Knoxville, Tenn. – Clemson women’s golf finished sixth in the 2023 Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championship, held at the par-71 Cherokee Country Club in Knoxville, Tenn. The Tigers finished the day at +4, putting them at +10 for the three-round tournament. Chloe Holder was the Tigers’ top finisher, finishing round three at -2 and the tournament in a tie for 14th. Annabelle Pancake finished the tournament at +2, tied for 20th, while Melena Barrientos finished the third round at +1 and +7 overall, tied for 38th. Sydney Robert and Isabella Rawl both finished the tournament tied for 42nd, while Katherine Schuster, Clemson’s individual participant, finished +2 and tied for 20th.Schuster finished the back nine at -3, including an eagle on 11. Holder finished the front nine at -3, with four birdies and one bogey. The Tigers are back in action on October 27, traveling to Wilmington, N.C. for the Landfall Tradition, held at the Country Club of Landfall.
Knoxville, Tenn. – Clemson women’s golf moved up two spots in the standings after the second round of the Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championship, finishing the day at +2. The three-day event is held at the par-71 Cherokee Country Club in Knoxville, Tenn.The Tigers turned in the second-best round of the day at +2 and now sit at +6 on the tournament, just one shot out of fourth (Louisville, +5) and two shots out of third (Pepperdine, +4). Ole Miss sits alone in second place at +1, while UCF still holds a seven-shot lead at -6. Individually, Sydney Roberts and Melena Barrientos each finished the day at -1, carding the best rounds of the day for the Tigers (70). Isabella Rawl finished the second round at +1, while Annabelle Pancake finished at +3 and is currently tied for 12th. Chloe Holder finished the second round at +5 and Katherine Schuster, Clemson’s individual participant, finished at +3. The Tigers return to the course for the final round on Tuesday, paired with Louisville an
Charleston, S.C. – Savannah Grewal carded a five-under 66 in the third round to earn co-medalist honors and Clemson women’s golf finished in third place at the Cougar Classic, held at the Yeamans Hall Club in Hanahan, S.C. Grewal’s first-place finish was the first tournament win of her career. She shared co-medalist honors with former Clemson Invitational champion and current world amateur No. 1, LSU’s Ingrid Linblad. After winning the Stage One LPGA Q School qualifier earlier this month, Grewal shined in her first tournament of her final season. The Mississauga, Ontario native finished -16 and broke her own score to par record of -12 set last year at the NCAA Pullman Regional. Grewal’s 197 total score broke a seven-year-old record of 203 set by Alice Hewson at the Schooner Classic in 2016. Grewal finished the tournament with a school-record 20 birdies, including nine in the second round (most in a single round in school history). Her 20 birdies now gives her 301 for her
Charleston, S.C. – Clemson shot -13 in the first round and is currently -6 in a suspended round 2 to sit atop the team leaderboard after the first day of the Cougar Classic at Yeamans Hall Club in Charleston, S.C. Round two was suspended due to weather, but will resume tomorrow morning at 8:30 before the teams head directly into the final round.The Tigers finished with a combined score of 271 after the first 18 holes, good for second all-time score vs par (and second all-time in low gross score). Juniors Katherine Schuster and Chloe Holder each shot -4 in round one and the Tigers had four girls finish in the 60s for just the third time in school history.Through 11 holes of round two, Savannah Grewal has five birdies and has propelled the Tigers into first. Schuster and Holder are each even, while Annabelle Pancake is -1 through 12 holes and Isabella Rawl is +2. Rawl was the only Tiger to not shoot in the 60s in round one, but finished -1 at 70 through the first 18 holes.Fans can foll
This summer, Trinton Jones stepped into his ancestral past. Jones, an Evanston resident, was one of four Oakton College students who traveled to study in Two Evanston residents were among Oakton College students who traveled to the Republic of Ghana in June, connecting with their African heritage.