logo
Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason

Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason

USA Today15-04-2025
Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason
After a few years of runaway performances in the Annika Award race, there are numerous players in contention for the women's college golf Player of the Year award with a month left in the season.
The last four winners – Rachel Heck, Rose Zhang (x2) and Ingrid Lindblad – had dominant seasons and all but locked up the award heading into the postseason, and their performances down the stretch just cemented their name on the award. But in the 2024-25 season, there has been no player to separate from the field.
There are, however, numerous players still in contention for the award, and there are a handful more who could make their case with dominant performances in conference championships, NCAA Regionals and the NCAA Championship.
There's about a month left in the season, with the NCAA Women's Golf Championship concluding May 21 at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa. Voting for the Annika Award ends on the Monday of stroke play, May 19.
More: 2025 NCAA women's college golf conference championship dates and results
The three frontrunners for the Annika Award:
Kary Hollenbaugh
The junior at Ohio State has been dominant this spring. Hollenbaugh has won four of her five events in 2025, coming at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge, Spartan Suncoast Invitational, Clemson Invitational and the Therese Hession Buckeye Invitational. The only tournament she didn't win, the Darius Rucker, she tied for 13th.
Hollenbaugh's worst finishes this season are a pair of T-22s coming in the fall. But this spring, Hollenbaugh has been arguably the best in college golf, and she's riding a hot streak heading into the Big 10 Championship.
Jasmine Koo
If the college golf season had ended in the fall, the freshman at USC would've won the Annika Award by a landslide. She has had a stellar debut in college golf, collecting four wins at the Windy City Collegiate Classic, Stanford Intercollegiate, East Lake Cup and Juli Inkster at Meadow Club Invitational.
Although Koo has only one win this spring, she has finished in the top six in four of her five starts. Her and Hollenbaugh in the Big 10 Championship will be fun to watch. There have been numerous standout freshmen this season on the women's side, but none have four wins like Koo.
Mirabel Ting
Ting, a junior at Florida State, has had a season for the ages. On the same squad as top-ranked amateur Lottie Woad, Ting has risen to the top of the NCAA golf rankings and No. 2 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. She has collected five victories this season, coming at the Folds of Honor Collegiate, Schooner Fall Classic, Collegiate Invitational at Guadalajara, Briar's Creek Invitational and the Florida State Match Up.
The five wins are the most in Power 4 Conferences, and Ting has lost to only five golfers all season in stroke-play events. She has put together a dominant resume that can become stronger with postseason success.
Note: Just because a player isn't mentioned here doesn't mean they're not in contention for the award.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jase Summy adds Western Amateur, the 'biggest win of my life,' to Walker Cup resumé
Jase Summy adds Western Amateur, the 'biggest win of my life,' to Walker Cup resumé

NBC Sports

time5 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Jase Summy adds Western Amateur, the 'biggest win of my life,' to Walker Cup resumé

Few players, if any, have had better summers than Ethan Fang. The Oklahoma State standout helped the Cowboys to an NCAA Championship in late May before flying across the pond and becoming the first American to win the British Amateur in nearly 20 years. After narrowly missing the cut at The Open, Fang co-medaled at this week's Western Amateur before storming through to the final with convincing wins over Huge Le Goff and Jacob Modleski, plus a hard-fought 3-and-1 result against Ben James. Like James, Fang is already on the U.S. Walker Cup team that will compete at Cypress Point this September. So, too, are Jackson Koivun, Michael La Sasso and Preston Stout, which leaves five spots still up for grabs. But on Saturday afternoon at Skokie Country Club, Jase Summy entered the chat. Summy, a rising senior at Oklahoma, dominated Fang, 6 and 5, to win the 123rd edition of the Western Amateur and tie the championship record for largest margin of victory in a final, equaling 6-and-5 marks by Phelps B. Hoyt (1901 over Bruce D. Smith) and John Klauk (2002 over Adam Rubinson). 'This is the biggest win of my life – by far,' Summy said. 'I knew my game was there, but I hadn't quite broken through. Today, I did.' Fang, ranked third in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, took just one hole against Summy, whom he grew up playing junior golf against in Texas. Fresh off a 19-hole victory over Florida's Zack Swanwick, Summy won five of the last six to end things before the 14th hole. 'It was a good week,' Fang said. 'Stroke play went great, and I was proud to co-medal. I did my best to stay focused, but I got a little tired and a little loose near the end. It didn't go my way, but that's golf.' Summy is projected to rise to seventh in the world, and with a T-3 at the Southern Amateur and T-12 at the Northeast Amateur this summer following a junior season that included a win and six other top-10s, he should feel confident about getting the call for Cypress. The final five Walker Cuppers are named after the U.S. Amateur, which begins a week from Monday at Olympic Club in San Francisco. With his win, Summy also received a sponsor exemption into next summer's NV5 Invitational, the Korn Ferry Tour stop outside of Chicago. 'This was a long, tough week,' Summy added. 'I prepared the right way, mentally and physically. I know I'm on the right path.'

Ohio State announces its Iron Buckeye Awards for the 2025 season
Ohio State announces its Iron Buckeye Awards for the 2025 season

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

Ohio State announces its Iron Buckeye Awards for the 2025 season

The offseason is over, and Ohio State football practice has officially begun. Heading into fall camp, the Buckeyes have been working hard all summer to improve their physical and mental strength to prepare for the season ahead. Ohio State has long been known for awarding accolades, most notably the Buckeye Leaves added to players' helmets for outstanding play, a tradition started by none other than Woody Hayes himself. More recently, OSU has handed out the Iron Buckeye award, given in recognition of players who exhibit 'unquestionable training, dedication, determination, discipline, toughness and leadership' during offseason workouts. This year, the honor went to a total of eight players, two of whom were given the award last season. Sonny Style and Jeremiah Smith were the only two repeat honorees joining first timers Austin Siereveld, Kenyatta Jackson Jr., Lincoln Kienholz, Payton Pierce, Carnell Tate, and Jaylen McClain. It's nice to see Tate join Smith as part of the receiving unit. It was also interesting to see Lincoln Kienholz on the list. It's clear that he has his eyes set on making a run at being the starting quarterback and won't back down from competition. Julian Sayin may be the presumed starter, but Kienholz is going to force Ryan Day to think long and hard. The Buckeyes open the season in less than a month when Texas comes to Columbus for a rematch of the Goodyear Cotton Bowl.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store