Ferguson has never won a college golf tournament while wearing a Clemson uniform. He has had four second-place finishes. In addition to last year's ACC Tournament, he also finished second at The 2002 Topy Cup, the 2003 Chris Schenkel and the 2003 Atlanta Intercollegiate.
Winning back to back ACC Tournaments has been very common in recent years. In addition to Clemson's active streak, Georgia Tech did it in 2001-02, Clemson in 1997-98, and North Carolina in 1995-96. The last time a team won three straight ACC golf championships was the 1991-94 era when Georgia Tech won four in a row under Puggy Blackmon. All four of those championships were recorded at Northgreen Country Club in Rocky Mount, NC. The record for consecutive ACC golf championships is 10 in a row by Wake Forest from 1967-76. Wake Forest has won the most championships overall with 18, followed by North Carolina with 10. Clemson has nine, including the one co-championship with NC State in 1990. Georgia Tech is fourth with eight, followed by Duke with five. Maryland, NC State and South Carolina all have on co-championship apiece. From a coaching standpoint, Clemson Head Coach Larry Penley is second on the
all-time list with eight championships, seven outright and one co-championship.
Former Wake Forest Head Coach Jesse Haddock is the all-time leader with 15. Charles Warren was a back to back champion, winning in 1997 by four shots over Matt Kuchar, and in 1998 by one shot over Don Hill of North Carolina. Warren is the only back to back ACC Champion since 1977-78 when Scott Hoch of Wake Forest won twice. John Engler was Clemson's most recent champion. The former Clemson All-American beat Bryce Molder by two shots in 2001. Clemson's Brad Clark never won the ACC tournament, but he still holds the tournament
record for the lowest round. He shot a 63 in 1985 at Bryan Park in Greensboro,
NC. It is also the lowest score in any tournament in Clemson history. Clemson vs. the ACC Clemson is a combined 22-0 against teams from Virginia and is 51-5 against North Carolina and NC State combined over the last four years. The Tigers were dominant against ACC teams each of the last two years, posting a 47-1 record against league teams in 2003, the year Clemson won the National Championship, and a 50-4 last year when Clemson won the ACC Tournament and the NCAA East Regional. Ferguson in top 10 in Career Average List
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