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.
Among NCAA women's sports, the largest 10-year net gain in teams participating has been in Lacrosse (+200 squads). Track & Field, Golf also with big increases.#ncaaLAX #ncaaTF pic.twitter.com/jKhHhhiOpq
— NCAA Research (@NCAAResearch) December 26, 2019
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.
Over the past 10 years, the NCAA men's sports with the largest net gains in teams (across all divisions) are Track & Field and Lacrosse. #ncaaLAX #ncaaTF pic.twitter.com/NCTIsaSk2W
— NCAA Research (@NCAAResearch) December 26, 2019
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.
Ten-year growth in number of women participating in HS and NCAA sports.
Top 3 growth sports (lax, bowling, indoor track) are the same in both @NFHS_Org and NCAA. However, several sports with strong HS growth only (e.g., water polo) or strong NCAA only (e.g., softball). pic.twitter.com/0tOKi4rQkD
— NCAA Research (@NCAAResearch) December 27, 2019
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.
10-year participation changes for men's HS teams vs NCAA:
Top growth in volleyball and lacrosse. HS football, wrestling, baseball and basketball participation down or flat, but each with double-digit percentage gains at NCAA level. pic.twitter.com/vAOCsNLe7u
— NCAA Research (@NCAAResearch) December 27, 2019
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