The University of South Carolina is fortunate to have an
alumnus like Darius Rucker. And college golf is fortunate to have an advocate
like Darius Rucker.
It was evident again this week when the 14th
Darius Rucker Intercollegiate was played at the Long Cove Club on Hilton Head
Island with some of the top players in women’s golf vying for the guitar that
goes to the individual champion and with The Golf Channel’s cameras capturing
the action.
The Darius Rucker Intercollegiate became the first
regular-season women’s tournament to be televised live in 2022. The fact that
The Golf Channel was back again in 2026 tells you all you need to know about
the regard with which this event is held.
Having Rucker’s name associated with it helps – a lot. But
the quality of the golf has a lot to do with it, too. The future of women’s
golf was on display this week at Hilton Head and you could witness that future
on live television.
Texas’ Farah O’Keefe, a junior home girl from Austin, Texas
and No. 6 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), jumped on the
par-71 Pete Dye design at Long Cove with an opening round of 7-under-par 64
Monday and held on to take the guitar by a shot with a 7-under 206 total.
Long Cove seems to fit O’Keefe’s eye as she was one of four
players who shared medalist honors in the Darius Rucker as a freshman two years
ago. She joined former Alabama standout Cheyenne Knight as the only two players
to earn medalist honors in the Darius Rucker twice.
After her seven-birdie, no-bogey masterpiece in the opening
round – a video of her 20-foot or so birdie putt at the 18th hole
made my Twitter/X time line – O’Keefe posted a 2-under 70 in Tuesday’s second
round before closing with a nervy 1-over 72 Wednesday, a birdie at the 16th
hole proving to be the difference in her one-shot edge over Florida State’s
Elin Pudas Remler, a sophomore from Sweden.
O’Keefe teamed with Stanford’s Meghan Ganne, the reigning
U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, and Southern California’s Catherine Park to help
the United States capture the title in the Women’s World Amateur Team
Championship (WATC) at Tanah Merah Country Club in Singapore in October.
O’Keefe was on the winning team again this week in the
Darius Rucker as she led Texas, a Southeastern Conference power, to the team
title with a 2-over 854 total, two shots better than a stubborn Pudas Remler
and Florida State.
The Longhorns rode O’Keefe’s blazing start to a 5-under 279
and then took a three-shot lead over the Seminoles into Wednesday’s final round
after recording a 4-over 288 in Tuesday’s second round. Texas closed with a
3-over 287 to hold off Florida State by two shots.
Texas bested a field that included half of the eight teams
that earned a spot in the match-play bracket in last spring’s NCAA Championship
at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif. The Longhorns fell to
Big Ten champion Oregon in the quarterfinals at La Costa.
Texas also got a strong showing from Lauren Kim, a junior
from Canada and No. 18 in the Women’s WAGR, as she finished alone in seventh
place in the individual standings with a 1-under 215 total.
Kim backed up O’Keefe’s opening-round 64 with a sparkling
3-under 68 of her own. After matching par in Tuesday’s second round with a 71,
Kim closed with a 2-over 73.
Texas began the week at No. 9 in the Scoreboard, powered by
clippd, rankings and remained at No. 9 following its victory in the Darius
Rucker.
Florida State, the reigning Atlantic Coast Conference
champion, was right on Texas’ heels throughout the tournament.
The Seminoles opened with a 3-over 287 and added a 1-under
283 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 2-over 286 that left them
two shots behind Texas with a 4-over 856 total.
Pudas Remler opened with a solid 2-under 69 and only trailed
O’Keefe by a shot going into the final round after Pudas Remler rattled off a
sparkling 5-under 66 in Tuesday’s second round. Pudas Remler matched O’Keefe’s
final round of 1-over 72 to earn runnerup honors with a 6-under 207 total.
Florida State also got a strong performance from Sophia
Fullbrook, a sophomore from England and No. 97 in the Women’s WAGR who finished
alone in eighth place with an even-par 213 total.
After matching par in the opening round with a 71, Fullbrook
added a 1-over 72 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 1-under 70.
It is a much different Florida State team than the one that lost
to Southern California in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championship last
spring. It was a team that boasted the No. 1 and No. 2 players in the Women’s
WAGR at the time, Lottie Woad and Mirabel Ting, respectively.
But Fullbrook was in that lineup and the Seminoles appear to
have reloaded. Somehow Florida State dropped two spots in the Scoreboard
rankings from No. 28 to No. 26 following its runnerup finish in the Darius
Rucker, but the Seminoles finished ahead of some really good teams in Hilton
Head this week.
Arkansas, behind reigning NCAA individual champion Maria
Jose Marin, a junior from Colombia and No. 8 in the Women’s WAGR, finished six
shots behind Florida State in third place with a 10-over 862 total.
The Razorbacks, another SEC power, struggled a little in the
opening round with a 14-over 298, but bounced back with a 4-under 280 in
Tuesday’s second round before matching par with a 288 in the final round.
Jose Marin closed with a 4-under 67 to get a share of fifth
place in the individual standings with Georgia’s Karoline Tuttle, a redshirt
junior from St. Mary, Fla., each landing on 2-under 214. Jose Marin had opened
with a 1-under 70 before adding a 3-over 74 in Tuesday’s second round.
Arkansas had another top-10 finisher in Reagan Zibilski, a senior
from Springfield, Mo. and No. 47 in the Women’s WAGR, as she was part of a
six-player logjam tied for ninth place at 1-over 214.
After struggling to an 8-over 79 in the opening round,
Zibilski bounced back in a big way with a sparkling 5-under 66 in Tuesday’s
second round before closing with a 2-under 69.
Jose Marin and Zibilski were in the lineup for the
Razorbacks as they earned a spot in the match-play bracket in the NCAA
Championship at La Costa last spring before falling to eventual champion
Northwestern in the quarterfinals.
Arkansas maintained the No. 8 spot in the Scoreboard
rankings where it began the week following its third-place finish in the Darius
Rucker.
Duke, one of Florida State’s ACC rivals, closed with the
best team round of the week, an 8-under 276, behind a brilliant tournament
record 8-under 63 from Rianne Malixi, the Blue Devils’ fabulous freshman from
the Philippines and No. 20 in the Women’s WAGR, in the final round to finish a
shot behind Arkansas in fourth place with an 11-over 863 total.
Duke had opened with a 12-over 296 and added a 7-over 291 in
Tuesday’s second round.
O’Keefe had equaled the tournament’s individual record with
her opening-round 64, but Malixi established a new standard in the Darius
Rucker record book as she made eight birdies without a bogey in her final-round
63 that enabled her to finish in third place in the individual standings with a
4-under 209 total that left her two shots behind Pudas Remler.
Malixi had opened with a 3-over 74 and added a 1-over 72 in
Tuesday’s second round.
It’s been a bit of a disjointed freshman season for Malixi.
She missed some time when she was in the field representing the Philippines in
last fall’s Women’s WATC in Singapore.
After claiming her first collegiate victory in Duke’s spring
opener in the Sea Best Intercollegiate at San Jose Country Club in
Jacksonville, Fla., Malixi was off to New Zealand, where she finished in a tie
for third place in the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific Championship at Royal
Wellington Golf Club.
Needless to say, when the gal who captured titles in both
the U.S. Girls’ Junior Amateur Championship at El Caballero Country Club in
Tarzana, Calif. and the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at Southern Hills
Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. in the summer of 2024 is in the lineup, it makes
Duke a really tough customer.
Duke failed to advance to the NCAA Championship last spring
as a five seed in Norman Regional. Duke dropped a spot in the Scoreboard
rankings from No. 12 to No. 13 following its fourth-place finish in the Darius
Rucker.
Auburn, another SEC power, finished three shots behind Duke
in fifth place with a 14-over 866 total at Long Cove. The Plains Tigers had won
tournament titles in their first two outings of the spring and have won four
times overall in the wraparound 2025-2026 season.
Auburn added a 9-over 293 in Tuesday’s second round to its
opening-round 294, but finished with a flourish, registering a 5-under 279 in
the final round.
Auburn was the highest-ranked team in the Darius Rucker
field at No. 5 and maintained that No. 5 ranking with its fifth-place finish.
Much as it was for Duke, it was a disappointing spring for
Auburn a year ago as the Plains Tigers failed to advance to the NCAA
Championship as a three seed in the Gold Canyon Regional.
Wake Forest, the runnerup to Florida State in the ACC a year
ago, and LSU, another perennial SEC power, finished in a tie for sixth place,
each landing five shots behind Arkansas with a 19-over 871 total.
The Demon Deacons, who maintained their hold on the No. 6
spot in the Scoreboard rankings with their tie for sixth place in the Darius
Rucker, opened with an 11-over 295 and added a 2-over 286 in Tuesday’s second
round before closing with a 6-over 290.
Wake Forest was led by Macy Pate, a junior home girl from
Winston-Salem, N.C. and No. 29 in the Women’s WAGR who finished in that large
group tied for ninth place at 1-over. Pate posted back-to-back 1-over 72s in
the first two rounds before closing with a 1-under 70.
After claiming the team title as a two seed in the Lubbock
Regional last spring, the Demon Deacons stalled in the NCAA Championship and
were unable to land a spot in the match-play bracket.
After opening with an 11-over 295, the Bayou Tigers put
together a solid 1-under 283 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 9-over
293.
LSU was led by an impressive effort by freshman Ryleigh
Knaub of Debary, Fla. as she rattled off three straight 1-under 70s to finish a
shot behind Malixi in fourth place in the individual standings with a 3-under
210 total.
Knaub showed up at the Old Course at Stonewall, where I
catch the occasional loop, on a random weekday in July last summer. Some
promised thunderstorms materialized in a big way and, I’m sure, cut short her
round. Never did figure out how Knaub ended up at Stonewall that day, but she
certainly announced her presence on the college golf scene with her performance
at Long Cove this week.
LSU snuck into the NCAA Championship last spring by
finishing in fifth place as a two seed in the Columbus Regional and very nearly
ended up in match play, the Bayou Tigers finishing just two shots out of the
final spot in the bracket after 72 holes at La Costa.
LSU dropped a spot in the Scoreboard rankings from No. 35 to
No. 36 with its tie for sixth place in the Darius Rucker.
A couple of Big Ten teams, Ohio State, with Lisa Strom, a
Pennsylvania state champion in 1994 as a senior at Lansdale Catholic at the
helm, and reigning national champion Northwestern, accounted for the next two
spots in the team standings.
The Buckeyes, who remained at No. 41 in the Scoreboard
rankings following the Darius Rucker, finished strong with a 1-over 285 in the
final round as they took eighth place with a 20-over 872 total. Ohio State had
opened with a 12-over 296 and added a 7-over 291 in Tuesday’s second round.
Ohio State returned to the NCAA Championship last spring for
the first time since 2018 by finishing in third place as a three seed on its
home course, the challenging Scarlet Course, in the Columbus Regional. The
Buckeyes never got it going at La Costa, but Strom, who starred at Ohio State,
seems to have them pointing in the right direction.
Northwestern, a year after its remarkable run to its first
national title at La Costa, finished six shots behind Ohio State in ninth place
in the elite 17-team field with a 26-over 878 total.
The Wildcats, who moved up a spot in the Scoreboard rankings
from No. 20 to No. 19 with their showing in the Darius Rucker, bounced back
from an opening round of 13-over 297 with a 5-over 289 in Tuesday’s second
round before closing with a 292.
Backing up O’Keefe and Kim for Texas was Cindy Hsu, a senior
from Taiwan who finished among a trio tied for 18th place at 3-over
216. Hsu was the low Longhorn in Wednesday’s final round with a 2-under 69. She
had opened with a 4-over 75 before adding a 72 in Tuesday’s second round.
Selina Liao, a junior from Taiwan, finished in the group
tied for 37th place for Texas with a 7- over 220 total. Liao opened
with a solid 1-over 72 and added a 75 in Tuesday’s second round before closing
with a 73.
Rounding out the Texas lineup was Angela Heo, a senior from
Murrietta, Calif. who finished among a trio tied for 68th place with
a 227 total. After opening with a 6-over 77, Heo recorded back-to-back 75s in
the final two rounds.
Georgia’s Tuttle closed with a sparkling 4-under 67 to earn
her share of fifth place with Arkansas’ Jose Marin at 2-under. Tuttle had
opened with a 1-under 70 before adding a 3-over 74 in Tuesday’s second round.
The Bulldogs, another SEC representative, had another top-10
finish from Trinity Beth, a freshman from Calvert City, Ky. who was part of the
six-way logjam tied for ninth place at 1-over. After opening with a 4-over 75,
Beth carded a 2-under 69 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 70.
Georgia finished in a tie for 11th place in the
team standings with SEC rival Kentucky, each landing on 28-over 880.
Rounding out the large group tied for ninth place at 1-over
were Alabama’s Natachanok Tunwannarux, a junior from Thailand, Mississippi’s
Mary Miller, a sophomore from Savannah, Ga. and Arizona’s Charlotte Back, a
junior from Germany and No. 66 in the Women’s WAGR.
After opening with a 5-over 76, Tunwannarux posted
back-to-back 2-under 69s. The Crimson Tide, another SEC entry, finished in 15th
place with a 36-over 888 total.
After opening with a 4-over 75, Miller bounced back with a
1-under 70 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 69. Ole Miss, yet
another SEC representative, finished in 13th place in the team
standings with a 30-over 882 total.
After matching par in the opening round with a 71, Back
added a 1-under 70 in Tuesday’s second round before closing with a 2-over 73.
Arizona, playing out of the Big 12, finished a shot behind Ole Miss in 14th
place with a 31-over 883 total.
Duke also got solid showings out of Katie Li, a junior from
Basking Ridge, N.J., and freshman Avery McCrery, who launched her outstanding
junior career out of Wilmington Country Club.
Li closed with a solid 2-under 69 to finish in the group
tied for 21st place with a 4-over 217 total. Li had opened with a
2-over 73 before adding a 75 in Tuesday’s second round.
Read a story in a golf publication I dug up while looking around
for some college golf news on the Internet that said that McCrery has been
Malixi’s roommate as the two freshmen navigate their rookie seasons at Duke.
Malixi credited McCrery with helping her with some of the subtleties of life in
America.
McCrery, who picked off a major victory as a junior golfer
when she captured the title in the Girls Junior PGA Championship in 2024 at
Congressional Country Club’s Blue Course in the summer of 2024, opened with a
3-over 74 at Long Cove and added back-to-back 1-over 72s to finish among the
group tied for 25th place with a 5-over 218 total.
Also in that group tied for 25th place at 5-over
was Northwestern sophomore Megan Meng, a scholastic standout at Hopewell Valley
Central in South Jersey and winner of the Pennsylvania Junior Girls’
Championship in 2020 at Lebanon Country Club.
After opening with a 3-over 74, Meng matched par in
Tuesday’s second round with a 71 before closing with a 2-over 73.
Meng wasn’t in the lineup for Northwestern’s thrilling ride
to a national title at La Costa last spring, but she was very much a part of a
team that showed remarkable grit on its way to the top of the heap in the
wraparound 2024-’25 season.
Another Jersey girl, Vanderbilt sophomore Angelina
Tolentino, a scholastic standout at Lenape High and winner of the Pennsylvania
Women’s Amateur Championship in the summer of 2024 at Waynesborough Country
Club, finished in the group tied for 37th place in the Darius Rucker
Invitational with a 7-over 220 total.
Tolentino helped the Commodores, another SEC entry, finish in
the top 10 in the team standings as they ended up in 10th place with
a 27-over 879 total.