CARMEL, Indiana — The No. 38 University of Iowa men’s golf team finished second at the Big Ten Championships on Sunday with a 54-hole score of 844 (+20). Sophomore Mac McClear won the individual championship, finishing atop the leaderboard at one-under par (215).
McClear carded only six holes above par through three rounds to become Iowa’s fourth Big Ten Champion in program history. He is the second Hawkeye to win a conference crown since 2015. The underclassman recorded a two-under par back nine on Sunday to pull three strokes ahead of the field. McClear is the second golfer in program history to finish alone in first place at the Big Ten Championships.
McClear has won medalist honors two of the last six times out for Iowa, which has now produced three individual medalists this season. Consistency was key this weekend, as McClear tied for a tournament-best 40 pars along with a 4.1 stroke average on par-fours that was tops in the field. He was the only golfer to finish below par through 54 holes at the tournament.
Iowa’s newest conference champion says the victory came from within.
“I thought I was really good mentally,” says McClear. “The course was playing really hard, so it was necessary to think your way around the course. Obviously [we are] a little disappointed we came up one shot short, but a very solid week for us. It should give us a lot of momentum continuing into the postseason.”
McClear had plenty of backup, as fifth-year senior Alex Schaake (T-2) and fellow sophomore Garrett Tighe (T-10) also placed inside the top ten. Schaake has strung together five top-five finishes in Iowa’s last five tournaments. Schaake’ s 11 birdies this weekend led the Hawkeyes and tied for the second-best total in the field. The Omaha, Nebraska, native fired off six of those birdies during the final round, including three in a row on the front nine.
McClear and Schaake were each named to the All-Championships Team, which honors the top-five performers at the event. The duo previously finished one-and-two at the Spartan Collegiate at Sea Island in March.