The Arizona men's golf team celebrates after learning it would be the No. 4 seed in the NCAA Regionals held in Cle Elum, Washington. The Cats held a watch party at Trident Grill II.

It wasn’t a matter of if; it was a matter of where.

The Arizona Wildcats’ men’s golf team learned Tuesday that it will travel to Cle Elum, Washington, for the May 17-19 NCAA Regionals. The Wildcats will be the No. 4 seed in a 14-team group that includes No. 1 Wake Forest, No. 2 Pepperdine and No. 3 Florida. The top five teams advance to the NCAA Championships, which will be held May 28-June 2 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale.

β€œWe’re really excited. The team has been playing great,” UA coach Jim Anderson said from Trident Grill II, where the team held an informal watch party. β€œI think this team is beaming with confidence right now.”

The Wildcats were guaranteed a spot in the regionals after taking home the Pac-12 Championship last week. Their placement on the West Coast as an advantage, since they won’t have to travel nearly as far as some of the other top seeded-teams in their region β€” like Wake Forest and Florida.

β€œOur time clock with wake-up calls and all those things will be pretty consistent with what we’re used to here at home,” Anderson said. β€œI think a lot of those things will benefit our team.”

UA senior Brad Reeves believes Tumble Creek, located 85 miles southeast of the University of Washington, will have a similar feel as the conference championships.

β€œIt’s very similar to what we just played in NorCal β€” especially me individually, I’ve played a lot of NorCal golf,” the Woodbridge, California, native said. β€œWe’re all very familiar with that style of golf.”

The forest-like feel of the course, the tall pine trees lining each side of the fairways β€” and of course, the possibility of rain β€” is β€œnot something that we’ve never seen before.”

Both Reeves and Anderson described the week since Arizona won its first conference title since 2004 as β€œa whirlwind.” The Cats received an outpouring of congratulatory phone calls and texts from UA alumni and golfers in the Tucson community.

β€œI hope (the team) got more rest than I did,” Anderson laughed.

The Wildcats must now put the accolades on the back burner as they prepare to battle the best teams in the country.

β€œThe challenge for us is going to be trying to do our best to hit that reset,” Anderson said. β€œOur team is experienced and I believe that experience will allow them to reset appropriately.”

The Cle Elum Region also consists of some familiar opponents. Washington, the region’s host school, is a No. 7 seed; Utah is ninth and Oregon is 10th.

β€œThey’re not done,” Anderson said. β€œWe believe we have more to accomplish this year.”


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