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Mid-season awards: Players of the (mid-)year

PLAYER OF THE (MID-)YEAR
MEN
Peter Uihlein.jpegPeter Uihlein, Oklahoma State
That this decorated junior golfer out of the Leadbetter Academy in Bradenton, Fla., is playing as well as he is right now--wins this fall at the Ping/Golfweek Invitational and at the Gifford, a T-3 at Isleworth, a 70.58 stroke average--as a sophomore isn't that big a surprise. It's the route that he's taken to get to the top of the college world that stops you. This time a year ago, Uihlein struggled simply breaking 80 during practices at Karsten Creek. Acclimating to college took a little longer than anticipated for the two-time AJGA player of the year.

When his game finally started to turn around last spring, however, we've seen the Uihlein we all had expected. If the close of his freshman season wasn't a sign of things to come (four top-10s, including second at the Central Regional), his quarterfinal finish at the U.S. Amateur followed by his 4-0 performance for the victorious U.S. Walker Cup team certainly served notice.

It's often interesting to watch how an elite player reacts when the consistent improvement in his game suddenly stops. Is it panic? Is it the realization that this game can be humbling? While certainly frustrated with his play last fall, Uihlein didn't do the former and accepted the latter. If his game hasn't matured since arriving at Stillwater, Uihlein himself certainly has.

Honorable mention: Dustin Garza, Wichita State
You can't say that Garza's performance this fall was out of nowhere, considering last fall he won three times and had two runner-up finishes. This time around, however, he has amazingly topped himself, winning outright or sharing medalist honors at four of five tournaments. If not for a double bogey on the final hole yesterday in El Paso, the senior from Mission, Texas, would have also captured the title at the Western Refining All-American.

WOMEN
Jennifer Song.jpegJennifer Song, USC
I'm sure I'm not alone in wishing the 19-year-old sophomore had played at the NCAA Preview last month rather than accept the invitation to play in an LPGA tournament back in South Korea. Don't get me wrong, I don't begrudge her for playing in the pro event. I simply wanted to see what she might have done on the CC of Landfall course that will host next year's NCAA Championship, particularly after her impressive performances in her two college starts this fall.

Indeed, Song's stats (67.4 average, 88.1 percent of fairways hit, 85.6 GIR, 35.1 percent birdie conversion rate) are amazing. Then again when you win the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links and the U.S. Women's Amateur in the same summer, you know you've got a lot of game. Song's win at the rain-shortened Mason Rudolph event in September included 12 birdies and no bogeys in 36 holes, matching 66s giving her a three-shot victory. At the Stanford Intercollegiate, Song finally made a bogey, but only five and with matching 67s in her first and third rounds, she cruised to another three-shot win.

It's hard to even remember, now, how Song was so nervous just a few months ago that she would never win a tournament, having come in second four times as a freshman at USC and then blowing the chance to win the NCAA title with a double bogey on the final hole. Again, the most interesting thing for me as an outside observer is to see how elite players handle adversity. USC women's coach Andrea Gaston assured me that Song would only get stronger because of all her near misses. Suffice it to say, that wasn't just coaching speak. Song indeed has improved, immensely even, which is pretty incredible considering how good she already was. No matter if this spring semester is the last for Song as a college player, as speculation suggests, it should be fun to watch her play.

Honorable mention: Cydney Clanton, Auburn
A 70.1 average and victory at the NCAA Preview make the junior from Concord, N.C., a very worthy adversary for Song--or any other golfer trying to win national player of the year honors. Clanton's confidence is extremely high and with teammate Candace Schepperle pushing her in practice each day, you get the feeling Clanton isn't going to rest on any laurels come spring.


GOLF WORLD MID-SEASON ALL-AMERICAN TEAMS
MEN
Bud Cauley
, Alabama
    72.19 avg., 3 starts, 1 win (Isleworth), 3 top-6s
Derek Ernst, UNLV
    70.31 avg., 5 starts, 2 wins (Tucker, Herb Wimberly), 4 top-7s
Dustin Garza, Wichita State
    70.27 avg., 5 starts, 4 wins (UTA, Wolfpack, Bill Ross, Scenic City)
Cody Gribble, Texas
    70.80 avg., 4 starts, 3 top-3s
J.T. Griffin, Georgia Tech
    70.20 avg., 4 starts, 3 top-4s
Sihwan Kim, Stanford
    71.33 avg., 4 starts, 2 runner-ups, 3 top-8s
Espen Kofstad, Denver
    71.13 avg., 5 starts, 3 top-3s, 5 top-8s
Ben Kohles, Virginia
    70.80 avg., 5 starts, 1 win (Maryland), 4 top-10s
Kelly Kraft, SMU
    69.77 avg., 5 starts, 1 win (Gopher), 4 top-5s
David Lingmerth, Arkansas
    70.77 avg., 5 starts, 4 top-4s
Peter Uihlein, Oklahoma State
    70.58 avg., 4 starts, 2 wins (Golfweek/Ping Invite, Gifford), 3 top-3s
Diego Velasquez, Oregon State
    69.27 avg., 4 starts, 1 win (Ridges), no finish worse than T-3


WOMEN
Marina Alex, Vanderbilt
    70.00 avg., 4 starts, 2 runner-ups, 4 top-7s
Amy Anderson, North Dakota State
    73.40 avg., 4 starts, 2 wins (Chip-N-Club, No. Arizona), 4 top-7s
Laura Anderson, Louisville
    71.87 avg., 5 starts, 1 win (Ptarmigan Ram), 1 playoff loss, 4 top-6s
Cydney Clanton, Auburn
    70.10 avg., 3 starts, 1 win (NCAA Preview), 3 top-5s
Jodi Ewart, New Mexico
    71.17 avg., 4 starts, 2 runner-ups, no finish worse than T-12
Numa Gulyanamitta, Purdue
    71.92 avg., 4 starts, 3 top-5s, 4 top-7s
Sara-Maude Juneau, Louisville
    71.07 avg., 5 starts, 2 wins (Napa River, Tar Heel), 4 top-4s
Maude-Aimee LeBlanc, Purdue
    71.57 avg., 3 starts, 2 wins (Lady Northern, Windy City)
Kendra Little, Oregon
    72.83 avg., 4 starts, 2 wins (Dick McGuire, OSU), 3 top-7s
Nathalie Mansson, Tennessee
    71.90 avg., 4 starts, 2 wins (Mercedes-Benz, Alamo), 3 top-10s
Kristina Merkle, Tulsa
    72.40 avg., 4 starts, 1 win (Johnnie Imes), 4 top-5s
Jennifer Song, USC
    67.40 avg., 2 starts, 2 wins (Mason Rudolph, Stanford)

Mid-season awards: Coaches of the (mid-)year

COACHES OF THE (MID-)YEAR
MEN
Trey Jones.jpegTrey Jones, Florida State
The Seminoles barely cracked the Golf World/Nike Golf preseason top 25 in September. Four fall starts later, Jones' squad has two victories, three top-five finishes and a No. 5 national ranking.

In his sixth year at Florida State, Jones has built a program that is a consistent contender in the ACC, having claimed its first conference title in 2008. While talented, the team is also hungry, in part because it has failed to get out of regionals the past two seasons. Motivation to avenge those late season slips, along with a deep roster, should have Jones heading to nationals come May.

Honorable mention: J.T. Higgins, Texas A&M
Having lost his top player, Bronson Burgoon, and having to deal with the hangover of winning the NCAA title in dramatic fashion last June, would you have blamed Higgins if his team started slow in its title defense? Instead, the Aggies have two wins and four top-five finishes in four starts.

WOMEN
Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll.jpegStacy Slobodnik-Stoll, Michigan State
She has built a program that consistently advances to the NCAA Championship while rarely landing a five-star national recruit. It doesn't matter to Slobodnik-Stoll, who takes pride in finding diamonds in the rough and fashioning a team whose sum is greater than the whole of its parts. Such is the case in 2009-10, as Michigan State picked up arguably the biggest win in school history at the Lady Tar Heel ... this after winning the Mary Fossum Invitational back in East Lansing.

The Spartans finished the fall ranked sixth in the Golf World/NGCA coaches' poll. Helping them maintain their spot nationally will be the regional challenge they face in Purdue. Says here that the MSU-Purdue showdown this spring for the Big Ten title could be the most entertaining conference race in the country. That competition will toughen both teams for the post-season.

Honorable mention: Nancy McDaniel, California
The veteran Golden Bears coach successfully acclimated a pair of talented transfers (Joanne Lee and Emily Childs) to help revamp Cal's line-up. The results—a victory at the Edean Ilhanfeldt Invitational, plus two other top-five finishes—have Cal making noise nationally for the first time in recent memory.

Mid-season awards: Top freshmen

It's only been one semester, but these first-year players have made the jump from junior to college golf with few problems.

NATIONAL FRESHMAN OF THE (MID-)YEAR
MEN
Cody Gribble.jpegCody Gribble, Texas
Starting his career with the Longhorns with three top-three finishes has helped the Dallas native become a leader on the UT squad in a short period of time. Gribble's style of play had led to some exciting moments; to wit, he had five eagles at the UTSA Lone Star Invitational this fall. Better yet for coach John Fields and his backers: Gribble leads the country in final-round scoring with a 67.25 average.

Fields has said publicly that he feels Gribble's decision to play primarily an amateur schedule the past 2 1/2 years rather than a junior one has made the transition go as smoothly as it has. Says Fields, the level of competition isn't new to Gribble.

Honorable mention: Cameron Peck, Texas A&M
The top junior coming out of high school has qualified for the Aggies starting line-up in all four events that the defending NCAA champs have played. Moreover, he seems to be getting more and more comfortable with each event, finishing T-2 at the Baylor Intercollegiate to close the fall.

WOMEN
Kristina Merkle.jpegKristina Merkle, Tulsa
While having a following back home in Honolulu, Merkle was under the radar nationally coming into college. Her performances this fall, however, have changed all that. Merkle started with a T-3 finish at the Mo-Morial, improved to a runner-up showing at the Marilyn Smith Sunflower, then did herself one better again when she won the Johnie Imes Invitational. To close the fall, she posted a T-5 at the Turtle Bay Collegiate, wrapping up the first half of the season with a 72.4 average.

Honorable mention: Amy Anderson, North Dakota State
The U.S. Girls Junior champion made a big splash in her first 54-hole college event, winning the Chip--N-Club Invitational while setting the school's 18- and 54-hole scoring records. This came after winning the 18-hole Concordia Open to start her college career. She continued her fine play with a third win and two other top-seven finishes.



GOLF WORLD ALL-FRESHMEN MID-SEASON TEAM
MEN
Pedro Figueiredo
, UCLA
    70.10 avg., 2 starts, 1 runner-up, 2 top-8s
Cody Gribble, Texas
    70.80 avg., 4 starts, 4 top-3s, 5 eagles
Daniel Jennevret, TCU
    73.11 avg., 3 starts, 1 win (The Prestige)  
Cameron Peck, Texas A&M
    72.58 avg., 4 starts, 2 top-5s
Jade Scott, Rice
    71.80 avg., 5 starts, 1 win (David Toms), 4 top-10s

WOMEN
Amy Anderson, North Dakota State
    73.60 avg., 5 starts, 3 wins (Concordia Open, Chip-N-Club, No. Arizona), 5 top-7s
Sarah Beth Davis, Texas A&M
    73.09 avg., 4 starts, 1 win (Mo-Morial), 3 top-6s
Laura Gonzalez Escallon, Purdue
    73.92, 4: T-5, T-9, T-6, T-54
Jennifer Johnson, Arizona State
    71.25, 3: T-7, T-6, T-10
Kristina Merkle, Tulsa
    72.40, 4: T-3, 2, Win (Johnnie Imes), T-5

Mid-season awards: Player you'll know by season's end

Past winner's of this award include Washington's Nick Taylor, Denver's Stephanie Sherlock, Georgia State's Joel Sjoholm and New Mexico's Jodi Ewart. The International theme continues this year.

BEST PLAYER YOU'LL KNOW ABOUT BY SEASON'S END
MEN
Nils Floren.jpegNils Floren, Texas Tech
The native of Ljungskile, Sweden has quietly improved throughout his two-plus years in Waco, dropping his stroke average from 75.44 as a freshman to 72.88 as a sophomore. During this past summer he showed his progress by advancing to the quarterfinals of the British Amateur. Come September, he kicked off his junior season with a share of the individual title at the Carpet Capital Classic before following it up with a T-13 at the Gary Koch and a T-3 at the Isleworth Collegiate.

Entering winter break, Floren had a 70.89 average and continued a streak of having his score count toward the Red Raiders' team total in 37 straight rounds, dating back to the fall of 2007. This season, his MO has been getting off to a quick start, as he sports a 69.33 first-round average.

Honorable mention: David Lingmerth, Arkansas
Made a solid impression at last year's NCAA Championship, winning two matches for the runner-up Razorbacks including his championship-match tilt. The Swedish native (by way of West Florida) then reached the quarterfinals of the U.S. Amateur in August before returning to Fayettville for his senior year and posting three top-five finishes and a 70.77 stroke average.


WOMEN
Marta Silva Zamora, Georgia
The Spaniard made an impression a year ago as a freshman, claiming the SEC individual title en route to earning honorable mention All-American honors. Half way through her sophomore season, she's shown her early play was no fluke, winning at the Duramed Cougar Classic and the Eat A Peach Collegiate to run her college victory total to four in her last 11 starts. She's also dropped her scoring average by  1.61 strokes from this fall (72.0) to last spring.

Honorable mention: Nathalie Mansson, Tennessee
The Swede had the best freshman season in Lady Vol history a year ago, then continued her fine play this fall, closing out the semester in style with wins at the Mercedes-Benz Collegiate and The Alamo Invitational.

Mid-season awards: Best player you've likely never heard of

These players seemingly wear their anonymity like a badge of honor. All I can say is sorry for the shinning the spotlight on you.

BEST PLAYER YOU'VE LIKELY NEVER HEARD OF
MEN
Derek Ernst.jpegDerek Ernst, UNLV
A solid contributor to the Rebels line-up as a freshman a year ago, when he posted seven top-10 finishes, the 19-year-old from Clovis, Calif., has avoided a sophomore slump, earning a share of two titles and finishing no worse than T-12. When senior Eddie Olson left the team to try Q school early in the spring, Ernst stepped up his own expectations and becoming the Rebels team leader.

"He is a very tough competitor," noted UNLV men's coach Dwayne Knight upon Ernst's arrival at UNLV. "He is really gutty and works hard on his game. I call him a 'gamer,' because every time he shows up he is going to give the best he can--he is just that kind of competitor."

Honorable mention: Kelly Kraft, SMU
A victory at the Gopher Invitational to start the spring was the junior's fourth career title, and the first of four top-five finishes he would post this fall. While his play isn't flashy, his results are starting to be.

WOMEN
Stefanie Kenoyer
, Furman
Stefanie Kenoyer.jpegThe junior from Lighthouse Point, Fla., is the two-time Southern Conference individual champion and preparing to make it three-in-a-row this spring after starting the fall with a three straight top-three finishes. She'd finish with four top-10s and positive thoughts for a three-peat.

Kenoyer's credentials are stout: she had led the team in scoring both her freshman (74.91) and sophomore (74.7 average), making her current 72.5 all the more impressive.


Honorable mention: Kenda Little, Oregon
Two wins (Dick McGuire, OSU Giustina) in her first two events of the fall, plus a T-7 to close the first semester boosted her career top-15 finishes total to 14. Only the second Duck to win all-conference honors twice.


Mid-season awards: Biggest spring question marks

Coaches, players and fans are all curious about how what is in store for some golfers as they gear up for spring. Here is a look at some who's fates could have a particular impact on the national scene.

Biggest spring question marks
MEN
Charlie Holland.jpegCharlie Holland, Texas
A miserable end to his 2008-09 season, in which swing changes the 23-year-old Dallas native implemented were eventually scrapped because of poor results, seemed to fade away when Holland reached the semifinals of the U.S. Amateur in August (after reaching the quarterfinals in 2008). Yet upon returning to Austin for his senior year, Holland once again struggled with his game, qualifying to play in just two of five events for the Longhorns all fall. When Holland is on, he has an All-American caliber game. However, you start to wonder if all the mental baggage he's collected over the past two years might be getting a bit too heavy for him to carry.

Honorable mention: Drew Kittleson, Florida State
The 2008 U.S. Amateur runner-up won medalist honors in the fall's first tournament, the Golfweek Conference Challenge, only to finish no better than T-33 in the Seminoles next three starts, posting only one round under par. If the junior can turn things around, FSU is perhaps the favorite to win the ACC title.

WOMEN
Belen Mozo.jpegBelen Mozo, USC
Trojan golf fans had to be pleased to see the senior from Spain, having had surgery on her left shoulder during the summer, return to the line-up at October's Stanford Invitational, where she shot a second-round 70 to finish T-33. Their joy was tempered, however, when she withdrew from the NCAA Preview in the middle of the third round after tweaking the shoulder a day earlier. Mozo skipped USC's final fall start and is going to take things slow during the winter break. Nevertheless, just how healthy she is this spring will have a major impact on the Trojans chances at claiming a third NCAA title in eight years.

Honorable mention: Julia Boland, Texas A&M
The Aussie playing on a one-year scholarship while enrolling in graduate school in college station, was impressive in her first semester, sharing the title at the rain-shortened Texas A&M Mo-Morial event and winning the Challenge at Onion Creek to close the fall. If Boland can keep the pace in the spring, Aggie women's coach Trelle McCombs deserves credit for rolling the dice on this one-and-done recruit.

Mid-season awards: Most Improved

Improvement is what every coach and player are looking for. Here's a glance at some individuals who really raised their games this fall.

MOST IMPROVED PLAYER
MEN
Scott Travers.jpegScott Travers, Santa Clara
A year ago at this time, the Trabuco Canyon, Calif., native was recovering from a case of mono. Travers had been diagnosed after playing in the team's opening event, finishing T-62 at the USF Collegiate in San Francisco in what turned out to be his only start of the 2008-09 season.

"He was going to come back in the spring but then [after finally getting over the mono] he got tonsillitis so we shut things down," said coach Rob Miller.

As it turns out, the time away didn't hurt the late bloomer, who returned rested and ready in September and proceeded to finish no worse than T-8 in five tournaments, posting just one score over par in 15 rounds. (That one round was a 75 at the Turtle Bay Collegiate, in which Travers had a 9 on one hole after playing a wrong ball.)

"We knew what he could have done last year, but he didn't get to show it," said Miller.

Travers applied (and expects to receive) a medical redshirt from last season, making him a redshirt junior. "It's his fourth year in college. He's been around the block a little bit," said Miller when asked about how the success might have affected Travers' attitude this fall. "He got comfortable with that quickly. It became what he expected to do."

Despite the impress fall performance, Travers isn't going to rest on his laurels. During the winter break, Miller says that his top player will be working with swing instructor Bill Johnson to get his grip back to a more neutral position.

Honorable mention: Jared Becher, Nevada
Last fall as a junior, the 22-year-old Reno, Nev., native had a 74.46 fall average with two top-10 finishes. This time around, Becher posted a 70.47 mark and have five top-10s in five starts.

WOMEN
Cydney Clanton.jpegCydney Clanton, Auburn
"Now this is more like it" the 20-year-old from Concord, N.C., had to be thinking as she concluded her fall schedule with an individual victory at the NCAA Preview after posting a T-2 finish at the Mason Rudolph and a fifth-place showing at the Lady Tar Heel.

With her performances, Clanton reminded the college golf world of her impressive first season at Auburn in 2006-07, when she claimed national freshman-of-the-year honors, and helped everyone (including herself) look past a sophomore season where she had four top-five finishes but saw her average rise to 74.23.

"I just think it kind of all clicked," said Auburn women's coach Kim Evans regarding the difference in play this fall, when Clanton posted a 70.1 average. "I think she has better understanding of her game and how to play her game. Cyd has a lot of length, and there are certain holes that she really has to pay a lot of attention on. And I think it was learning her game. I just think [her game] kind of grew up."

If there was a particular moment that Evans looks back on most fondly from the fall, it was watching Clanton claim medalist honors at the NCAA Preview, posting three straight 70s at CC of Landfall in Wilmington, N.C., site of next spring's NCAA Championship.

"I don't think I've ever seen anyone play as well with her distance control," said the NGCA Hall of Fame coach. "It was just incredible, to see her truly work the ball, maybe take one more or one less club and work it into the area she needed to work it to. Just to watch her play those shots and play the game, it was a great tournament for me to watch her play. It wasn't about just killing a drive down there and hitting it close. She really was taking clubs and hitting shots and making it work on those greens."

It's for this reason that you can rationalize a player of Clanton's caliber being the mid-season's most improved golfer. The incremental improvement she made to return to the elite level of college golf is just as critical a leap as the one made by a player who drops her scoring average several strokes.

Honorable mention: Lacey Agnew, Florida State
Her T-64 finish at the NCAA Preview caused the senior to finish the fall on a down note. Still, the semester was a true success for Agnew, who finished second, T-5 and T-8 in her first three starts and closed the fall with a 73.50 average after coming into the 2009-10 season with a career average of 79.92.

Mid-season awards: Biggest Surprises

The first half of the 2008-09 campaign has come and gone. With roughly eight weeks to catch their breathe before beginning the spring march to the NCAA Championship, players and programs must assess where they stand overall and consider how to repeat any success from the fall or recover from a disappointing start to the season.

And just who, exactly, will be doing the repeating and who is looking at recovering? Gaze no further than Golf World’s fifth annual Mid-Season Award package, a compendium that serves as both a review of the season to date and a primer for what’s to come when players tee it up again in late January. Each day we’ll reveal another award winner in men’s and women’s college golf, culminating with the Mid-Season Player of the Year honorees and All-American teams being unveiled on Wednesday, Nov. 25.

Lets start with the golfers and teams that unexpectedly made a lasting impression the past three months.

BIGGEST SURPRISE: PLAYER
MEN
Diego Velasquez.jpegDiego Velasquez, Oregon State
For as happy-go-lucky as the Bogota, Colombia native was off the course his first three years in Corvallis, Ore., Velasquez was the picture of tension on it, turning a talented ball-striker (he won twice during the 2008-09 season) into an inconsistent golfer.

Entering his senior season, however, he spent time in the summer addressing his mental approach to the game, taking serious the various meditation and breathing techniques the Beaver squad have been taught by the team's sports psychologist in recent years.

"When he came [to campus] in the fall, I saw a different person," said Oregon State men's coach Brian Watts. "He had always been a very aggressive player, but he had a much more patient approach. When he wasn't hitting it great, he wasn't trying to force anything."

Suffice it to say, the more laid-back attitude worked: Velasquez finished third, T-3, first and second in Oregon State's four fall starts, posting a 69.27 average while breaking par in 10 of 11 rounds.

"It wasn't like he was lights out with his putter or flagging everything," Watts said about Velasquez. "He just was doing everything very well. He's comfortable, confident and relaxed on the course. He's in a great place mentally, which sets him apart. He's mentally tougher and disciplined and calm out there."

"I just try to stay inside there and don't let anybody else come inside it," Velasquez recently told the Corvallis Gazette-Times. "It's just me out there, doing my thing."

Honorable mention: Seath Lauer, Florida State
The senior from Huntington, Ind., had been a staple of the Seminoles lineup the past two seasons, but stepped up his performance this fall with three top-10s in four fall events, including a runner-up showing at the Gary Koch Collegiate.


WOMEN
Sara-Maude Juneau.jpegSara-Maude Juneau, Louisville
The departure of All-American Cindy LaCrosse left a potential void at the top of the Cardinals' line-up, one that the 22-year-old junior from Quebec has done her part to fill. After posting a 74.5 average a year ago, the Canadian native limboed that number to 71.07 this fall, winning her first two college titles and finishing fourth and second in two other starts. Her shinning moment came in October at the Lady Tar Heel Invitational, where Juneau shot a career-best 10-under 206.

Searching for what brought out the best in Juneau might require you look not further than the solid play of teammate Laura Anderson, a junior who won once in the fall, lost a second tournament in a playoff and had two additional top-10 finishes. The two have been battling for the No. 1 spot all fall, a rivalry that's had great returns for both.

Honorable mention: Cheyenne Woods, Wake Forest
There has been no sophomore slump for Phoenix, native, who closed out the fall with a T-6 showing at the Mercedes-Benz Collegiate and a T-3 at the NCAA Preview. "She's always had the athletic ability to hit the ball well but her short game has improved so much," said women's coach Diane Dailey. On a squad with All-American caliber players in Natalie Sheary and Dolores White, it was Woods who posted the low scoring average (72.83) for the Demon Deacons this fall, a performance that would make Uncle Tiger proud.



BIGGEST SURPRISE: TEAM
MEN
Oregon State logo 2009-10.gifOregon State
Having one player post nothing higher than a 72 in any round during the fall, as Beaver coach Brian Watts had with Velasquez, quickly lifts a team up a leader board. Still, Oregon State's run of four straight top-four finishes--including victories at the OSU Giustina and the Bank of Tennessee at the Ridges--couldn't have come without a little help from the other guys in the line-up. Credit also goes to seniors Mike Barry (71.73 average) and Paul Peterson (72.88) and sophomore Morten Madsen (72.45), who each had top-15 finishes.

"Overall, from top to bottom we're as deep as we've ever been talentwise," said Watts, whose team started the semester unranked but was 21st in the most recent Golf World/Nike Golf coaches' poll. "If you get complacent on this team, you're not going to be in the lineup."

As with Velasquez, the entire roster has bought into the notion that slow and steady can win the race. "The guys are understanding that college golf is a marathon," Watts noted. "Everybody is going to have ups and downs, but how you get things back on track is what matters."

Honorable mention: SMU
Two wins to start the fall from the Mustangs have been followed but two more top-three performances to close out the semester. Besides becoming the front-runner for the Conference USA title, Jay Loar's crew is entering the fray on the national level.

WOMEN
Thumbnail image for Michigan State.jpgMichigan State
If the Spartans impressive start to the 2009-10 season--two wins and a second-place finish in four starts--caught some off guard (OK, yours truly), the same can't be said for Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll. "We've been looking forward to this year for years," said the MSU women's coach, who has made a living (literally) off signing talented if under the radar junior golfers.

Coming into the fall, however, she knew that her line-up for the first time ran a legitimate five players deep, with experienced returning starters Laura Kueny, Aimee Neff, Lindsey Solberg and Shannon Warner being joined by freshman Caroline Powers. Where last spring the Spartans' top performers became guilty of pressing, feeling like they had to shoot low scores for MSU to succeed only to get in their own way, this year's group has played with the freedom of knowing that everyone is capable of contributing.

The difference became evident at the Lady Tar Heel Invitational in October. With a victory already in their home event (Mary Fossum), the Spartans journeyed to Chapel Hill, N.C., and returned with arguably their biggest regular-season title ever, beating a standout field by 12 strokes while breaking the school's 54-hole scoring record.

"We knew we had the potential, but to come through and win was a huge confidence booster," Slobodnik-Stoll said. "We know what we're capable of doing."

Even finishing the fall with a 10th-place showing at the NCAA Preview, MSU's collective outlook remained high knowing that while playing poorly at CC of Landfall in Wilmington, they still finished in the top 10 and got a good look at the course that will host the national championship in May.

Honorable mention: Florida State
Their finish to the fall was a little flat (14th at Lady Tar Heel), but the Seminoles, unranked at the start of the fall, were impressive in victory at the Bette Lou Evans Invitational and with runner-up finishes at the Duramed Cougar Classic and Eat A Peach Collegiate. The performances are even more interesting considering they saw former All-American Caroline Westrup graduating from a squad that failed to qualify for nationals at year ago.

Allie White leaves Ohio State women's team

Last spring she played college golf at North Carolina, only to transfer after Tar Heel coach Sally Austin decided to retire. This fall she played at Ohio State. Come 2010, however, Allie White will no longer be playing for any school. The 19-year-old from Lancaster, Ohio, has decided to leave the Buckeye women's golf team after competing in just three tournaments.

"Golf is going to be kind of a summer thing," White told the Lancaster Eagle Gazette. "I'm hoping to do some studying abroad and some other things that I wouldn't be able to do if I was playing golf."

White intends to remain at Ohio State but become a full-time student.

Suffice it to say, the departure seems a bit odd. For one thing, she had been playing well, posting two top-10 finishes this fall (T-6 at the Golfweek Conference Challenge, T-3 at the Lady Northern) before being disqualified from the Mercedes-Benz Championship for signing an incorrect scorecard.

Moreover, White had seemed to have found a nice niche in Columbus. "I am thrilled to be a Buckeye," she said in September. "I have cheered for Ohio State since I was little [her mother played tennis at OSU] and am excited to become a part of this team. Coach Hession has such enthusiasm for golf and the team is great to be around. I want to do my best and help continue to build the program."

Asked about White's decision, OSU women's coach Therese Hession told Campus Insider via e-mail: "The reason she gave me was that she does not want to play college golf any more."

Outside college golf, White made a few headlines last summer during the U.S. Women's Open, where she made the cut at Saucon Valley CC (finishing T-65) and caught some attention of TV cameras by wearing a hat with the logo Ohio Farmer, a magazine for which her father/caddie, Tim, is the editor.

"It's not something I necessarily feel good about--stopping in the middle of something," White said about leaving the team. "But in the overall scheme of things, it's a good move."



Kang to enroll at Pepperdine in January

As schools collect National Letters of Intent with the early signing period set to end Wednesday, one program's blue-chip recruit has committed not for next fall but for this coming January. Danielle Kang, a 17-year-old from Thousand Oaks, Calif., accelerated her high school studies in order to graduate next month and enroll at Pepperdine in January.

Kang, a honorable mention AJGA All-American in 2008 and medalist at the U.S. Women's Amateur this past summer, would have been a welcome addition at any time, but her early arrival will help bolster a squad that played with just five golfers this past fall. She also heads to Malibu on a bit of a hot streak; last month she shot a 10-under 57 at Westlake GC in a high school match.

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