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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Southern Cal's youngsters ride the Wave to victory at San Luis Obispo Country Club



   Southern California women’s golf coach Andrea Gaston front-loaded the spring portion of the Trojans’ schedule, sending her young team out in the Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge, the Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate and the Bruin Wave Invitational in consecutive weeks.
   Then she watched her team grow up right on front of her eyes. After finishing 10th in an absolutely loaded field at the Northrop Grumman and second at the Allstate Sugar Bowl, Southern California, No. 10 in the latest Golfstat rankings, bested tournament host and crosstown rival UCLA, the No. 1 team in the country, by eight shots to capture the team title in the Bruin Wave Invitational Tuesday at a chilly San Luis Obispo Country Club in San Luis Obispo, Calif.
   Southern Cal grabbed control of tournament with an opening-round 300 in tough conditions Monday morning and never let go, adding a 298 Monday afternoon and finishing up with another 10-over-par 298 over the 6,323-yard, par-72 San Luis Obispo layout in Tuesday’s final round for a 32-over 896 total.
   UCLA, behind individual winner Lilia Vu, a junior from Fountain Valley, Calif. and the No. 2 player in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), was the runnerup, the Bruins’ final-round 301 leaving them eight shots behind Southern Cal at 40-over 904.
   No. 4 Stanford finished up with the best team round of the tournament, a 6-over 294, that left the Cardinal two shots behind UCLA in third at 906. No. 43 San Diego State, the only non-Pac-12 team among the top six finishers, had a final-round 303 to take fourth at 913, seven shots behind Stanford.
   No. 18 Washington was another shot behind San Diego State in fifth at 914 after a final-round 306 with No. 19 Colorado a distant sixth, 14 shots behind the Huskies, in the 16-team field at 928 after posting a 309 in the final round.
   Southern Cal and Stanford were semifinal losers in the NCAA Championship at Rich Harvest Farms last spring to Northwestern and eventual champion Arizona State, the third Pac-12 representative in the final four, respectively. UCLA had dusted all three of those teams in the Pac-12 Championship only to see its postseason hopes go off the rails in the Lubbock Regional.
   This, however, is an almost completely remade Southern Cal team. But like perennial national contenders in any sport, the Trojans don’t rebuild, they just reload.
   Jennifer Chang, a freshman from Cary, N.C., led the way for the Trojans, finishing alone in third place at 6-over 222, seven shots behind Vu. She finished up with a 3-over 75 in a final round that was delayed at the start by frost.
   Alisen Corpuz, a sophomore from Honolulu, Hawaii, was two shots behind her teammate Chang in a tie for fourth at 8-over 224 after a solid final round of 2-over 74. 
   Maybe the key to the victory was the play of Gabi Ruffels, a freshman from Australia, the daughter of tennis champions who joined the program at the start of the spring semester, just in time to get thrown into tournaments with the best players in college golf, with many of the top women’s amateur players in the world. After opening with a 76, Ruffels had a pair of steady 3-over 75s to finish tied for seventh at 10-over 226.
   Alyaa Abdulghany, the third stud freshman in the Southern Cal lineup out of Newport Beach, Calif., finished tied for 16th at 229, carding a crucial 2-over 74 in the final round. Rounding out the Southern Cal lineup was Aiko Leong, a sophomore from Honolulu, Hawaii who finished tied for 27th at 233 after a final-round 81. Leong’s opening-round 75, though, nicely picked up Abdulghany, who struggled to an 80. It’s what the good teams do.
   Vu got a little run for her money in the individual chase from an entirely expected source, Stanford’s Albane Valenzuela, a sophomore from Switzerland who is No. 5 in the Women’s WAGR.
   Vu had led Valenzuela by five going into the final round and her 3-over 75 was good enough for a 1-under 215 total and a two-shot margin of victory over Valenzuela, who matched par with a 72 for a 1-over 217 total. Valenzuela beat Vu in the U.S. Women’s Amateur semifinals last summer at San Diego Country Club, so Vu got a small bit of revenge. But this rivalry isn’t near over. There are several more chapters yet to be written.
   Sharing fourth place with Southern Cal’s Corpuz was Vu’s teammate, Mariel Galdiano, a sophomore from Pearl City, Hawaii and the qualifying medalist in the 2016 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Rolling Green Golf Club. Galdiano was probably disappointed with her final-round 77 that left her tied with Corpuz at 6-over 222, two shots behind Southern Cal’s Chang, but Galdiano knows there are bigger battles to come.
   Washington’s Sarah Rhee, a junior from Seattle, Wash., finished up strong with a 1-over 73 to end up alone in sixth at 9-over 225. And San Diego State’s Sara Kjelker, a freshman from Sweden, shared seventh place with Southern Cal’s Ruffels at 10-over 226 after carding a final-round 77.
   It wouldn’t be a big surprise to see the top three in the Bruin Wave, Southern Cal, UCLA and Stanford, among the top eight still standing when it comes time for match play in the NCAA Championship at Karsten Creek Golf Club in Stillwater, Okla. in May. But there is still a lot of golf to be played between now and then.






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