Hope Golfer Josh Gibson Records Hole-In-One During Opening Round Of NCAA Championships
Josh Gibson’s first collegiate hole-in-one echoed through the first round of the NCAA Division III Championships on Tuesday in Howie-in-the-Hills, Florida.
The Hope College sophomore from Grandville, Michigan (Grandville HS) aced the 142-yard,
par-3 15th hole en route to a 1-over-par 73 at Mission Inn & Resort’s El Campeon Golf
Course.
Gibson is tied for 17th among 215 golfers. He also helped the Michigan Intercollegiate
Athletic Association champion Flying Dutchmen to a team score of 306 that was them
in 18th place out of 42 teams.
The top 18 teams and five individuals from non-advancing teams make the second-round
cut.
Hope coach Bob Ebels said his team is in good shape to make the cut. The Flying Dutchmen
entered Wednesday’s second round just two strokes behind four teams.
Eleven of the teams ahead of Hope have to play on what Ebels considers the challenging
El Campeon course.
“We were here in 2012. I thought if we could shoot 300 on the hardest course, we’d
be in good shape,” Ebels said. “Most of the scores are falling into the same bracket
as 2012.”
Besides Gibson, the Flying Dutchmen received on Tuesday 77s from senior Winton Munch
of Traverse City, Michigan (Central) and junior Kade Hoeksema of Byron Center, Michigan
(South Christian).
Sophomore Andrew Goble of Brighton, Michigan (Brighton) rounded out Hope’s scoring
with a 79.
Sophomore Ben Kramer of Spring Lake, Michigan (Spring Lake) finished with an 81.
Huntingdon leads with a team score of 293.
Gibson hit the perfect iron shot for his aces, Ebels said. The ball landed past the
hole and spun back into the cup.
“Just like they do it in commercial. It was the most beautiful thing you could imagine
seeing,” Ebels said. “It’s an island-type of green. The entire putting surface is
surrounded by wasteland.
“Josh was besides himself with excitement. It was the highest point of his college
career.”
After his hole-in-one, Gibson managed his emotions and finished the final three holes
at 1-over.
Ebels was proud of how Gibson controlled his emotions after such a jubilant moment.
Ebels also was pleased with how his senior co-captain, Munch, responded after a quadruple
bogey on his first hole. Munch played at 1-over the rest of the round.
“A normal golfer would collapse. Not Winton. He dug his teeth in,” Ebels said.