Don’t look now, but Lisa Strom might have something going with her Ohio State women’s golf team.
Strom was the PIAA champion as a senior at Lansdale Catholic in 1994 and was a standout for the Buckeyes before playing professionally on the LPGA Tour and whatever the developmental tour – it’s the Epson Tour these days -- was called back then.
Strom returned to Ohio State as an assistant under Therese Hession, the legendary head coach for the Buckeyes under whom Strom had played. Strom made a couple of stops as a head coach, including a time when Kent State was a national power, before returning to Columbus.
When Hession retired, Strom was an obvious and easy choice to take over at her alma mater in 2021.
It was a frustrating spring a year ago when the Buckeyes finished in sixth place as a six seed in the Bryan Regional, five shots shy of earning a trip to the NCAA Championship.
It’s starting to look like things are going to be different this spring. With Kary Hollenbaugh, a junior from New Albany, Ohio and No. 22 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), blossoming into a real star and some talented freshmen gaining confidence with each passing day, Ohio State rewrote the program’s record book with a 10-shot victory over Southeastern Conference power Arkansas in the Clemson Invitational, which wrapped up Sunday at The Reserve at Lake Keowee in Sunset, S.C.
Ohio State, a Big Ten representative, came into the Clemson Invitational at No. 28 in the Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings, but the Buckeyes should be moving up after going a whopping 45-under par and leaving a talented field, including Arkansas, which has been one of the hottest teams in women’s college golf throughout the wraparound 2024-2025 season and is No. 2 in the Scoreboard rankings, in the dust.
Hollenbaugh has emerged as the leading lady for Ohio State. After a couple of 4-under 68s in the first two rounds over the 6,489-yard, par-72 Jack Nicklaus design at Lake Keowee, Hollenbaugh closed with a career-best 8-under 64 for a 16-under 200 total that gave her a one-shot victory over Arkansas’ Kendall Todd, a senior from Goodyear, Ariz. and No. 30 in the Women’s WAGR.
I always try to post on the Orange Blossom Tour events in Florida in January and Hollenbaugh was an impressive winner of the South Atlantic Women’s Amateur Championship, better known by its shorthand moniker The Sally, at Oceanside Country Club in Ormond Beach, Fla. for the second straight year. Turned out it was a preview of things to come.
The victory in the Clemson Invitational was Hollenbaugh’s third of the spring. She won twice in February, capturing the title in the Therese Hession Regional Challenge hosted by Ohio State at the Palos Verdes Golf Club in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. and winning again at the Spartan Suncoast Invitational at the Palm Aire Country Club’s Champions Course in Sarasota, Fla.
Ohio State opened with a 13-under 275 at Lake Keowee and then set a program record with a 16-under 272 in Saturday’s second round to take a commanding 11-shot lead over SMU, an Atlantic Coast Conference entry and No. 33 in the Scoreboard rankings, going into the final round.
Then the Buckeyes did it again as, fueled by Hollenbaugh’s sizzling 64, they matched their new program record with another 16-under 272 in the final round for a 45-under 819 total. Those were program records for both the total and the total in relation to par.
With a gloomy forecast for Sunday, the teams played the first nine holes of the final round Saturday, so only nine holes remained to be played Sunday.
Arkansas, getting a remarkable 11-under 61 from Todd, set a program record for score in relation to par with its 20-under 268 final round as the Razorbacks finished with a 35-under 829 total, still somehow 10 shots behind Ohio State.
Arkansas, which has won four team titles this season, had opened with a 9-under 279 before adding a 6-under 282 in Saturday’s second round.
Todd trailed Hollenbaugh by four shots when the final round began Saturday afternoon. She made 11 birdies and had seven pars as she tied the NCAA women’s record in relation to par with her 11-under round and is just the sixth woman ever to record a 61.
Todd had opened with a 1-under 71 before adding a 3-under 69 in the second round.
Todd and her teammate, Maria Jose Marin, a sophomore from Colombia and No. 6 in the Women’s WAGR, both reached the semifinals in last summer’s U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.
Marin contributed a 6-under 66 to Arkansas’ final-round surge as she finished alone in fifth place with a 10-under 206 total. Marin had opened with a 3-under 69 before adding a 1-under 71 in the second round.
Arkansas captured the team title in last spring’s Las Vegas Regional as a two seed, but came up short of a spot in the match-play bracket in the NCAA Championship at the La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif. Marin finished in a tie for fourth place in the individual standings at La Costa.
LSU, another SEC power and No. 11 in the Scoreboard
rankings, finished nine shots behind
Arkansas in third place with a 26-under 838 total. After opening with an
8-under 280, the Tigers added a sparkling 16-under 272 in the second round
before closing with a 12-under 276.
LSU, in the final year of the era of Ingrid Lindblad and Latana Stone, earned a spot in the match-play bracket in last spring’s NCAA Championship at La Costa before falling to Oregon in the quarterfinals.
Tennessee, another SEC entry and No. 32 in the Women’s WAGR, finished seven shots behind LSU in fourth place with a 19-under 845 as the Volunteers got off to a fast start with a 10-under 278 and added a 6-under 282 in the second round before closing with a 3-under 285.
Tennessee failed to advance to last spring’s NCAA Championship as a seven seed in the Bermuda Run Regional.
SMU was Ohio State’s closest pursuer going into the final round as the Mustangs added a 6-over 282 in the second round to their opening round of 12-under 276. SMU closed with a 2-over 290 to finish three shots behind Tennessee in fifth place with a 16-under 848 total.
SMU earned a trip to last spring’s NCAA Championship by finishing in a tie for second place as a five seed in the Bryan Regional.
Louisville, one of SMU’s ACC rivals, finished a shot behind the Mustangs in sixth place with a 15-under 849 total. The Cardinals, No. 51 in the Scoreboard rankings, were solid throughout the weekend, opening with a 3-under 285 and adding a 7-under 281 in the second round before closing with a 5-under 283.
Penn State, getting a tie for 10th place in the individual standings from its talented freshman, Jiratchaya Jiratthitinun of Thailand, finished in 13th place in the 15-team field with a 15-over 879 total.
It was the first appearance in the Clemson Invitational for Penn State as second-year head coach Kristen Simpson continues to try to expose her Nittany Lions to some better competition. Never a bad thing in my book.
Penn State struggled in the opening round with a 15-over 303 before settling down with a pair of even-par 288s in the final two rounds.
Penn State is one of Ohio State’s Big Ten rivals and the Big Ten Championship will return to the outer edge of the Philadelphia area for the second straight spring when it tees off April 18 – play concludes Easter Sunday -- at Bulle Rock Golf Course, the Pete Dye design that was once the site of an LPGA major championship, in Havre de Grace, Md.
Backing up Hollenbaugh for Ohio State was one of the three freshmen in Strom’s lineup at Lake Keowee, Marina Joy-Moreno of Spain, as she finished alone in fourth place, the best of her still fledgling college career, in the individual standings with an 11-under 205 total, another career best.
Joyce-Marino carded back-to-back 3-under 69s in the first two rounds before closing with a career-best 5-under 67.
Another freshman, Nellie Ong of England, finished among the group tied for 15th place with a 6-under 210 total, a career best. Ong sandwiched an even-par 72 in the second round with a pair of 3-under 69s.
The third freshman in the Ohio State lineup, Mandy Song of China, finished among a trio of players tied for 21st place at 5-under 211, including a sizzling career-best 8-under 64 in Saturday’s second round. Song had opened with a 3-over 75 and matched par in the final round with a 72.
Rounding out the Ohio State was its veteran leader, Faith Choi, a senior form Frederick, Md. who finished in a tie for 31st place with a 2-under 214 total. Choi added a 1-under 71 in Saturday’s second round to her solid opening round of 3-under 69 before closing with a 2-over 74.
Strom also sent out Kavya Ajjarapu, a sophomore from Lutz, Fla., to compete as an individual and Ajjarapu finished among the trio tied for 75th place at 227. After opening with a 2-over 74, Ajjarapu added a 3-over 75 in the second round before closing with a 78.
Mississippi’s Caitlyn Macnab, a senior from South Africa and No. 28 in the Women’s WAGR, finished alone in third place in the individual standings, three shots behind Arkansas’ Todd at 12-under 204.
After opening with a 3-under 69, Macnab recorded a 5-under 67 in Saturday’s second round before closing with a 4-under 68.
As I’m finishing up this post, the opening round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship at the Champions Retreat Golf Club is complete and Ohio State’s Hollenbaugh and Macnab are in a large group tied for 13th place at 2-under 70.
Both are in with a good shot to survive the cut to the low 30 and ties who survive the cut and get to play the final round at the nearby Augusta National Golf Club.
Host Clemson’s Isabella Rawl, a junior from Lexington, S.C., and SMU’s Emily Odwin, a junior from Barbados, finished in a tie for sixth place, each ending up a shot behind Arkansas’ Marin with a 9-under 207.
After opening with a 76, Rawl came on strong, registering a 5-under 67 in the second round before closing with a sizzling 8-under 64. Odwin was steady throughout the weekend as she opened with a 4-under 68 and added a 2-under 70 in the second round before closing with a 3-under 69.
LSU’s Taylor Riley, a junior from San Diego, Calif., and Harvard’s Vanessa Zhang, a freshman from Canada, finished in a tie for eighth place, each ending up with an 8-under 208 total.
Riley carded back-to-back 3-under 69s in the first two rounds before finishing up with a 2-under 70. After opening with a 1-under 71, Zhang recorded a 3-under 69 in the second round before closing with a solid 4-under 68.
Aine Donegan, a senior from Ireland and No. 57 in the Women’s WAGR, gave LSU a second finisher inside the top 10 as she headed a group of five players tied for 10th place at 7-under 209, a group that included Penn State’s Jiratthitinun.
After opening with a 2-under 70, Donegan, a member of the winning Great Britain & Ireland team in last summer’s Curtis Cup Match at Sunningdale Golf Club in England, matched par in the second round with a 72 before closing with a sparkling 5-under 67.
After matching par with a 72 in the opening round, Jiratthitinun surged up the leaderboard with a sparkling 6-under 66 before closing with a 1-under 71. Jiratthitinun’s 7-under total was her best in relation to par in her still fledgling college career.
Jiratthitinun’s fellow Thai, Maryland’s Chanayu Chowiwattana, also a freshman, was also in the group at 7-under as Chowiwattana matched par in the opening round with a 72 and added a 3-under 69 in the second round before closing with a 4-under 68.
Rounding out the quintet at 7-under were Tennessee’s Kyra Van Kan, a freshman from South Africa, and Louisville’s Carmen Griffiths, a senior from Scotland.
After opening with a 1-under 71, Van Kan signed for back-to-back 3-under 69s. Griffiths registered back-to-back 2-under 70s in the first two rounds before closing with a solid 3-under 69.
Backing up Jiratthitnun for Penn State was Drew Nienhaus, a senior from St. Louis, Mo. who finished among the group tied for 48th place with a 3-over 219 total. Nienhaus, who has been consistent throughout the spring portion of the wraparound 2024-’25 season, added a 2-under 70 in the second round to her opening round of 3-over 75 before closing with a 2-over 74.
Senior Michelle Cox, who lost in a playoff for the PIAA Class AAA title as a senior at Emmaus in the fall of the coronavirus pandemic year of 2020, finished in the group tied for 54th place for the Nittany Lions with a 5-over 221 total. After opening with a 5-over 77, Cox matched par in each of the final two rounds with a pair of 72s.
Jami Morris, a senior from Chagrin Falls, Ohio, finished among a trio of players tied for 79th place with a 231 total. Morris struggled in the first two rounds, adding an 80 in the second round to her opening-round 79 before settling down and matching par in the final round with a 72.
Rounding out the Penn State lineup was Lauren Thompstone, a freshman from France who finished in 84th place with a 243 total. Thompstone couldn’t solve the Lake Keowee layout in the first two rounds as she posted back-to-back 84s before contributing a counting 1-over 73 in the final round.