Stanford, Lynn, Emory women’s golf headline final regular season Mizuno WGCA coaches polls

This is the fourth and final coaches poll for the 2023 spring campaign.

The final regular season Mizuno WGCA coaches polls for women’s golf have been released and there’s no surprise Stanford is the top team in Div. I.

The Cardinal received nine first-place votes but so did Wake Forest, which checks in at No. 2. Stanford’s has just a one-point lead in overall points, 441 to 440. LSU is No. 3, South Carolina is No. 4 and Mississippi State checks in at No. 5.

This is the fourth and final coaches poll for the 2023 spring campaign by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association.

With an eye on the details, Emory’s golf programs surge into national prominence and repeat at Golfweek DIII Invite

Emory’s men’s and women’s golf teams defended their titles.

A practice round with Katie Futcher is deliberate. It’s a fact-finding mission and it’s also a perfect example of the detail-oriented culture that Futcher has established at Emory, where the girls golf program is only four years old.

“We’re engaged,” Futcher said of that crucial day before a tournament. “Our team is engaged the entire time. We’re going through our plans, we’re talking about our shots. We’re not just hitting it out there anywhere. That day sets us up really well on challenging courses and in challenging conditions.”

Over the final 36 holes at the Golfweek DIII Invite, especially as conditions turned cold and windy at Baytowne Golf Links in Sandestin, Florida, in the final round, Emory’s preparation paid off. Emory trailed Oglethorpe by a shot after the first round but spent the next two days pulling away from the 24-team field. The Eagles completed their title defense with a 12-shot victory at 10 over.

Emory sophomore Sharon Mun won the individual title at 6 under.

Emory women
The Emory women’s golf team defended its title at the 2022 Golfweek DIII Invite. (Photo: Golfweek)

Emory is a program with Futcher’s unique stamp. Futcher retired from the LPGA after a nine-year career during which she competed in more than 25 major championships and 120 events while earning Class A status with the LPGA.

After a few months spent “in the woods,” she came out on the other side realizing she could put her golf background to use pursuing another passion: helping people.

Futcher spent the 2016-17 season as a volunteer assistant at her alma mater, Penn State (Futcher was the leading scorer for the Nittany Lions throughout her four-year career there). Then she spent the 2017-18 season as the assistant coach at James Madison. She applied for the head coaching position at Emory because it also offered the chance to build a team from the ground up – Futcher is the first head coach in program history.

And Emory wasn’t just looking to just experiment with the sport. The Atlanta school is academically rigorous, and with more than 20 NCAA titles across all sports, Futcher’s drive matched that winning culture.

“You don’t get the opportunity to build a program from scratch at any division,” Futcher said. “I never thought I’d be in Division III, but to be able to have complete control and nobody else to blame if something goes wrong – it’s all your players, all your vision – that really intrigued me and I really was interested in that challenge.

“I had this formula in my head I thought might produce a team that would play well. I really wanted to try it out. That’s why I really chose Emory.”

The Eagles won five times in the 2021-22 season, then added the NCAA Division III Women’s National Championship last spring. The Golfweek win is Emory’s second this fall.

“We really care as coaches about the things you can directly control,” Futcher said when asked about that the national title – referencing assistant coach Christel Boeljon, who won five times on the Ladies European Tour and appeared on the victorious 2011 European Solheim Cup team.

Futcher ticks off a list of variables– hydration, nutrition, attitude, decision-making, pre-shot routine – that she and Boeljon preach to the team. If her players take care of those things, Futcher reasons, success follows.

There is structure in the way Futcher runs her program – maybe more than any other team at the Division III level.

“We have scheduled practice,” she said. “You have to come for a certain amount of hours and time. It’s not this revolving door where you can come when you want and stay as long as you want. We do have pretty structured practice times and that doesn’t suit everybody so it’s my job to try to find the recruits that that does work for them and that’s what they want to be a part of.”

From Emory head men’s coach John Sjoberg’s perspective, Futcher has been key in moving the whole golf program forward.

“She has been unbelievable to work with for the last four years,” said Sjoberg, who has been at the helm of Emory’s men’s program since 2011. “She’s made us better, just the ideas she’s brought to our day to day. How they practice and what she did on tour. . . Our guys really respect what (Futcher and Boeljon) say and how they say it.”

Sjoberg’s squad has a tendency to be explosive and that’s what got the Eagles to the finish line for their own title defense across the street at Sandestin’s Raven Golf Club. Emory and Oglethorpe went back and forth all day in the final round, with Emory down by a handful of shots approaching the closing stretch.

Emory men
The Emory men’s golf team defended its title at the 2022 Golfweek DIII Invite. (Photo: Golfweek)

Emory played Nos. 15-18 in 10 under – with the four counting scorers going 8 under – to edge Oglethorpe by five. Oglethorpe’s Michael O’Sullivan won the individual title at 6 under.

“Momentum is a tangible thing, and you can just see it,” Sjoberg said. “Jackson (Klutznick) was our first guy out and he made a couple in a row there, and it just filters through the lineup and all of a sudden, a couple of 6 footers go in, we play the par 5 (No. 17) really well. The momentum works great in both directions and fortunately for us there, we got it going in the right direction.”

Emory’s men have competed in the Golfweek DIII Invite every year since its inception in 2009. Accuracy off the tee is paramount at the Raven, but it’s not a particularly difficult second-shot golf course, Sjoberg’s players have learned. Emory has now won this title three times.

Emory teed it up at the Golfweek event after winning the Piedmont Invitational early in October. Emory’s play puts the team in a national conversation – the Eagles were ranked No. 2 in the latest Golfweek/Bushnell Coaches Poll.

“I think certainly we have a lot of the makings of a lot of the good programs around the country,” Sjoberg said. “…Us being a D3 program is a huge asset because we can recruit kids who want to compete for a championship at the end of the year.”

It’s been a good run at Emory these past few years, and the momentum looks to continue.

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Emory men and women make it a sweep at Golfweek DIII Fall Invitational at Sandestin

While the women mounted a comeback on Centre College, the men won wire to wire.

Emory head coach Katie Futcher keeps an important statistic for her team throughout the season. The bounce-back column is all about what a player does after she makes a bogey.

At the Golfweek Division III Fall Invitational, Emory pulled off the ultimate bounce-back, coming from two shots behind Centre entering the final round to win the tournament, its second in four starts this fall.

“Fighting, always finishing to the end, we always try to preach that with all of our ladies in our program,” Futcher said of the importance of that stat. “To finish today with a win after coming in trailing is good.”

Emory’s round of 8-over 296 was its best round of the week at Baytowne Golf Club in Destin, Florida. At 35 over, Emory was two better than Centre College for 54 holes. Emory freshman Sharun Mun won the individual title at 3 over.

It’s the midway point of the semester for many teams, Emory included. Futcher’s players were coming off midterms and the exhaustion that often comes with that. But Futcher never looks at scoring during a tournament and stays in the moment. She didn’t know her team had a chance for the comeback win until the final putt.

Futcher is an accomplished player herself, having been the leading scorer at Penn State for all four years of her college career before going on to play on the LPGA for nine years. After qualifying for the LPGA in just her second attempt, Futcher competed in more than 25 major championships and 120 events while earning Class A status with the LPGA. In 2012, she made 18 cuts in 23 events and posted a pair of top-10 finishes including ties for eighth at the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open and the RICOH Women’s British Open.

She took the helm at Emory in 2018 and has watched the program grow.

“They’ve been working really hard, last tournament of the season, really tried to just keep them focused, keep them calm,” Futcher said of this week’s win. “Really had them rely on all the work they’ve put in this semester. I don’t think anyone has outworked us and that’s part of winning. Winning feels good – the work part doesn’t always feel good – but you have to do the work to win.”

Emory’s men made it a sweep for the Eagles by finishing 13 shots ahead of runner-up Methodist. At 12 under par, Emory was the only team in the red at the end of three rounds at the Raven Golf Club.

The Eagles tied for first at the Wabash Invitational to start the month and last week, won outright at the Tartan Invitational.

“We’ve been good this fall, I thought we’d be competitive,” said head coach John Sjoberg. “Our start today was just unbelievable, five birdies on the first hole and that kind of separated us a little bit form Methodist and we were able to continue to play well and hold them off.”

Emory men's golf
Emory’s men after winning the Golfweek DIII Fall Invitational.

Last month, Emory finished second to Methodist at the Division III Fall Preview at Mission Inn.

Sjoberg says this team is deeper – Nos. 1 to 9 – than it ever has been.

“Qualifying has been really competitive so that’s really set us up to come to events like this and feel like we’ve got a good chance to be a good team,” he said.

In the individual competition, Averett’s Caleb Kimbrough went 8 under to edge Carnegie Mellon’s William Knauth and Emory’s Jackson Klutznick.

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Division III Bushnell Golfweek Coaches Poll: Illinois Wesleyan sits at No. 1

The Titans won five events this fall to claim the No. 1 ranking in Division III men’s college golf.

Illinois Wesleyan has solidified itself as the top team in Division III college golf after the fall portion of the 2019-20 season.

The Titans won five events this fall to claim the No. 1 ranking, followed by former No. 1 Emory, Huntingdon, Claremont-Mudd-Scripps and Hampden-Sydney.

Division III

Rank

University (First Place Votes)

Points

Previous Ranking

1

Illinois Wesleyan (16)

424

1

2

Emory (1)

406

3

3

Huntingdon

381

2

4

Claremont-Mudd-Scripps

375

5

5

Hampden-Sydney

349

4

6

St. Thomas (MN)

332

8

7

Gustavus Adolphus

302

16

8

Carnegie Mellon

287

10

9

Wittenberg

280

6

10

NYU

255

18

11

Methodist

241

7

12

Guilford

231

11

13

Wisconsin-Eau Claire

213

14

14

Southwestern (TX)

174

12

15

RPI

173

NR

16

Redlands

167

15

17

Babson

163

20

18

Oglethorpe

112

13

19

Aurora

84

24

20

Christopher Newport

80

NR

21

Williams

73

22

22

Denison

69

NR

23

Webster

63

NR

24

Washington & Lee

58

9

25

Saint Johns (MN)

49

19

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