A little late with this, but wanted to get back to the opener of the spring campaign for the Penn State women’s team …
Coming off a strong finish to the fall portion of the wraparound 2025-2026 college golf season, Penn State got its spring campaign off to a solid start with a fifth-place finish behind some heavyweights in a 16-team field that gathered for the UCF Challenge, presented by the Player Development Index (PDI), which wrapped up Jan. 27th at Eagle Creek Golf Club in Orlando, Fla.
The cold weather that would eventually shorten the LPGA Tour’s season-opening Tournament of Champions to 54 holes was approaching Orlando, so the UCF Challenge, originally scheduled to be three days of single rounds, tried to get in 36 holes Jan. 26th, but couldn’t quite pull it off.
Teams had to return Jan. 27th to finish up their final round and basically succeeded in beating the worst of the January chill that reached Orlando.
Penn State opened with a 1-under-par 287 over the 6,392-yard, par-72 Eagle Creek layout and added a solid 5-under 283 in the second round played over two days before closing with a 1-over 289 that gave the Nittany Lions, out of the Big Ten, a 5-under 859 total.
It left the Nittany Lions 19 shots behind Southeastern Conference power Auburn, which claimed the team crown with a 24-under 840 total.
Penn State went into college golf’s midseason pause at No. 71 in the Scoreboard, powered by clippd, rankings. Following its fifth-place finish in the UCF Challenge, one of the traditional starting points in the early part of the spring season, Penn State rose to No. 61 in the Scoreboard rankings.
There’s a lot of golf to be played between now and the Big Ten Championship, which heads west this year to Oakmont Country Club in Glendale, Calif. and tees off April 24. But the Nittany Lions are building a little momentum as college golf’s spring sprint to the postseason unfolds.
Penn State was led by Yaya Jiratthitinun, a sophomore from Thailand, and sophomore Hannah Rabb, the 2022 PIAA Class AA champion as a junior at Warrior Run, as they finished in the top 16 in the individual standings.
Jiratthitinun, coming off an outstanding freshman season, opened with a 3-under 69 and added a 2-under 70 in the second round before closing with a 1-over 73 that left her alone in 13th place with a 4-under 212 total. It was Jiratthitinun’s best finish in relation to par for the season.
Rabb, who transferred to Penn State following her freshman season at James Madison, added a 2-under 70 in the second round to her opening round of 1-over 73 before closing with a 1-under 71 that left her alone in 16th place with a 2-under 214 total.
It was also the best finish in relation to par this season for Rabb, winner of the Pennsylvania Women’s Amateur Championship last summer at Valley Brook Country Club.
It was Auburn, behind individual champion Katie Cranston, a senior from Canada and No. 75 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), that outdueled Southeastern Conference rival Mississippi State to capture the team title by four shots over the Bulldogs.
The Tigers got off to a solid start with an 8-under 280 and then added a 10-under 278, the best team round of the tournament, early on the second day that gave them a three-shot cushion over Mississippi State going into the final round.
Auburn closed with a 6-under 282 to hold off the Bulldogs and win its third team title of the wraparound 2025-’26 season.
Cranston was the picture of consistency while claiming the first individual victory of her collegiate career as she rattled off three straight 3-under 69s for a 9-under 207 total that was one shot better than Mississippi State’s Avery Weed, a junior from Ocean Springs, Miss. and No. 32 in the Women’s WAGR, and host Central Florida’s Mila Jurine, a sophomore from France.
Auburn also got a strong showing from Molly Brown Davidson, a sophomore from Springville, Ala. who finished among a trio of players tied for fourth place that included Baylor’s Malena Castro, a sophomore from Argentina, and Florida Gulf Coast’s Leonie Wulfers, a senior from Germany, as they all landed on 7-under 209.
Brown Davidson was only a shot behind her teammate Cranston going into the final round as Brown Davidson added a 4-under 68 in the second round to her opening-round 69. Brown Davidson matched par in the final round with an important 72 as the Tigers were trying to hold off Mississippi State.
Charlotte Cantonis, a freshman from Tampa, Fla., gave Auburn a third finisher in the top 10 as she ended up in a tie for 10th place with Mississippi State’s Moa Stridh, a freshman from Sweden, and Baylor’s Amelia Wan, a freshman from England, each landing on 5-under 211.
After opening with a 1-over 73, Cantonis contributed a 3-under 69 for the Tigers in the second round and a 4-under 68, their best individual round of the day, in the final round.
Auburn entered the UCF Challenge at No. 7 in the Scoreboard rankings and has actually dropped a spot to No. 8 since then.
Auburn is hoping for a bounce-back season after the Tigers failed to advance to last spring’s NCAA Championship at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif. as a three seed in the Gold Canyon Regional.
Mississippi State was at that same Gold Canyon Regional and did advance to the NCAA Championship by finishing in fourth place as a four seed, although the Bulldogs were unable to earn a spot in the match-play bracket at La Costa.
Mississippi State was right on Auburn’s heels the whole way at Eagle Creek as the Bulldogs opened with a 7-under 281 and added an 8-under 280 in the second round before closing with a 5-under 283 that left them in second place, five shots behind the Tigers with a 20-under 844 total.
Weed led the way as she sandwiched a 4-under 68 in the second round with a pair of 2-under 70s to finish a shot behind Cranston at 8-under.
Ines Belchior, a freshman from Portugal, backed up Weed for Mississippi State as she finished in a tie for seventh place with UCF’s Pimpisa “Sandwich” Sisutham, a senior stalwart for the Knights from Thailand and No. 81 in the Women’s WAGR, and South Florida’s Tiphani Knight, a freshman from Spain, each ending up at 6-under 210.
Belchior was two shots out of the lead going into the final round after adding a 4-under 68 in the second round to her opening-round 70. She matched par in the final round with a 72.
Stridh gave Mississippi State a third player in the top 10 as she sandwiched a 1-under 71 in the second round with a pair of 2-under 70s to join the trio tied for 10th place at 5-under.
Mississippi State has moved up from No. 18 to No. 16 in the Scoreboard rankings in the two weeks since the UCF Challenge was played.
Host UCF, playing out of the Big 12, finished five shots behind Mississippi State in third place with a 15-under 849 total.
The Knights, behind Jurine and Sisutham, were solid throughout, adding a 6-under 282 in the second round to their opening-round 283 before closing with a 4-under 284.
Jurine posted back-to-back 2-under 70s in the first two rounds before closing with a 4-under 68 to earn her share of runnerup honors with Mississippi State’s Weed at 8-under. Sisutham recorded back-to-back 3-under 69s in the first two rounds before matching par in the final round with a 72 to get her share of seventh place at 6-under.
UCF, which closed out its fall schedule with a solid runnerup finish in the Landfall Tradition at the Country Club of Landfall in Wilmington, N.C., has dropped three spots in the Scoreboard rankings from No. 12 to No. 15 since its home tournament.
Baylor, a rival of UCF in the Big 12, was another five shots behind UCF in fourth place with a 10-under 854 total.
The Bears, who have maintained the No.-21 spot in the Scoreboard rankings they had at the outset of the UCF Challenge, opened with a 7-under 281 and added a 3-under 285 in the second round before matching par in the final round with a 288.
Castro was a shot out of the lead held by Florida Gulf Coast’s Wulfers going into the final round as she matched the low individual round of the tournament with a sparkling 6-under 66 in the second round after she had opened with a 71. She matched par in the final round with a 72 to join the trio tied for fourth place at 7-under.
Castro’s teammate Wan matched that 6-under 66 in her opening round, matched par with a 72 in the second round and closed with a 1-over 73 as she gave Baylor a second finisher inside the top 10, joining Auburn’s Cantonis and Mississippi State’s Stridh in the trio tied for 10th place at 5-under.
Backing up the top three for Auburn was Anna Davis, a junior from Spring Valley, Calif. and, at No. 14 in the Women’s WAGR, one of the very best players in Division I women’s golf.
After opening with a 3-under 69, Davis carded a 71 in the second round before closing with a 1-over 73 as she finished in a tie for 14th place with a 3-under 213 total.
Davis had finished off the fall portion of Auburn’s schedule by claiming an individual title in the Ruth’s Chris Tar Heel Invitational at the Finley Golf Club on North Carolina’s campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. and co-medalist honors in the Nanea Invitational at the Nanea Golf Club in Kailua Kona, Hawaii, the third and fourth victories of her college career.
Davis and Mississippi State’s Weed had spent the previous weekend in Los Angeles as they were among a dozen candidates for the U.S. Curtis Cup team that gathered for a practice session at Bel-Air Country Club, site of the biennial matches against a Great Britain & Ireland team in June.
Rounding out the Auburn lineup was Carys Worby, a redshirt senior from Wales who finished among the group tied for 35th place with a 3-over 219 total. Worby put together three straight 1-over 73s.
Auburn head coach Melissa Luellen brought along Anne Fernandez, a sophomore from Singapore, and Frances Brown, a freshman from Mobile, Ala., to compete as individuals at Eagle Creek.
Fernandez was solid as she added a 3-under 69 in the second round to her opening round of 2-over 74 before closing with a 1-over 73 to finish in the group tied for 17th place at even-par 216.
Brown bounced back from an opening round of 7-over 79 with a solid 2-under 70 in the second round before closing with a 75 to finish among the group tied for 61st place with an 8-over 224 total.
Florida Gulf Coast’s Wulfers had the individual lead when the second round wrapped up early in the day Jan. 26th after completing a second straight 4-under 68. She closed with a 1-over 73 in a final round played over two days to get a share of fourth place with Auburn’s Brown Davidson and Baylor’s Castro at 7-under.
USF’s Knight added a 1-under 71 in the second round to her opening-round 70 before closing with a 3-under 69 to get a share of seventh place with Mississippi State’s Belchior and UCF’s Sisutham at 6-under.
Penn State got another strong performance from Lilian Guleserin, a freshman from Westwood, Mass. who finished among the group tied for 17th place at even-par 216 to back up Jiratthitinun and Rabb. After opening with a 2-over 74, Guleserin signed for back-to-back 1-under 71s in the final two rounds.
Audrey Lam, a freshman from Belgium coming off a solid start to her college career in the fall, finished in the group tied for 41st place for the Nittany Lions with a 4-over 220 total. After opening with a solid 1-under 71, Lam added a 3-over 75 in the second round before finishing up with a 74.
Rounding out the Penn State lineup was Mara King, a freshman playing not far from her Lake Mary, Fla. home who finished among the trio tied for 51st place with a 6-over 222 total. King matched par with a 72 in the second round after opening with a 4-over 76 and closed with a 74.
Kristen Simpson, who earned her first career tournament title in her third year at the helm at Penn State in the Nittany Lion Invitational last fall, brought along Myranda Quinton, a junior from Canada, to compete as an individual and Quinton delivered a solid performance.
Quinton matched par in the second round with a 72 after opening with a 1-over 73 and closed with a 1-under 71 to join her teammate Guleserian in the group tied for 17th place at even-par 216.