New Mexico State’s Emma Bunch picked up another win at the Golfweek Fall Challenge. Here’s what’s behind her success

Bunch has now won six of the last seven starts she has made with the Aggies.

Emma Bunch didn’t see much of the real estate at Caledonia Golf and Fish Club in Pawleys Island, South Carolina. The New Mexico State junior missed only two fairways in 54 holes at the Golfweek Fall Challenge on her way to a winning score of 7 under.

This is typical for the player from Denmark. Given the accuracy, the next stat is unsurprising: Bunch has now won six of the last seven starts she has made with the Aggies. That track record helped land her on the preseason ANNIKA Award Watch List, where she was one of 10 players on the final watch list in the spring.

“I think I’ve always been a good ballstriker, but my short game has gotten a lot of better over the last year or so,” Bunch said. “Now, even if I miss a green, I think I could get up and down. That’s why I’m barely making bogeys right now.”

Scores: Golfweek Fall Challenge

Part of Bunch’s success at Caledonia on Sept. 10 can be attributed to a course that suits her. She finished T-8 there as a freshman and runner-up as a sophomore. But a much bigger part of the college winning streak she’s riding has to do with short game and confidence.

“She was just able to really expand on her short game and her putting last season, and I think that’s the tip of the iceberg when she got that first win this past spring, she really just took off with it and her confidence was through the roof plus some,” New Mexico State coach Danny Bowen said.

Bunch agrees with Bowen’s assessment that short game has been a difference maker, and the Aggie golf facilities have had a lot to do with that. Bunch found it easier to practice more once she got to college, particularly because team practices often focused on short game.

She also gained exposure to many more different types of grass than she had seen back home in Denmark.

Short game aside, Bunch struggles to put her finger on what has unlocked the door to so many tournament titles. Before winning the GCU Invitational last February, Bunch had not won a college tournament. Her next four spring tournament titles included the Ping/ASU Invitational and the Conference-USA Championship. She qualified for the NCAA Cle Elum Regional as an individual and finished T-24, but did not advance to the NCAA Championship.

“I don’t feel like anything has really changed, but I can look at my scores and they’re way better than they were before, so I guess something did unlock,” she said. “I think definitely a little bit more confident and a little more belief in my skills and that kind of stuff.”

Bunch says it’s “definitely fun every time” she tees it up. She finds that when she gets too focused on score, that’s when a round starts to slip.

In her preseason meeting with Bowen, the two spoke of keeping processes in place – like continuing Bunch’s goal of hitting at least 14 greens a round and being grateful for the opportunities she has – and continuing to do things to improve.

Bunch has been a leader by example for her Aggie team, largely in the way she works in practice and before the team goes to tournaments. She has found her voice in team meetings and as a cheerleader for her teammates.

“She has been in those positions this past spring and then this past week, right down to the last hole and in contention for a win,” Bowen said, “but also still realizing that she has those teammates in front of her and just cheering them on as much as she can as well.”

Bunch was selected to the International Arnold Palmer Cup team over the summer. She played the European Ladies Team Championship and was T-9 at the European Ladies Amateur. She is ranked inside the top 100 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking.

As a top player from Denmark, Bunch will represent her country at the Spirit International Amateur in November.

John Crooks cements his Campbell legacy as Golfweek Fall Challenge marks his 100th title

Crooks has special feelings about Caledonia Golf and Fish Club.

John Crooks wonders if his personal feelings about Caledonia Golf and Fish Club have something to do with the success his Campbell women’s team has experienced there over the years.

“The first time I saw Caledonia,” he said, “it’s just one of my favorite golf courses anywhere.”

The Camels are a consistent contender at the Golfweek Fall Challenge, played annually at this scenic spot on Pawleys Island, South Carolina. Entering this year’s event, Campbell had won six team titles, with its first title coming in 2012, and finished runner-up twice.

Crooks’ personal history will be forever entwined with Caledonia after Campbells’ latest victory there on Sept. 10. It was Crooks’ 100th title with the Camels women’s team, a milestone that puts him into a very small club of women’s coaches with career victories in the triple digits. In fact, he and longtime Duke women’s golf coach Dan Brooks, with 143 career victories, are the only members.

Scoring: Golfweek Fall Challenge

“I’ve been doing it for quite a while,” Crooks said of his long coaching stint. “The first year we didn’t win anything and so there’s been 33 years to accumulate 100 and I’ve just been fortunate to be surrounded by some really good people.”

Crooks also oversees the men’s golf program at Campbell, and has guided that team to 61 team titles. The men competed at the Myrtle Beach Golf Trips Intercollegiate this week while the women were at Caledonia, so Crooks split his time between the tournaments.

Campbell’s women had to put the pedal down in the final round to reach this milestone victory for their coach. After 36 holes at Caledonia, they trailed North Carolina-Wilmington, the defending champion in this event, by three shots. The Seahawks are a team capable of going low, having blistered the opening holes at last spring’s National Golf Invitational before finishing runner-up there. Three players from that squad returned this week at the season opener.

The Camels began chipping away at their deficit immediately, with the squad’s counters playing the first three holes in 3 under. UNCW played them in 3 over.

“After about three or four holes, we started gaining momentum. Then they just started playing really well,” Crooks said of his team. “We made a lot of birdies today and we played well.”

The closing hole, a 377-yard par 4 with an approach shot over water, can present drama at Caledonia, but so can the par-4 16th, another tricky hole with a green protected by water on the right. They played as two of the three hardest scoring holes for the tournament. Campbell navigated them both in even par for a final test, but UNCW didn’t give up any ground there, either.

“We have had luck there, we’ve made some pars where we needed to and today they finished very well,” Crooks said. “I have a lot of respect for the 16th and 18th hole at Caledonia.”

Campbell was the only team under par in the final round, and the team’s 2-under 54-hole total left them five shots ahead of UNCW. Emma Bunch of New Mexico State won the individual title for her sixth win in her last seven starts, dating to last season.

Crooks’ team had no problem getting excited for their coach and his 100th victory. The Campbell campus in Buis Creek, North Carolina, is only 170 miles north of Pawleys Island, and initially they were ready to pile right back in the van and head home.

“I told them well it’s time for a celebratory meal and they said well we’ll just go back to campus and get something there,” Crooks said. “I said, No, no, no. We’re at Myrtle Beach. We’re going to find something to eat now’”

And so, the team sat down to a big Italian dinner fitting for the accomplishment.