Mississippi made its point loud and clear two springs ago
when it won its first Southeastern Conference crown and backed it up by earning
a trip to the NCAA Championship at The Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville,
Ark. Ole Miss wasn’t anybody’s weak sister in the SEC anymore.
If you didn’t get that particular memo, the Rebels
reiterated it by taking the women’s crown in the East Lake Cup, which wrapped
up Wednesday at the East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta with a 3-2 victory over SEC
rival South Carolina.
Two Old Miss players shared medalist honors and led the
Rebels to the top seed in match play and the Rebels proceeded to knock off
Texas and South Carolina to take the title.
While college golf remains locked down in much of the
country, The Golf Channel got four men’s teams and four women’s team together
in Atlanta for what has become the highlight of the fall portion of the
wraparound season each year.
The East Lake Cup usually pits the four semifinalists from
the previous spring’s NCAA Championships in an NCAA Championship style event, a
round of stroke play to establish seeding for a semifinal round of match play
followed by a championship match.
Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but nothing about 2020
is normal. There were no NCAA Championships last spring and only some of the
biggest conferences have so much as gotten off the ground for the wraparound
2020-2021 season. East Lake Cup organizers decided to take the top four teams
in the Golfstat rankings when the 2019-’20 season came to a sudden halt
March 19 to fill out the field.
While that turned out be Nos. 1 through 4 for the men, with
the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Pac-12 not playing, it went all the way
down to No. 12 among the women and that turned out to be Mississippi. Not sure
if any of the ACC or Pac-12 teams are allowed to do their own thing or if the
conferences are dictating to their member schools that they can’t compete. Like
I said, in 2020 things can get confusing.
But give Ole Miss credit. It got the opportunity to compete
and made the most of it.
Julia Johnson, a senior from St. Gabriel, La. was there two
springs ago, winning a match in Ole Miss’ 3-2 victory over South Carolina in
the SEC Championship final.
And she was there again Wednesday, pulling out a 1-up
victory over South Carolina’s Lois Kaye Go, a senior from the Philippines, for
the final point in the Rebels’ 3-2 victory in the East Lake Cup final. The win
improved Johnson’s career mark in match play at Ole Miss to 8-0. At No. 7,
South Carolina was the highest-ranked SEC team when the 2019-’20 season came to
its premature end.
“This was a dream come true to try to play in this
tournament, and win it is really just the cherry on top,” head coach Kory
Henkes told the Old Miss website. “This is a surreal feeling being here,
especially for Julia, who was here freshman year and has kind of seen where we
have been and where we are.”
Kennedy Swann, a fifth-year player from Austin Texas, was
there for the run to the SEC title and a berth in the NCAA Championship field two
years ago as well. She and Ellen Hume, a junior from England, got Ole Miss off
to a strong start to the week as they shared medalist honors, each carding a
3-under 69 over an East Lake layout that measured 6,240 yards and played to a
par of 72, in Monday’s stroke-play qualifying.
They led Ole Miss to a a 5-under 283 team total that gave it
the top seed in match play. The Rebels were the only team to finish under par.
South Carolina was the runnerup with a 3-over 291 total followed by another SEC
entry in Florida at 5-over 283, just two shots behind the Gamecocks in third
place, and Texas, out of the Big 12, in fourth place with a 13-over 301 total.
Backing up Swann and Hume for the Rebels was Chiara Tamburlini,
a sophomore from Switzerland who matched par with a 72. Johnson was the final
counter for Ole Miss with a 1-over 73 and Andrea Lignell, a sophomore from
Sweden rounded out the Old Miss lineup with a solid 4-over 76.
Ole Miss drew Texas in Tuesday’s semifinals and rolled to a
4.5-.5 victory. The Longhorns were ranked No. 2 and seemed poised for a deep
postseason run when college golf was shut down in March.
Swann claimed a 1-up victory over Sophie Guo, a sophomore
from Orlando, Fla., Hume pulled out a 2 and 1 decision over Kaitlyn Papp, a senior
home girl from Austin, Texas who is No. 19 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf
Ranking (WAGR), Tamburlini earned a 2 and 1 win over another Austin home girl,
freshman Bentley Cotton, and Johnson captured a 2 and 1 win over Hailee Cooper,
a junior from Montgomery, Texas.
Lignell battled Ashley Park, a freshman from Irvine, Calif.,
to a draw.
One of the featured matches in the semifinals came in South
Carolina’s 3.5-1.5 victory over Florida as the Gamecocks’ Pauline
Roussin-Bouchard, No. 2 in the Women’s WAGR, outdueled Annabell Fuller, a sophomore
from England and No. 41 in the Women’s WAGR, earning a 1-up victory.
South Carolina got two other full points in tight battles as
Mathilda Claisse, a sophomore from France, edged Marina Escobar Domingo, a
sophomore from Spain, 1-up, and Kaye Go needed 19 holes to pull out a victory
over Clara Manzalini, a junior from Italy.
Florida’s lone full point came from Addie Baggarly, a junior
from Jonesborough, Tenn. who defeated Thailand’s Pimnipa Panthong, the former
Kent State standout who joined the Gamecocks for a fifth season, 2 and 1. South
Carolina’s Paula Kirner, a freshman from Germany, earned a half-point with a
tie against Florida’s Malsie Filler, a freshman from Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
Kaye Go and Panthong, Florida’s Escobar Domingo and Texas’
Guo shared third place in Monday’s stroke-play qualifying, each registering a
1-under 71 to finish two shots behind Mississippi’s Swann and Hume.
South Carolina got the jump on Ole Miss in Wednesday’s title
match with Claisse knocking off Tamburlini, 3 and 2, and Roussin-Bouchard
downing Swann by the same 3 and 2 margin.
But Hume, playing 1-under par golf for 12 holes, turned
things around by dismantling Panthong, 7 and 6. Lignell evened things on the
scoreboard with a 3 and 2 decision over Kirner. And Johnson finished the job,
earning the deciding point with her 1-up win over Kaye Go.
In the consolation match, Florida rolled to a 4.5-.5 victory
over Texas.
An interesting match there pitted Florida’s Fuller against
Texas’ Papp. I’m thinking both might make their respective Curtis Cup teams
next spring – assuming, of course, that the Curtis Cup Match at the Conwy Golf
Club in Caernarvonshire, Wales, rescheduled from last spring, is played. Fuller
and Papp appeared to have made a strong case to make the Great Britain &
Ireland team and the United States team, respectively, when the world shut down
in March.
Fuller, the runnerup to Germany’s Aline Krauter, a junior at
Stanford, in the Women’s Amateur Championship in the summer at West Lancashire,
claimed a 4 and 3 victory over Papp.
South Carolina and Texas were each without one of their top
players as the Gamecocks’ Ana Pelaez, a senior from Spain, and the Longhorns’
Agathe Laisne, a senior from France and No. 12 in the Women’s WAGR, are hanging
back in Europe with travel still restricted because the pandemic continues to
rage around the world.
Pelaez finished third in a Madrid Santander Golf Tour event
last week while Laisne won a Ladies European Tour Access Series event in Spain
earlier this month. Both will be valuable additions to the lineup for their
respective teams if we can ever get some kind of handle on this pandemic.
The SEC teams got together for The Blessings Intercollegiate
Invitational earlier this fall at The Blessings in Fayetteville, Ark., site of the
2019 NCAA Championship. South Carolina finished in third place behind Arkansas,
playing on its home course, and LSU with Ole Miss taking fourth and Florida
ending up sixth.
Texas got two events in before the East Lake Cup, most
recently earning a runnerup finish behind Big 12 rival Baylor as the host for
the Betsy Rawls Invitational at the UT Golf Club earlier this month.
On the men’s side, Pepperdine was the No. 1 team in the
country when college golf was shut down in March. Fred Hawkins Award winner
Sahith Theegala has moved on to professional golf, but Theegala had a talented
group of youngsters behind him during the Wave’s run to the No. 1 ranking early
in 2020.
And the Wave’s winning ways continued in Atlanta as
Pepperdine claimed an impressive 4-1 victory over Oklahoma in Wednesday’s East
Lake Cup final.
Oklahoma, No. 2 when the 2019-’20 season was halted last
spring, headed a group of three Big 12 teams in the field at East Lake. The
Sooners’ ancient rival, Texas, was ranked fourth behind Texas Tech when the
season ended in March.
And the Sooners, winners of the 2017 NCAA Championship at
Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove, Ill., looked pretty impressive at East Lake,
right up until they met up with Pepperdine in the title match.
Patrick Welch, a senior from Providence, R.I., earned
medalist honors with a sparkling 5-under 67 over an East Lake layout that
measured 7,034 yards and played to a par of 72 for the guys in Monday’s
stroke-play qualifying. Oklahoma teammate Quade Cummins, a redshirt senior from
Weatherford, Okla. and No. 17 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR), shared
second place with Pepperdine’s R.J. Manke, a senior from Lakewood, Wash., each
signing for a 3-under 69.
Backing up Welch and Cummins for the Sooners in qualifying
was Jonathan Brightwell, a redshirt senior from Charlotte, N.C. who finished in
a tie for fourth place with a 2-under 70. Logan McAllister, a junior from
Oklahoma City, Okla. was Oklahoma’s final counter as he matched par with a 72
and Garett Reband, a redshirt senior from Fort Worth, Texas and No. 12 in the
WAGR, rounded out the Oklahoma lineup with a 2-over 74.
Oklahoma grabbed the top seed with a 10-under 278 total.
Pepperdine was seven shots behind the Sooners in second place with a 3-under
285 with Texas Tech a shot behind the Wave in third place at 2-under 286 and
Texas finishing fourth with an even-par 288 total.
Manke claimed a 2 and 1 victory over Cummins in Wednesday’s
title match as the Wave never trailed in any of their four wins in the final.
Joe Highsmith, a senior from Lakewood, Wash., knocked off
Welch, 5 and 4, Derek Hitchner, a senior from Minneapolis, Minn., beat McAllister,
3 and 2, and Dylan Menante, a sophomore from Carlsbad, Calif., rolled to a 5
and 4 decision over Reband.
Brightbill picked up the lone point for Oklahoma with a 2
and 1 victory over William Mouw, a sophomore from Chino, Calif. who is No. 16
in the WAGR and might be the Wave’s most talented player.
The most interesting match of the week might very well have been
the semifinal between Oklahoma and Texas. It seems like a decade ago, but it’s only
been two springs since a talented group of youngsters for the Longhorns knocked
off a supremely talented Oklahoma State team looking for a second straight NCAA
title in the semifinals at The Blessings before falling to Stanford in the
Final Match.
The Sooners pulled out a 3-2 victory over their bitter rival
to reach the final.
All of Oklahoma’s wins came in tight matches. Two of the
Sooners’ points came on the 19th hole as McAllister edged Parker
Coody, one of Texas’s twin grandsons of 1971 Master champion Charlies Coody
from Plano, Texas, and Brightbill pulled out a victory over Travis Vick, Texas’
talented sophomore from Houston. Parker Coody is No. 50 in the WAGR.
Oklahoma’s third point came from Cummins, who edged Christoffer
Bring, a senior from Denmark.
Texas’ top guns came up big in match play as immensely talented
senior, Cole Hammer, another Houstonian who is No. 22 in the WAGR, cruised to a
5 and 4 victory over Welch and junior Pierceson Coody, the other Coody twin who
is No. 9 in the WAGR, was equally impressive in a 5 and 4 win over Reband.
Pierceson Coody was the highest-ranked individual in the field.
Vick and Oklahoma’s Brightbill were two of the three players
tied for fourth place in Monday’s stroke-play qualifying, each registering a
2-under 70.
Menante got the key win for Pepperdine in its 3-2 semifinal
victory over Texas Tech as he pulled out a 2-up decision over Andy Lopez, a senior
from Plano, Texas.
Hitchner rolled to a 6 and 4 decision over Garrett Martin, a
sophomore from San Antonio, Texas, and Highsmith claimed a 4 and 3 win over Markus
Braadlie, a junior from Norway, to account for the Wave’s other two points.
Martin led the way for Texas Tech in Monday’s stroke-play qualifying as he
carded a 2-under 70 to join Texas’ Vick and Oklahoma’s Brightbill in the tie
for fourth place.
Texas Tech got wins from Baard Skagen, a freshman from
Norway who handed Manke a 4 and 3 setback, and J.D. Roller, a freshman from
Jenks, Okla. who edged Mouw, 2 and 1.
Texas rolled to a 5-0 victory over Texas Tech in the
third-place match.