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  Jon Reehoorn

Jon Reehoorn

Player Profile

Position:
Head Coach

Experience:
2nd Year

Alma Mater:
Washington State, 2002

05/19/2012

Beavers' Season Ends With Tie For Seventh Place Finish At Regionals

Beavers' Season Ends With Tie For Seventh Place Finish At Regionals

05/18/2012

Beavers Back In Contention After 11-Under Round At NCAA Regional

Beavers Back In Contention After 11-Under Round At NCAA Regional

05/17/2012

Men's Golf Tied For 10th At NCAA Regional With 36 Holes To Play

Men's Golf Tied For 10th At NCAA Regional With 36 Holes To Play

05/15/2012

Beavers Hope To Build On Impressive Resume At NCAA Regional

Beavers Hope To Build On Impressive Resume At NCAA Regional

05/07/2012

Beavers Earn Trip To NCAA Regionals For Sixth Consecutive Year

Beavers Earn Trip To NCAA Regionals For Sixth Consecutive Year

Jon Reehoorn enters his second year with the Oregon State men's golf program with a roster of returning players that earned their fifth consecutive trip to the NCAA Regional Championships.

Reehoorn enjoyed a successful first season with the Beavers as the team finished in the top-10 in 10 of their 11 tournaments, including five top-5 finishes, and a seventh place finish at the NCAA Arizona Regional. The Beavers also set the school record for low team score in a three-round tournament when they shot a 27-under at the Alister MacKenzie Invitational in the fall of 2010, which bettered the 26-under Oregon State shot at the 2004 Northwest Collegiate Classic.

Individually, junior Alex Moore had one of the best seasons in school history, finishing with a 70.74 scoring average for second all-time and shooting a school record 9-under 63 in the Oregon Duck Invitational. Moore became just the sixth Oregon State golfer to earn All-America honors when he was named to the PING and Golfweek honorable mention teams and was an All-Pac-10 First Team selection.

Other top-10 finishes included sophomore Nick Sherwood and freshman David Fink with a tie for sixth and tie for seventh, respectively, at the Bandon Dunes Championship and junior Jonnie Motomochi with a tie for seventh at the Pacific Invitational.

Off the course, Motomochi earned Pac-10 All-Academic Second Team honors, while Travis Milleman and Fink were named to the Pac-10 honorable mention team.

Reehoorn also added two highly-touted freshmen in Brian Jung and Scott Kim and transfers Nick Chianello (Portland) and Matt Rawitzer (Idaho) to the 2011-12 roster that will be one of the deepest and most talented in school history.

Reehoorn came to Oregon State after spending three years at the University of Idaho, first as the associate head coach for the men's and women's programs for the Vandals and then two seasons as head coach for the men's program.

At Idaho, Reehoorn led the Vandals to new heights as they finished in the top half of the Western Athletic Conference all three years of his tenure including a school-best third-place finish in 2009. In his first year at Idaho as the associate head coach, he helped Ben Weyland earn second team All-WAC honors; a first for the Vandals' program. Reehoorn was elevated to head coach following the 2008 season and promptly watched as his first recruit, Jarred Bossio, was selected WAC Freshman of the Year in 2009. The Vandals ended his first season as head coach with its best ranking in eight seasons.

Prior to his stop in Moscow, Reehoorn spent three seasons as the assistant coach at the University of Washington. During his time with the Huskies, he coached four All-Americans, eight All-Pac-10 selections and seven Pac-10 All-Academic selections. In his first year at Washington in 2005, the Huskies won the Pac-10 Championship and finished third at the NCAA Championships. In addition, Erik Olson won the individual title at the conference tournament and James Lepp won a playoff at the national championships to earn the individual title. In 2006, the Huskies finished runners-up at the Pac-10 Championships and ninth at the NCAA Championships.

As an athlete, Reehoorn walked-on at Washington State before ultimately earning a scholarship during his record-setting playing career for the Cougars. Reehoorn set the school's single-season scoring average at 72.0 as a senior after notching six top-10 finishes and 12 top-25's. He was also the team captain of WSU's first golf team to advance to the NCAA Championships. He wrapped up his career at WSU with 14 top-10 finishes, 28 top-25 finishes and was named to the All-Pac-10 Second Team and the PING Pacific All-Region team. Outstanding in the classroom as well, Reehoorn was a three-time Pac-10 All-Academic performer and was awarded a Pac-10 post-graduate scholarship.

Reehoorn earned a Bachelor of Arts in Communication from Washington State in 2002 and added a Master's of Science in Sport Administration from the University of Louisville in 2004. He is married to the former Meghan Parsons.

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