Walking off the first hole after a double-bogey on Friday, ACU
junior golfer Cyril Bouniol could have easily wound up shooting a
score in the mid-70s that would have dropped him out of contention
for the NCAA Division II individual national championship.
Instead he stepped up to the tee on the par-5 No. 2, striped a ball
right down the middle, went for the green in two and made an eagle
to right his ship. He went on to make birdie on the next hole
and he never looked back, building as much as a 10-stroke lead
before settling for a six-stroke win at the NCAA Division II
national championship golf tournament at the Sagamore Golf
Club.
Bouniol's win makes him the second ACU golfer to win the individual
national championship, joining current PGA Tour veteran Jeev Singh
as the only Wildcats to win the title. Singh won the crown in
1993 when he led the Wildcats to the team championship.
Bouniol finished Friday's round at 2-under 70 as he finished the
four-round event with a score of 3-under-par 285, six shots better
than Central Missouri's Justin Yoder, who finished at 3-over-par
291. The six-shot difference could have been greater if not
for bogeys on Nos. 16 and 17 when he was playing safe and a penalty
stroke assessed after the round for slow play on No. 13.
But by the time Bouniol had reached the latter stages of the round,
ACU head coach Mike Campbell knew his player had wrapped up the
title.
"This course is not easy at all, but Cyril just ripped it up all
week," Campbell said. "After he got that double-bogey on No.
1 he walked off the green and he was still in the zone. He
handled his emotions really well and he hit the next ball right
down the middle and made eagle. I knew after that happened
that he would have a good day. He was in control of his game,
and I knew after that he would be fine."
For Bouniol, Friday's round capped a week that saw him move from a
tie for 20th after the first round to national champion.
After Bouniol fired that opening-round 76 on Tuesday, he fired his
putter, putting a new flat stick in his bag for the final three
rounds.
"I went to a putter with a softer face, and that made all the
difference," he said. "I struck the ball really well all
week, and that was the case on Monday, too. But I was so
scared on the greens, and I didn't putt well at all in the first
round. After I made the putter change, it made all the
difference.
"After starting with that double-bogey on the first hole today, I
just told myself not to panic," Bouniol said. "In the past I
might have panicked, but I didn't panic (Friday). I just
stayed with the same game plan and I went for the green on No. 2
and made eagle."
Bouniol pulled away on the tough back nine at the par-72,
7,173-yard layout, carding birdies at Nos. 11, 13, 14 and 15,
putting him 10 strokes ahead of the field going to the tough holes
at Nos. 16 and 17. Playing smart golf, Bouniol said, he took
bogeys on both holes as he stayed out of trouble and left both
greens with a minimum of damage.
"I just took my bogeys and played smart on those two holes,"
Bouniol said. "I knew I was well ahead and taking my score
pretty deep, so I knew I had some room to play with. I just
didn't want to try and be a hero and impress people when I didn't
need to do that."
Bouniol didn't even realize that he had won the national
championship until he walked off the No. 18 green after sinking a
short par putt. Even then, he was still so focused on his
round that he couldn't tell his parents during a celebratory phone
call back to France how he had won.
"All week long my focus was just shot-to-shot, not worrying about
anything that was going on around me," he said. "Even
(Friday), I didn't see anything going on around me: the people
following me, the cameras taking my picture, the video cameras ...
nothing. I was in communication with Coach Campbell, and that
was the only thing I saw.
"I couldn't have imagined before this tournament that I would go
3-under-par and win the national championship," Bouniol said.
"I thought after the practice round on Monday that even-par would
win the tournament (which it would have). But I'm really
proud of the way I handled everything this week. I feel like
a more mature golfer than I did even one month ago. I feel
like I can go out now and dominate and win golf tournaments."
The victory caps a sensational year for the ACU golf program,
putting the Wildcats back on the national scene. Bouniol not
only won the national championship, but he also won the Arnold
Palmer Award for earning medalist honors and was named a PING Golf
first team all-America. And freshman Alex Carpenter won the
Phil Mickelson Award presented by the Phil and Amy Mickelson
Foundation as the most outstanding freshman in NCAA Division II
men's golf. ACU also won its first Lone Star Conference
championship since 1995 as Bouniol and Carpenter tied for medalist
honors at the tournament.
"We had just a tremendous year," Campbell said. "With all the
guys we have coming back next year, I'm already ready to start next
season. The future looks very bright for ACU golf."
The Cameron men’s golf team finished the four-round event
in 12th place out of 20 teams. With a total team score of 1247
(312-302-316-317), the Aggies finishes 41 strokes out of 1st place.
Senior Peter Svajlen had a strong tournament and finished in 8th
place overall.
-- Courtesy of ACU Sports Information