Windon Memorial Classic Returns to Wildcats' Schedule
12-team field set for Sept.30-Oct. 1 tournament
Tom Johnson, NU's top returning golfer, will lead the Wildcats in next fall's Windon Memorial Classic
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July 18, 2002
EVANSTON, Ill. -- Northwestern's Windon Memorial Classic, which has featured such collegiate stars as Luke Donald (Northwestern), Tiger Woods (Stanford), Casey Martin (Stanford) and Hunter Mahan (USC/Oklahoma State), returns to the men's golf schedule this year as the Wildcats host the seventh edition Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 at Glen View Club in Golf, Ill.
The field for the 2002 Windon Memorial Classic includes UC Davis, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Southern, Houston, Kent State, LSU, North Florida, Northwestern, Oklahoma State, Oregon and Stanford. Eight of the 12 schools -- Duke, Georgia Southern, Houston, LSU, North Florida, Oklahoma State, Oregon and Stanford -- all were ranked in the final top 50 of the 2001-02 Golfweek/Sagarin index.
"We're excited to have the Windon back on our schedule this year and look forward to the opportunity to compete against some great teams in a home setting," says Northwestern Head Coach Pat Goss. "It is an honor to host the event at a club with such a storied history as the Glen View Club. The address of Golf, Ill., says it all."
Kent State is the only school in the 2002 field that has won a Windon title. The Golden Flashes captured the inaugural crown in 1993 and then won a second championship in 1999. Oklahoma is the defending champion, having claimed the title in 2000, the last year the event was held. Mahan snagged the individual title with a 3-under 213.
The Windon Memorial Classic is a 54-hole tournament, with 36 holes played on Monday (Sept. 30) and 18 holes on Tuesday (Oct. 1). A practice round will be played Sunday.
The Glen View course measures 6,750 yards and is a par-72 with a course rating of 71.9 and a slope of 135. Glen View was the host of the first Western Open in 1899, the 1902 U.S. Amateur and the 1904 U.S. Open. It was originally designed by the club's first professional, Richard Leslie, with renovations in 1922 by William Flynn, and in 1999 by David Esler.
"Northwestern's golf program is proud to be a part of the greatest golf city in America and I hope the Chicagoland golf fans take advantage of the opportunity to see the future PGA stars of tomorrow in such an intimate and fan-friendly situation," says Goss.
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