Nichols: There’s no good reason why the men have 30 teams at the NCAA Championship and the women advance 24

“This is a passionate hill I would die on,” said Ohio State coach Lisa Strom.

Clemson coach Kelley Hester remembers a time when the NCAA Division I Women’s Championship field was selected solely by rankings. She was in college at Georgia in 1993 when it changed to regional qualifying. At first, the country was split into two regions, East and West. Then it expanded to three sites in 2001, then four in 2015 and, now, for the first time in 2022, there will be six regional tournaments.

The women’s regional setup now mirrors the men’s in the number of sites. However, six fewer women’s teams will advance to the NCAA Championship in Scottsdale, Arizona. The men and women compete in back-to-back weeks at Grayhawk Golf Club.

Why do the men get to send 30 – five teams from each site – when only 24 teams advance for the women?

“This is a passionate hill I would die on,” said Ohio State coach Lisa Strom. “We’ve been behind in opportunities for women’s sports for a long time.”

Julie Manning, chair of the NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Committee, said last fall when the group took the proposal to the Championship Oversight Committee to move to six regional fields, they didn’t ask for an increase in the number teams that advance.

“I don’t know that we would’ve had the confidence that we could get them both done,” she said.

Stanford University golfers celebrate as their teammate Rachel Heck (not pictured) wins as individual medalist during the NCAA Women’s Golf Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

The COC approved the proposal to move to six regions and put it in place for 2022. It’s unusual, Manning said, for a proposal to be accepted and put in play in the same year. The committee scrambled to find two additional sites to host May 9-11, adding Stanford Golf Course in Stanford, California, and the Vanderbilt Legends Club in Franklin, Tennessee.

Four teams from each site will move on to Grayhawk May 20-25 for the NCAA Championship.

Manning said women’s coaches approached her at their annual meeting in Las Vegas last December and asked why they didn’t push for 30.

“In hindsight, now knowing that that just flew right through,” said Manning, “… you feel like you left something on the table that you didn’t bring up.”

Currently, there are 298 men’s Division I teams and 268 women’s Division I teams.

A breakdown of the regionals fields shows that the number of teams advancing to regional action (81 for the men and 72 for the women) is equal at 27 percent of the total number of programs.

But what’s not equal is the number of teams that advance to the national championship. Thirty teams on the men’s side equal 10 percent of all programs; and 24 on the women’s side equal 9 percent.

“The golden ticket, the holy grail of coaching golf is making it to the NCAA finals,” said Hester.

The addition of six teams equals more opportunities for college players and coaches.

Strom looks at regionals as the equivalent of the first round of the NCAA basketball tournament. The first round is equal from a percentage standpoint. But then on the road to Grayhawk, the men suddenly get more.

Shouldn’t the men’s and women’s fields in Scottsdale mirror each other in size? It can’t be a financial issue. The cost of sending six extra teams is minuscule when looking at the entirety of the NCAA budget.

If the numbers were equal at 30 teams, the women would have 11 percent of teams in Grayhawk compared to the men’s 10 percent. This seems entirely reasonable at a time when just last year women at the NCAA basketball tournament were fighting for adequate facilities.

NCAA Men's Championship
Oklahoma golfer Logan McAllister celebrates after making a hole-in-one on the eighth hole during the NCAA Men’s Golf Championship Final at Grayhawk Golf course. (Photo: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

Devon Brouse, head women’s coach at Purdue who coached on the men’s side for decades, has always believed that a 24-team setup makes for a better championship in terms of management.

“But clearly,” he said, “if the men are going to be playing with 30, the women should have 30.”

Manning said the committee has since forwarded a request to the COC to have 30 teams at the finals. The matter was discussed at the April COC meeting but tabled until the summer.

This seems like an absolute no-brainer.

“I tell our girls you fight for what you believe in,” said Strom, “and stand up for what’s right.”

There’s no good explanation for why the women should be short-changed.

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Ohio State women’s golf names Lisa Strom new head coach

On Monday, the Ohio State Department of Athletics announced Lisa Strom as the new women’s golf head coach.

The Ohio State women’s golf team has a new captain. On Friday, the athletic department announced the naming of Lisa Strom as the new head coach.

It is a homecoming for Strom who played for director of golf Therese Hession as a member of the Ohio State team from 1995-99 and then returned as an assistant coach from 2011-16 following her professional playing days. She had spent the last five seasons coaching at Texas State and Kent State. Strom will run the women’s golf program and while working alongside Hession who will remain the director of golf for both the men’s and women’s programs.

“We are excited for the Ohio State golf program and in particular women’s golf,” said Dan Cloran, executive associate athletic director in a statement. “We’re thrilled to welcome Coach Strom back to Columbus. She is one of the brightest coaches in the game of golf and has made a positive impact on the programs she has been associated with. Coach Strom will be reunited with Coach Hession who will be able to utilize her role as the director of golf to continue to impact both the men’s and women’s teams. Coach Hession has been a part of Ohio State golf for over 30 seasons, and while she’ll still have an instrumental role teaching and coaching the women’s program, this shift will allow her to also focus and build upon the impression she has already made within the men’s program as well.”

Hession, who has brought an insane amount of success to the OSU golf program was also excited to welcome Strom back to the program.

“I am thrilled to have Lisa Strom rejoin our Ohio State golf program,” said Hession. “Her knowledge and now 10 years of coaching experience will benefit both our men’s and women’s golf teams in a big way. Lisa has been a part of Buckeye golf as a student-athlete, an assistant coach, and now returns as head coach after developing student-athletes at Texas State and Kent State. We are grateful to welcome her home!”

All of Buckeye Nation welcomes one of their own home.

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‘We’re not done yet’: Kent State, the lone mid-major at the women’s NCAA Championship, is confident and ready to go

Kent State is just as good as, if not better than, the Power 5 schools in the field for the NCAA Championship, and they intend to prove it.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — They’ve won 22 consecutive conference championships. This year marks the fourth straight season—and eighth overall—of reaching the NCAA Championship. They’re not unfamiliar with being highly ranked in the polls and taking down Power 5 teams.

As the only mid-major to reach the 2021 NCAA Women’s Golf Championships, the Kent State Golden Flashes are geared up to once again play on the biggest stage.

“I talk to them all the time, I say ‘We treat you like a Power 5,'” said Kent State head coach Lisa Strom after a practice round on Thursday at Grayhawk Golf Club. “Our program is based on a national schedule, we’re gearing towards a national championship, we’re not selling ourselves short by any means. We have the resources and the support from everybody at home to do that. And that’s how we treat our players and our program. We do things first class all the way.”

Kent State is one of 24 teams in Scottsdale for the first of three straight NCAAs at Grayhawk. The Golden Flashes punched their ticket after finishing in a tie for fifth in the Columbus regional, which was played on the Scarlet Course at Ohio State. It didn’t take long after that for it to sink in that they were headed back to the national championship.

“Finishing up in the Columbus regional, I’ll say it hit us,” Strom said. “It didn’t surprise us but I think it firmly established the spot we’re in, and I think that’s huge for their confidence.

“We’ve worked hard. We’re up in northeastern Ohio and we’re kind of a little forgotten spot but it’s college golf and we have to earn everything. I tell them that all the time, I say ‘No one’s going to hand them anything.'”

“We’re here. We’re just as good as anybody else,” said Emily Price, a junior who transferred from South Carolina. “Winning the tournaments we have, winning the conference 22 times in a row, then getting through regionals and beating some other good teams, I think we deserve the spot we’re in.”

Kent State will start alongside Texas and Maryland on the first tee Friday. With a 6:30 a.m. (Arizona) tee time. Even that doesn’t faze this squad.

“Oh, I love it. This heat? Get me out early,” Price said. “I’ve been waking up a little bit earlier than usual anyway so it’s nothing. Get me up before it’s too hot. I’m good with that.”

Strom agreed and noted the time change works in their favor, too.

“The 6:30 tee time, we gotta be ready to go,” she said. “Traveling from the East Coast helps. But for us, the first thing I thought of is, ‘Wow, our players get to hit the first tee shots of the national championship.'”

It’s been since 1992 when San Jose State won that a non-Power 5 program took home the NCAA title.

This Kent State squad might be the next.

“We’re on a good run,” Strom said. “It’s how they take care of their business, how they handle themselves, they do it in a very professional way. They work hard and they deserve all that credit that they’ve got yet.

“But we’re not done yet. They’re hungry for it.”

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Kent State women pick up where they left off with spring-opening UCF Challenge title

Kent State’s women have a new coach in Lisa Strom but are finding the same level of success with hard work and dedication.

ORLANDO, Fla. – Mornings at the Kent State rental house in Central Florida this week started with bacon and eggs. It was a full kitchen, as each player took charge of her own morning fuel-up.

The breakfast routine, head coach Lisa Strom says, speaks to her team’s self-sufficient nature. Dinner, however, reflects their competitive fire. The six-woman Kent State squad divided into two groups of three in a practice round for the UCF Challenge on Saturday afternoon. The loser had to make the pasta.

Pimnipa Panthong was on the winning team, which is a good thing because she hates to lose, she says. At anything.

“That really gets me going,” she said, laughing. “Sometimes the loser has to do push-ups, something like that.”

Leaderboard: UCF Challenge

That mindset fits in nicely on a squad that won its fourth season title on Tuesday at Eagle Creek Golf Club. The Flashes, which ended the fall No. 6 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings, have only one head-to-head loss all season and that’s to Texas, the No. 1 team in the nation.

Panthong, who grew up in Thailand, has not finished outside the top 7 in a college event this season. She has seven career wins over three and half years. The ball pocket of her bag is covered with white pins that have a yellow lightning bolt in the center. Strom hands those out for major accomplishments (a round in the 60s or a team win are good ways to score one). It’s one tradition she brought with her from previous coaching stints at Texas State and Ohio State.

Strom is in her first year at Kent State. It can be a difficult thing when the guard changes, no matter where a team is ranked. Strom has approached it gently and with an open mind. Lodging situations like this week, where the team stays together in one house, have helped ease the transition.

“They didn’t expect to have a new coach,” Strom said candidly of replacing Greg Robertson, who took the head women’s coaching job at Oklahoma State this fall. Robertson had spent the previous six years at Kent State.

Strom, who played on the LPGA before her college coaching career, knows you can’t force it. It’s a matter of “meeting them where they are.”

“In order for trust to be built, you have to be around each other,” Strom said. “You can’t just expect it on day one.”

Kent State fired a closing 13-under 275 to win the UCF Challenge by six shots. Four Flashes finished in the top 10. Two of those women were bogey free in the final round, including Chloe Salort. The junior has upped her commitment to this game noticeably. The usually stoic player ended her day in happy tears.

Strom called it a glimpse of what “good” can look like for Salort down the road.

“She started working hard over the winter break, and it was almost like a lightbulb moment for her: ‘I need to work harder, I need to make a difference on this team and I need to put the work in.’”

If Salort is the up-and-comer, then Panthong and Stormo are Strom’s quiet leaders. They are both fiercely competitive, which contributes to a meteoric rise in their individual rankings, and unquestionably committed.

Stormo, who hails from Norway, said coming to Kent State made her more independent.

As top-25 players in the world, Stormo (No. 9 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking) and Panthong (No. 25) have been received invitations to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur this spring. Panthong returns after a 17th-place finish last year, but Stormo will play for the first time. Kent State is among a small number of teams to send multiple players.

“I just feel like that tournament, it’s awesome,” Panthong said. “I really just want to go back and play that course again. Everything was perfect.”

Stormo and Panthong have played an important role in Strom’s transition and the Flashes’ continued success. Panthong preached communication, making sure Strom knew what this team was used to and what had worked in the past. Stormo liked that every day had a plan, and that it might not be the same for every player.

“I think just knowing your game and knowing what you need to do to improve, different people have different stuff they need to improve and I think that’s what made us improve,” she said.

Credit to Strom for embracing that winning formula.

Kent State, which owns a 21-year Mid-American Conference winning streak, is by definition a mid-major school, but redefined. Strom tells her players to play like a Power 5 school – after all, they are traveling, competing and recruiting like one.

She also reminds them to enjoy the wins, even as they pile up. Winning doesn’t happen often in this sport.

“There’s only a few dynasties in the history of women’s golf, only a few teams that really dominated a season,” Strom said. “Each win is special, and that’s to be celebrated. It’s not to be overlooked.”

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