Tue, May 25, 2010 - [Women's Golf] - Viewed 674 times
Four of the event's eight previous national champions will be featured on the
course
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The 16th Annual NAIA Women's Golf National Championships are
set to tee off Tuesday at Meadowbrook Golf Course in Rapid City, S.D. First and
second round play will tee off from No. 1 at 7:30 a.m. MDT, followed by an 8
a.m. start from No. 10 on both Tuesday and Wednesday. The first round's
afternoon session will open off of No. 10 at 12:30 p.m., followed by a 1 p.m.
start at No. 1. The second round's afternoon session will get underway at 1 p.m.
on both No. 1 and 10. The event will be four rounds of stroke play.
The
129-player championships field is comprised of 14 automatic qualifying teams
from NAIA affiliated conferences/unaffiliated groupings and 10 at-large
selections, which are determined using the final Top 25 rating released on May
7. South Dakota School of Mines & Technology qualifies as the host
institution.
Among the 14 teams bound for Rapid City, four have
previously won a national team title. Oklahoma City has five championships to
their credit, all in the last five years. British Columbia took home top honors
in 2001 and 2004. Southern Nazarene (Okla.) has won the event twice, taking home
the title in 1999 and 2002. In 2003, Northwood (Fla.) won its first women's golf
crown.
Nineteen of this year's 25 qualifying teams played in the event a
year ago, led by defending titlist Oklahoma City. The Stars carded a
302-311-302-313-1228 en route to the win. Second-place went to Bethel (Ind.)
with a 303-330-306-322-1261 outing in Rapid City.
A trio of players
earned a spot in the field through automatic qualification: Wolverine-Hoosier
Athletic Conference medalist Caitlin Duval of Davenport (Mich.), Lewis-Clark
State's (Idaho) Courtney Shrout won the Frontier Conference and Maegan Rice of
Mobile (Ala.) was the medalist at the Unaffiliated Group #4 - Gulf
Coast/Southern States/TranSouth tournament. A pair of Cumberlands (Ky.) players,
McKinzie Price and Emma Cutmore, along with Jada Bennington of William Woods
(Mo.), were at-large selections.
In the event's 16-year history, 12
different programs have produced the individual medalist, led by Oklahoma City
with three. Bethel's Shanna Page became the second Bethel individual to win the
title and join the Stars as the only other program with multiple individual
medalists.