Players Mentioned

Go, Harper Lead MGolf to Fourth Place at Patriot
9/29/2014 12:00:00 AM | Men's Golf
TEAM LEADER BOARD | PLAYER LEADER BOARD
LORTON, VA. - Sophomore Lloyd Jefferson Go (Guadalupe Cebu City, Philippines) fired a 2-under-par, 69, in Monday's final round to lead the Seton Hall men's golf team to a fourth place team finish at the Patriot Intercollegiate.
Go's last two stellar rounds enabled him to finish the three-round event in a tie for 11th place among 104 golfers at 2-over-par with a 75-71-69-215.
Collectively, Seton Hall finished with a 14-over-par, 290-290-286-866, 15 strokes behind the team champion, Missouri, which was the lone team to shoot under-par for the tournament (-1). Marshall finished second at 2-over-par, while James Madison placed third at 9-pver-par. The Pirates downed their lone BIG EAST competitor in the event. Villanova finished in 12th place, 28 strokes behind The Hall.
JT Harper (Pebble Beach, Calif.) collected his second straight top-10 placement with the help of a strong finish. Harper fired a 1-under-par, 70, on Monday to complete the event at 1-over-par with a 70-74-70-214. He tied for ninth to lead all Pirates.
Junior Ryan Snouffer (Sparta, N.J.) shot a 1-over-par, 72, in the final round to finish the event at 3-over-par with a 75-69-72-216.
Kevin O'Brien (Wexford, Pa.) finished with an 8-over-par, 70-76-75-221. David Cha (Carrollton, Texas) rounded out the Pirates' team scoring. He finished with a 19-over-par, 79-77-76-232.
Junior Cory Wilson (Newton, N.J.), competing as an individual, shot par on Monday and enjoyed his top tournament of the fall season. Wilson tied for 25th place with a 6-over-par, 74-74-71-219.
The third annual Patriot Intercollegiate was played at the par-71, 6,903-yard Laurel Hills Golf Club. Designer Bill Love, whose credits include the Iron Forge Course at Penn National and Hunting Hawk in Glenn Allen, Virginia, has created an impressive 18-hole course on land that formerly housed the D.C. Department of Corrections facility at Lorton. Paying homage to the early architects of American golf, Love's objective was to let the natural beauty of the property dictate the character of the course. By all accounts he has succeeded with the golf press already describing the course with accolades like "one-of-a-kind" and "visually stunning."
In addition to Seton Hall and George Mason, the 15-team field also included Binghamton, Delaware, Drexel, Fairleigh Dickinson, George Washington, IUP, James Madison, La Salle, Longwood, Marshall, Missouri, Saint Joseph's, St. Thomas Aquinas, Villanova and Wagner.
Seton Hall will return to the links on Monday, Oct. 6 for the first two rounds of the Wolfpack Intercollegiate in Raleigh, N.C.