Florida State cannonballs (quite literally) into the spring season with statement win at Moon Golf Invitational

With their star player, Beatrice Wallin, back in the lineup, Florida State proved it can be a power this spring season.

MELBOURNE, Fla. – Beatrice Wallin was the picture of peace sitting on the pool deck after a smooth 4-under 68 in Tuesday’s final round of the Moon Golf Invitational. Having held up her end of a deal with assistant coach Justin Fetcho, she waited patiently as Fetcho scrambled to find a towel before he made his promised leap into the swimming pool.

On the range Tuesday morning at Suntree Country Club, Fetcho gave Wallin a bit of incentive to score: A round of 6 under would get him in the pool. Mid-round, with wind kicking up, the two agreed to back it up it 4 under.

Fast forward to No. 18, Suntree’s par-5 finishing hole. Wallin was 2 under on her round and looking at just over 180 yards into the green on her second shot. She pulled the 4-iron and went for it.

“He’s was like, are you aiming in the middle of the green?” Wallin said of her mid-fairway conversation with Fetcho. “I’m like, I need to go for the middle of the pin because I need to make an eagle. I hit a really good shot and had a foot left.”

Fetcho could only shake his head and Wallin went on to tap it in for 68. She finished T-5 individually at the Moon Golf Invite, the second-lowest Seminole behind sophomore Charlotte Heath, as Florida State won the tournament at 10 under, four shots better than Virginia.

Justin Fetcho, Florida State
Justin Fetcho, Florida State’s assistant coach, after a dip in the swimming pool post-Moon Golf Invitational title. (Photo submitte

All feels right in Wallin’s world now that her senior spring has started. She decided last fall to delay her start on the Epson Tour even though she earned status at last fall’s Q-School, finish out the season with her team and graduate. A teammate informed her that this week was her last first spring tournament. She hadn’t thought much about it before that.

“She’s a great leader in keeping them loose and focused when she needs to,” said head coach Amy Bond, who said she got chills just thinking about Wallin coming back for this final semester. “She called herself the middle child today, playing the three guy. She’s like, it’s OK if you don’t see the middle child, it’s OK. That’s how she is. If you’re there great, if not she’s fine.”

Conversely, Florida State is elevated by Wallin’s presence. The Moon Golf title is the team’s first win this season, and a far cry from a fall-ending 10th-place finish at the Landfall Tradition, when Wallin was absent for Q-School. Florida State entered the spring ranked No. 26 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings, which belies the team’s potential now that Wallin is back in the lineup.

The Seminoles picked up significant victories over top-20 programs South Carolina, Arkansas, Alabama, Virginia, Duke and Auburn at the Moon Golf.

“To lead wire to wire in this field, I’m extremely proud of them,” Bond said. “It’s almost like a regional – instead of 12 teams you have 15 teams. About half of that was in the top 25. Really happy with the caliber of play all around.”

It’s fitting that this whole team would eventually migrate to the pool deck post-round for Fetcho’s leap – which is exactly the kind of no-stress incentive Bond likes to see during competition.

“It’s one of those where if the kids are having fun and in the moment and the mood is light, they’re going to execute their shots,” she said. “If we put too much pressure on them it’s not going to happen. Golf is a game and it should be played.”

Bond calls Florida State a combined program – the men and women pool resources, share social media accounts, flip-flop coaches and generally look out for each other.

“It’s a lot of fun, it’s like a big family away from home,” said Heath, an Englishwoman who knows team golf well, mostly recently as a Great Britain and Ireland Curtis Cupper. “It’s great to be able to play with the men because you learn from them. They play golf completely different from how we play golf. It’s so nice sharing a coach because everyone knows everyone.”

Heath, who had her best finish of the season at Moon Golf, calls this squad a lot deeper than last year’s. Attribute that to an overarching “goofy, silly” culture as well as just another year of experience. She’s relishing the time spent competing against and learning from Wallin and names as a big goal the ability to come off the golf course after each round and know she didn’t get ahead of herself.

That was particularly important, big-picture wise, this week. The next stop in the road comes up quickly for the Seminoles, who host the Florida State Match-Up Feb. 25-27. That leaves only one real off day between tournaments. For the first time this year, Pac-12 programs Arizona, Oregon and Oregon State will all fly east to compete.

Florida State will host an NCAA Regional at its newly redesigned Seminole Legacy Course in May and scouting is perhaps part of the pull.

Hosting a postseason event is also a huge leg up for a team that has now revealed the extent of its capability with a full lineup.

“The great thing is we never have to leave,” Bond said of preparing for postseason. “I can qualify there and we can do a few things differently that maybe we wouldn’t normally do because we know maybe a kid is not playing well maybe coming into it but we know they play well at home so we can use that. But again, it’s nice to know that at the end of the year they can at least spend a regional sleeping in their own beds.”

Now somebody find the nearest swimming pool.

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Beatrice Wallin’s Epson Tour gamble could set up a magical spring at Florida State

Beatrice Wallin decided she couldn’t start a professional career until she’s finished the academic career she started at Florida State.

Beatrice Wallin “isn’t really a school person,” and yet school is the one thing tethering her to Tallahassee, Florida, for the next three months. In one hand, the 22-year-old Swede has just a semester left of college golf. In the other, she has status on the Epson Tour.

After much deliberation, Wallin decided she just couldn’t take the latter until she’s properly closed out the former. So when Florida State opens the spring at this week’s Moon Golf Invitational in Melbourne, Florida, Wallin will be there, just as she has for three and a half years.

“I get to finish, I get to graduate and do everything one more time with my team,” Wallin said. “So I’m kind of excited and I’m not too worried about turning professional and that whole life because I feel like I will have so much more time to do that. We only go to college once.”

NCAA Women's Championship
Florida State golfer Beatrice Wallin putts on the 18th green during the NCAA Women’s Golf Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club. (Photo: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

It’s an unusual decision for a college player. Since the LPGA began allowing college players to defer status earned until after they graduate, only two players have actually taken the option. Jennifer Kupcho and Maria Fassi notably went 1-2 at the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur in 2019 and cruised into LPGA careers with glory and a fair amount of notoriety.

For the record, Wallin has averaged under par in competitive rounds at Augusta National. She’s the only player with consecutive top-10 finishes at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Given those statistics alone, her gamble seems a safe bet. By the time she finishes the spring college season, she will have missed eight events on the 21-tournament Epson Tour schedule. The LPGA’s developmental tour is essentially a money grab – only the top 10 players earn an LPGA card at the end of the season.

“If you’re a top 5 player in the world,” Florida State head coach Amy Bond told her senior as they talked through options last fall, “you should be able to hopefully make enough money to at least keep your (Epson) card but I really feel like you can get in the top 10 if you springboard your play out of college golf into professional golf in the summertime.”

To that point, Wallin countered that if she had a bad summer, she deserved to play another year on the Epson Tour anyway. Decision made.

Three years ago, Wallin’s former teammate and roommate Frida Kinhult earned a pass directly to the final stage of LPGA Q-Series by ending her freshman college season ranked inside the top 5 in the season-end Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings. Kinhult earned status on the then-Symetra Tour the next fall and decided to depart for professional golf immediately.

It opened Wallin’s eyes to the possibility that she could have the same opportunity.

“Bea said, ‘If I ever get in that five, can I go to tour school?’” Bond said. “I said absolutely, you’re crazy not to. This is what we all work toward, as college coaches, is getting our players out on tour at some point.”

Florida State Seminoles golfer Beatrice Wallin (right) walks with her coach Amy Bond on the 10th fairway during the NCAA Women’s Golf Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

Bond and Wallin didn’t revisit the issue until Wallin found herself ranked No. 4 at the end of her junior season and exempt into the second stage. Bond told her she needed to plan on playing Q-School in the fall, and most of their conversations revolved around preparation and logistics.

“With Frida, I knew going in,” Bond said of whether her star player would turn professional. “That’s how forward Frida was. Frida was like, ‘If I finish in X number, then I’m leaving.’ Bea wasn’t like that – we just kind of didn’t talk about it.”

Wallin finished the eight-round Q-Series at 1 over, good for a T-60 finish that left her five shots short of a full LPGA card but with Epson Tour status. As Wallin drove back to Tallahassee after the final round, she chatted with Bond on the phone. She was coming back, she told her coach.

By the next morning, with a little more time to think, Wallin had decided she needed to do more research. She spent time consulting Fredrik Wetterstrand, her Swedish National Team coach, as well as her parents. Bond called the LPGA to determine whether she could play Epson events as an amateur and bank points or money toward her card (she couldn’t). They counted exactly how many events she’d miss.

“She’s a huge piece of our puzzle to be successful and to have her finish what she started, I’m so extremely proud of her for betting on herself,” Bond said.

In Wallin’s mind, returning ultimately came down to the amount of work she’d already poured into a Humanities major at Florida State – three and a half years of studying and keeping her grades up, something that hadn’t come easily. What difference would three months really make?

“I want to accomplish it because I’ve been really putting time to do school,” she said of graduating. “I also want to do it for my team and myself too.”

The potential for a magical spring is there for Wallin, especially as she’s poised to become just the second four-time All-American in Florida State history (a club that only Caroline Westrup, not Tour-winning Seminoles Brooks Koepka and Daniel Berger, occupies) and will tee it up at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur for the third time.

“I feel like I know more now than my first year when I played,” Wallin said of Augusta, “like how the golf courses are and how the competition is.”

Then there’s the possibility of a deeper run at the NCAA Championship. Last spring, Florida State missed the match-play bracket by one shot. Wallin will figure heavily into a team that she says is ready for a redo.

“Of course, that counted in my decision to stay,” she said. “I feel like we can do so much better. I’m looking forward to having the opportunity to do it again and hopefully, we will do better and it will be a great finish to my college career.”

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Women’s college golf team of the week: South Carolina

The Gamecocks won the Moon Golf Invitational at 24 under to start the spring. It was a true team effort from a seasoned squad.

South Carolina’s women threatened to run away with the Moon Golf Invitational title in their first start of the spring season last week. The Gamecocks had it to 30 under midway through the third round at Duran Golf Club in Melbourne, Florida, and ultimately ended 54 holes at 24 under, six shots ahead of runner-up LSU.

The Gamecocks draw experience from three fifth-year seniors, and at the Moon Golf event, a seasoned sophomore led the way. Pauline Roussin-Bouchard is the No. 4-ranked player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. She played the first 45 holes in 15 under before coming home with two closing bogeys. Still, Roussin-Bouchard won the individual title.

When they needed to, Roussin-Bouchard’s teammates stepped up to fill the scoring void. Her final-round 73 didn’t even count toward the team total in the final round.

The win was truly a team effort.

“To watch the others just step up in that situation was exactly what I was looking for,” head coach Kalen Anderson said. “That’s what’s really going to carry us through, I think, late in the spring.”

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Women’s team | Women’s individual
College golf blog: The Road to Grayhawk

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A close culture pays dividends for South Carolina as it carts off spring-opening Moon Golf title

A close culture payed dividends for South Carolina as it carted off the spring-opening Moon Golf Invitational title.

MELBOURNE, Fla. – So early in the college golf season, Kalen Anderson was looking for hints of what’s to come out of a deeply experienced South Carolina squad.

The Gamecocks started the final round of the Moon Golf Invitational with a 10-shot lead at 27 under. They were 30 deep midway through the back nine after counting three birdies on the par-5 15th. They gave those back and then some at the par-4 18th, a hole bordered on the left by water and on the right by sand.

Such a lead allows for a few hiccups.

At the top of the South Carolina lineup, Pauline Roussin-Bouchard was in a head-to-head battle with LSU sophomore Latanna Stone. Roussin-Bouchard hadn’t made a bogey in 45 holes, but she made two at Nos. 10 and 11. Engaged in a horserace with Stone, and with foursomes contributing to a slower pace, Roussin-Bouchard struggled to keep her head on.

Scores: Moon Golf Invitational

For Roussin-Bouchard, even a closing 1-over 73 – which backed up rounds of 63-67 – wasn’t enough to drop her out of the top spot. She edged Stone by three shots for the third individual title of her college career.

“Today was a bit more frustrating than the two other days,” she said. “I struggled with my putting and I was on the edge of getting impatient and losing myself in that so I tried to just stay focused and stay in my bubble. . . . If I can’t have the satisfaction I need personally, then what should I do for the team? And what does the team need right now in terms of score, in terms of birdies?”

South Carolina didn’t even count Roussin-Bouchard’s closing 73 and still was 3 under in the final round, 24 under for the tournament and six shots ahead of runner-up LSU. The back of the lineup showed the kind of consistency necessary when the big gun stops firing.

“To watch the others just step up in that situation was exactly what I was looking for,” Anderson said. “That’s what’s really going to carry us through, I think, late in the spring.”

More than half the 18-team Moon Golf field sat out the fall season because of COVID. South Carolina, being in the SEC, got in three events in the first half of the year. Experience factors in that way, but also in what players bring to the table.

Anderson started three fifth-year seniors in her five-woman Moon Golf lineup. Roussin-Bouchard is a sophomore with loads of experience on the French National Team and as the No. 4 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Only Ana Pelaez, a fifth-year from Spain, didn’t compete with the team in the fall, opting instead to remain at home. It freed up a spot in the lineup for freshman Paula Kirner to make all three fall starts and now, Pelaez’s big personality is a key piece of the puzzle to have back in place.

“It gives us a lot of firepower and depth,” Anderson said.

When the Gamecocks climbed in the team van with their trophies at the end of a windy three days in Central Florida, the volume on the stereo went up so high the music was audible several feet away. Anderson says the culture within this squad is one of the closest among teams she’s coached when it comes to balancing support with competition.

“We all live in three different apartments but right next to each other,” Roussin-Bouchard said. “It’s kind of, open doors. You want to go to someone else’s apartment? Just go in.”

Now whose mantel gets the Moon Golf hardware?

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South Carolina’s Moon Golf charge started early behind a Pauline Roussin-Bouchard birdie run

South Carolina’s Pauline Roussin-Bouchard had five opening birdies on her way to a record 9-under 63 at the Moon Golf Invitational.

MELBOURNE, Fla. – Pauline Roussin-Bouchard birdied her first five holes to open the Moon Golf Invitational on Sunday. Live scoring didn’t immediately reflect that, but word travels fast at a college-golf tournament. Roussin-Bouchard’s name seemed to carry with the wind that whipped around the flat Florida layout, wreaking havoc on many other scorecards.

Given the kind of efficiency with which the South Carolina sophomore executed a 9-under 63 at Duran Golf Club – the lowest 18-hole score in program history – it would seem she knew where to play every shot, land every green, line up every putt. Turns out Roussin-Bouchard had only played five holes in a Saturday practice round that was eventually washed out.

South Carolina saw several holes only by golf cart.

“We still had a practice round, we didn’t play the practice round,” Roussin-Bouchard said by way of explanation. “We imagined the practice round.”

Scores: Moon Golf Invitational

Roussin-Bouchard is capable of reaching every par 5 in two at Duran, and she birdied all of them on Sunday. She missed only three greens – including one at the par-5 ninth, where she bombed her second shot over the green. The Frenchwoman, who is ranked No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, averages 275 yards off the tee.

“Without a practice round, I just told myself just get birdies on the par 5s, and then green and two-putt on par 4s,” she said. “Get your par and then next. I actually holed a couple putts.”

Roussin-Bouchard, who once fired off seven consecutive birdies to start a round, continually gave herself birdie looks on Sunday. If this act looks familiar, it’s because it got quite a bit of play in the opening round of the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open, when she fired a 2-under 70 at Champions Golf Club’s Cypress Creek course in Houston and landed in a tie for 12th.

With South Carolina coach Kalen Anderson on the bag that week, Roussin-Bouchard made the cut and finished T-46.

The beauty of Roussin-Bouchard’s game is in its layers. On Sunday, Anderson was waiting for the sophomore on the tee box of Duran’s par-3 seventh – a third consecutive hole that played dead into a south wind. Roussin-Bouchard pulled a 4-iron – a lot of club for the 172-yard hole.

“It was too much if she hit it full,” Anderson said, but Roussin-Bouchard’s plan was to take some off and spin it.

“She’s that calculated that she is able to know what the spin is doing and the wind and those kind of things,” Anderson said. “It’s a total different level of a player out here.”

South Carolina women's golf
South Carolina huddles after Round 1 at the Moon Golf Invitational.

At South Carolina, Anderson and assistant coach Kevin Williams have helped Roussin-Bouchard with short game and also with how to handle emotions on the golf course. Anderson says Roussin-Bouchard isn’t just a hard worker, but an efficient one. She often plans out her own practice.

Sometimes, the challenge in coaching Roussin-Bouchard is in focusing her – preventing her from practicing too much, or from leaving a round and fitting in a workout back at the hotel.

“I’ve never, in my whole career, I’ve never seen anybody work like she does with her organization and the way she wants to prepare,” Anderson said.

Roussin-Bouchard’s 9-under 63 went a long way toward South Carolina’s 8-under total on Sunday, one that put the team two shots ahead of UCF in second. Florida State, LSU and Virginia are all tied for third at 3 under.

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It took five qualifying rounds back in Columbia, South Carolina, to set the five-player Moon Golf lineup out of the eight-woman Gamecock roster. On Sunday, Anderson also got a 2-under 70 out of Lois Kaye Go and a 1-under 71 from Ana Pelaez.

Combine the experience Roussin-Bouchard brings from the French National Team with that of fifth-year seniors Pelaez, Go and Pimnipa Panthong (a transfer from Kent State), and South Carolina looks awfully deep – and with a family-like team culture to boot.

During a global pandemic, players from all corners of the world have had to lean on each other more than ever. If there was an advantage to playing three tournaments in the fall – something few teams the SEC and Big 12 were allowed to do – it was being able to travel together and build a bond. Anderson recognized that early.

“We have a lot of depth, which is great,” Anderson said. “And it’s young depth, which is also fun.”

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