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Stanford University student golfer Krauter wins Dinah Shore award

Match Play! Women s Golf To Face Texas A&M On Tuesday

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (seminoles.com) – Florida State will face Texas A&M in the quarterfinals of match play on Tuesday as the Seminoles kicked in the door and finished sixth in the team standings after four rounds of stroke play at the NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championships at the Grayhawk Golf Club.  Florida State’s sixth place finish in stroke play marks its best ever finish and catapults Head Coach Amy Bond and her team into match play at the national finals for the first time in school history.  It’s huge.  I’m just excited for the girls to have the opportunity.  Now the fun really begins,” said Bond.  “They are one of have teams that has the opportunity to win a national championship.  I’m just excited for them and excited to see what happens over the next couple of days. “I don’t have enough words to describe what they’ve (the players) have done.  They played for each other; they played as a family, they were super gritty.  Friday’s round was

When playable isn t playable - The Independent Florida Alligator

When playable isn’t playable How 12 NCAA women’s golf teams saw their postseason end without hitting a single shot A ball hangs over the hole at Mark Bostick Golf Course Photo by Samantha Harrison | The Independent Florida Alligator There are a million ways an athlete’s career can end. A national championship trophy, a boisterous celebration with the teammates who became family, a gritty postseason match ending in either immortal glory or valiant defeat. For 19 of the seniors at the NCAA women’s golf regional in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Wednesday, their collegiate career ended with a man who made an announcement on The University Club’s clubhouse stairs.

Controversial Decison Brings Abrupt Halt to Season for Mississippi State Bulldogs Women s Golf at Baton Rouge NCAA Regional - Sports Illustrated Mississippi State Football, Basketball, Recruiting, and More

Why? For Mississippi State women s golf coach Charlie Ewing and his team, it s a question that might never have an answer after the Bulldogs didn t get the chance to compete at the Baton Rouge Regional this week. The NCAA declared that The University Club course was playable, but not at a championship caliber . As a result, the top six seeds at the event automatically advanced to the NCAA Championships. But as for everyone else, including State, those seasons came to an unceremonious end. MSU came into the Baton Rouge Regional on the heels of a second-place finish at the Southeastern Conference Championships. It was the team s best-ever finish at the event. The Bulldogs went to Baton Rouge with a ton of momentum and high aspirations. They left with nothing but disappointment and questions after not getting to play any golf at all. 

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