The 2013-14 men's golf team was inducted into the 2021 Hall of Fame class. They finished third at the NAIA National Championships. At the time, this was the highest finish for any WWU team in a NAIA Championship sanctioned sport.
The team consisted of: Cameron Baker, Cruz Buchanan, Damon Burrow, Tyler Daly, Andrew Davis, Tyler Hamilton, David Houlding, Dillon Klein, Monty Lack, Dakota Lindsenbart, Bryan Mach, Chris Martin, Billy McKenzie, Jack Mueller, Chris Reinert, Jordan Riffe, Jordan Russell, Alex Stear, Julian Taylor and Matt Wells. The Owls were coached by
Barry Doty and assisted by Bobby Mayer and J.D. Nash.
The team had a school record nine wins on the year and finished with a 120-5-1 overall record. They went 20-0 in AMC play, 12-0 against NCAA Division II teams and 25-5-1 against NAIA Top 25 ranked teams. They won the American Midwest Conference Championship. They ranked no. 1 for most of the season by Golfstat throughout most of the spring season and finished third in the postseason NAIA Coaches Top 25 Poll.
The team placed four on the NAIA All-America list: Julian Taylor, Billy McKenzie, David Houlding and Matt Wells. Those four also earned GCAA NAIA Ping All-America honors.
Taylor was named the AMC Player of the Year and was the AMC Champion, and the team placed seven on the AMC All-Conference lists: Chris Martin, Andy Davis, David Houlding, Billy McKenzie, Monty Lack, Julian Taylor and Matt Wells. The team had three players earn NAIA National Player of the Week honors (Taylor twice, Houlding).
McKenzie became the second WWU player in three years to win the Phil Michelson Award as the nation's top freshman.
The team broke the school record for scoring after shooting 25 under par and the season scoring average record with a 289.85. Houlding broke the individual scoring record and finished the year with the lowest score in all of college golf after shooting 11-under par. Both the team and individual scores were also the lowest scores shot in the country that year.
During the season, Taylor and McKenzie made golf history by both making double eagles on the same hole during the same round.