
Unlike regionals, Vanderbilt women start strong to take NCAA Championship lead
The Commodores got off to a much better start Friday, shooting 6 under to take a two-shot lead after the first round of the NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship at Omni La Costa in Carlsbad, California.
Oklahoma State sits second at 4 under as the Cowboys, like Vanderbilt, teed off in the morning wave, which consisted of the lower-ranked squads in the 30-team field. Florida also played early and shot even par, where it is tied with top-10 programs Oregon, Texas and Arizona State.
'I thought the girls did a nice job of bringing the momentum that we had the last two rounds in Lexington with us,' said Vanderbilt head coach Greg Allen, whose Commodores set a new program low at nationals thanks in large part to 3-under 69s from Ava Merrill and Tillie Claggett. 'It's really nice to take advantage of the morning tee time and get off to a good start. … It's still super early, so we understand there's a lot of golf left, and we just need to embrace the leaderboard and where we're at.'
Vanderbilt's five players also combined for just one double bogey or worse.
Further down the leaderboard, top-ranked Stanford is tied for 11th at 5 over. The Cardinal, which haven't lost a stroke-play competition since prior to last year's Pac-12 Championship, threw out a 77 from Annika Award finalist Meja Ortengren. No. 4 Florida State, which boasts the top two amateurs in the world in Mirabel Ting and Lottie Woad, shares 16th at 7 over. Ting and Woad shot 2-under 70 and even-par 72, respectively.
No. 2 Arkansas and No. 3 South Carolina each opened in 9 over, good only for T-21, while No. 7 Wake Forest is beating just three teams at 16 over. Gamecocks senior Hannah Darling, who was subbed out after an opening 84 at last year's NCAA Championship but bounced back this season to be ranked 12th nationally, shot 82 on Friday and is ahead of just three players.
Tennessee's Bailey Davis carded just one bogey while shooting 5-under 67. She leads Texas' Lauren Kim, USC's Catherine Park and LSU's Elsa Svensson.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
2 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Lunden Esterline, Asterisk Talley win Junior PGA titles; Charlie Woods backs up to T-9
While the U.S. Ryder Cup picture is still unclear, the U.S. Junior Ryder Cup team is nearly set. Lunden Esterline, a 2027 Auburn commit from Andover, Kansas, won the Junior PGA Championship by six shots on Friday afternoon and, in turn, earned an automatic Junior Ryder Cup berth. Esterline, who fired a second-round 62 to take control, closed in even-par 71 at the Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex's Ackerman-Allen Course to finish the 72-hole tournament at 19 under. 'I'm still trying to comprehend the whole thing, but it feels amazing,' Esterline said. 'It means a ton. It gives me a lot of confidence going into bigger tournaments after this that I can do it, and I proved to myself this week that I'm just as good as anybody else out there.' Behind Esterline were 2026 Vanderbilt commit Tyler Mawhinney and 2027 recruit Guiseppe Puebla in a share of second. Mawhinney double-bogeyed the par-3 17th hole before capping his closing 69 with birdie. Puebla fired the round of the day by three shots, a 64. Because Mawhinney, who earlier this year teamed with Will Hartman to win the U.S. Amateur Four-Ball, qualified for the U.S. Junior Ryder Cup team via points (along with top-ranked Miles Russell), Puebla received the automatic berth afforded to the runner-up. Esterline, Puebla, Mawhinney and Russell will be joined by U.S. Junior Amateur winner Hamilton Coleman and a captain's pick to be named Tuesday in competing in the two-day Junior Ryder Cup, which is scheduled for Sept. 23-25 at Nassau Country Club and Bethpage Black (singles only). Ayden Fynaut of Fresno, California, nearly had a solo second before doubling the par-4 18th hole. He tied for fourth at 12 under with China's Zenghao Hou, who played his final five holes in 4 over. As for Charlie Woods, he began Friday in the final threesome alongside Esterline, but after back-to-back 66s, he shot 74 to slip to 9 under and T-9. He was 12 under for the tournament until going bogey-double at Nos. 14 and 15. Woods likely will not receive the captain's pick for the Junior Ryder Cup. That pick should be extended to 2026 Vanderbilt commit Luke Colton, who is the second highest-ranked junior in the World Amateur Golf Ranking at No. 24, behind only Russell (16th) and ahead of Tyler Watts (40th), who is not eligible for the pick because he skipped the Junior PGA to play this week's Western Amateur. Colton, fresh off making the semifinals at the U.S. Junior, declined to the play the Western in favor of chasing a Junior Ryder Cup spot. Asterisk Talley took the girls division, birdieing two of her last three holes to help offset three bogeys in her last five. Talley earned the one-shot win over Zoe Cusack, who closed her final round bogey-double.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
James Scantlebury Commits To Boston University
Chicago Steel forward James Scantlebury has committed to Boston Univeristy, it was announced on Friday. A native of Montréal, Que., Scantlebury played for the Bishop Kearney Selects 16U AAA team last season, tallying 100 points (35 goals, 65 assists) in 56 games. A 2009-born skater, Scantlebury will join the USHL and play for the Steel in 2025-26 before making the jump to the NCAA and joining the Terriers. Make sure you bookmark The Hockey News' NCAA Page for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns and so much more.


American Press
6 hours ago
- American Press
Scooter Hobbs column: No easy pickings for SEC preseason poll
Before tossing this summer's SEC preseason football media poll into its rightful home — which would be next to some used coffee grinds at the bottom of a trash can — should we dare take one last glance at the latest? I suppose such foolishness would come under the heading of 'For entertainment purposes only.' After all, the poll, which is released as the grand finalé of SEC Media Days each year, is traditionally best known for being comically wrong far more than it ever stumbles onto anything right. Add to that the fact that every year there's one anonymous vote predicting Vanderbilt to win the whole shooting match and you can understand the fanfare it generates. Yes, there are people who actually get upset about the annual Unknown Lone Vandy Voter, as if wasting one (1) vote is making a mockery of such a solemn event as a worthless, useless poll that will be forgotten while experts are still over-dissecting it before opening weekend. Anyway, it's almost become a badge of honor among the conference leadership, the big-wigs who seem to relish its release each year, an event that comes with the delightful disclaimer about just how misguided the media hacks are historically prone to be. If you, or someone you know, has a prediction addiction, please keep them away from the SEC Media preseason poll and seek professional assistance and counseling. The SEC office does not endorse, nor can it be held responsible for, the results of this or any future predictions. Or something like that. It was just last year when the official release was quick to update and point out that only nine times in the previous 32 years had the bumbling, stumbling media correctly picked the eventual conference champion. Of course, this year the conference office wasn't quite so condescending. Don't be so quick to gloat. The media — drum roll, please — actually got it right last year in picking Georgia to win. So it's up to 10 out of 33 now and … who's laughing now? We're on a roll. And that was in the first year with two extra teams, 16 I guess it's up to now, with no divisions. It's harder to pick a conference champion when you can't even remember who's in the conference this week. But last year not only did your media whiz kids get Georgia right, the preseason poll also had newcomer Texas in the top two as the team Georgia did, in fact, beat for the title. Once again, you may have noticed, Vanderbilt did NOT win the conference, but the Commodores DID beat Alabama, which might have been just as much fun. Nobody saw it coming, that's for sure. So maybe the media is on to something. Vanderbilt, for instance, this year got two votes to win it all. The converts are pouring in. Maybe it's a trend, maybe not. But with new-found respect for the long-maligned media poll, maybe we can take a last, serious look at the latest offering from the June confab. (Insert weather-worn disclaimers here.) But, OK, Texas is predicted to win the SEC. Makes sense. Arch Manning is the Longhorns quarterback. Georgia is picked to finish second and would probably be picked first if not for the Burnt Arch factor. But Georgia is now what Alabama once was and the logical next choice. Alabama is picked third because it's Alabama and if the Tide finish worse than that, Nick Saban really might come back. Then it seems, the media took the easy way out, poking around to see which teams were set at quarterback. That may be why LSU is next at No. 4 with Garrett Nussmeier, the preseason second team all-conference quarterback. It's also logical that South Carolina, with first-team preseason All-SEC quarterback LaNorris Sellers, is No. 5 and Florida, with rising star DJ Lagway, is No. 6. No. 7 Ole Miss has concerns at the position, but the media assumption may be that head coach Lane Kiffin will always find a nuisance to play the position. Texas A&M found Marcel Reed against LSU last year and if he ever figures out how to throw, the No. 8 ranking may be too low. Maybe by now you're figuring out how tough this prediction business is in the current atmosphere. That's eight teams and we're only halfway through. If that holds — and it won't — it would delegate some pretty big brand names to the bottom half. Teams like Tennessee, Auburn, Oklahoma. You figure one of those three is going to jump up among the challengers. Don't forget Missouri, either. Those Tigers were in the jumbled six-way tie for fourth place last year. Then the bottom three look pretty well settled in down there — Arkansas, Kentucky and Mississippi State. But who knows about No. 12? Maybe the uplifting Vanderbilt resurgence continues under Diego Pavia who may not have the best arm, but surely has the best name among SEC quarterbacks. This seems like a Hallmark movie waiting to happen. If so, you read it here first. * Scooter Hobbs covers LSU for the American Press. You can contact him at