Atlantic Coast Conference champion Stanford, No. 1 in the Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings throughout the wraparound 2025-2026 season, was closing in on the top seed in match play following Sunday’s third round of stroke play in the NCAA Championship at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa’s North Course in Carlsbad, Calif.
The Cardinal are a virtual lock to make it into the match-play bracket, something they’ve accomplished in every season since a layer of match play was added to determine the national champion in 2015.
Stanford had taken a three-shot lead over Big Ten champion Southern California, No. 2 in the Scoreboard rankings, following a second straight 6-under-par 282 in Saturday’s second round.
The Cardinal kept the heat on in Carlsbad with the best team round of the tournament, a 9-under 279 over the 6,330-yard, par-72 North Course layout at La Costa in Sunday’s third round that gave them a 21-under 843 total.
Stanford was led by its dynamic duo of Meja Ortengren, a sophomore from Sweden and No. 6 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), and reigning U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Megha Ganne, a senior from Holmdel, N.J. and No. 10 in the Women’s WAGR, as they stood in third and fourth place, respectively, in the individual standings.
Ortengren had a share of the individual lead after two rounds as she added a 4-under 68 in Saturday’s second round to her opening-round 70. Ortengren got it around in a solid 3-under 69 in Sunday’s third round and was alone in third place with a 9-under 207 total, a shot behind the co-leaders, Texas’ Farah O’Keefe, a junior home girl from Austin, Texas and No. 4 in the Women’s WAGR, and Southern Cal’s Catherine Park, a senior from Irvine, Calif. and No. 11 in the Women’s WAGR.
Ganne had a share of the lead following an opening round of 4-under 68 and added a 1-under 71 in Saturday’s second round. Ganne added a 3-under 69 that left her a shot behind her teammate Ortengren in fourth place with an 8-under 208 total.
Southern California, behind Park, wasn’t far behind its old Pac-12 rival as the Trojans posted a 7-under 281 in Sunday’s third round that left them five shots behind Stanford with a 16-under 848 total.
Southern Cal had opened with a 7-under 281 before adding a 2-under 286 in Saturday’s second round.
Park had the round of the day, a sizzling 7-under 65, as she gained a share of the lead with Texas’ O’Keefe at 10-under 206. Park had opened with a 2-under 70 and added a 1-under 71 in Saturday’s second round before going off Sunday.
The Big 12’s Oklahoma State, No. 21 in the Scoreboard rankings, recorded a solid 3-under 285 to maintain its hold on third place in the team standings with a 10-under 854 total.
A pair of Cowgirls, Ellie Bushnell, a senior from Granite Bay, Calif., and Marta Silvencho, a junior from Latvia and No. 47 in the Women’s WAGR, were among a trio of players tied for fifth place in the individual standings at 7-under 209.
Bushnell signed for a 4-under 68 in Sunday’s third round. She had opened with a 68 before falling back a little with a 1-over 73 in Saturday’s second round.
Silchenko, who had registered back-to-back 2-under 70s in the first two rounds, posted a 3-under 69 in Sunday’s third round to join the group at 7-under.
Southeastern Conference power Texas, behind O’Keefe, was four shots behind Oklahoma State in fourth place with a 6-under 858 total.
The Longhorns, No. 5 in the Scoreboard rankings, carded a solid 8-under 280 in Sunday’s third round to put themselves in solid position to earn one of the eight spots in the match-play bracket following Monday’s final round of qualifying for stroke play.
O’Keefe had tallied back-to-back 3-under 69s in the first two rounds to grab a share of the lead at the halfway point and then added a 4-under 68 to maintain a spot at the top of the individual leaderboard alongside Park at 10-under.
Big 12 champion Iowa State, No. 17 in the Scoreboard rankings, and SEC power Arkansas, No. 7 in the Scoreboard rankings, each ended up three shots behind Texas in a tie for fifth place at 3-under 861.
The Cyclones continued their impressive postseason run by posting a 3-under 285 to remain very much in the picture for a spot in the match-play bracket.
The Razorbacks matched Iowa State’s 3-under 285 in Sunday’s third round to maintain its spot inside the top eight going into Monday’s Memorial Day windup of stroke play at La Costa. The Golf Channel will pick up coverage of the NCAA Women’s Championship at some point Monday.
Most of the focus of Monday’s final round will be on the battle for those final spots in the match-play bracket and three teams, SEC power Florida, No. 3 in the Scoreboard rankings, perennial ACC power Duke, No. 10 in the Scoreboard rankings, and another Big 12 representative in Arizona State, No. 23 in the Scoreboard rankings, enter the day in a tie for seventh place at 2-over 866.
The Gators, behind Siuue Wu, a sophomore from Hong Kong, recorded a 4-under 284 in Sunday’s third round to get it to 2-over.
Wu, who had fired the low round of the week, a sizzling 8-under 64, in Saturday’s second round, checked in with a 2-under 70 Sunday that left her among a group of five players tied for eighth place in the individual standings at 6-under 210.
The Blue Devils, owners of seven national championships, posted a 1-over 289 to get it to 2-over.
Duke got a big boost from its fabulous freshman, Rianne Malixi of the Philippines and No. 14 in the Women’s WAGR. Malixi, winner of both the U.S. Girls’ Junior Amateur Championship and the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship in a sensational summer of 2024, signed for a 4-under 68 in Sunday’s third round to move into the group tied for eighth place at 6-under.
The Sun Devils posted a 3-under 285 to join Florida and Duke in the tie for seventh place at 2-over.
Plucky Eastern Michigan, the Mid-American Conference runnerup and No. 27 in the Scoreboard rankings, was four more shots behind the trio tied for seventh place in 10th at 6-over 870 and every much in with a shot at an unlikely spot in the match-play bracket.
The Eagles hung in there with a 1-over 289 in Sunday’s third round.
It’s another two shots back to West Coast Conference champion Pepperdine, No. 11 in the Scoreboard rankings, and another SEC entry in Missouri, No. 32 in the Scoreboard rankings, in a tie for 11th place at 8-over 872. One hot round away for a chance to be among the eight teams still standing when match play gets under way Tuesday.
The Waves kept their hopes alive with a solid 1-under 287 in Sunday’s third round while the Tigers, who are having the best season in the history of the program, registered a 1-over 289.
Backing up Ortengren and Ganne for Stanford was Paula Martin Sampedro, a junior from Spain and No. 2 in the Women’s WAGR, as she carded her best round of the week, a 2-under 70, to join the group tied for 20th place at 2-under 214.
Martin Sampedro captured the title in last summer’s Royal & Ancient Women’s Amateur Championship, defeating Texas’ O’Keefe in the final at Nairn Golf Club in Scotland.
Kelly Xu, a senior from Claremont, Calif. and No. 17 in the Women’s WAGR, posted a solid 1-under 71 for the Cardinal and was among the group tied for 36th place with a 1-over 217 total.
Rounding out the Stanford lineup was Andrea Revuelta, a sophomore from Spain and No. 3 in the Women’s WAGR who struggled a little in a 3-over 75 in Sunday’s third round that left her in the group tied for 83rd place with a 6-over 222 total. Revuelta was the runnerup in last month’s Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship.
Joining the Oklahoma State pair of Bushnell and Silchenko in the tie for seventh place at 7-under was Tennessee’s Kyra Van Kan, a sophomore from South Africa and one of the heroes of the Volunteers’ run to the SEC Championship.
Van Kan had opened with a 3-under 69 and added a 1-under 71 in Saturday’s second round before tallying another 69 in Sunday’s third round.
A couple of players competing as individuals, TCU’s Kirstin Angosta, a junior from Las Vegas, Nev., and Ivy League champion Thanana Kotchasanmanee, a freshman at Princeton from Thailand who has surged into the top 100 in the Women’s WAGR at No. 98, were part of the group tied for eighth place at 6-under.
Angosta recorded a solid 1-under 71 to maintain her spot inside the top 10. Kotchasanmanee put together a solid 2-under 70 to continue one of the great postseason runs ever by an Ivy League player.
Rounding out the quintet tied for eighth place in the individual standings was Mississippi’s Kajsalotta Svarvar, a sophomore from Sweden and No. 66 in the Women’s WAGR, as she matched par with a 72 in Sunday’s third round to remain at 6-under for the tournament.
Malixi wasn’t the only freshman in the Duke lineup as her roommate, Avery McCrery, the Wilmington, Del. native who captured the Girls Junior PGA Championship at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md. in 2024, struggled a little with a 4-over 76 in Sunday’s third round and was in the group tied for 72nd place with a 5-over 221 total.
Katie Li, a junior from Basking Ridge, N.J., contributed a 1-over 73 for the Dookies as they try to land one of those coveted spots in the match-play bracket that left her among the group tied for 51st place with a 3-over 219 total.
Another Jersey girl, Megan Meng, a scholastic standout at Hopewell Valley Central in Pennington, was in the lineup for Northwestern and the sophomore posted a 1-over 73 to join Duke’s McCrery in the group tied for 72nd place at 5-over.
The team field was cut in half to 15 teams following Sunday’s third round and Meng and the defending national champion Wildcats, out of the Big Ten, gutted out a 6-over 294 to make that cut on the number at 12-over 876.
It seems unlikely that Northwestern would rally Monday to make the top eight in match play. But the same grit that brought them a national championship was on display Sunday as the Wildcats made sure to take their season to the final day of stroke play at the scene of their greatest triumph.