With Abbey Schutte, a junior from Goodyear, Ariz., clicking off her second straight individual title, with the reigning NCAA individual champion in the lineup and the midseason addition of a hotshot freshman from France, you need just two words to describe the outlook for the Arkansas women’s golf team right now: Look out.
A perennial power in the Southeastern Conference, the most competitive circuit in college golf – really in college sports, period – the Razorbacks earned a spot in the match-play bracket in last spring’s NCAA Championship at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif., falling to eventual national champion Northwestern in the quarterfinals.
Schutte won her match in that frustrating 3-2 setback to the Wildcats and she was one of three co-medalists in a loaded field in the Purdue Puerto Rico Classic, which wrapped up Monday at the Grand Reserve Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico, while leading Arkansas, No. 4 in the latest Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings, to the team title.
The Purdue Puerto Rico Classic has always been one of the first big events as the spring sprint to the NCAA postseason gets under way.
Originally scheduled to be single rounds Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, the threat of rainy weather prompted tournament officials to play a double round Sunday and hope to finish Monday or Tuesday.
Arkansas proved worthy of its lofty ranking as the
Razorbacks got off to a great start with a 9-under 279 in the opening round and
a sizzling 13-under 275 in Sunday afternoon’s second round, the best team round
of the tournament, to take a one-shot lead over revitalized
Atlantic Coast Conference power North Carolina going into Monday’s final round.
I’m guessing some wind from approaching weather kicked up Monday as the scores were generally higher, but Arkansas’ solid final round of 1-under 287 gave it a 23-under 841 total that was easily good enough to defeat a couple of its SEC rivals, Mississippi and Vanderbilt, by six shots.
Schutte fueled Sunday’s hot start for Arkansas as she opened with a 7-under 65, the low individual round of the tournament, and added a 67 in Sunday afternoon’s second round to build a one-shot lead over North Carolina’s Reagan Southerland, a junior from Atlanta, Ga., going into Monday’s final round.
Schutte struggled a little in the final round with a 2-over 74, but her 10-under 206 total was good enough to give her a share of the individual crown with Southerland and Kansas State’s Kelsey Chen, a sophomore from China.
Schutte had finished out the fall portion of the wraparound 2025-2026 college season by claiming an individual victory in The Ally at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point, Miss. in October.
Southerland was right on Schutte’s heels the whole way as she opened with a sparkling 6-under 66 and added a 67 in Sunday afternoon’s second round before closing with a 1-over 73, chipping in for birdie on her final hole to earn a share of the individual title at 10-under. It was her first collegiate individual win.
Chen was three shots behind Schutte going into the final round after she added a 2-under 70 in Sunday afternoon’s second round to her opening-round 68. Chen closed with another 4-under 68 that enabled her to catch Schutte and Southerland at 10-under for her first collegiate victory.
After opening with a 3-under 285, Ole Miss, No. 15 in the Scoreboard rankings, posted back-to-back 7-under 281s to earn a share of second place with a 17-under 847 total.
The Rebels were led by Kajsalotta Svarvar, a sophomore from Sweden who finished two shots behind the trio at the top of the leaderboard in fourth place with an 8-under 208 total. Svarvar sandwiched a 2-under 70 in Sunday afternoon’s second round with a pair of 3-under 69s.
Ole Miss earned a trip to the NCAA Championship at La Costa last spring with a runnerup finish in the Charlottesville Regional, but was unable to claim a spot in the match-play bracket.
Vanderbilt, No. 10 in the Scoreboard in the rankings, matched par in the opening round with a 288 before putting together two solid rounds, an 8-under 280 in Sunday afternoon’s second round and a 9-under 279 in the final round, the best team round of the day, to join Ole Miss at 17-under.
The Commodores were led by none other than sophomore Angelina Tolentino, who starred scholastically at Lenape in South Jersey and captured the title in the 2024 Pennsylvania Women’s Amateur Championship at Waynesborough Country Club.
Tolentino had the best round of the day in Monday’s final round, a sparkling 5-under 67 that enabled her to join a group of five players tied for eighth place at 5-under 211. After opening with a 2-under 70, Tolentino fell back to even-par with a 2-over 74 in Sunday afternoon’s second round.
Starting off the sixth tee in the shotgun start, Tolentino rattled off birdies at the sixth, ninth, 11th, 12th, 15th and 17th holes to get it to 6-under for the round before making a bogey at 18, the only blemish on her scorecard. It was Tolentino’s third top-10 finish in the wraparound 2025-’26 season.
Vanderbilt earned a spot in the field in the NCAA Championship at La Costa last spring by finishing in fifth place as a four seed in the Lexington Regional, but the Commodores were unable to land a berth in the match-play bracket.
LSU, No. 33 in the Scoreboard rankings, made it an SEC sweep of the top four sports as the Tigers finished three shots behind Ole Miss and Vandy in fourth place with a 14-under 850 total.
LSU was solid throughout, opening with a 5-under 283 and adding a 279 in Sunday afternoon’s second round before matching par in the final round with a 288.
The Tigers were led by Rocio Tejedo, a sophomore from Spain and No. 26 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) who finished in a tie for fifth place with Arkansas’ Reagan Zibilski, a senior from Springfield, Mo. and No. 43 in the Women’s WAGR, and Northwestern’s tenacious Dianna Lee, a senior from San Diego, Calif. and No. 80 in the Women’s WAGR, all of whom landed on 6-under 210.
After matching par in the opening round with a 72, Tejedo added a 4-under 68 in Sunday afternoon’s second round before closing with a 70.
Zibilski, backing up Schutte for the Razorbacks, rattled off three straight 2-under 70s to join the trio at 6-under.
Lee, who cooly accounted for the clinching point in Northwestern’s semifinal victory over Oregon and again in the Final Match against Stanford to deliver a national title for the Wildcats at La Costa, added a solid 4-under 68 in Sunday afternoon’s second round to her opening-round 69 before closing with a 1-over 73.
LSU earned a trip to the NCAA Championship last spring by finishing in fifth place as a two seed in the Columbus Regional. The Tigers finished just two shots out of a spot in the quarterfinals in a tie for 10th place in qualifying for match play at La Costa.
After a strong start, North Carolina, No. 14 in the Scoreboard rankings, struggled to a 9-over 297 in the final round to finish in fifth place, two shots behind LSU with a 12-under 852 total.
The Tar Heels, with Southerland leading the way, opened with a sparkling 12-under 276 before adding a 279 in Sunday afternoon’s second round that left them just a shot behind Arkansas going into the final round.
North Carolina failed to advance to the NCAA Championship at La Costa as a three seed in the Norman Regional last spring.
Big 12 representative Kansas State, No. 26 in the Scoreboard rankings, finished five shots behind North Carolina in sixth place with a 7-under 857 total.
With Chen leading the way, the Plains Wildcats recorded a pair of 4-under 284s in Sunday’s double round before closing with a 1-over 289.
Kansas State earned its first trip to the NCAA Championship in program history last spring by finishing in a tie for second place in the Lexington Regional.
In seventh place in the loaded 18-team field in Rio Grande were the Windy City Wildcats as reigning national champion Northwestern ended up two shots behind Kansas State with a 5-under 859 total.
Northwestern, behind Lee, opened with a solid 7-under 281 and added a 4-under 284 in Sunday afternoon’s second round before closing with a 6-over 294.
Backing up Schutte and Zabilski for Arkansas was reigning NCAA individual champion Maria Jose Marin, a junior from Colombia and No. 7 in the Women’s WAGR, as she joined the group that included Tolentino in the tie for eighth place at 5-under.
The always steady Jose Marin added a pair of 2-under 70s in the final two rounds to her opening-round 71.
Marin added to her gaudy amateur record in November when she captured the title in the Women’s Amateur Latin America in a playoff at PGA Riviera Maya in Mexico.
The Arkansas lineup got a little deeper when Sara Brentcheneff, a freshman from France and No. 27 in the Women’s WAGR, showed up in Fayetteville in time for the spring semester and she made an immediate impact, finishing in the group tied for 29th place with an even-par 216 total.
Brentcheneff sandwiched a 3-under 69 in Sunday afternoon’s second round with a pair of 1-over 73s.
Rounding out the Arkansas lineup was Swetha Sathish, a freshman from Canada who finished among the group tied for 59th place with a 5-over 221 total. Sathish also contributed a 3-under 69 for the Razorbacks in Sunday afternoon’s second round while tallying a pair of 4-over 76s in the first and final rounds.
Natalie Blonien, a sophomore from Altus, Okla., competed as an individual for Arkansas and was solid, ending up in the group tied for 36th place with a 1-over 217 total. Blonien sandwiched a 1-over 73 in Sunday afternoon’s second round with a pair of even-par 72s.
Joining Tolentino and Marin in the quintet tied for eighth place at 5-under in the individual standings were Iowa’s Riley Lewis, a senior from Edwardsville, Ill., Minnesota’s Luismariana Mesones, a junior from Peru, and Furman’s Audrey Ryu, a junior from Dublin, Ohio.
Lewis got off to a great start in Sunday’s double round, adding a 3-under 69 in the afternoon to her opening-round 68 before closing with a 2-over 74.
Mesones matched par in the first and final rounds with 72s around a sparkling 5-under 67 in Sunday afternoon’s second round. Ryu sandwiched a 1-under 71 in Sunday afternoon’s second round with a pair of 2-under 70s.
Tolentino wasn’t the only Jersey girl with a solid showing at Grand Reserve. Northwestern sophomore Megan Meng, a scholastic standout at Hopewell Valley Central High in Pennington, N.J., finished in the group tied for 44th place with a 2-over 218 total.
Meng, winner of the Pennsylvania Junior Girls Championship in 2020 at Hershey Country Club, was not in the lineup during the Wildcats’ run to the national championship last spring, but I’m certain she was very much part of a team dynamic that resulted in the program’s first national title.
Meng recorded a pair of 1-over 73s in Sunday’s double round before matching par in the final round with a 72.