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NCAA Division I men's golf championship

The NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship, played in late May or early June, is the top annual competition in U.S. men's collegiate golf.

Results
:Note: The NCAA was founded in 1906. The first championship sponsored by the NCAA was in 1939. Pre-NCAA era, match play (1897–1938) The NCAA started sponsoring the golf championship in 1939; the previous 41 championships were conferred by the National Intercollegiate Golf Association. • Team scores, individual scores, and course pars are not kept in official NCAA records before 1939. NCAA era, match play (1939–1964) NCAA era, stroke play (1965–2008) NCAA era, stroke and match play (2009–present) • § Won via a playoff. ==Non-American winners==
Non-American winners
Americans had captured all of the titles from the tournament's inception, until James McLean of Australia won in 1998. Luke Donald of England won in 1999. Alejandro Cañizares of Spain won in 2003, followed by James Lepp (2005) and Matt Hill (2009), both from Canada, Thomas Pieters of Belgium in 2012, Fred Biondi of Brazil in 2023 and Hiroshi Tai of Singapore in 2024. ==Team titles==
Team titles
The Intercollegiate Golf Association (later named the National Intercollegiate Golf Association) sponsored the annual tournament and awarded titles from 1897 through 1938. In 1939, the NCAA assumed tournament sponsorship and began awarding championship titles. Schools are listed by their current names, which do not necessarily match those used when schools won their titles. ==Multiple winners==
Multiple winners
Individual champion These men have won more than one individual championship: • 3: Ben Crenshaw, Phil Mickelson • 2: Richard Crawford, Dexter Cummings, George Dunlap, Fred Lamprecht, Scott Simpson Individual champion's school These schools have produced more than one individual champion: • 13 champions: Yale • 9 champions: Oklahoma State • 8 champions: Harvard, Houston • 7 champions: Princeton • 6 champions: Arizona State, Texas • 5 champions: Ohio State • 4 champions: Southern California, Georgia Tech • 3 champions: Florida, LSU, Michigan, Stanford, Tulane, Wake Forest • 2 champions: Clemson, Georgetown, Illinois, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Purdue, San Jose State, UNLV ==Winners of both U.S. Amateur and collegiate titles==
Winners of both U.S. Amateur and collegiate titles
These men have won both the collegiate individual championship and the U.S. Amateur. Only Jack Nicklaus (1961), Phil Mickelson (1990), Tiger Woods (1996), Ryan Moore (2004), and Bryson DeChambeau (2015) have managed the feat in the same year. ==See also==
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