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Indiana Finishes 25th at US Women’s State Team

Oct 11, 2011

Savannah,
Ga. – As the sunlight began to fade behind the large clubhouse at The
Landings Club’s Palmetto Course late Thursday afternoon, a large cheer
went up. That’s when Georgia’s non-playing captain Sissy Gann brought
out three bottles of champagne and the celebration commenced.

Rallying from as much as a five-stroke deficit, Georgia, behind the
stellar performance of 14-year-old Rachel Dai of Suwanee, registered a
two-stroke victory over Texas and Tennessee to successfully defend its
USGA Women’s State Team Championship on the 6,067-yard, par-72 layout.

Dai, along with veteran Laura Coble of Augusta and 17-year-old Amira
Alexander of Alpharetta, posted a 54-hole total of 16-over-par 448 in
the 3-count-2 team format.

Georgia is the only team to have won multiple Women’s State Team
titles – it also won in 2005 – and joins the Texas men as the only teams
to have claimed three State Team Championships since the biennial
competitions were started in 1995.

Dai, a Milton High School freshman, shot an even-par 72 in a final
round that included four birdies over the last nine holes to secure
individual medalist honors at 2-under 214, edging Tennessee’s Calle
Nielson by one stroke.

Coble added a 5-over 77, while Alexander’s 79, her best round of the championship, was not counted.

Texas and Tennessee shared second at 18-over 450, but Texas earned
the silver medal based on a better score from its third golfer; Robin
Burke (84) edged Maggie Scott (87) by three shots. Tennessee received
the bronze medal.

Maryland, the 18- and 36-hole leader, wound up fourth at 451,
followed by Mississippi (456), Florida (458) and New Jersey (458), which
had its best showing ever at the Women’s State Team.

After the scores were made official, Coble was overcome with emotion.
She hugged former Georgia captain Pat Clarke, along with Gann, her
teammates and other well-wishers. Fellow competitors, including Savannah
native and Kentucky player Martha Leach, also congratulated Coble, who
played on the winning Georgia teams in 2005 and 2009. But this title had
special meaning since it came in front of the “home” crowd.

Georgia joined the Minnesota men and women (2001) and the Texas men
(2007) as the only teams to win State Team titles on home soil.

“It’s just unbelievable,” said the 47-year-old Coble. “It’s just hard
to describe. The Landings has been so wonderful to us. [Georgia] is my
home and where I’ve grown up, and they’ve been wonderful to us.”

Added Dai, who made an exquisite up-and-down par from a greenside
bunker at No. 18 to help clinch the title: “The fact that it was at home
was the biggest thing. It was so awesome when I found out [the
championship] was in Savannah. I have been here before and I’ve always
enjoyed coming back here. It was so amazing.”

So was her play, especially over the final nine holes. It began with a
15-yard chip-in birdie from above a greenside bunker at No. 11. Then at
the par-3 13th, she holed a 15-footer for birdie and followed it up by
making a challenging downhill 6-foot slider at the par-3 15th. At 16,
she hit her best drive of the day and her 124-yard 8-iron approach
stopped 12 feet below the flagstick. She converted the birdie putt
before making solid pars over the final two holes, including the up and
down from the bunker at 18.

“I was fortunate to have a very nice [uphill] lie,” said Dai of the
bunker shot. “I knew I couldn’t land it on [the green], so I tried my
best to land it on the fringe and let it trickle down [to 3 feet from
the hole]. Things just went my way.”

Georgia’s victory came after a wild and windy day that saw four
different teams hold the lead during various portions of the final
round.

Maryland was the first to falter as 17-year-old Elyse Smidinger
struggled to find her form from the first two days. After rounds of
68-72, the first of which included nine birdies (eight in a row), the
Crofton resident could muster only a 79. With Andrea Kraus’ 76, Maryland
shot 155 for the day, which put them three shots behind Georgia.

Early in the final round, it appeared as though Texas might run away
from the field. The team held a five-stroke lead after nine holes before
struggling down the stretch. Mina Hardin birdied four of her first six
holes before hitting her drive out of bounds at the par-5 seventh,
leading to a double-bogey 7.

“That was totally unexpected,” said the 2010 USGA Senior Women’s
Amateur champion and 2011 runner-up from Fort Worth. “I rushed my shot. I
came over it and [my ball] hit the cart path. But stuff happens.”

That double bogey proved to be a bad omen for Texas. Hardin wound up
shooting a team-best 73, while Anna Schultz of Rockwall, the 2007 USGA
Senior Women’s Amateur champion, carded an 80 after opening the event
with rounds of 72-75. Texas still had a chance at the end, but Hardin
made a disappointing bogey at 18 and Schultz bogeyed the 17th hole to
give Texas its second runner-up finish at this championship. The team
finished one stroke behind Pennsylvania in the inaugural Women’s State
Team 16 years ago.

“Of course we are disappointed,” said Hardin. “You come in with a
good team and you think you have a good chance. You’re looking good
going into the last day, so not being able to finish the job was a
little disappointing.

“But it was a good tournament. We showed well and did our best. We’ll make it one day.”

As Texas faltered, Tennessee moved into the lead by one stroke with
just three holes remaining. Nielson, a recent University of Virginia
graduate from Nashville who advanced out of last week’s Stage II LPGA
Tour Qualifying School tournament in Florida, birdied the par-3 15th
hole to get to one under for the round.

But like Texas, Tennessee failed to close strong. Nielson bogeyed No.
17 and teammate Jennifer Lucas of Knoxville double-bogeyed the same
hole to drop back into a share of second. Nielson finished with an
even-par 72 and was one of only two players to complete 54 holes in red
figures (1-under 215). Lucas wound up with an 80.

“I just couldn’t get any putts to fall,” said a mentally exhausted
Nielson, who has played 12 or 13 rounds in the last two weeks. “And the
conditions were really tough. I played well. I’m coming off a lot of
golf right now. And today it was just harder because I had to focus
twice as hard because the wind was switching.

“This was more exciting than a college event. I didn’t know if I
could feel that again. I had butterflies going down 18 knowing what was
going on. This is why we play. I had a really good time this week.”

Georgia, playing ahead of the final three groups of Texas, Maryland
and Tennessee, took full advantage of the teams faltering behind them.
Coble wasn’t fully aware of the fluidity of the leaderboard, but her
caddie, Dori Carter, a current LPGA Tour member who was on the winning
Georgia side in 2009, mentioned that Texas was starting to come back to
the pack.

Coble listened, but also knew she couldn’t worry about what was happening to the other teams.

“We still have to play,” said Coble, who hoped her bogey at the
closing hole wouldn’t be costly. “We’ve got to finish as strong as we
can and get the ball in the hole as fast as we can.”

Even when someone mentioned that Georgia had won, Coble remained cautious until the USGA made the results official.

That’s when the celebration got crazy with champagne being sprayed on anyone associated with the team.

“We did it all together,” said Coble. “There’s no one superstar. It’s very special.”

David Shefter is a USGA senior staff writer. E-mail him at dshefter@usga.org. 

Savannah, Ga. – Results from Thursday’s final round of the 2011
USGA Women’s State Team Championship conducted at the 6,067-yard, par-72
Palmetto Course at The Landings Club. Note: The team score is
determined by the two lowest scorers for each round.
 

1—Georgia (153-146-149—448) Rachel Dai, Suwanee 75-67-72–214; Laura Coble, Augusta 78-79-77–234; Amira Alexander, Alpharetta 80-80-79–239

T2—Tennessee (149-149-152—450) Calle Nielson, Nashville 69-74-72–215; Jennifer Lucas, Knoxville 80-75-80–235; Maggie Scott, Charleston 84-89-87–260

T2—Texas (146-151-153—450) Anna Schultz, Rockwall 72-75-80–227; Mina Hardin, Fort Worth 79-76-73–228; Robin Burke, Houston 74-79-84–237

4—Maryland (143-153-155—451) Elyse Smidinger, Crofton 68-72-79–219; Andrea Kraus, Baltimore 78-83-76–237; Lisa Schlesinger, Laytonsville 75-81-86–242

5—Mississippi (154-150-152—456) Virginia Grimes, Meridian 73-72-76–221; Cissye Gallagher, Greenwood 81-78-79–238; Renee Chastain, Brandon 84-86-76–246

6—Florida (155-156-147—458) Tovie St. Louis, West Palm Beach 78-78-74–230; Meghan Stasi, Oakland Park 81-78-73–232; Wendi Golden, Bradenton 77-80-81–238

7–New Jersey (155-148-158—461) Kuriko Tsukiyama, West New York 78-76-74–228; Cindy Ha, Demarest 77-72-84–233; Scotland Preston, Mountainside 80-83-84–247

8—Hawaii (153-153-160—466) Ciera Min, Hilo 75-76-78–229; Hana Furuichi, Honolulu 78-77-82–237; Allisen Corpuz, Honolulu 78-78-NC–NC

T9—Minnesota (160-153-154—467) Leigh Klasse, St. Anthony 86-72-77–235; Olivia Lansing, St. Paul 78-81-77–236; Kristen Wagner, Minneapolis 82-85-80–247

T9–New York (162-154-151—467) Annie Park, Levittown 74-76-71–221; Danielle Fuss, Rochester 88-78-80–246; Teresa Cleland, Syracuse 90-83-81–254

T11–South Carolina (149-159-160—468) Dawn Woodard, Greer 73-77-76–226; Lea Venable, Simpsonville 76-85-85–246; Lea Anne Brown, Mt. Pleasant 87-82-84–253

T11—California (155-153-160—468) Lynne Cowan, Davis 74-80-81–235; Joan Higgins, Glendora 81-78-79–238; Sharon Park, Irvine 81-75-83–239

13—Arizona (156-157-157—470) Thuhashini Selvaratnam, Tempe 80-78-78–236; Mikayla Harmon, Gilbert 77-81-79–237; Kimberly Eaton, Tempe 79-79-90–248

T14–North Carolina (158-160-153—471) Pat Brogden, Garner 76-80-72–228; Patty Moore, Charlotte 83-80-81–244; Debbie Adams, Asheville 82-82-81–245

T14—Connecticut (159-156-156—471) Mia Landegren, Bridgewater 76-79-75–230; Ellie Dutch, Moodus 83-77-81–241; Debbie Johnson, Stamford 95-81-87–263

16—Oregon (163-154-155—472) Brie Stone, Veneta 80-77-79–236; Lara Tennant, Portland 84-77-76–237; Monica Vaughn, Reedsport 83-78-82–243

17—Oklahoma (164-146-163—473) Ellen Mueller, Bartlesville 77-73-79–229; Kathy West, Tulsa 88-73-84–245; Leigh Ann Fore, Tulsa 87-89-85–261

T18—Pennsylvania (157-159-158—474) Noreen Mohler, Bethlehem
80-76-72–228; Alexandra Frazier, West Conshohocken 77-83-89–249; Lisa
McGill, Philadelphia 82-83-86–251

T18—Kansas (165-155-154—474) Lacy Shelton, Overland Park 85-78-73–236; Shelly McCalla, Topeka 81-77-85–243; Alex Beury, Benton 84-92-81–257

20–Puerto Rico (156-157-162—475) Maria Torres, San Juan 72-78-76–226; Paola Robles, Aguadilla 84-79-86–249; Rebekah Alfond, Dorado 93-97-103–293

21—Alabama (157-162-158—477) Suzanne Stanley, Decatur 75-82-79–236; Linda Jeffery, Millbrook 82-81-83–246; Gabi Oubre, Mobile 87-81-79–247

22–South Dakota (163-156-159—478) Julie Jansa, Sioux Falls 80-80-79–239; Maggie Murphy, Sioux Falls 83-76-84–243; Karla Murra, Sioux Falls 85-80-80–245

23—Massachusetts (159-161-160—480) Tara Joy Connelly, Pembroke 77-82-78–237; Pam Kuong, Wellesley 82-79-82–243; Kristen MacDonald, Billerica 83-83-82–248

24—Wisconsin (155-159-167—481) Maggie Leef, Brookfield 75-78-82–235; Rheba Mabie, Wausau 80-81-85–246; Katie Falk, Milwaukee 86-87-88–261

25—Indiana (166-162-156—484) Kristi Trotter, Greenwood 83-81-77–241; Julie Carmichael, Indianapolis 88-81-79–248; Nina Whalen, Indianapolis 83-96-89–268

T26—Michigan (169-157-159—485) Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll, Haslett 83-77-77–237; Natalie Brehm, Mt. Pleasant 86-83-82–251; Kim Kester, Ada 90-80-86–256

T26—Washington (154-163-168—485) Leslie Folsom, Seattle 76-80-86–242; Denise Kieffer, University Place 78-83-82–243; Anne Carr, Renton 85-87-86–258

28 – Kentucky (159-165-163—487) Beverly Games, Elizabethtown 81-80-82—243; Laura Patrick, Russell 78-87-81—246; Martha Leach, Hebron 81-85-82—248 

29 – Colorado (167-158-164—489) Allie Johnston, Castle Rock 83-76-79—238; Mary Doyen, Denver 84-85-85—254; Laurie Steenrod, Aurora 86-82-90 – 258

T30 – Louisiana (160-163-169—492) Julie Harrison, Baton Rouge 84-81-86—251; Elise Bradley, Mandeville 82-88-86—256; Kay Daniel, Covington 78-82-83—243

T30 – Utah (158-165-169—492) Lea Garner, Washington Terrace
89-83-86—258; Annette Gaiotti, Salt Lake City 78-82-89—249; Julie
McMullin, Park City 80-83-83–246

32 – Iowa (166-164-166—496) Julie Bush, Cedar Rapids 88-84-90—262; Lisa Meshke, West Des Moines 81-80-78—239; Jenny Graeser, Cedar Falls 85-87-88—260

33 – Nebraska (167-163-169—499) Jane Pohlman, Omaha 92-92-93—277; J.C. Weaver, Grand Island 81-81-82—244; Susan Marchese, Omaha 86-82-87—255

34 – Ohio (158-176-167—501) Lynn Thompson, Cincinnati 84-91-94—269; Suzi Spotleson, Canton 74-87-74—235; Cathy Jefferson, Centerville 87-89-93—269

35 – New Mexico (163-163-176—502) Shania Berger, Socorro 81-84-84—249; Nancy Romero Albuquerque 96-85-92—273; Lara Davis, Albuquerque 82-79-95—256

36 – Illinois (165-167-171—503) Char McLear, McHenry 88-88-81—257; Tanya Olson, Naperville 82-81-90—253; Laura Carson, Lake Bluff 83-86-90—259

37 – Idaho (171-172-163—506) Shawna Ianson, Boise 98-85-92—275; Kareen Markle Meridian 82-87-81—250; Karen Darrington Boise 89-91-82—262

38 – Virginia (162-171-174—507) Boodie McGurn, Richmond 87-88-91—266; Mimi Hoffman, Springfield 82-83-87—252; Shelley Savage, Alexandria 80-88-87—255

39 – Nevada (167-172-174—513) Robin McNesby, Henderson 87-87-88—262; Karen Hoppe, Carson City 83-92-89—264; Lisa Stanley, Reno 84-85-86—255

40 – Maine (168-172-176—516) Mary Brandes, Falmouth 89-88-93—270; Emily Bouchard, Saco 79-84-83—246; Laurie Hyndman, Cumberland 96-93-100—289

41 – Arkansas (174-170-173—517) Rosetta Parks, Lowell 88-100-90—278; Brenda Carr, Bentonville 93-84-87—264; Tanna Richard, Fort Smith 86-86-86—258

T42 – Wyoming (173-172-173—518) Mary Smith, Sheridan 94-86-95—275; Miranda Bandemer, Laramie 89-86-88—263; Sarah Bowman, Parkman 84-89-85—258

T42 – West Virginia (177-174-167—518) Caroline Ramsey,
Bridgeport 91-85-88—264; Nicolle Flood-Sawczyszyn, Morgantown
94-91-82—267; Kimberly Eaton, Shepherdstown 86-89-85—260

44 – District of Columbia (173-175-171—519) Deborah Klein, Washington 93-85-86—264; Shelley Gaffin, Washington 85-92-87—264; Maggie Brady, Washington 88-90-85—263

45 – Delaware (175-176-178—529) Carolyn R. Henry, Middletown 99-89-95—283; Angie Whitley Coleman, New Castle 86-93-91—270; Sandy Scitti, Selbyville 89-87-87—263

46 – Rhode Island (181-177-182—540) Marisa White, Wakefield 92-89-93—274; Judy Davis, Rumford 89-88-94—271; Kibbe Reilly, Providence 98-90-89—277

T47 – Missouri (183-176-182—541) Janis Clemens, Sedalia 104-88-95—287; Barbara Blankenship, Centertown 95-88-101—284; Stephany Powell, Springfield 88-95-87—270

T47 – Vermont (179-172-190—541) Shelly Yusko, Quechee 93-98-99—290; Susie Bremner, Essex Junction 105-94-99—298; Holly Reynolds, Morrisville 86-78-91—255

49 – Montana (180-183-187—550) Sue Peterson, Glendive 85-89-89—263; Sabie Hamilton, Colstrip 99-97-107—303; Sue Matson, Laurel 95-94-98—287

50 – Alaska (187-186-182—555) Susan Gatewood, Anchorage 117-102-104—323; Terri McAngus, Eagle River 90-86-81—257; Jamie Berge, Anchorage 97-100-101—298

51 – North Dakota (198-204-188—590) Sharonn Lipsh, Grafton 101-108-109—318; Theresa Burns, Bismarck 102-98-87—287; Mary Adams, Grand Forks 97-106-101—304