The Coastal Carolina men’s golf team is participating in the NCAA playoffs for the first time in seven years.
The Chanticleers won the Sun Belt Conference championship last Thursday at Annandale Golf Club in Madison, Mississippi to earn a berth in an NCAA regional, and learned Wednesday they will be traveling to the Pacific Northwest for a regional at Gold Mountain Golf Club in Bremerton, Washington from May 12-14.
The regional features 14 teams and five individuals, and the top five teams and the top player not on those teams will advance to the NCAA championship May 23-28 at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California.
Coastal is seeded 12th in Washington, and the top five seeds are Arizona State, Florida, Utah, South Carolina and South Florida. There are six 54-hole regionals.
“I think this is the best regional for us,” said CCU sophomore Jack Lee of England. “We’ve got three guys who are from international countries and we’re used to playing on the [poa annua] grass that is up there. So it’s going to definitely feel almost like being at home. And I think the team is in such good spirits after the win that I think we’ll be able to just sort of roll with that. We’ve got a few teams there that we really do want to beat, and if we can do that we should be in a good spot.”
CCU head coach Jacob Wilner, whose teams played Gold Mountain Golf Club several times when he was the coach at Nevada, agrees that the venue is the best of the six regional sites for the Chants.
CCU is making its 13th NCAA regional appearance, but just the second as a Sun Belt member, as it won its only other Sun Belt title in 2018.
Coastal needed a late rally by Lee to win the conference championship in the match play final against 2024 conference champion Arkansas State.
With the team match tied 2-2, Lee was two holes down to Chris Somerfield with two remaining when a lightning delay stopped play for more than an hour.
Both players had already hit their tee shots and were just off the fairway when play was halted, and Lee was a few yards behind so he had the first shot coming out of the delay.
He hit the green with his approach and made par to win the hole after Somerfield missed the green and was unable to get up and down, and won the par-5 18th with a par after Somerfield hit his second shot into a water hazard. Lee then sank a 30-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to send the Chants to a regional.
“It will go down as the best rain delay in Coastal Carolina men’s golf history,” Wilner said.
CCU also got championship match wins from freshman Drew Sykes of England and senior Trey Crenshaw of Lancaster, who each also won their matches in the semifinals against Troy.
Lee and junior Max Bengtsson of Sweden split their two matches, while senior Trace McDonald of Columbia went 0-2.
Junior Owen Kim of Ontario, Canada was also with the team and eligible to play in the Sun Belt tournament, and Wilner said he will take the same six players to the regional. While he has four players set, he plans to have a 36-hole qualifier between two players for the final playing spot in the opening round.
“Sometimes in this business it’s what have you done for me lately, and you just want the hot hand,” Wilner said. “The good news is all six of these guys are playing well.”

Coastal Carolina captured the No. 1 seed for match play by posting the lowest team score during 54 holes of stroke play with a 14-under 850, which was one stroke better than Arkansas State. The Chants made up a four-stroke deficit to Arkansas State in the final round, then defeated Troy 3-2 in the match play semifinals.
Coastal is ranked 85th in the Scoreboard national rankings with a 74-44-1 record against opponents in events, so the Chants needed the conference title to make an NCAA regional.
Prior to the conference tournament, this spring CCU finished third in the Wyoming Desert Intercollegiate in California, ninth in the 15-team The Hayt at Sawgrass Country Club in Florida, eighth in the 16-team General Hackler Championship at The Dunes Golf and Beach Club, 10th in the 15-team Hootie at Bulls Bay Intercollegiate, and seventh in the 10-team Old Corkscrew Intercollegiate in Florida.
Bengtsson was named the conference’s Newcomer of the Year and a Second Team All-Sun Belt performer after joining CCU following two years at Tarleton State.
The junior has played in nine events and has a 71.7 adjusted scoring average. He has two top 10s and four top 15s with his best finish being third at the General Hackler Championship with a season-low 8-under par total.
Bengtsson tied for 11th at the Sun Belt Championship at 2 under before winning his semifinal match against Troy’s Jake Springer and falling to 2024-25 Sun Belt Player of the Year Thomas Schmidt in the finals.

Bengtsson is the third CCU golfer to earn Sun Belt Newcomer of the Year honors, joining Morgan Deneen (2018) and Zack Taylor (2019).
Sykes, of England, was selected to the All-Sun Belt Third Team after tying Bengtsson for the team scoring lead while recording a pair of top 10s and four top 20s, including a runner-up finish at the JT Poston Invitational.
Gold Mountain Golf Club – Bremerton, Washington
Hosted by Washington
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Arizona State |
2. Florida [Southeastern Conference] |
3. Utah |
4. South Carolina |
5. South Florida |
6. Colorado |
7. Charlotte [American Athletic Conference] |
8. Kansas |
9. Colorado State |
10. Kansas State |
11. Elon [Coastal Athletic Association] |
12. Coastal Carolina [Sun Belt Conference] |
13. Oral Roberts [The Summit League] |
14. Seattle U [Western Athletic Conference] |