A bad break in golf can happen from time to time, whether it be an inconsistent bounce or ending up in a fairway divot after absolutely smoking a drive. But when it happens on the final hole while the unfortunate party is in contention for the biggest prize of their career to date, you’d have to imagine that would be very tough to take.
Sadly for Jackson Koivun, the Auburn University freshman does not have to imagine that feeling after he fell victim to a cruel ricochet on the 72nd hole of the 2024 NCAA Men’s Individual Championship at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California.
The San Jose, California-born player headed down the par-4 18th on Monday knowing only a birdie would do if he was to tie Georgia Tech sophomore, Hiroshi Tai at the top of the leaderboard.
After sitting his drive in the perfect position to attack the green, Koivun sent his approach shot right down Hollywood Boulevard and heading towards the flag. However, Koivun’s second shot was perhaps *too* accurate as his ball slammed off the top of the flag stick and vaulted backwards into the front green-side bunker.
Instead of making an unlikely eagle – which would have earned him the title outright – the man who had only just enjoyed his 19th birthday four days earlier was forced to settle for a highly-respectable par and a share of second place alongside the University of Illinois’ Tyler Goecke and Florida State’s Luke Clanton. Meanwhile, Tai will take part in the 2025 Masters as a result of his victory.
Golf is so cruel…Jackson Koivun gets a bad break on his approach shot. #NCAAGolf pic.twitter.com/dATchHUKO8May 28, 2024
A form of consolation for Koivun will be that his Auburn squad will compete in the NCAA men’s golf team championship later this week after they finished sixth at 19-over. He could end up facing off against Tai once more, too, after Georgia Tech squeezed into the eight-team match play event with a cumulative score of 25-over.
One player and team the pair will not battle against is 2024 PGA Tour University champion, Michael Thorbjornsen’s Stanford University. Both Thorbjornsen and his college missed the 54-hole cut, but it mattered not to the American as he followed Ludvig Aberg directly to the PGA Tour via the No.1 position in the University ranking system.
The 22-year-old wrapped…
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