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NCAA Division I women's golf championship

The NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship, played in the month of May, is the annual competition in women's collegiate golf for individuals and teams from universities in Division I. Golf was one of twelve women's sports added to the NCAA championship program for the 1981-82 school year. From its inception through 2014, it was a stroke play team competition with an additional individual award. Beginning in 2015, after 72 holes of stroke play, the top eight teams play in single-elimination match play to determine the team champion.

Many individual winners have gone on to have successful careers on the LPGA Tour, including 1991 champion Annika Sörenstam and 1999 champion Grace Park.

The Division I competition started in 1982. A combined Division II and Division III championship was held from 1996 to 1999, splitting into separate championships starting in 2000.[1]

Results

Stroke play (1978–2014)

Stroke and match play (2015–present)

Source:[2]

Notes

  1. ^ Team championship decided by playoff.
  2. ^ Individual championship decided by playoff.
  3. ^ Tulsa's team (1,175) and individual (Melissa McNamara, 287) championships from 1988 were vacated by the NCAA.
  4. ^ The fourth round of the 1999 championship was cancelled due to rain.
  5. ^ NCAA record – Lowest aggregate score.
  6. ^ NCAA record – Most strokes under par.

Team titles

NCAA Division I women's golf championship is located in the United States
Arizona State
Arizona State
Duke
Duke
Arizona
Arizona
San Jose State
San Jose State
UCLA
UCLA
USC
USC
Florida
Florida
Stanford
Stanford
Alabama
Alabama
Georgia
Georgia
Miami
Miami
Ole Miss
Ole Miss
Purdue
Purdue
TCU
TCU
Tulsa
Tulsa
Wake Forest
Wake Forest
Washington
Washington
National Championships by school: 8, 7, 3, 2, 1

Appearances by team

Total Columns

Table Entries

Winners of both NCAA and U.S. Amateur

The following women have won both the NCAA individual championship and the U.S. Women's Amateur. Only Vicki Goetze (1992) managed the feat in the same year.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Division I Women's" (PDF). NCAA Golf. Retrieved March 3, 2024.
  2. ^ "Division I Championship History" (PDF). NCAA.org. p. 3. Retrieved May 12, 2014.

External links