College golf job blog: News from around the coaching community for 2022

News from around the coaching community.

Interested in the college golf coaching scene around the country in 2022? Get the latest updates on this page.

If you have information to share on this page, please e-mail Lance Ringler or Adam Woodard.

Editor’s note: To see previous listings, click here.

January 12

IDAHO

Athletic Director Terry Gawlik announced the hire of Stephanie Young  Stephanie Youngs has been named head women’s golf coach at the University of Idaho.

Young comes to Idaho from Bowling Green where she was the head golf coach for the past 16 years.

“It is an honor to become the next head women’s golf coach for the Idaho Vandals,” Young said. “Thank you to Terry Gawlik and Heath Senour  for this fantastic opportunity. I am excited to begin working with our student-athletes and get settled into the Moscow community. I would also like to thank everyone at BGSU for entrusting me to lead their women’s golf program for 16 years. I will be forever grateful for my time there and am proud of all that we were able to accomplish together.”

During her time at BGSU, Young has guided the Falcons to a school-record 12 team tournament titles and 11 individual tournament titles. Young played her college golf at the University of Toledo.

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Ringler: New six-regional format in women’s college golf comes with tournament ops benefits but also forces ‘great’ play

The old adage “just play better” more than applies to the new six-regional format in the women’s college golf postseason.

There is a saying in the world of competitive golf that when the going gets tough, the solution is simple: Just play better.

With the addition of two more regionals for the postseason in NCAA Division I women’s golf the saying might as well be: Just play great. That might be what it takes now to advance to the national championship each spring.

This past week the NCAA announced it would add two more regionals this coming spring. Instead of a four-regional format with 18 teams playing for six spots, we will now see 12 teams at each of six locations playing for four tickets to the national finals.

“I think it’s great,” Washington head women’s coach Mary Lou Mulflur said. “You still have to play well and beat good teams. It just makes more sense from a logistical standpoint.”

Mulflur also added that two more regionals should translate to less travel for many teams.

There is no question a six-regional format will make tournament operations more manageable. Smaller fields with fewer players on the course are ideal for so many reasons. The old format featured 18-team fields, which is about the limit when it comes to running an event with just one wave. Any sort of lengthy delay can put the event in jeopardy of not finishing or being reduced from 54 holes.

“The pace of play at NCAA regionals has been a big issue for years with having 18 teams at each site,” Arizona head women’s coach Laura Ianello said. “This will allow for a normal tournament experience compared to the past few years where you would have an hour wait at the turn.”

This move also allows an opportunity for more schools to host a regional, as long as the NCAA can continue to get enough bids. One worry, however, is that the same schools and venues will emerge as hosts. Will we see many new venues?

With just four teams getting to advance from each site for a total of 24 teams at the NCAA Championship, is it now harder to advance?

“It will make it even more difficult and competitive as a team to make it to the national championship,” Kansas head women’s coach Lindsay Kuhle said. “You have to bring your best game over three days to qualify.”

Doing the math, the percentages are the same – 33.3% of the field will advance. However, it certainly will feel different. With fewer qualifying spots, it will feel different, likely resulting in even more pressure to perform well.

“You’ll see the top-ranked teams feel more pressure now,” Kuhle said.

For those teams with a better seed, it will be harder to recover from a bad day. And when you have a host school in the field, that alone will hurt the chances of advancing for the visiting teams. The men have had a six-regional format for the past 11 years after a switch from three regionals. Their six regionals have five qualifying spots with field sizes of 13 or 14.

On the men’s side:

  • Teams that have hosted a regional are 38/49 (77.6%) in advancing to the NCAA finals.
  • Teams that have hosting a regional and been seeded within the top five are 32/36 (88.9%%) in advancing to the NCAA finals.
  • Teams that have hosted a regional and been seeded outside the top five are 7/14 (50.0%) in advancing to the NCAA finals.

Looking at the men’s regional play, history suggests that with a decent host school playing in the event, the number to advance will likely be one lower.

“The host schools now even have more of an advantage because of the experience they have on their home course,” added Kuhle.

A certain positive with the addition is what it does for individuals. There will be six individuals at each site, and the top two players not on an advancing team will earn a spot in the national finals. This means the number of individuals participating in the postseason increases from 24 to 36.

“Increasing the number of individuals is a smart idea too. We should give more attention to the individual achievements in college golf and this will help,” Old Dominion head women’s coach Mallory Hetzel said. “There are quality players competing on teams ranked well outside the bubble. It will be good for those individuals, their school and the game as a whole to be able to include them in the NCAA tournament.”

“Congratulations to those committee members for taking such a positive step,” Campbell head women’s coach John Crooks said. “The new six-site format will give the NCAA tournament committee at each site the maximum flexibility to conduct the best possible championship.”

Crooks was quick to mention something else that the majority of women’s coaches believe will also improve the women’s game.

“Now if the committee will adopt the .500 rule,” he said, “we would have the best 12 teams at each of the six sites.”

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NCAA Division I women’s college golf postseason gets regional shake-up

Two more regional sites will be announced in January.

On Wednesday it was announced that a request from the NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Committee to move to a six-regional format was approved by the NCAA Competition Oversight Committee. The change will go into effect for this upcoming spring’s championship, May 20-25 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Each regional site will now be comprised of 12 teams and six individuals. The top four teams and top two individuals (not on an advancing team) will qualify for the championship. According to a release from the NCAA, “72 teams will still qualify for regional play, with the number of individuals not on an advancing team increasing from 24 to 36.”

“The additional individual championship playing opportunities is exciting, and the smaller field sizes at the six regional sites positively addresses the concerns related to the checkpoint pace of play system at regionals and allows for additional flexibility in inclement weather situations,” said Julie Manning, chair of the Division I Women’s Golf Committee and deputy athletics director and senior woman administrator at Minnesota via a release.

“It’s the right move for the championship.”

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Women’s team | Women’s individual

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Four sites were already announced to host regional events, May 9-11

  • The Championship Course at UNM  in Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • University of Michigan Golf Course in Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • Karsten Creek Golf Club in Stillwater, Oklahoma
  • Seminole Legacy Golf Club Tallahassee, Florida

Bidding for the final two sites is expected to begin in early November, with the sites to be announced in January.

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Debbie Blount, the 63-year-old sophomore, earns NIL deal with Walk-On’s Sports Bistreaux

Have a few years of eligibility and some game left in the tank? There’s NIL money to be made.

Have a few years of eligibility and some game left in the tank? There’s name, image and likeness money to be made.

Just ask 63-year-old Debbie Blount, the nearly-senior-citizen sophomore member of the Reinhardt University women’s golf team. Blount joined the team as a freshman walk-on and has since received a partial scholarship and her first NIL deal with Walk-On’s Sports Bistreaux as their “Walk-On of the Week.” The program aims to highlight the underdogs in sports and support collegiate walk-on athletes across the country.

“I had to work very hard to keep my grades up and qualify for all the tournaments, but I had a ball as a walk-on,” said Blount. She’s now playing in the lead spot and boasts a 4.0 GPA.

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Women’s team | Women’s individual

Blount began the season with a T-34, then bounced back with a sixth-place finish at the TWU Invitational top 25 at the Firehawk Invitational. Reinhardt University in Waleska, Georgia, competes in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).

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Rose Zhang remains unstoppable, sweeping third college title while leading Stanford to 22-shot victory

The Stanford freshman is doing things no other player has done before.

Rose Zhang has now won her first three starts at Stanford. It’s the first time in Cardinal history that a freshman has swept her first three events. For the record, Tiger Woods won two of this first three at Stanford.

Zhang’s 16-under effort at the Stanford Intercollegiate ties the relation-to-par record that sophomore Rachel Heck posted last season. The two-time USGA champion carded only two bogeys over the course of 54 holes at the home event, winning by four. The No. 1-ranked amateur is now 23 under through nine rounds of college golf, sporting a 69.1 average.

The Stanford women’s team are now a perfect 3-0 as well.

The Cardinal’s 28-under performance ties the 54-hole record set last year at NCAA regionals, also hosted at Stanford’s home course. Freshman Caroline Sturdza of Switzerland tied for fifth for Stanford while Aline Krauter (T-7), Heck (T-10) and Angelina Ye (T-19) rounded out the lineup.

The Cardinal topped runner-up San Jose State by 22 strokes. UCLA was the only other team that broke par at 1 under.

The legendary Woods won three times as a freshman and eight times as a sophomore in his two years at Stanford. Maverick McNealy, Patrick Rodgers and Woods hold the all-time record for most wins at Stanford with 11. Andrea Lee, a rookie on the LPGA, is next with nine.

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Sophomore Rachel Heck won six times in one semester last spring, including a sweep of the postseason.

Stanford heads next to Hawaii for the final event on the fall schedule, the Pac-12 Preview. There are eight events listed for the spring, including the NCAA Championship.

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Stanford, Rose Zhang make college golf look easy, start season with consecutive wins at Windy City Collegiate Classic

Rose Zhang is making college golf look easy.

It’s not easy to win a golf tournament, let alone at the Division I level as a freshman. Rose Zhang begs to differ.

The Stanford freshman has now won the first two starts of her collegiate career, claiming The Molly last week and now the Windy City Collegiate Classic on Tuesday at Westmoreland Country Club in Wilmette, Illinois.

Zhang, the 2020 U.S. Amateur and 2021 U.S. Junior Amateur champion, shot rounds of 72-70-70 to finish at 4 under, one shot clear of Florida junior Jackie Lucena and three of Texas freshman Bohyun Park. The trio were the lone players to finish under par on the individual leaderboard.

Windy City scores: Team | Individual

On the team leaderboard it was a lot of the same. Stanford took the title as a group as well, finishing at 14 over, eight shots clear of runner-up Virginia. Joining Zhang in the top 10 was Aline Krauter, who finished T-7 at 4 over.

Florida (+26), Texas (+28) and Oregon (+35) round out the top five.

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College golf recruiting: Division I verbal commitment list

Stay up to date on the latest news surrounding the world of college golf recruiting.

There’s isn’t much of an offseason when it comes to the college golf scene.

Schools compete in both the fall and spring seasons, and as soon as the NCAA Championship concludes in May, players spend their summers playing in amateur events nationwide and their coaches are out hitting the recruiting trail.

To keep you up to date on the future of your favorite college teams, here is a list of college golf verbal commitments for Division I, by school. Schools are listed in alphabetical order and commits are separated by class year.

If you have a commitment you’d like added, email Adam Woodard, Julie Williams or Lance Ringler with name, class, hometown and which college the player committed to.

**LAST UPDATED: August 30, 2021**

Men

ALABAMA

2022

  • Nick Dunlap, Greenville, South Carolina
  • Jonathan Griz, Hilton Head, South Carolina

ARIZONA STATE

2022

  • Luke Potter, Encinitas, California
  • Michael Mjaaseth, Oslo, Norway

2023

  • Connor Williams, Escondido, California
  • Anawin Pikulthong, Gilbert, Arizona

AUBURN

2023

  • Cayden Pope, Lexington, Kentucky

BUCKNELL

2022

  • James Robbins, North Andover, Massachusetts

CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY

2023

  • Sihao Cong, Irvine, California
  • Ethan Fang, Plano, Texas
  • Tyler Lee, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey
  • Eric Lee, Fullerton, California

CENTRAL FLORIDA

2022

  • Cooper Tate, Windermere, Florida

EAST TENNESSEE STATE

2022

  • Matthew Dodd-Berry, Cheshire, England

 

FLORIDA

2022

  • Will McGriff, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida
  • Parker Bell, Tallahassee, Florida
  • Luke Poulter, Orlando, Florida

2023

  • Jay Brooks, Boca Raton, Florida

 

FLORIDA GULF COAST

2022

  • Sebastian Frau, Milan, Italy

 

GEORGIA TECH

2022

  • Hiroshi Tai, Singapore
  • Aidan Tran, Fresno, California

ILLINOIS

2022

  • Ryan Voois, Ladera Ranch, California

 

JAMES MADISON

2022

  • Garrett Kuhla, Richmond, Virginia

KANSAS STATE

2022

  • Ben Stoller, Owasso, Oklahoma

 

 

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT

2023

  • Mason Snyder, Las Vegas

 

 

 

MURRAY STATE

2022

  • Jakob Wellman, Owensboro, Kentucky
  • Drew Wallace, Crestwood, Kentucky

 

OKLAHOMA

2022

  • Karson Grigsby, Abilene, Texas
  • Jase Summy, Keller, Texas

2023

  • Ryder Cowan, Edmond, Oklahoma
  • PJ Maybank, Cheboygan, Michigan

OKLAHOMA STATE

2023

  • Gaven Lane, Argyle, Texas

OREGON STATE

2022

  • Rylan Johnson, Gilbert, Arizona
  • Collin Hodgkinson, Beaverton, Oregon

PACIFIC

2022

  • Ian Fritz, Las Vegas

 


SOUTHERN MISS

2021

  • Cam Guidry, Picayune, Mississippi
  • Ryan Dupuy, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

2022

  • Tommy Latter, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada

STANFORD

2023

  • Kush Arora, Pleasanton, California
  • Ethan Gao, Alpharetta, Georgia

TEMPLE

2022
  • Darren Nolan, Glenside, Pennsylvania

TENNESSEE

2022

  • Evan Woosley-Reed, Shelbyville, Tennessee
  • Bruce Murphy, Johns Creek, Georgia

TEXAS

2022

  • Jacob Sosa, Austin, Texas

2023

  • Jack Gilbert, Houston
  • Tommy Morrison, Dallas

TEXAS A&M

2021

  • Dallas Hankamer, Temple, Texas

2023

  • Aaron Pounds, The Woodlands, Texas

TROY

2021

  • Blake Rigdon, Destin, Florida
  • Jake Springer, Tallahassee, Florida
  • Brantley Scott, Dothan, Alabama

UAB

2021

  • Matthew Streitman, Dothan, Alabama
  • Cole Imig, Birmingham, Alabama
  • Paul Bruce, Guntersville, Alabama

UTSA

2021

  • Carson Gallaher, New Braunfels Texas
  • Patrick Kahanek, San Antonio

2022

  • Brayden Bare, Waco, Texas

UCLA

2021

  • Evan Chien, Irvine, California

2022

  • Lincoln Melcher, Burbank, California
  • Matthew Yamin, New York
  • Anton Ouyang, San Jose, California

2023

  • Luciano Conlan, Carlsbad, California

UNLV

2021

  • Tommy Kimmel, Spokane, Washington

USC

2021

  • Gavin Aurilia, Phoenix, Arizona
  • Jackson Rivera, Rancho Santa Fe, California

2022

  • Mahanth Chirravuri, Chandler, Arizona

2023

  • Carson Kim, Fullerton, California

UTAH STATE

2021

  • Julio Arronte, Xalapa, Mexico

VANDERBILT

2021

  • Gordon Sargent, Birmingham, Alabama
  • Jackson Van Paris, Pinehurst, North Carolina

2022

  • John Broderick, Wellesley, Massachusetts
  • Wells Williams, West Point, Mississippi

VIRGINIA

2021

  • Matthew Monastero, Leesburg, Virginia

2022

  • Benjamin James, Milford, Connecticut

VIRGINIA TECH

2021

  • David Stanford, Vienna, Virginia

WAKE FOREST

2021

  • Scotty Kennon, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida
  • Marshall Meisel, Chevy Chase, Maryland
  • Collin Adams, Charlotte, North Carolina

XAVIER

2021

  • Justin Gabbard, Fort Thomas, Kentucky
  • Shawn Sehra, Canada

2022

  • Drew Wagner, Austin, Texas

• • •

Women

ARIZONA STATE

2022

  • Beth Coulter, Ireland
  • Paula Schulz-Hanssen, Germany
  • Grace Summerhays, Scottsdale, Arizona

AUBURN

2021

  • Casey Weidenfeld, Pembroke Pines, Florida
  • Morgan Jones, Auburn, Alabama

BOSTON COLLEGE

2021

  • Eubin Shim, Waco, Texas

CINCINNATI

2021

  • Julia Rabadam, Upper Arlington, Ohio

COLGATE

2021

  • Robbie Herzig, New York, New York

COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON

2022

  • Adrian Anderson, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina

DUKE

2021

  • Sophia Bae, Norwood, New Jersey
  • Rylie Heflin, Avondale, Pennsylvania

2022

  • Andie Smith, Hobe Sound, Florida

FLORIDA

2022

  • Karoline Tuttle, Lake Mary, Florida

GEORGIA

2023

  • Natachanok (Drive) Tunwannarux, Bangkok, Thailand

HOUSTON

2021

  • Brooke Morales, Mckinney, Texas

LIPSCOMB

2021

  • Tzunami Polito Franklin, Tennessee

PEPPERDINE

2021

  • Lauren Gomez, San Diego

RADFORD

2021

  • Kaitlyn Mosdell, Roanoke, Virginia

TEXAS A&M-CORPUS CHRISTI

2021

  • Reagan Gray, Missouri City, Texas
  • Anastacia Johnson, Tacoma, Washington

TULSA

2021

2022

  • Grace Kilcrease, Springdale, Arkansas

USC

2023

  • Bailey Shoemaker, West Edmeston, New York

VANDERBILT

2022

  • Lynn Lim, Gallatin, Tennessee

WASHINGTON STATE

2022

  • Hannah Harrison, Granite Bay, California

WESTERN KENTUCKY

2021

  • Catie Craig, Sautee Nacoochee, Georgia

XAVIER

2022

  • Madison Reemsnyder, Canton, Ohio