BRONCOS WILL FACE DAUNTING TEST IN NCAA SUPER REGIONAL
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. – If their final exams weren’t
tough enough, there will be another stern test awaiting
Fayetteville State’s golfers next week.
The 26-time CIAA Champions were officially invited to the NCAA
Division-II Atlantic/East Super Regional after claiming the Central
Intercollegiate Athletic Association title for the 11th time in the
last 15 years at the CIAA Tournament on April 19 at Fort Lee,
Va.
The Broncos will compete among 20 teams beginning on Monday, May
6, at the 6,984-yard East Course at Hershey Country Club in
Hershey, Pa. The top five teams will advance to the national
championship, which will be played from May 15-19 at Cardinal Club
Golf Course in Louisville, Ky.
Fayetteville State, which will play in its sixth regional, last
reached regional play in 2009 when the Broncos advanced to the NCAA
Tournament with a runner-up finish. It was the first time in 35
years an HBCU qualified for the national tournament.
And only the best will advance again this year.
“The (East Course) is very challenging,” says
Fayetteville State golf coach Raymond McDougal. “A lot of the
holes have demanding tee shots in order to execute the approach
shot to the greens. It’s relatively long, and the greens have
a lot of slope to them.
“It’s a course that can jump up and grab you at any
time.”
The East Course is about 500 yards longer than any course
Fayetteville State has played in competition this season, and with
more than 100 bunkers and several elevated and undulating greens,
it is a severe test of the game. The East Course has hosted several
PGA tournaments, and most recently hosted the Nationwide
Tour’s Reese’s Cup Classic from 1997-2004, an event on
golf’s top developmental tour.
“The East Course is really the hardest challenge we
have,” says Simon Andres, the head golf pro of the East
Course at the Hershey Country Club complex. “The biggest
thing we hear from people who have played the East Course for the
first time is how tough it is. They love the challenge of
it.”
Designed by George Fazio in 1969, the East Course was constructed
to host marquee tournaments.
“The East Course was built for championships, so it is
challenging,” says Ned Graff, the director of golf at Hershey
Country Club. “There are a lot of uphill shots, and
it’s a longer golf course.”
“It was one of the toughest stops for the professionals
(when the East Course hosted the Nationwide Tour),” says
Andres. “The intent of the golf course was to host a
professional event. You feel like you’re on a professional
tour stop when you’re on the East Course at Hershey Country
Club.”
No stretch may be more difficult that the East Course’s last
four holes. The 15th hole is the longest par 4 at 467 yards before
a tough par 3 over water on 16. The last two holes are demanding
par 4s that will each play longer than 445 yards.
“The finishing holes of the East Course are probably the
four toughest holes we have (at Hershey Country Club),”
Andres says.
Fayetteville State will begin its play with noon tee times on
Monday, and will come back with 7:30 a.m. tee times for the second
round on Tuesday. For the third and final round of the 54-hole
regional tournament on Wednesday, tee times will reflect team
scores after the first two rounds.
The Broncos, who will turn right around and play in the PGA
National Minority Championship in Florida the weekend following the
regional – Fayetteville State has won six Minority titles
– dominated the CIAA this season, winning both the Southern
and Northern Division Tournaments before leading wire-to-wire to
capture the league championship, the 16th under the legendary
McDougal.






