Women’s golf finishes second in PING/ASU Invitational
In their lone home invitational, the ASU women’s golf team started strong and finished on a tear, placing second with a plus-17 score of 869.
In their lone home invitational, the ASU women’s golf team started strong and finished on a tear, placing second with a plus-17 score of 869.
The ASU women’s golf team hopes for a little home-course advantage when they host the annual ASU/Ping Invitational on March 30 to April 1.
Tiger Woods stole headlines Sunday with his first PGA tour victory since 2009.
ASU heads to the Battle at Rancho Bernardo from March 18-20 without having competed against another NCAA school in over a month.
The team looks to recover when it resumes play in the GCAA Match Play Championship on March 18-20 in Sarasota, Fla.
The State Press had a chance to sit down with Giulia Molinaro of the women’s golf team to discuss tfall 2010 and the road ahead of her.
In perhaps the most elite invitational of the collegiate golf season, the ASU men’s golf team didn’t step up to the challenge.
After being pushed around two weeks ago by less-than-stellar competition, the ASU men’s golf team steps back onto the course against some of the strongest teams in the country.
Looking to bounce back from a disheartening performance in San Diego, the ASU men’s golf team returned to California, where they fell into a bigger funk.
ASU seeks a bounce-back performance in the North Ranch Intercollegiate Open while playing against a weaker field than the two prior tournaments.
After a sluggish start, the Sun Devils spent the second and third days of the Northrop Grumman Invitational climbing up the leaderboards with rounds of 11-over and 10-over par.
ASU battled injury, illness, and imperfect course conditions while shooting 52-over par on the weekend in the San Diego Intercollegiate Classic.
After less than a week off, the ASU women’s golf team is back in action at the Northrop Grumman Invitational in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif., from Feb. 13-15.
Men’s golf coach Tim Mickelson’s biggest asset for ASU in the San Diego Intercollegiate Classic on Feb. 13-14 might be freshman Austin Quick, who is coming off his best performance of the season.
Sports are diagnosed, analyzed and picked apart for every statistic imaginable. Every number is considered and memorized and too often recited by their fans. Since sports are considered at every angle on the field, why not judge it for how they look while playing? From polos to speedos, sports are played in enough outfits to measure, so which can we call the most “fashionable”? Here’s a list of what I believe may be some of the most fashionable sports and teams out there: Golf As one of the most prestigious sports in the world, it is no wonder that golf made my list as a fashionable sport. On the course, golfers sport some of the greatest, classiest acts around. Matching from head to toe, they often coordinate their entire outfit with common colors and patterns ranging from checkered to plaid to gingham. A golfer who never ceases to amaze on the course: Rickie Fowler. Tennis Considering tennis is just about the only sport you can get away with wearing a tiny skirt, I had to include it on the list. Tennis fans often anticipate the outfits that tennis pros plan to sport on the court during opens and other tournaments. Accessories are even considered since popular stars like the Williams sisters always wear large earrings. The Australian Open was held earlier this month and brought much attention to the sport, not only for the tough competition (like the almost six-hour-long championship round!), but for the outfits athletes wore.
The ASU women’s golf team fell victim to UA’s significant home-course advantage in the Wildcat Invitational at the Vistoso Golf Club in Tucson.
For the six former ASU golfers in the Waste Management Phoenix Open, participating in a marquee tournament close to home was a rewarding experience.
A number of ASU alumni, including Phil Mickelsonn, competed in the 2012 Waste Management Phoenix Open in Scottsdale throughout last week. In the end though, Clemson alumnus Kyle Stanley took away his first PGA tour trophy after the lead of 3rd round leader, Spencer Levin, collapsed on Sunday.
Freshman Austin Quick swung his club and drilled the ball off the tee. The shot bounced twice and rolled directly into the hole, completing the rare hole-in-one.
Though the Wildcat Invitational on Feb. 5–7 in Tucson won’t count toward the Territorial Cup standings, the victor will take pride in being the top golfing school in the state.
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