Division I Women's Golf Championships

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Division I Women's Golf Championships DIVISION I WOMEN’S GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK 2016 Championship 2 History 4 All-Time Team Results 11 2016 CHAMPIONSHIP HIGHLIGHTS Washington beats Stanford to win NCAA golf title: The Washington Huskies earned the school’s first NCAA Division I women’s golf national championship, defeating Stanford 3-2 Wednesday afternoon at the Eugene Country Club, a par 72, 6,369-yard course. With the match tied at 1-all, Ying Luo holed out from 51 yards on 18 for birdie to halve and take the match 1-up over Casey Danielson. “I used my 64-degree wedge, and I couldn’t believe it went in,” Luo said. “I was thinking to put that in, and I did it. I was thinking about Sarah [Rhee].” Washington then looked like it was on the cusp of clinching the match behind the play of Julianne Alvarez as the freshman was 3-up after 15. However, Stanford’s Lauren Kim came back, winning 16, 17 and 18 to bring the match back to all square. “It started on 15 where I was hitting my approach in and I happened to get a glance at the scoreboard and I think we were down in three matches so that motivated me to turn on some heat,” Kim said. While that match went to extra holes, Mariah Stackhouse tied the overall match up at 2-all when she won 1-up on Sarah Rhee. Stackhouse was 3-up on Rhee heading into the 15th hole before the Washington freshman picked up wins on three straight holes to bring the match to all square and force a play-off. “My match was pretty steady most of the way through up until 15,” Stackhouse said. “I had control for the majority of the day, and then on 15 she birdied and I kind of let my emotions get to me a little bit there for a second, just because I was disappointed with the result I got on my second shot. After that she birdied, and you can’t get mad at losing a hole when somebody birdies, so I just tried to turn it around, but her putter got hot. She just started making everything. But I was able to hold her off once we went into 18, and we halved that hole and continued.” Moving to the play-off hole, the two halved on the first one and then Stackhouse stuck the par putt on the second one to claim the win. The deciding point then shifted back to Alvarez and Kim who halved the first play-off hole and then headed to the second one. After a shaky second shot from Alvarez, she nailed the third shot to within inches of the hole and conceded par. “I would say a little bit of nerves played into my game, especially on the last hole,” Alvarez said. “I was really nervous on the green. But then, you know, know- ing that I was still in it, I wasn’t out yet, I still had those extra playoff holes. I needed to regroup. I had no time to be frustrated or angry. I just had to focus on getting the job done.” Kim, whose third shot sailed well past the hole, missed her par putt, giving Alvarez the victory and the Huskies their first championship. “Just incredibly proud of these guys,” Washington head coach Mary Lou Mulfur said. “I keep saying the same thing over and over, but they just are a special, special group, and sometimes it’s just your turn, and the things that happened this week with Sarah holing out of the bunker yesterday and Ying’s hole-out today and Julianne’s chip shot and people coming left and right doing things, and steady senior leadership that gets us here, I just couldn’t be more proud of them.” In the first two matches to finish, Stanford’s Shannon Aubert won 2&1 over Charlotte Thomas while Wenyung Keh of Washington defeated Sierra Kersten 4&3. “The way that the national championships have played out has just been unbelievable,” Washington senior Charlotte Thomas said. “You think about last year, and it was [Baylor’s] Haley [Davis] and Mariah, two of the best players in college golf going down in extra holes to the championship, and then this year Julianne, Sarah, Ying, doing all these crazy things in order to get the title. It’s amazing for TV, and it showed people that girls can do it, too …we are just as exciting.” Round 2016 TEAM RESULTS Pos. Team Scores Total 21. Miami (FL) 299-292-299 890 Three-Round Totals 22. Ohio St. 293-293-306 892 (Par 288-864) 23. Texas 301-290-306 897 24. BYU 294-306-298 898 Round Pos. Team Scores Total 1. Southern California 289-280-291 860 Four-Round Totals 2. UCLA 286-291-285 862 Duke 299-283-280 862 (Par 288-1,152) 4. Washington 289-285-292 866 Pos. Team Round Scores Total 5. Stanford 295-283-290 868 1. UCLA 286-291-285-282 1,144 6. Oregon 297-282-291 870 2. Stanford 295-283-290-279 1,147 7. South Carolina 293-289-290 872 3. Southern California 289-280-291-290 1,150 8. Virginia 293-294-286 873 4. Washington 289-285-292-286 1,152 Arizona 291-289-293 873 5. Virginia 293-294-286-282 1,155 10. Northwestern 292-289-295 876 6. Duke 299-283-280-296 1,158 Oklahoma St. 294-295-297 876 7. South Carolina 293-289-290-290 1,162 12. Arkansas 292-291-298 881 8. Oregon 297-282-291-296 1,166 North Carolina 298-292-291 881 9. Northwestern 292-289-295-291 1,167 14. Alabama 300-292-290 882 Arizona 291-289-293-294 1,167 15. Florida St. 295-290-298 883 11. Oklahoma St. 284-295-297-292 1,168 16. Tennessee 297-285-303 885 12. Arkansas St. 292-291-298-292 1,173 17. Florida 297-293-296 886 Alabama 300-292-290-291 1,173 18. Michigan 296-299-292 887 14. North Carolina 298-292-291-294 1,175 Georgia 298-291-298 887 15. Florida St. 295-290-298-293 1,176 20. Furman 298-297-293 888 2016 Championship 2 Quarterfinals Pos. Player, Team Round Scores Total May 22 at Eugene Country Club in Eugene, Ore. Kenzie Neisen, Oklahoma St. 71-75-74-72 292 Stanford def. South Carolina 3-2 Kyung Kim, Southern California 71-70-77-74 292 Duke def. Southern California 4-1 Petra Salko, Oregon 74-74-72-72 292 Julianne Alvarez, Washington 71-72-73-76 292 UCLA def. Oregon 4-0-1 Cara Gorlei, Arkansas 73-71-76-72 292 Washington def. Virginia 3-1-1 Kendra Dalton, BYU 72-76-70-74 292 46. Gabriella Then, Southern California 74-76-71-72 293 Semifinals May 22 at Eugene Country Club in Eugene, Ore. Semifinal #1 – Stanford def. Duke 3-2 Through Three Rounds Semifinal #2 – Washington def. UCLA 3-1-1 (Par 72-216) Pos. Player, Team Round Scores Total Championship Match Results 1. Virginia Elena Carta, Duke 69-68-66 203 May 23 at Eugene Country Club in Eugene, Ore. 2. Jennifer Kupcho, Wake Forest 69-73-67 209 Washington 3, Stanford 2 Dewi Weber, Miami (FL) 69-66-74 209 1. Shannon Aubert, Stanford, def. Charlotte Thomas, Washington, 2&1 Cheyenne Knight, Alabama 69-69-71 209 2. Ying Luo, Washington, def. Casey Danielson, Stanford, 1 Up 5. Caroline Inglis, Oregon 73-65-73 211 3. Mariah Stackhouse, Stanford, def. Sarah Rhee, 1 Up in 20 Anna Newell, Tennessee 69-67-75 211 4. Wenyung Keh, Washington, def. Stanford, 4&3 7. Haley Moore, Arizona 68-70-74 212 5. Julianne Alvarez, Washington, def. Lauren Kim, 1 Up in 20 Bronte Law, UCLA 71-72-69 212 Lauren Coughlin, Virginia 72-72-68 212 10. Katelyn Dambaugh, South Carolina 69-73-71 213 Leona Maguire, Duke 72-70-71 213 2016 INDIVIDUAL RESULTS 12. Linnea Johansson, Oklahoma St. 73-71-71 215 Casey Danielson, Stanford 71-70-74 215 Through Four Rounds Louise Ridderstrom, UCLA 69-73-73 215 (Par 72-288) 15. Hannah Kim, Northwestern 74-72-70 216 Stephanie Lau, Northwestern 71-71-74 216 Pos. Player, Team Round Scores Total August Kim, Purdue 68-75-73 216 1. Virginia Elena Carta, Duke 69-68-66-69 272 Wenyung Keh, Washington 73-74-69 216 2. Haley Moore, Arizona 68-70-74-68 280 Lilia Vu, UCLA 73-72-71 216 Dewi Weber, Miami (FL) 69-66-74-71 280 Tiffany Chan, Southern California 71-71-74 216 4. Cheyenne Knight, Alabama 69-69-71-73 282 Julianne Alvarez, Washington 71-72-73 216 Anna Newell, Tennessee 69-67-75-71 282 Karen Chung, Southern California 73-69-74 216 6. Lilia Vu, UCLA 73-72-72-67 283 Rio Watanabe, Ohio St. 70-68-78 216 Casey Danielson, Stanford 71-70-74-68 283 24. Ainhoa Olarra, South Carolina 73-71-73 217 Jennifer Kupcho, Wake Forest 69-73-67-74 283 Cathleen Santoso, Oregon 72-70-75 217 9. Bronte Law, UCLA 71-72-69-72 284 Taylor Totland, Furman 76-72-69 217 10. Tiffany Chan, Southern California 71-71-74-70 286 27. Mariah Stackhouse, Stanford 79-69-70 218 11. Stephanie Lau, Northwestern 71-71-74-71 287 Sarah Schmelzel, South Carolina 75-71-72 218 Katelyn Dambaugh, South Carolina 69-73-71-74 287 Shannon Aubert, Stanford 74-72-72 218 Ying Luo, Washington 75-68-75-69 287 Laura Lonardi, Baylor 71-72-75 218 Shannon Aubert, Stanford 74-72-72-69 287 Kyung Kim, Southern California 71-70-77 218 Louise Ridderstrom, UCLA 69-73-73-72 287 Ying Luo, Washington 75-68-75 218 16.
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