With their two freshmen leading the way, Marta Martin of
Spain and Linn Andersson, one of three Swedes on the roster, Purdue fell back a
spot in the final standings, finishing third as the Big Ten Tournament wrapped
up Sunday at The Fort Golf Course in Indianapolis.
In her final appearance at the Big Ten tourney, senior
Aurora Kan, the 2010 PIAA champion as a senior at Chichester, struggled a
little with a 75, but still finished in a tie for ninth at 2-over 218.
Martin,
who has emerged as the Boilermakers’ best player this spring, had a final-round
73 to end up at 1-over 217 and finish in a tie for fifth in the individual
chase.
Purdue flashed the kind of ability it possesses in the
middle round Saturday as Swedish junior Anna Appert Lund fired a 3-under 69,
Kan posted a flawless three-birdie, one-bogey 2-under 70, Swedish senior
Johanna Tillstrom carded a 1-under 71, and Martin, Andersson and sophomore
August Kim all posted 75s. It added up to a sparkling 285 as the Boilermakers
creeped up to second in the team standings, just five shots behind Ohio St.
It was fourth-best team round of the tournament as Ohio St.
opened with a 281 and Northwestern opened with a 284 and then added another 284
in the final round that enabled the Wildcats to catch the Buckeyes for a share
of the team title at 1-under 863. Purdue sandwiched rounds of 293 and 294
around that 285 to finish third at 872, nine shots back of the co-champions.
Northwestern had a second-round 295 in between those two
rounds of 284 while Ohio St. cooled off a little from that opening-round 281
with rounds of 292 and 290.
Andersson’s final-round 73 matched Martin for Purdue’s low
round of the day Sunday. It was also the rookie’s lowest career round and gave
her a career-best 54-hole total of 226. That left her in a tie for 32nd
at 226.
The other two final-round counters were Lund, who had a 74
for a solid 7-over 223 total that left her in a tie for 21stth, and
Kim, who also had a 74 to match Andersson’s 226 total in that tie for 32nd.
Kan and Tillstrom both had 75s. Tillstrom’s 75 gave her a solid 4-over 220
total that left her in a tie for 13th.
So that gave Purdue four finishers in the top 21 and six in
the top 32.
Northwestern’s Sarah Cho, a freshman from San Diego, cruised
to the individual title with rounds of 72, 70 and 71 for a 3-under 213 total,
five shots clear of Maryland’s Julie Vongphoumy (73-68-73), a senior from
Providence, R.I., and Ohio St.’s Katja Pogacar (69-73-72), a sophomore from
Slovenia.
In addition to that final-round 71 from Cho, the Wildcats
got a 71 from Suchaya Tangkamolprasert, a junior from Thailand, and a 72
from Hannah Kim, a freshman from Chula
Vista, Calif. in forging that 284 that enabled them to catch Ohio St.
It was a disappointing weekend for Denise St. Pierre’s Penn
State team as the Nittany Lions finished 12th with rounds of 303,
305 and 304 for a 912 total. The Nittany Lions were led by Grace Chung, a
junior from Ontario who had rounds of 73, 75 and 74 to finish in a tie for 18th
at 222. Senior Ellen Ceresko, the reigning two-time Pennsylvania Women’s
Amateur champion and a rival of Kan’s in high school and in Pennsylvania
amateur circles, wrapped up her career at Penn State in a tie for 72nd
at 239.
St. Pierre is getting a major infusion of talent from
District One in the next two years with Jackie Rogowicz, a two-time District
One champion and two-time PIAA runnerup from Pennsbury, and Cara Basso, a PIAA
Class AA champion as a sophomore at Villa Maria, arriving next fall and Council
Rock North standout Madelein Herr the following year.
The destination for the NCAA regionals for Kan and her
Boilermakers will be revealed Monday. I’ve never been much of a fan of rankings
because I think they are often made by people won don’t really know the teams,
so it’s not that surprising that Purdue never got inside the top 30 in the
rankings, despite some really nice results this spring.
The Boilermakers are going to be a dangerous team in the
regionals, no matter where they go. They have a nice mix of talent and
experience. That middle round at the Big Ten Tournament was hardly a fluke and
was accomplished with probably their two most talented players, Martin and Kim,
posting 75s.
Speaking of the Big 10 and former PIAA champions, former
Ohio St. standout Rachel Rohanna, who won the PIAA title as a junior at
Waynesburg in 2007, was a winner Sunday on the Symetra Tour, the LPGA’s
developmental circuit.
Kan was a freshman at
Chichester in 2007 and she was in the hunt following the opening round of the
PIAA Tournament at the Heritage Hills Golf Resort, but Rohanna blew the field
away, Kan settling for a tie for fifth. Kan would finish no worse than second at Heritage Hills
the next three years.
Rohanna carded a 2-over 74 in windy conditions at Sara Bay
in Sarasota, Fla. Sunday to win the Guardian Retirement Championship event by
two shots with a 5-under 211 total. Rohanna earned $16,500 to jump from 16th
to fourth on the Symetra money list. The top 10 on the final Symetra Tour money
list automatically graduate to the LPGA Tour.
Among the five players who finished tie for second behind
Rohanna was Canadian Maude-Aimee Leblanc, a member of Purdue’s 2010 NCAA
championship team.
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