HONOLULU – For the sixth consecutive year, the University of Hawai'i men's golf team will make the short flight to the Garden Island for the 43
rdannual John A. Burns Intercollegiate, which will be held Feb. 21-23 at the Wailua Golf Course in Līhu'e, Kaua'i.
The tournament, which is named after the former Governor of the state of Hawai'i, features a 20-team field that includes 11 teams ranked in Golfweek's Top 100, eight of whom in the Top 50.
Highlighting the field is second-ranked Duke, No. 15 Arizona State, and No. 20 Texas A&M, the latter of whom won its second Burns Intercollegiate title last year. Also returning to Kaua'i is 57
th-ranked Virginia, who captured the crown in 2017.
Other teams ranked in the Top 50 include No. 22 BYU, No. 33 North Carolina, No. 35 UNLV, and No. 45 Arizona. Making up the rest of the field are CSUN, Fresno State, Grand Canyon, Long Beach State, New Mexico (#62), Northern Colorado, Saint Mary's (#63), UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara (#93), UTEP, Washington State.
TAMU's Chandler Phillips has captured the last two Burns individual titles becoming the tournament's first back-to-back and two-time champion.
Five teams participating this year are multiple Burns winners including four-time champion UNLV (1991, '98-99, 2010), three-time champions Arizona (1992, 2003-04) and BYU (1977, 2000, '07), and two-time champions New Mexico (2001, '05) and Texas A&M (2009 & '18).
Wailua is a municipal course, which played host to three USGA National Public Links Championships and has a Top 10 rating by Golf Digest as one of the best courses in the state of Hawai'i. It first played host to the Burns in 1978, the second year of the tournament. In addition, Wailua will host this year's Big West Conference Championship in April.
UH senior
Bryden Salvador will return to his home island where he has competed in three previous Burns Intercollegiates. His best finish was 89
thplace in 2016.
The Burns is the fourth tournament the Warriors will have played host this season, all on neighbor islands – the Warrior Princeville Makai Invitational also on Kaua'i, the Kā'anapali Classic Collegiate Invitational on Maui, and the Amer Ari Invitational in Waikoloa, Hawai'i.
Tournament #7
What: 43
rdJohn A. Burns Intercollegiate
Dates: Thursday, Feb. 21 through Saturday, Feb. 23
Course: Wailua Golf Course
Location: Līhu'e, Kaua'i
Yardage: 6,991 (72)
Format: Three-days; 54 holes (18 on each day); 5-count-4
Host: Hawai'i
Field (20 teams): Arizona, Arizona State, Brigham Young, CSUN, Duke, Fresno State, Grand Canyon, Hawai'i, Long Beach State, New Mexico, North Carolina, Northern Colorado, Saint Mary's, Texas A&M, UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara, UNLV, UTEP, Virginia, Washington State
Live Scoring: www.golfstat.com
Tournament History
In its 43
rdyear, the John A. Burns Intercollegiate is considered the University of Hawai'i's premiere golf tournament, providing some of the nation's top-ranked programs with the opportunity to compete against one another in the 50th state.
The annual spring tournament has seen tremendous growth since its first year in 1977. The tournament was held primarily at Kāne'ohe Klipper Golf Course before moving to Leilehua Golf Course in 2000 for an 11-year run. The tournament then moved to Turtle Bay Resort from 2011-13 and Wailua Golf Course on Kaua'i the past three years.
Among the who's-who of Burns champions include Bob Clampett, who won at Wailua in 1978, Steve Pate (UCLA, 1983), Notah Begay (Stanford, 1995), Tiger Woods (Stanford, 1996), and Bo Van Pelt (Oklahoma State, 1997). Oklahoma State has a won record six Burns titles while California captured five straight titles from 2011-15.
As governor of the state of Hawai'i, Burns longed to see the growth of UH's athletes at a competitive level with the rest of the nation. He took part in initiating statehood in 1959 and also started the planning and construction for Aloha Stadium – home of UH football and the NFL's Pro Bowl, as well as other island sporting events and music concerts.
Before he passed away on April 15, 1975 at the age of 66, Burns had a hand in upgrading UH's athletics program. Shortly after his death, his namesake tournament was founded. This tournament reflects back to Burns, the political power who was really a "sportsman at heart."
In his later years, Burns often talked about young Hawai'i athletes needing support and opportunities to express and compare their athletic talent with other athletes from the U.S. mainland. Both of Burns' sons (John Jr. and James) took up golf as a sport as youngsters and they too found success on the courses. James qualified for the National Junior Championships and drew his father even closer to the junior golf programs. John Sr., was appointed as an honorary member of the Hawai'i Junior Golf Association in 1967.
When the now-defunct Hawaiian Open was included on the PGA Tour, Burns gave solid support and was named honorary chairman of the tournament committee. The success of that tournament, opened doors to the state for future events and soon became a regular stop for the PGA, LPGA, and Champions Tour.
The tournament that bears his name offers UH golfers an opportunity to compete with the best in the NCAA. Former participants and individual champions include PGA stars such as Notah Begay (1995) and Tiger Woods (1996) of Stanford and Oklahoma State's Bo Van Pelt (1997). Last year, Texas A&M's Chandler Phillips became the first back-to-back and two-time champion of the event.
Burns' dream has become a reality for Hawai'i's athletes, as many have gone on to professional careers. Because of his determination and the energy he put forth for the growth of this island state, John Burns' name lives on in sports circles as well as in the hearts of Hawai'i athletes and their fans.
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