"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
weekly online golf column
by
Chris Dortch
May 16, 2006
Chattanooga golf coach Mark Guhne was talking
with a candidate for the school’s vacant athletic director job the
other day when the subject of international players came up.
Noticing that Guhne had one Englishman on his
roster and a freshman from Sweden on the way for next season, the
prospective AD asked Guhne if he enjoyed recruiting overseas.
Guhne didn’t fall down laughing at that one.
Instead, he patiently explained how he runs his program on a
budget that would have to go a ways just to be called shoestring.
Part of his modus operandi, Guhne said, was sleeping in his truck
on recruiting trips. Guhne didn’t mention this, but if McDonald’s
offered the equivalent of frequent flyer miles, he would have
built up enough points to have his breakfast burritos and Big Macs
comped for the next decade or so.
So no, Guhne doesn’t jet off to London or
Stockholm to find players. When you’re running a program on
$10,000, or roughly what Tennessee football coach Phillip Fulmer
earns in two days, you have to be just a bit more economical than
that.
You also have to be crafty and resourceful
just to survive, let alone thrive.
The above preamble brings us to what Guhne
has accomplished in his first year as head coach, after a couple
of seasons understudying former coach Reid Sanderlin, and offers
some telling perspective. Consider what has happened to Guhne’s
program in just the last week.
On Monday, the young Mocs, who start three
freshmen, a sophomore and junior Bryce Ledford, finished third in
the Linger Longer Invitational, behind only No. 1 ranked Georgia
and No. 20 Charlotte, and ahead of No. 15 North Carolina and No.
30 Florida State. Ledford finished third individually.
Still stoked from that accomplishment, three
of the Mocs, along with red-shirt Tyler Neff, drove straight to
the Tennessee Open at the treacherous Golf Club of Tennessee
because Guhne “strongly encourages” them to play a competitive
summer schedule. The final scoreboard there speaks volumes about
the talent Guhne has assembled by sleeping in his car, keeping
good local players at home and choosing his friends from across
the pond wisely. Junior Mitch Brock, who shot a pair of 69s and
shared the first-round lead, and freshman Jonathan Hodge finished
tied for third among amateurs and sixth overall. Ledford finished
21st after a poor start. Neff tied for 45th
despite a second-round 77.
Keep in mind this was no hometown
invitational where the Mocs were roughing up a bunch of local
hackers. The field was comprised of the best amateurs and club
professionals in Tennessee.
“It’s been an incredible week,” said Guhne,
who was chosen the Southern Conference coach of the year as a
rookie after leading the Mocs to a third-place finish in the
conference, their best since 1993. “Incredible.”
Guhne didn’t mean that. The dictionary tells
us that incredible means “impossible or difficult to believe.”
After the week—and the season—they just finished, the Mocs are
starting to believe they can beat any team in the country.
Whether that’s true right now is irrelevant.
In the years ahead, the Mocs are finally going to get that chance.
In his first year, Guhne has done an amazing
job of program building. He’s rallied support among the local golf
community, raised money, networked with upper-level Division I
coaches to try and squeeze his team into more prestigious events.
Next season, The Honors Course has agreed to
play host to a tournament that has attracted several upper-level
Division I programs. That in turn will get the Mocs invited to
better tournaments, which will increase their strength of schedule
and, if they keep playing as well as they have recently, propel
them up the rankings.
The building blocks for the Mocs’ entry into
the world of big-time college golf were set three years ago, when
Guhne, than an assistant coach with no previous experience, talked
Ledford and Brock into joining the program. The next year, Guhne
convinced Gordon Strother, the Georgia AAAAA champion, to come to
Chattanooga.
Last year he went to Jefferson City, Tenn.
for Hodge, who despite winning the state high school and junior
championships wasn’t heavily recruited by major programs. Whoops.
This season Hodge earned All-SoCon honors. And then there was that
72-71-71 showing in the state open on a course than was harder
than geometry.
In the same recruiting class, Guhne landed
local star Tripp Harris to continue a trend of keeping some of
Chattanooga’s best young talent in the city. He also trusted the
judgment of former UTC player Neil Connolly, who lives in London
and told Guhne about Ben Rickett, a talented Englishman who hits
the ball nine miles off the tee. Rickett was fourth on the team in
scoring and had a fifth-place finish this season.
Golfstat, which tracks college golf
statistics, keeps a Freshman Class Impact Ranking. The Mocs’
rookies ranked ninth in the country with a stroke average of
74.92, just below classes from traditional powers Oklahoma State,
Florida and Georgia Tech.
The talent transfusion continues. Guhne has
already signed Chattanooga’s Derek Rende, rated the No. 1 junior
in the state. Taking a tip from UTC women’s coach Colette Murray,
a native of Scotland who knows several international coaches,
Guhne signed Frederick Qvicker from Sweden. Here’s how good
Qvicker is: Earlier this week, jetlagged after the long trip from
his native country and with no sleep, Qvicker joined a couple of
his new teammates for a round at Council Fire, which of course
he’d never even seen, let alone played. He shot 31 on the front.
Guhne won’t stop there. With plans to blanket
Tennessee with his recruiting dragnet and to continue to trust his
growing international connections, Guhne will keep signing good
players. He’s got a lot more to offer these days as donations
continue to roll in. The program was recently given 15 acres of
land on which a practice facility will be built. All the good
local courses—and Chattanooga has as many per capita as nearly any
mid- to large city in the country—have opened their doors to the
Mocs so they can practice and play. Buzz is building about this
program.
“Now that we’ve proven we can play with the
big guys, there’s a lot more interest in what’s going on at UTC,”
Guhne said. “We’ve had kids from major schools call and look at
transferring. But I’m very happy with guys I’ve got now. These
kids can compete with anybody in the country. We’re starting to
prove that.”
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