NCAA Research shows major growth in number of women’s college golf teams since 2009

According to year-end research from the NCAA, women’s golf has one of the highest net gains in teams participating across all sports.

As the decade ends, NCAA research shows that women’s golf is in a much better place than when the 2010s began. According to year-end research from the athletic organization, women’s golf shows one of the highest net gains across all sports when it comes to number of teams participating.

Women’s lacrosse leads the way with a net gain of 200 squads from 2009 to 2019. Outdoor (170) and indoor (165) track and field represent the next two spots, but women’s golf checks in after that with a net gain of 157 teams.

Those numbers are significant considering that women’s soccer comes in fifth with a gain of only 79 teams.

The additional 157 teams come from all three divisions, according to NCAA research. In a chart included in the 2018-19 NCAA Sports Sponsorship and Participation Rates Report, the total number of women’s golf teams is broken down by season. According to NCAA.org, this kind of participation information from NCAA member schools is self-reported retroactively and on an annual basis.

In the 2008-09 season, NCAA research showed a total of 543 participating teams across all three divisions of women’s college golf. By the 2018-19 season, the increased participation brought that number to an all-time high of 700 teams. New teams competing on the Division III level accounted for the biggest chunk of that growth, with the number of teams up from 164 teams in 2008-09 to 235 teams in 2018-19.

Division I women’s golf grew by 24 teams, up to a total of 267 participating teams in 2018-19.

The NCAA also tracks total athletes and average squad size. Last season, 5,436 women played NCAA college golf, up from 4,308 in the 2008-09 season. An average women’s college golf team numbered 7.8 players last season.

Women’s college golf grew at more than triple the rate that men’s golf did, though men’s numbers are also up in the last decade. The NCAA reports a net gain of 46 men’s golf teams across all divisions.

NCAA Research also released on Twitter a chart comparing changes in women’s sports participation at both the high school and NCAA level. Women’s golf grew in both areas.

In comparison, men’s golf participation grew slightly on the NCAA level, but dropped 9 percent at the high school level, a decline exceeded only by football, rifle and gymnastics.

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As 2019 ends, Kenzie Wright hopes Dixie Amateur is the last rung on the climb to ANWA

Wright is making her final start of 2019 at the Dixie Women’s Amateur, the last event of the year where WAGR points are awarded.

TAMARAC, Fla. – Kenzie Wright was in a leadership role at Alabama before she even knew her way around campus. Two tournaments after she transferred from SMU at the start of the 2018 fall season, Wright was part of a team that set an NCAA scoring record. Barely a month later, she was one of the oldest players left.

When Tide stars Kristen Gillman and Lauren Stephenson departed for the LPGA at the end of last fall, the Crimson Tide dynamic changed almost instantly.

“Last year was pretty rough on the girls who remained,” said head coach Mic Potter.

Potter was not particularly fond of the soundtrack – joking that if he and Wright butt heads on anything, it’s music – but Wright has led an admirable rebuilding effort.

Dixie Women’s Amateur: Leaderboard

Among the several choreographed videos on the “Golfing Gals RTR” (short for roll, Tide, roll) Instagram page is one in which Wright emerges from a doorway in a long hall of offices and dances toward the camera to “That Girl is Poison,” a 1990s hit by Bell Biv DeVoe. Her Tide teammates fall in step, and there’s maybe no better way to describe the real-life musical going on in Tuscaloosa.

“She came in very much a natural leader this year,” assistant coach Susan Rosensteil said. “I’m not sure that would have been her role.”

Leading the charge

For all the hamming she does on social media, Wright knows when to buckle down. She was paying close attention during the short time she had with Gillman and Stephenson.

“Even though it was for two tournaments, just being around them and watching how they practice was honestly the best thing I’ve been able to be a part of,” Wright said.

Potter has also played a big role in Wright’s development despite the relatively short amount of time she has spent at Alabama.

Conversations around game improvement can sometimes be daunting. When Wright and Potter sat down at the end of last year to see where she was losing shots, she thought a complete short-game overhaul was on the horizon. Potter wanted to see her control her distances better with a wedge in her hand and get more precise with trajectory and spin.

“It was basically making one or two more putts per round, maybe making an up-and-down a round,” Wright said. “In my head before that, I was thinking it was going to be a lot.”

Wright tracks progress in a category called “P6,” which essentially means making the putt each time you hit it to 6 feet. She completes a P6 90 percent of the time now (as opposed to 60 percent last spring) and has improved her scrambling percentage from roughly 60 percent last season to 85 percent this fall. Rosenstiel praises Wright’s ability to be realistic in her own assessment of her game. That alone has allowed for continuous improvement.

The time is now

This is exactly the time of year when all of those little shots count. Wright is making her final start of 2019 at the Dixie Women’s Amateur, the last amateur event of the year where World Amateur Golf Ranking points are awarded. Wright was No. 145 in the WAGR at the start of the week.

Come January, Augusta National Women’s Amateur invitations are awarded to the top 30 Americans in the ranking. Wright is roughly 30 spots short of the projected cut-off. The Dixie, as the last stop on the competition calendar each year, figures in prominently for ANWA hopefuls.

Wright has played the event each of the past two years, and at the end of the year a 48th-place finish will rotate out of her two-year rankings window.

“I shot 12 over here two years ago,” Wright said. “I was like, ‘If I shoot 12 over, I don’t even deserve to go to Augusta.’ I don’t have anything to lose – if I don’t play, I’d be mad if I didn’t make it.”

Augusta became real when she and her teammates huddled around the TV during last year’s final round and actually saw it happen. She and Tide junior Angelica Moresco, of Caldogno, Italy, vowed they’d be there next time, but it was still a long shot for Wright.

“I didn’t even think I’d have a chance,” she said. “That’s what’s so crazy. In April, I was like, I’m going to have to do a lot to be able to get there.”

Improving ranking, building confidence

A quarterfinal run at the U.S. Women’s Amateur, as the No. 445 player in the world, did a lot to improve her standing. Wright had never qualified for that event before this year and had never really seen herself on the same stage with the world’s best players.

In her quarterfinal match against eventual champion Gabriela Ruffels, Wright birdied four consecutive holes from Nos. 9 to 12 but only won one of them. They combined for 13 birdies in a match Ruffels won on the 17th hole at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point, Mississippi.

“That match really solidified it for me,” Wright said. “I played well the whole week, but that’s the one I remember. I know I deserve to be there, and I know I can compete with the best.”

These are big revelations for a player who, one year ago, saw her name on an Arnold Palmer Cup watch list and didn’t know how to handle it. Potter coached her to be less distractable, across the board. Wright is not exceptionally long and fell into the trap last season of feeling that she needed more power to seriously compete.

Knight shares a swing coach – Joey Wuertemberger – with LPGA rookie Cheyenne Knight, who turned professional after her junior year at Alabama in 2018 or would have overlapped Wright on the Tide roster. Knight inspired another Alabama team TV moment when she won the LPGA’s Volunteers of America Classic in October.

“Seeing Cheyenne go win a tournament where all these girls are out-driving her, I don’t need to worry about that,” Knight said of the “flashy” stuff. “Just stick with short game, make some putts, make some up and downs. That’s how you can beat them.”

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Seven of nation’s top 10 teams highlight field at 2020 ANNIKA Intercollegiate

The ANNIKA Foundation announced the first 11 teams in the field for the 2020 ANNIKA Intercollegiate, with a 12th team to be announced later.

The ANNIKA Intercollegiate Presented by 3M boasts the most competitive field in women’s collegiate golf, and the 2020 event will be no different.

The ANNIKA Foundation announced on Thursday the first 11 teams who will be competing for the title Sept. 13-16 at Royal Golf Club in Lake Elmo, Minnesota.

Seven of the top 10 teams in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings are in the field, including No. 1 Texas, 2019 champion Wake Forest, No. 2 Arizona State, No. 3 Arizona, No. 4 USC, No. 9 South Carolina and No. 10 Duke. Also in the field is 2018 ANNIKA Intercollegiate champion Alabama, UCLA, Vanderbilt and host Minnesota.

The 12th and final team will be announced following the 2020 NCAA Championship in May.

“For the seventh-consecutive year, we’re honored to welcome a collection of women’s golf’s most-powerful and storied programs,” said LPGA legend Annika Sorenstam. “Royal Golf Club has proven to be a great host venue for the last two editions, and we look forward to returning to Minnesota during an ideal time of year for weather and course conditions.”

To find out more about the work the ANNIKA Foundation does for women’s golf, go to annikafoundation.org.

Juli Inkster Senior Award will shine a light on skill, commitment in women’s college golf

Female collegians in their final year of NCAA eligibility will now be able to play for the Juli Inkster Senior Award.

Female collegians will now have an additional honor to play for with the creation of the Juli Inkster Senior Award. The award will be presented to the highest ranked women’s college golfer, as determined by Golfstat and Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, who is in her final year of NCAA eligibility.

The award is appropriately named for Inkster, given that the LPGA legend was a three-time All-American at San Jose State, and in the span of her college career (1979-1982), won 17 individual titles.

“This is a great honor to have this award named after me,” said Inkster.  “It’s a privilege to be able to play college golf at all levels. To have a player be honored for her commitment to the school, coaches and her teammates is what this award is about.”

The creation of the award was announced Tuesday at the annual college golf coaches convention in Las Vegas.

The Inkster award will be administered by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association and presented across all three NCAA divisions. The recipient must be academically eligible, per NCAA rules, and must meet a minimum round requirement – 15 rounds for Division I players and 12 rounds for Divisions II and III players.

The creation of the Inkster Award will shine a light on a senior who commits a full college career to her team in a climate where leaving early for the LPGA has become more and more enticing for the top players. It also bolsters postseason honors in the women’s game. While the men have many honors and awards to play for, women’s golfers only recently have been eligible for a player of the year award – the ANNIKA Award – which is voted on by players, coaches and media.

“On behalf of the Women’s Golf Coaches Association, I’d like to thank Juli for her support of this award as well as the college golf experience,” said WGCA President Todd Oehrlein. “To have our top ranked seniors recognized with an award bearing her name is an incredible honor. We’re thrilled to have the opportunity to create this award.”

The first Inkster awards will be presented after the completion of the 2019-20 women’s collegiate golf season. The Division I women’s golf recipient will receive a sponsor exemption into the next Cambia Portland Classic and have the opportunity to spend time with Inkster during a two-day mentorship retreat.

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Substitution, .500 Rule likely to be big topics at college golf coaches convention

Substitution, NCAA regional seeding, the .500 rule and even an NIT-type tournament for college golf will be on the table in Las Vegas.

Next week, the college golf coaching community assembles in Las Vegas for the annual Golf Coaches Association of America and Women’s Golf Coaches Association national conventions.

The one topic that is certain to be discussed is the substitution rule. This past fall, it appeared that substitutions would be permissible during regular-season tournaments, however there was some confusion on exactly how it would work. That resulted in the following announcement being sent to coaches in August:

The Division I Men’s Golf Committee has delayed the implementation of substitutions for regular-season play until the 2020-21 season. The committee is fully supportive of substitutions for regular-season play and will confer with coaches during the 2019-20 season and at the GCAA Convention for implementation. 

How substitution will work when it is finally implemented next fall should be a hot topic in Las Vegas, especially considering that some coaches don’t support the idea.

A few questions must be addressed. For example, will teams be allowed to have individuals competing in the event and will that individual be allowed to be inserted into the lineup as a substitute? Or can a coach only substitute a player who has not yet played that event? Maybe an even bigger question is how substitution will figure into individual rankings.

San Jose State prepares for the 2019 NCAA Women’s Championship at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Ark.

Also expect a discussion on NCAA regional sites. Seeding conversations will likely continue around the possibility of awarding hosting opportunities to top seeds, which rewards a team for having a good season.

There has been some chatter in the college-golf world that some coaches would like to see the.500 Rule eliminated in men’s golf. The .500 Rule requires a team to have a head-to-head won-loss record of 50 percent or higher against Division I teams.

The rule was first implemented for the 2007-08 season, and four teams did not meet the requirement that year. As a result, those teams – Arizona, Vanderbilt, Northwestern and Minnesota – all missed out on at-large berths into the NCAA postseason.

Since that initial year, only seven teams total have missed playing in the postseason. For the most part, coaches have figured out how to schedule accordingly.

On the women’s side, .500 Rule conversations continue mostly in the mid-major community. However, it’s doubtful this discussion has any momentum heading into Las Vegas.

My take on the .500 Rule remains unchanged. It has been good for the men’s game and I am in favor of it for both men and women, but it is not necessary.

Duke women’s golf coach Dan Brooks, left, shakes hands with Wake Forest women’s golf coach Kim Lewellen after setting pairings for the final match at the 2019 NCAA Women’s Championship. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)

If there’s another topic that should be discussed at the convention, it would be the addition of a postseason tournament – picture something like the National Invitation Tournament in college basketball.

Why? There are many schools investing in their golf programs, but the reality is many of those schools, which are mid-majors, can’t keep up and compete year after year with teams in the Power Five conferences.

On the women’s side the Power Five schools dominate the NCAA championships, to the tune of 90 percent of the field coming from the Power Five leagues in each of the past four years. It’s just below 80 percent for the past three years on the men’s side.

An NIT for college golf could be a good reward for a program that is investing in the sport. It could provide the opportunity to compete for a championship against programs that are both similarly sized and similarly funded.

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10 best women’s college golfers of the decade

Golfweek’s Julie Williams ranks the top 10 female college golfers of the past decade.

Women’s college golf is continually getting deeper, as evidenced by the number of new teams that are constantly coming into the mix in the postseason.

The past decade not only saw breakout stars, but more opportunities. For one thing, a women’s player of the year award came into the mix in 2014 with the creation of the ANNIKA Award. Like the Haskins Award, it’s voted on by players coaches and media.

Three of the women on this list have won that award — some multiple times. Others broke program record, NCAA records, racked up titles or led their teams to NCAA glory.

These are the best 10 women’s college golfers of the decade.

10. Bronte Law, UCLA (2013-2016)

UCLA’s Bronte Law. (Photo: UCLA Athletics)

Law won seven times in three and a half seasons as a Bruin (which is a program record), and almost half of those came in her junior season. That year ended with the ANNIKA Award as well as the top spot in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings. Over the course of her college career, Law shaved three shots off her scoring average.

ANNIKA Award: End of fall watch list for 2020 season

Women’s college golf will look a little different in the spring with five of the top players gone. These are the remaining front runners.

In women’s college golf, the mid-season exodus is old news. It happens almost every year after LPGA Q-School. This winter, five top players will leave their teams to turn professional with the start of the 2020 LPGA and Symetra Tour seasons. Those players include Albane Valenzuela and Andrea Lee from Stanford, Sierra Brooks from Florida, Frida Kinhult from Florida State and Jennifer Chang from USC.

Four of those players were tabbed as Golfweek Preseason First-Team All-Americans (Brooks was second-team).

Their departure not only changes the landscape for teams hoping to make a postseason run, but also vacates some headlines for players in the running for individual postseason awards.

The ANNIKA Award Presented by Stifel goes to the top player in college women’s golf, as selected by college golfers, coaches and members of the golf media. This is the first edition of the ANNIKA Award Watch List since those five players have announced plans to turn professional.

Get to know a few of the up-and-comers who will have the opportunity to step up in the spring season. Interestingly, half of the 10 players highlighted below are freshmen. Alison Lee (UCLA) and Leona Maguire (Duke) were the first two recipients of the ANNIKA Award as freshmen in 2014 and 2015, respectively, but a newcomer hasn’t claimed the honor since.

Players are listed alphabetically.

Golfweek Women’s Rankings: Team | Individual

Ana Belac, Duke

Golfweek/Sagarin Ranking: 9
Golfstat Ranking: 36
Scoring Average: 72.14
Par 3 Average: 3.04
Par 4 Average: 4.11
Par 5 Average: 4.71 

Belac balanced her own LPGA Q-School run with the fall college season, advancing to second stage but falling short of an LPGA card. The senior from Slovenia had respectable top-25 finishes in two of the fall’s strongest fields, the ANNIKA Intercollegiate and the Windy City. She was medalist at the East Lake Cup on the strength of a 3-under 69 in qualifying and went 1-1 in her head-to-head matches that week.

Duke’s Ana Belac participates in the second round of the 2019 NCAA Women’s National Golf Championship at the Blessings Golf Club on Saturday, May 18, 2019 in Fayetteville, Arkansas. (Tim Cowie/ Duke Athletics)

Duke women’s, Stanford men’s teams celebrate championships at White House

The Stanford men’s and Duke women’s golf teams celebrated their 2019 national championships at the White House with President Trump.

Before the Stanford men’s and Duke women’s golf teams break for the holidays, they traveled to the nation’s capital to celebrate their respective 2019 national championships.

The Blue Devils and the Cardinal were honored at the White House on Friday along with several other NCAA Championship teams from last year.

Duke won its seventh national title at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Arkansas, in May after defeating Wake Forest, 3-2, in match play. Stanford won its ninth title in program history with a 3-2 win in match play over Texas at Blessings.

According to the school, Duke has visited the White House three times, having also received invitations in 2005 and 2007 from President George W. Bush for having won the 2005, 2006 and 2007 NCAA titles under coach Dan Brooks.

Ahead of the White House ceremony on Friday, the teams posted photos from around Washington D.C. and 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. on their respective Twitter accounts.

Here are a few of the best photos:

Carnegie Mellon claims top spot on Division III WGCA Coaches Poll

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) revealed Friday the final WGCA Coaches Polls of the fall 2019-20 season. In the Division III poll, Carnegie Mellon earned seven first-place votes to sit at the top spot. University of Redlands earned the …

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) revealed Friday the final WGCA Coaches Polls of the fall 2019-20 season.

In the Division III poll, Carnegie Mellon earned seven first-place votes to sit at the top spot. University of Redlands earned the No. 2 spot with four first-place votes followed by Washington University in St. Louis in third with one-first place vote. George Fox University and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps earned the fourth and fifth spots on the newest poll.

The top 25 teams in the Division III WGCA Coaches Poll can be seen below.

Division III WGCA Coaches Poll

Rank University (First Place Votes) Points
1 Carnegie Mellon University (7) 294
2 University of Redlands (4) 284
3 Washington University in St. Louis (1) 265
4 George Fox University 259
5 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 252
6 Methodist University 239
7 Williams College 220
8 Pomona/Pitzer 218
9 New York University 216
10 Rhodes College 192
11 Bethel University 172
12 St. Catherine University 158
13 Washington and Lee University 145
14 University of Wisconsin, Whitewater 138
15 Carleton College 137
16 Illinois Wesleyan University 114
17 Amherst College 101
18 Centre College 90
19 Middlebury College 84
20 Oglethorpe University 81
21 Denison University 70
22 DePauw University 50
23 California Lutheran University 49
24 Saint Mary’s College (IN) 25
25 Gustavus Adolphus College 13

Others Receiving Votes: Berry College (12); Wellesley College (9); University of Wisconsin-Stout (5); Christopher Newport University (3); Carthage College (2); Southwestern University (1); University of St. Thomas (1); University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh (1)

Indianapolis leads latest Division II WGCA Coaches Poll

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) revealed Friday the final WGCA Coaches Polls of the fall 2019-20 season. The University of Indianapolis kept its No. 1 ranking in the latest Division II poll, followed by Nova Southeastern University, …

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) revealed Friday the final WGCA Coaches Polls of the fall 2019-20 season.

The University of Indianapolis kept its No. 1 ranking in the latest Division II poll, followed by Nova Southeastern University, University of Findlay, Dallas Baptist University and Lynn University respectively in the top five.

The top 25 teams in the Division II WGCA Coaches Poll can be seen below.

Division II WGCA Coaches Poll

Rank University (First Place Votes) Points
1 University of Indianapolis (10) 319
2 Nova Southeastern University (2) 308
3 University of Findlay 279
4 Dallas Baptist University (1) 278
5 Lynn University 262
6 University of Tampa 245
7 Rollins College 242
8 Barry University 228
9 Saint Leo University 221
10 Florida Southern College 204
11 Wingate University 193
12 California State University San Marcos 188
13 Simon Fraser University 164
14 Lee University 157
15 West Texas A&M University 153
16 Limestone College 152
17 Arkansas Tech University 125
18 Grand Valley State University 119
19 St. Edward’s University 82
20 Midwestern State University 74
21 Lenoir Rhyne University 65
22 University of North Georgia 46
23 University of Central Missouri 34
24 University of North Carolina at Pembroke 21
25 University of Central Oklahoma 18

Others Receiving Votes: Augustana University (South Dakota) (17); University of Missouri-St. Louis (15); University of Arkansas, Monticello (6); Academy of Art University (5); Sonoma State University (3); Flagler College (1); Texas A&M University – Commerce (1)