Virginia Golfer Mar / Apr 2019 | Page 20

Expanding Opportunity THE NCCGA STARTED WITH A COUPLE OF REGIONS AND ABOUT 40 CLUB TEAMS AND HAS GROWN TO 28 REGIONS AND MORE THAN 350 TEAMS. “ We keep the costs really, really low and affordable,” Hart says. “ We never want to price prohibit a student from playing.” All tournaments, usually two to three each semester depending on the region, are held on weekends in specific regions to help cut down travel costs and time. Virginia schools compete in the Colo- nial Region and the Capitol Region. The NCCGA started with a couple of regions and about 40 club teams and has grown to 28 regions and more than 350 teams. There is a national championship each semester. Players qualify through the region tournaments. There are player rank- ings (based on scoring average) in each Filling a region, and it is all co-ed. Women play from different tees, but they are competing with the guys in every tournament. Individuals who aren’t part of a team are also welcome. life and a big football team. Both parents went to Virginia Tech. I thought I would go there and try to walk on. I found out Tech didn’t have walk-on tryouts.” Jordan and his soon-to-be- roommate Colton Grow, a Mills Godwin High graduate who faced a similar situation as a golfer, decided to go to Virginia Tech and play club golf. “We knew it was a thing, and we had looked at the scores online and saw we’re better than most of these players so we can go there and play right away and have fun,” Jordan says. “We’re both extremely competitive. I like having fun but in a more serious environment. I thought club golf could give me that thing that I was missing. And it did.” Jordan, a VSGA member at Willow Oaks Country Club, shot a course-record 62 on Virginia Tech’s campus course during his first qualifier for the club team in the fall of 2015. In the fall of 2017 he had the top scoring average in the Colonial Region (Virginia schools with club teams) and was second nationally in the National Collegiate Club Golf Association’s rankings. He had won three of four events and was first-team all-NCCGA. The course-record qualifying round caught the attention of Virginia Tech coach Jay Hardwick, T wo days before spring semester classes started Joey Jordan was working on his golf game in the warmth of the indoor facility at Virginia Tech. The temperature was frigid and the wind “just cut through me like knives” the Hokies senior from Richmond said of the weather outside. Eighteen months ago Jordan didn’t have access to the varsity golf team’s indoor facility. College golf for Jordan was as a member of the school’s club sports golf team. There are 18 30 club sports teams at Virginia Tech that fall under the Recreational Sports umbrella. Jordan was a late developer on his Deep Run High School teams that won a state championship in the fall of 2013 and was state runner-up in the fall of 2014. “I couldn’t shoot in the 60s until [late in my junior year] so I knew I wouldn’t get recruited,” says Jordan, who received some offers from Division III schools. “I really didn’t want to go to a smaller school and sacrifice having a social V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | M A R C H / A P R I L 2 0 1 9 vsga.org Void