Meet the 30 teams and 6 individuals who advanced to the 2024 NCAA Div. I Women’s Golf National Championship

Omni La Costa Resort & Spa’s North Course in Carlsbad, California, will host the national championship, May 17-22.

The field is set.

After three rounds of play across six regionals, 30 teams and six individuals (not on a qualifying team) punched their tickets to the 2024 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf National Championship at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa’s North Course in Carlsbad, California, May 17-22.

Wake Forest, the defending national champion, finished third at the Bermuda Run Regional, finishing behind Ole Miss, which picked up its first regional win in school history. Stanford senior Rachel Heck also won the Cle Elum Regional, her first win in more than two years.

Check out all 30 teams and six individuals who will be competing for a national title.

Teams

  • Arkansas
  • Arizona State
  • Auburn
  • Baylor
  • Clemson
  • Duke
  • Florida State
  • LSU
  • Michigan State
  • Mississippi State
  • Northwestern
  • North Carolina
  • Ole Miss
  • Oklahoma State
  • Oregon
  • Oregon State
  • Pepperdine
  • Purdue
  • San Jose State
  • SMU
  • South Carolina
  • Stanford
  • Texas
  • Texas A&M
  • Tulsa
  • UCLA
  • USC
  • Vanderbilt
  • Virginia
  • Wake Forest

Individuals

  • Carla Bernat, Kansas State
  • Lauren Beaudreau, Notre Dame
  • Bailey Davis, Tennessee
  • Veronika Kedronova, Kent State
  • Jasmine Leovao, Long Beach State
  • Isabella McCauley, Minnesota

NCAA Women’s Regionals: Top-seeded South Carolina in trouble, Lottie Woad’s stellar play highlight Tuesday’s second round

Everything you need to know for the first round of regional play.

The women’s college golf postseason is here, as Division I regionals continued Tuesday across the country.

The six regional championship sites feature 12 teams and six individuals (72 teams and 36 individuals, total), with play beginning on Monday, May 6 and ending Wednesday, May 8. The top five teams (30 total) and the top individual (6 total) not on a qualifying team from each regional will advance to the national championship at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, May 17-22.

Below you’ll find a recap, as well as a breakdown of what to watch for Wednesday from each regional as the second round concludes from all six sites.

College golf: Breaking down the six regional sites

Team leader: Auburn, 1 over

Individual leader: Moa Svedenskiold, Houston, 3 under

The hook: Top-seeded South Carolina is in trouble. The only time a top seed hasn’t advanced from a regional was UCLA in 2017. South Carolina was 17 over on Tuesday and fell outside of the top five. However, it trails Tulsa and Georgia by only two shots going into the final round.

If the cut were today: 1. Auburn, 2. Houston, 3. North Carolina, 4. Oregon, 5. Tulsa, Georgia

What to watch for Wednesday: Whether South Carolina can avoid a bad kind of history and bounce back from its sub-par performance.

Team leader: Wake Forest, 18 under

Individual leader: Bailey Davis, Tennessee, 10 under

The hook: There are five teams under par after the first two rounds at the Bermuda Run Regional, and there are six shots between fifth and sixth with 18 holes to play. Wake Forest, Texas and Ole Miss seem well locked into three of the five available spots.

If the cut were today: 1. Wake Forest, T-2. Texas, Ole Miss, 4. Mississippi State, 5. Tennessee

What to watch for Wednesday: The last two spots will likely come down to four teams: Mississippi State, Tennessee, Oregon State and North Texas. However, the latter two have a big hill to climb to make nationals.

Team leader: SMU, 6 under

Individual leader: Ingrid Lindblad, LSU, 8 under

The hook: No surprise seeing Ingrid Lindblad at the top of the individual leaderboard. She has been arguably the most consistent player in college golf during her five years in Baton Rouge. She has her Tigers in a great position with one round left.

If the cut were today: 1. SMU, 2. Clemson, T-3. Texas A&M, LSU, 5. Ohio State

What to watch for Wednesday: The race for the fifth spot. It seems to be Ohio State or Vanderbilt’s for the taking, but could someone else go low?

Team leader: Stanford, 17 under

Individual leader: Rachel Heck, Stanford; Paula Martin Sampedro, Stanford (7 under)

The hook: Is Rachel Heck finding her groove? That’s bad news for the rest of college golf. She’s tied for the lead, and the 2021 NCAA individual champion has Stanford in excellent position for yet another regional title.

If the cut were today: 1. Stanford, 2. Duke, 3. Virginia, 4. Arizona State, 5. Long Beach State

What to watch for Wednesday: With Stanford and Duke comfortable ahead, it is looking as if it could be a battle of six teams for three spots, and even more likely is five teams for two spots with Arizona State having a four-shot lead out of that bunch.

Team leader: USC, 6 under

Individual leader: Bailey Shoemaker, USC, 8 under

The hook: As expected, a big move by Michigan State with the low round of the day. However, only 10 shots separates USC in first from two teams tied for seventh. This regional looks as if it is going to come down to the wire.

If the cut were today: 1. USC, 2. Northwestern, 3. Pepperdine, 4. Michigan State, 5. Florida

What to watch for Wednesday: The top-five seeds are the top-five teams with 18 holes to play. However, Denver, Kentucky and Oklahoma State are within striking distance to steal a nationals berth.

Team leader: Arkansas, 16 under

Individual leader: Lottie Woad, 10 under

The hook: Lottie Woad hasn’t played a college event since March, but she has gotten plenty of playing experience under her belt. And it’s showing. She leads by a stroke heading into the final round, however, the Seminoles are fourth. They have a four-shot cushion over sixth.

If the cut were today: 1. Arkansas, 2. Purdue, 3. UCLA, 4. Florida State, 5. Baylor

What to watch for Wednesday: With only three shots between fifth and seventh heading into the final round, it’s going to take a strong performance from a chaser or a bad one from a top team to have a chance in who makes NCAAs from Las Vegas.

Lost luggage almost forced Little Rock women’s golf to WD from its first NCAA Regional appearance

This is travel story that’s difficult to believe.

Jenna Birch promised her two seniors, Viktoria Krnacova and Agatha Alesson, that they would make an NCAA Regional during their time at Little Rock if they decided to commit. They did so, and then Birch and the duo, her first recruiting class as head coach, helped make that promise come true.

However, it was almost taken away because of travel issues.

The Little Rock women’s golf team is the 12th seed at the Bryan NCAA Regional, which begins Monday. It’s the program’s first appearance in school history in regional competition. The Trojans were supposed to arrive in College Station, Texas, on Friday, but they didn’t get there until Saturday because of severe weather across Texas in recent days. However, their 23 bags, including golf clubs and all their clothes, didn’t get to College Station until early Sunday morning, and the story is difficult to believe.

“I was telling the airline employees that I get mistakes happen, but when it could cost my team a chance at doing something they’ve never done before, it’s just wrong,” Birch said.

The story began Friday, when the Little Rock women’s team was set to fly to Dallas and then Houston before driving to College Station. When coming into Dallas, storms hit the area, forcing the plane to go to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to refuel before continuing on to Dallas.

The Trojans missed their connecting flight to Houston when the 55-minute flight took nearly three hours. Then, the team said that American Airlines employees told them all of the flights from Dallas to Houston and College Station were fully booked on Saturday, and they couldn’t get the traveling party of nine all on them on flights.

On Friday night, Birch and her team stayed in the Hyatt Regency at the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport before waking up Saturday morning and getting rental cars to drive down to College Station, about a three-hour trip.

However, the bag situation was just starting. The team wasn’t able to collect its 23 bags on Friday night. Birch said airline employees said they would get the bags on a flight to College Station so they would arrive when the team got there.

Later Saturday, Birch got a call that her team’s 23 bags were in Houston, not College Station. Then, they got put back on a flight to Dallas. Then, the bags missed multiple flights that were bound for College Station.

All of this happening because Birch said that airline employees were telling her that she could not collect her team’s bags on Friday night nor was she allowed to drive to Dallas to get them herself during the day Saturday. She had to wait for them to get to College Station via plane.

“Our girls were joking that our bags were racking up more miles than we were,” Birch said. “It felt like they were holding my personal property at some points.”

Then there was another issue. Because of the weather and flooding in the regions around Bryan and Traditions Club, site of the NCAA Regional, the NCAA was allowing teams to get practice rounds in starting at 6 p.m. Saturday.

While that was fine for 11 of the teams in attendance, it didn’t do much for Little Rock. Because their six sets of clubs, six push carts, eight duffels of clothes, two suitcases and one bag of athletic training gear were still sitting in Dallas.

An airline employee promised Birch her bags would be on the late flight into College Station. However, initially, the scan showed the bags were never checked on to the flight. After calling after 10 p.m. to ask why, she was told it was too late to get them on.

Here’s where there is finally a bit of good news: the incoming plane that was continuing to College Station hadn’t even landed in Dallas yet, meaning there’s no way the bags could’ve been loaded in the first place. A bit before midnight, she got a notification that the bags were finally loaded on the plane for College Station.

Come Sunday morning, the airport called her and said they arrived late that night and were ready to pick up.

“The airline employees in College Station were laughing when we got there because even they expected to have 23 bags come in all day Saturday, and they just never did,” Birch said.

For more than a day, all Birch and her players had were the clothes on their backs and some personal items they carried on to their original flight.

Thirty-one hours later, the luggage finally arrived at its destination. However, Birch said her team has handled the situation wonderfully, even making jokes about it and rolling with the punches.

“My girls are really mentally tough,” Birch said. “They understand this was out of there control and there was nothing they could do.”

Because of weather that hit Traditions Club on Saturday night into Sunday morning, the practice round scheduled for Sunday was canceled, and teams could only hit short pitch shots and putt on the greens as crews worked to get the course ready for Monday’s first round.

That means Little Rock, before its biggest tournament in school history, is going in without any of its players having played a complete hole. With all the adversity the Trojans have been through, though, it’s nothing they won’t be able to handle.

“I told them you just worry about shooting under par,” Birch said.

How Brian May, Kendall Griffin guided Indiana women’s golf from the doldrums to a Big 10 title and NCAA postseason

Need a team to cheer for in the NCAA postseason? Why not Indiana

Kendall Griffin had every right to be picky. But she knew right away she wanted to work for Brian May.

Griffin was finishing her college golfing career at Louisville, her fifth collegiate season playing after four years donning purple and gold for LSU. Once having aspirations to be a professional golfer, those dreams changed after she got into the day in and day out of college golf. She realized coaching could be a great avenue for her to stay connected in the sport, but she wanted to make sure the right opportunity presented itself.

Enter May, who in May of 2022 became the fifth coach in the history of the Indiana women’s golf program. The former assistant at Kentucky had gotten to know Griffin a bit from her time at LSU, but it was perhaps May’s peers who gave a more stellar impression of their coach to Griffin.

Three years ago, Indiana women’s golf beat one team all season long. Now, the Hoosiers are Big 10 champions for the first time since 1998 and are back in NCAA Regionals for just the third time since 2010. It’s a culmination of May’s vision, Griffin’s guidance and a team featuring six newcomers on its roster this season coming together when it mattered most.

It’s also because May took a chance on hiring Griffin fresh out of college, and their partnership has revived a program that’s heading into the postseason with nothing to lose.

“It was extremely important for us to have Kendall Griffin,” May said. “She was the first piece of the puzzle and how important she is as a piece to the program. To be able to have somebody by my side that I know is going to put these girls in the best position possible whenever she’s out on the golf course, she’s so important to what we’re doing.”

Griffin expressed her desire to get into coaching to her coach at Louisville, Whitney Young, as Griffin’s career was winding down. That’s when May took the Indiana job, and Griffin wanted to join him.

“One day I got a text from her,” Griffin said. “And she said, ‘hey, you know, Brian May got the head coaching job at Indiana, would you want to work for him?’ I was like, ‘yes, absolutely. Like when can I talk to him?’ You know, would he be willing to just at least give me a conversation right? Like maybe I’m not what he’s looking for, but I would love to learn from that conversation to learn from him.

“Being a player, you’re around others all the time. You get to know how coaches really are. And I never heard one bad thing about Brian, and it was all like overwhelmingly great things. And for me like going into coaching, I was going to be very picky about who I started under because I felt like as a new fresh coach, who that person was is really going to affect me and who I become as a coach. So I wanted to make sure that that person was obviously a great person but also had similar values and kind of a similar vision.”

That vision culminated last week.

The Hoosiers were in second place heading into the final round of the Big 10 Championship two weeks ago at Bulle Rock in Havre de Grace, Maryland. However, Indiana was 11 shots behind leader Michigan State.

Enter Griffin. Heading into the last 18 holes, she was speaking with her and May’s players and gave them a lesson from when she was at LSU. In a tournament during her sophomore year, the Tigers faced an 11-shot deficit with nine holes to play but came back to tie it.

“I think showing them that, like taking it down to a smaller scale. I’m like look, this is totally doable for you guys,” Griffin recalls telling the team.” No matter what you guys do, we’re still going to be so proud of you. But this is completely doable for you guys. So don’t go in today thinking that there’s no chance like at least have hope, like knowing that you guys can do it because you guys are great.”

College golf: 2024 Division I women’s golf regionals full fields, seeds

Indiana shot 5 under on the day, and Michigan State was 7 over. The result? The Hoosiers finished at 8 under for the championship, one shot in front of the Spartans. Indiana was the Big 10 Champion.

Entering the tournament, the Hoosiers were on the outside looking in at an NCAA Regional berth. After their first win of the season, they were dancing.

If the shoe fits.

“We had a roller coaster of a year, May said. “We didn’t play very well, and in January and February, there was a lot of things going on behind the scenes that we kind of had to iron out. But their willingness to go through that with us and not avoid it, whether it was conflict or whether it was just bad play. They weren’t avoiding it. They were willing to go through it.

“The willingness of these girls to buy in and to work hard and to work through, whether we want to call it controversy or just tough times on the golf course and off the golf course, shaped this victory and shaped this kind of season to be something extremely special.”

Some of the challenges going on throughout the season were meshing a roster that included six newcomers, including five transfer players. One of those is Caroline Craig, who came to Indiana from Georgia, and she was one of the conference co-medalists. Then there is Caroline Smith, who transferred from 2023 NCAA champion Wake Forest, and Maddie May, who played her first two seasons with Ole Miss, the 2021 national champ.

That championship experience, along with players learning camaraderie under May and Griffin, took time. But it all came together, and now Indiana is golfing in May.

More: College golf practice facilities

May and Griffin admit they knew their team had to do something special at the Big 10 Championship to get into the postseason. When they woke up the final day of Big 10s, they were no the outside looking in. By day’s end, they had a program-changing victory.

Griffin remembers watching Craig’s final approach shot heading toward the green in the final round of the Big 10 Championship. She was overwhelmed with emotion as the ball pierced the air and headed for the putting surface. She knew Indiana had done it.

Now, the Hoosiers travel to the East Lansing Regional as the ninth seed, where they will play at Forest Acres Golf Course. When Griffin was a sophomore at LSU, she played there, and that invaluable experience is sure to help as Indiana looks to build upon its incredible victory two weeks ago.

“The message is just remembering how we got there,” May said. “Not looking too far forward. We got there by taking accountability of our games and taking it personal, being prepared and ready to go. And understanding that our good is good. We’re going to have a great time, we’re gonna pop into cars here in a few days, and we’re gonna head up and see what we can do a regional.”

If it’s anything like what May and Griffin have already accomplished, it’s bound to be special.

Stanford remains No. 1 in final Mizuno WGCA coaches poll of 2023-24

Who’s No. 1?

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association has announced its fourth and final coaches poll of the spring 2024 season.

In Division I, Stanford remains at the top of the rankings after receiving all but one first-place vote, while South Carolina received the remaining vote to come in at No. 2. Wake Forest and UCLA take the No. 3 and No. 4 spots, respectively, while LSU holds steady at No. 5.

Dallas Baptist University remains the unanimous No. 1 in Division I

Here’s a look at the final Mizuno WGCA Coaches Polls for the 2023-24 season:

Division I

Rank Team (First-place votes) Points
1 Stanford (20) 524
2 South Carolina (1) 495
3 Wake Forest 286
4 UCLA 454
5 LSU 443
6 USC 417
7 Auburn 395
8 Northwestern 371
9 Texas 351
10 Arkansas 348
11 Duke 316
12 Texas A&M 289
13 Arizona State 280
14 Oregon 230
15 Ole Miss 219
16 Clemson 199
17 Arizona 192
18 Florida 163
19 Florida State 158
20 Vanderbilt 114
21 Pepperdine 109
22 Mississippi State 85
T-23 Georgia 53
T-23 Virginia 53
25 San Jose State 22

Receiving votes: North Carolina (15);  California (14); UCF (13); SMU (12); Purduu (5)

Division II

Rank Team (First-place votes) Points
1 Dallas Baptist (11) 275
2 Flagler College 261
3 Findlay 245
4 West Texas A&M 231
5 Anderson 225
6 Nova Southeastern 225
7 Indianapolis 194
8 Rollins 190
9 St. Mary’s (Texas) 184
10 Barry 175
11 Lynn 168
12 Central Missouri 145
13 Saint Leo 133
14 CSU-San Marcos 131
15 Henderson State 123
16 Lee 113
17 Oklahoma Christian 111
18 Wingate 88
19 Midwestern State 85
20 Lander 63
21 Grand Valley State 57
22 CSU-Monterey Bay 40
23 Florida Southern College 39
24 North Georgia 19
T-25 CSU-Los Angeles 17
T-25 Tampa 13

Receiving votes: West Florida (11); Southwestern Oklahoma State (8); CSU-East Bay (6); Texas at Tyler (3); Rogers State (1)

Division III

Rank Team (First-place votes) Points
1 Carnegie Mellon (8) 318
2 Pomona-Pitzer (1) 306
3 George Fox (1) 291
4 Emory 289
5 Claremont-Mudd-Scipps (2) 277
6 Illinois Wesleyan (1) 270
T-7 Redlands 229
T-7 Washington St. Louis 229
9 Wellesley College 211
10 Texas at Dallas 201
11 Truett McConnell 184
12 St. Catherine 179
13 Washington and Lee 177
14 Amherst College 163
T-15 Centre College 137
T-15 Trinity (Texas) 137
17 Carleton College 107
18 Mary Hardin-Baylor 101
19 Methodist 94
20 Middlebury College 74
T-21 Hamilton College 57
T-21 Rhodes College 57
23 Chapman 40
24 Sewanee 27
25 Grinnell College 23

Receiving votes: Denison(14); Huntingdon College (14); Ohio Northern (11); Whitman College (6); Wisconsin, Whitewater (2)

NAIA

Rank Team (First-place votes) Points
1 British Columbia (8) 89
2 Keiser(1) 82
T-3 Oklahoma City 64
T-3 SCAD Savannah 64
5 Texas Wesleyan 55
6 Dalton State 42
7 William Carey 38
8 Truett McConnell 28
9 Loyola-New Orleans 15
10 Ottawa-Arizona 7

Receiving votes: Embry Riddle (5); Lindsey Wilson College (5); Indiana Wesleyan (1)

Meet Jackson Koivun, the freshman rewriting the record books at Auburn

The Auburn men’s golf team has never had a golfer like Koivun.

The Auburn men’s golf team has never had a golfer like Jackson Koivun.

Although he’s only a freshman and hasn’t even completed his inaugural season in college, Koivun is making his mark as one of the best Tigers in program history. He had one of the best regular seasons in team history, and he’s prepared to lead the top-ranked Tigers into the SEC Championship and NCAA postseason.

All he has to do is continue to play like he has in his first 10 events.

Look no further than the Auburn record books, which is going to need plenty of updating after this season.

Just in Auburn’s 10 regular-season events, Koivun has set the freshman records for top-10 finishes (9), rounds in the 60s (13) and sub-par rounds (21).

But forget just freshman records. Koivun is on pace to break the single-season scoring average mark (he’s at 69.47; the old mark is Brendan Valdes at 70.03 last year); Koivun has twice tied the 54-hole tournament scoring mark of 17 under and if he continues at his current pace, he could set the mark for single-season sub-par rounds (24), rounds in the 60s (16) and top-10 finishes (9).

College golf: 2024 NCAA men’s conference championship dates and results

“He came out of high school as the best junior in the country, and he’s just very mature,” Auburn coach Nick Clinard said. “He’s got a calmness and maturity about him on and off the golf course.”

A lot of those attributes Clinard credits to Koivun are things he has worked on since arriving on campus.

Last summer, Koivun struggled during the Elite Amateur Series. His best showing was at the Western Amateur, where he had three rounds in the 60s but still missed the match-play cut.

Heading into the U.S. Amateur, he didn’t have many expectations, but whatever he did had, he blew them out of the water.

“You know, you get up there and you see all of these names,” Koivun said. “All these people that have done all these things. But I started making a run, and it opened my eyes that I belong here and I can do great things as an amateur.”

2023 U.S. Amateur
Jackson Koivun shakes hands with Blades Brown’s caddie Jack Bethmann after Koivun during the round of 32 of the 2023 U.S. Amateur at Cherry Hills. (Photo: Chris Keane/USGA)

Koivun earned the No. 32 seed for match play and won 1 up in the Round of 64. Then he took down top-seeded Blades Brown 4 and 3 in the Round of 32. Up next, he dispatched Matthew Sutherland in 19 holes to move on to the quarterfinals. Then, he took on Nick Dunlap and gave the eventual champion his hardest match of the week, losing in 19 holes.

But Koivun’s mentality changed. He grew tougher and learned a lot about himself. He was ready to compete on the biggest stage and could battle with the best in the amateur game.

And that’s exactly what he has done this season.

In his first collegiate start, he finished T-2 at the Mirabel Maui Jim in Arizona. He added two more top-10 finishes and a T-19 to close out the fall.

The spring has been even better. He has lost to only 10 golfers in six starts, picked up his first victory at the Wake Forest Invitational at Pinehurst No. 2 and his worst finish is T-4. He’s squarely in contention for the Phil Mickelson Award, given to the nation’s top freshman, and the Fred Haskins Award, given to the nation’s top player.

“It’s great to play good golf in the fall and the spring,” Koivun said, “but nationals is where it’s all at. It’s make or break. That’s where my attention has been at.”

Clinard said Koivun’s practice has improved since he got to Auburn, meaning he’s more focused during practice and not just pounding golf balls on the range like a lot of juniors do. Having one of the best teams int he country helps, too, with many of his teammates also pushing Koivun.

Qualifying rounds can be pretty competitive, leading to some animated competition between teammates, but all of that has pushed Koivun to be one of the best golfers in the country this year. As a squad, Auburn has lost to only four teams all season.

If the rankings are any indication, SECs should come down to No. 1 Auburn and No. 2 Vanderbilt for the title. Perhaps Koivun will match up with Vanderbilt superstar and World No. 1 Gordon Sargent come match play.

It’s something he would welcome because he knows it would be a growing experience, win or lose.

Auburn’s Jackson Koivun. (Photo: Lucas Peltier)

Koivun’s father, George, taught him the game. Koivun guesses the first time he beat his dad was when he was 7, but he attributes where he is now to his parents for their teaching and guidance. Clinard said that guidance is a big foundation for Koivun, and he has only grown as he has come into his own.

“He’s like a sponge,” Clinard said of Koivun. “He wants to learn. He wants to get better. He wants to know what it’s going to be like on Tour and what it’s going to be like when pins are tucked and greens are firmer and faster. And what he has to do to win, not just play well.”

Those lessons instilled in Koivun since his junior days have grown as he has gotten comfortable in college, and he has become one of the best amateurs in the game.

Koivun has put together one of the best seasons in Auburn history, but as he acknowledges, it’s what he does in the postseason that matters the most.

New Mexico State’s Emma Bunch has won five straight tournament this spring

She has lost to only 26 players in 10 starts this season.

Emma Bunch has played against 463 golfers this spring. She hasn’t lost to a single one.

Bunch, a sophomore at New Mexico State, has been dominant since the calendar turned to 2024. She has played in five tournaments and won all five, including her latest win Wednesday in the Conference USA Championship, winning by a shot over Sam Houston’s Jennifer Herbst at High Meadow Ranch Golf Club in Magnolia, Texas. 

No other Division I women’s college golfer has more than four victories this year. Bunch is in a world of her own.

She started the spring with a win at the GCU Invitational, shooting 14 under. The next week, it was her second straight victory at the Momentum Transportation UNF Collegiate. No. 3 came at the Ping/ASU Invitational. Then the fourth straight was at the Wyoming Cowgirl Classic before her conference crown marked the fifth straight win.

Bunch’s spring wasn’t anything to blink at, either. She finished runner-up in each of her first two starts. Her worst finish was 15th at the Golfweek Red Sky Classic. She added another pair of top 10s before the winter break.

To sum it up, Bunch’s record this year is five wins, two runner-up finishes, eight top 5s and nine top 10s. She has lost to only 26 players in 10 starts.

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Auburn men win Mossy Oak Collegiate while sweeping top 5 individual spots

There’s a reason Auburn is the top-ranked team in men’s college golf.

There’s a reason Auburn is the top-ranked team in men’s college golf.

The Tigers won the Mossy Oak Collegiate on Tuesday by 34 shots, shooting 46 under to win at Mossy Oak Golf Course in West Point, Mississippi. It’s Auburn’s fourth consecutive win and the seventh of the season, but perhaps more impressive is how the Tigers finished on the individual leaderboard.

The five players in Auburn’s lineup finished T-1, T-1, 3, 4 and 5. That’s right. The Tigers swept the top-five spots in the individual competition. And their individual placed T-7.

J.M. Butler and Brendan Valdes shared medalist honors, shooting 12-under 204. Freshman Jackson Koivun was two shots back at 10 under, his ninth top-10 finish of the season. Carson Bacha was fourth at 9 under and Josiah Gilbert placed fifth at 7 under.

Reed Lotter was the individual and shot 5 under.

“Not to my knowledge has that been done,” said Auburn coach Nick Clinard. “Twenty-three years of coaching, and it’s the first time it has happened to me. It’s kind of crazy. But obviously proud of the team and how they played.”

Resident college golf historian College Golf Book on social media hasn’t been able to find another instance of this happening on the men’s side, let alone four of a team’s individuals placing in the top five.

However, he did find a women’s team that accomplished the feat in the fall of 2015, albeit in a smaller field.

Ole Miss placed second in the team competition while Cincinnati finished third.

For Auburn, it’s another signature victory as the team heads toward the SEC Championship next week.

“These guys push each other,” Clinard said. “Iron sharpens iron. It’s something that they challenge each other and learn from each other, too.”

Mossy Oak Golf Course is ranked 43rd on the Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play: Top 100 U.S. public-access courses. It’s also ranked No. 2 on Mississippi’s top public-access courses in the Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play: State-by-state rankings for public-access layouts.

Florida State’s Luke Clanton becomes first Seminole to win three straight events

Not a bad time to be in Tallahassee.

No one in college golf has been better this spring than Luke Clanton.

The sophomore captured his third straight tournament victory Tuesday, winning the Lewis Chitengwa Memorial at Birdwood Golf Course in Charlottesville, Virginia. Clanton shot 15-under 198, beating Tennessee’s Bryce Lewis by five shots to win.

Clanton is the first Seminole in school history to win three straight events. Over his last nine rounds played, Clanton has seven rounds in the 60s.

In addition to his three victories this spring, Clanton tied for eighth at the Amer Ari in Hawaii and finished T-7 at the Watersound Invitational. After a slower start to the year, Clanton now has put himself squarely in the conversation for the Haskins Award, given to the best player in men’s college golf.

It has been a banner week for the Seminoles.

On Saturday, sophomore Lottie Woad birdied three of her final four holes to claim the fifth Augusta National Women’s Amateur title. She threw out the first pitch Tuesday night at the Florida State home baseball game.

Earlier in the day, Clanton claimed win No. 3 on the year.

Not a bad time to be in Tallahassee.

A pair of 61s in college golf, including a 23-shot turnaround in one day (before a WD, too)

An 84. A 61. And a WD? By the same player?

Dartmouth’s Tyler Brand has a story he’s going to be able to tell forever.

Playing at the Princeton Invitational at Springdale Golf Club in New Jersey, he shot 13-over 84 in the opening round on Saturday morning. However, it was the first of 36 holes that day, so there was a quick turnaround before the afternoon 18.

And how different that afternoon was — 23 shots different.

Brand shot 10-under 61 in the afternoon, an incredible improvement in a single day. A 3-over total after 36 holes was not too shabby after his start. With eight birdies and an eagle, Brand set a course record.

But that wasn’t the end of Brand’s story. He ended up withdrawing from the tournament after being injured Sunday in the final round. He suffered a concussion after walking into a tree branch with his head down and was unable to finish.

Again. What a story.

And Brand wasn’t the only golfer to shoot 61 this week. On Monday, Michigan’s Monet Chun shot 10-under 61 during the second round of the Chattanooga Classic at Council Fire Golf Club in Tennessee. And similar to Brand, Chun had a 13-shot improvement in the second round compared to her opening 3-over 74.

Chun had 11 birdies and a bogey in her 61, which is tied for the second-lowest round by a female golfer in NCAA history. It trails only North Carolina State’s Lauren Olivares Leon, who shot 60 in the fall at the Cougar Classic.