Kate Roberts, a District One Class AAA champion as a senior at Phoenixville in 2023 and a three-time PIAA Class AAA qualifier during her standout scholastic career, probably wasn’t real happy with her results during her sophomore season at Delaware, her first year with the Blue Hens.
Roberts wasn’t even in the lineup when Delaware teed off this week in the Nashville Invitational, hosted by Lipscomb at the President’s Reserve Golf Course in Hermitage, Tenn., although she was competing as an individual.
That probably meant Roberts came up short in a team qualifier ahead of the Blue Hens’ trip to Music City. And maybe that was the last straw for Roberts.
Roberts earned a runnerup finish in the individual standings of the Nashville Invitational, which wrapped up Tuesday, with a 2-over 218 total over the 6,700-yard, par-72 President’s Reserve layout. Only a double bogey at her final hole of the day, the 16th at President’s Reserve, prevented Roberts from claiming her first collegiate victory.
Perhaps inspired by the outstanding individual effort of their teammate, the rest of the Blue Hens captured the team title, their 18-over 882 total leaving them five shots clear of host Lipscomb.
It was the second team crown of the wraparound 2025-2026 season for director of golf programs Patty Post’s Delaware team as it also captured the title in its home event, the Lady Blue Hen Invitational in October at Rehoboth Beach Country Club in Rehoboth Beach, Del.
Roberts matched par with a 72 in the opening round of a Monday double round and added a 1-over 73 in the afternoon that left her a shot behind her teammate, Hyunji Kim, a sophomore from England, and Seattle’s Tsara Ralamboarison, a senior from France, going into Tuesday’s final round.
With the exception of the closing double bogey, Roberts’ final round was typical of the kid who was such a dominant high school and junior player.
Starting off the 17th tee, Roberts rattled off seven straight pars before making a bogey at the sixth hole. Birdies at the 11th and 15th holes got her to 1-under for the round before the untimely double bogey at the par-5 16th left her with another 1-over 73 and a 2-over total.
Host Lipscomb’s Ava Bankston, a junior from Franklin, Tenn., closed with a solid 2-under 70 to overtake Roberts and claim the individual crown with a 1-over 217 total. Bankston had opened with a 2-over 74 before adding a 73 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round.
It is a really good time for Roberts to find her groove. Following a dual match with Navy Saturday at Du Pont Country Club, Delaware will have just one more full-field tournament left, the Terps Invitational in College Park, Md., before the Blue Hens tee it up in the Conference USA Championship for the first time beginning April 20 at Stonebriar Country Club in Frisco, Texas.
A couple of weeks later, Kate will team up with little sister Kayley, the District One Class AAA champion as a senior at Phoenixville last fall, in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship, which tees off May 2 at the Daniel Island Club in Charleston, S.C.
Kayley Roberts will be joining her sister with the Blue Hens at the end of this summer.
Delaware took command in the Nashville Invitational right from the start as the Blue Hens opened with a 5-over 293 and added a 7-over 295 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to take a six-shot lead over Mid-American representative Ball State into the final round.
Delaware closed with a 10-over 298 for an 18-over total and a five-shot victory over Lipscomb, which plays out of the Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN). Delaware was the highest-ranked team in the latest Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings, at least among the top six finishers in the Nashville Invitational, at No. 110, in the aftermath of the Nashville Invitational.
Kim and junior Marissa Malosh, a two-time PIAA Class AAA qualifier at South Fayette, were nearly as good as Roberts while leading the Blue Hens to the team title by finishing in a tie for third place with Seattle’s Ralamboarison, the trio ending up at 3-over 219, a shot behind Roberts.
Kim opened with a 2-under 70 and added a 1-over 73 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to get a share of the individual lead going into the final round. Kim closed with a 4-over 76.
Malosh, who has been solid all season for Delaware, opened with a 1-over 73 and added a 74 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before matching par in the final round with a 72.
Lipscomb struggled in the opening round with a 304 and added a 9-over 297 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round. Behind Bankston’s 70, the Bisons closed with the best team round of the tournament, a 2-over 290, to earn runnerup honors in the team chase with a 23-over 887 total.
Lipscomb had another finisher in the top 10 as Savannah Howell, a senior from Calvert City, Ky., finished in a tie for ninth place with Ball State’s Sabrina Langerak, a senior from Grand Rapids, Mich., and Seattle’s Blayne Brown, a freshman from Riverside, Calif., each ending up with a 5-over 221 total.
Howell bounced back from an opening round of 7-over 79 with a 2-under 70 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before matching par in the final round with a 72.
Ball State opened with a 5-over 293 and added an 8-over 296 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before closing with a 9-over 297 to finish two shots behind Lipscomb in third place with a 25-over 889 total.
The Cardinals were led by Sophie Korthuijs, a sophomore from the Netherlands who finished in a tie for sixth place in the individual standings with Northern Illinois’ Alexa Ouellet, a sophomore from Canada, and Longwood’s Madison Lehr, a sophomore from Mechanicsville, Va., each landing on 4-over 220.
After opening with a 3-over 75, Korthuijs matched par in the afternoon of Monday’s double round with a 72 before closing with a 1-over 73.
Korthuijs’ teammate, Langerak, finished a shot behind her in the trio tied for ninth place at 5-over. Langerak matched par in the opening round with a 72 and added a 1-over 73 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before closing with a 4-over 76.
Seattle, a Western Athletic Conference (WAC) entry, was another three shots behind Ball State in fourth place with a 28-over 892 total.
The Redhawks, added a 9-over 297 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to their opening-round 296 before closing with a 299.
Ralamboerison led the way for Seattle as she added a 2-under 70 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to her opening round of 1-over 73 to get a share of the individual lead going into the final round. She closed with a 4-over 76 to end up in a tie for third place with the Delaware duo of Kim and Malosh at 3-over.
It was nine more shots back to Big South Conference representative Longwood as the Lancers finished in fifth place with a 37-over 301 total.
After opening with a 306, Longwood added a 299 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before closing with an 8-over 296.
The Lancers were led by Lehr as she matched par in the afternoon of Monday’s double round with a 72 after opening with a 3-over 75 and closed with a 1-over 73 to end up in the trio tied for sixth place at 4-over.
Northern Illinois, one of Ball State’s MAC rivals, finished in sixth place in the 16-team field with a 40-over 304 total as the Huskies bounced back from an opening-round 307 with a 10-over 298 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before closing with a 299.
Northern Illinois was led by Ouellet, who added a 1-over 73 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to her opening-round 76 before closing with a 1-under 71 to join Longwood’s Lehr and Ball State’s Korthuijs in the tie for sixth place at 4-over.
Backing up Kim and Malosh for Delaware was Anushka Sawant, a sophomore from South Brunswick, N.J. who finished among the group tied for 12th place with a 6-over 222 total.
Sawant, who has been solid this spring, matched par in the afternoon of Monday’s double round with a 72 after opening with a 2-over 74 and closed with a 76.
Junior Mary Grace Dunigan, a three-time PIAA Class AAA qualifier during a standout scholastic career at Unionville, finished in the group tied for 22nd place at 10-over 226 as she sandwiched a 6-over 78 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round with a pair of 2-over 74s.
Rounding out the Delaware lineup was freshman Rhianna Gooneratne, the Pennsylvania champion in Class AAA as a junior at Plymouth-Whitemarsh in 2023, as she finished among the group tied for 45th place with a 232 total.
Gooneratne bounced back from an opening-round 80 with a counting 2-over 74 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round before closing with a 78.
Delaware was coming off a fifth-place finish earlier this month in the Riverbend Intercollegiate with a 25-over 889 total at Riverbend Country Club in Sugar Land, Texas, the Blue Hens closing with the best team round in the final round with a solid 2-over 290.
Sawant and Malosh both ended up in the top 20 at Riverbend with Sawant finishing in a tie for 12th place with a 5-over 221 total and Malosh ending up in a tie for 18th place at 7-over 223.
Also in the lineup for Longwood in the Nashville Invitational was graduate student Caroline Tragresser, a scholastic standout at Franklin Regional who is finishing out her college career at Longwood after transferring from Ohio Dominican.
Tragresser finished in a tie for 65th place with a 248 total for the Lancers as she added a 79 in the afternoon of Monday’s double round to her opening-round 84 before closing with a 3-over 75.