Duncan helps lead Duke to second place finish in NCAA golf

Lindy Duncan.
Lindy Duncan.
One of the greatest golfers in Duke history closed her career in remarkable fashion on Friday at the NCAA Championship as senior Lindy Duncan played the final three holes at four-under-par to finish second overall, while the Duke squad placed second on the 6,372-yard, par 72 University of Georgia Golf Course in Athens, Ga.

The second place finish for Duke marks the second time in school history the Blue Devils have finished second, including their 13th overall top five finish in the NCAA Championship. Duke turned in rounds of 286, 289, 287 and 292 for a school-record 72-hole total of 1,154. The second place finish was the highest Duke has placed in the NCAAs since the Blue Devils won their fifth NCAA Championship in 2007.

Duke has come a long way over the last three years as the Blue Devils did not advance to the NCAA Championship in 2011 and placed 15th a year ago, before turning in a second place ledger in 2013.

Southern California claimed the title with a NCAA Championship record four-day total of 1,133, while Duke (1154), Purdue (1173), UCLA (1174), Arizona State (1181), Auburn (1183), Alabama (1189), Arizona (1190), Oklahoma (1191), Michigan State (1191) and Tulane (1191).

“We played as well as they (USC) did for three of the days,” said Duke head coach Dan Brooks. “They just had one day that was unbelievable. It was the lowest round ever shot in an NCAA Championship. For a team that solid to have a magical day like that, it is going to be really hard to catch them. They are a very, very solid team. My hats off to them.”

Duncan closed her outstanding collegiate career with a two-under-par, 70, on her way to finishing with a four-under-par, 284, over the four days. She became just the second Blue Devil to finish in the top 10 of three straight NCAA Championships (Amanda Blumenherst).

“It is great finishing in second place in the national championship, after our team had been struggling a little bit in the last few years [at the NCAAs],” said Duncan. “This was the first time I’ve been on a team that was close to contention [at NCAAs]. It’s great to get a trophy.”

On Friday, Duncan once again had a slow start with bogeys on No. 2 and No. 5 and No. 11 to fall to three-over-par on the day. All week she was so close on her putts and down the stretch she finally got some to drop as she birdied No. 13, No. 16 and No. 17 to move to even par. On the 159-yard-par three 13th, she sank a four-foot birdie, hit her seven-iron from 150 yards to within a foot on the 16th and drained a 14-footer for birdie on No. 17.

Duncan came to the 18th hole in a tie for second place and she hit a three-wood from 220 yards away to 15 feet for a chance for eagle. A product of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Duncan went on to drain the putt for her first eagle of the season and fell to her knees. She also became the second Blue Devil to notch four straight rounds of even or under par at the NCAA Championship (Virada Nirapathpongporn in 2002 and 2004). On the day, Duncan hit a team-high 16 greens, 11 fairways and had 30 putts.

“She eagles her last hole in college golf,” commented Brooks on Duncan. “That was just really special. She has been putting very, very well and they haven’t been falling in. It has been really hard on her. On the backside, the putts started to fall. She got two birdies and an eagle coming in. I was so happy she was rewarded for her patience at the end of her college career.”

Claiming the individual title was freshman Annie Park of Southern California with a four-day total of 278.

Turning in her best finish of the season was freshman Celine Boutier with rounds of 69, 73, 71 and 74 for a total of 287. A native of Montrouge, France, Boutier totaled the third-highest finish at the NCAA Championship by a Duke freshman (Candy Hannemann finished second in 1999 and Jennie Lee placed second in 2006).

“It was my first nationals, I really enjoyed it,” commented Boutier. “I love the course. It was in really great shape. I really enjoyed playing on it. My game was really good, my ball-striking was good, and I would say the only thing was my putting, it wasn’t that great.”

Boutier kicked off her day with a bogey on the first hole as she missed the green on the approach and could not get it up-and-down. She had another bogey on the third hole before draining two straight birdies on No. 8 and No. 9 to return even par. Boutier was on the par five 12th in two and had an eagle putt before finishing with her third birdie of the day to get to one-under-par and in second place. She closed with a bogey on No. 13 as she hit her tee shot in the bunker and a double-bogey on No. 16 to finish with a 74.

Junior Laetitia Beck had an up-and-down final round, which featured one bogey, three birdies, three double-bogeys and 11 pars on her way to finishing with a 76. Overall, she placed tied for 17th, which is a career-best finish at the NCAA Championship and her eighth top 20 finish of the year. She hit 12 greens, eight fairways and had 31 putts on the afternoon.

Coming off a day where she struggled with an 80 on Thursday, junior Alejandra Cangrejo carded an even-par, 72, to finish her season. Overall, she tied for 58th with a 72-hole total of 302. On Friday, she had a bogey on No. 2 and a bogey on No. 11 before sinking her first birdie of the day on the 511-yard, par five 12th hole. Cangrejo, who is from Bogota, Colombia, found the water on her tee shot on the par three 13th and finished with a double-bogey to fall to three-over-par on the day.

Cangrejo regrouped and finished strong with a 25-foot birdie putt on No. 14, 15-foot birdie on the 15th and a 10-footer for birdie on No. 17 to get back to even par. On No. 18, she had her birdie putt lip-out as she finished with a 72. Cangrejo hit 12 fairways, 11 greens and had 29 putts on the day.

Playing in her final collegiate round on Friday senior Courtney Ellenbogen struggled on her way to finishing with an 81. A product of Blacksburg, Va., Ellenbogen finished tied for 50th overall with a 301 as she hit 11 fairways, 11 greens and had 36 putts on the afternoon.

“I had a lot of fun,” commented Brooks on the week in Georgia. “Number one, it was a great experience and was a lot of fun. I had a team that played with a lot of heart. They were good at staying patient, getting over shots and moving on to the next one. When you watch a team do that for four days, it’s a lot of fun.”

Duke will lose three seniors in 2012-13 – Duncan, Ellenbogen and Stacey Kim – but will return five letterwinners and welcome one of the top recruiting classes in the nation for next season.

Notes:
• Duke has won five NCAA Championships over the years – 1999, 2002, 2005, 2006 and 2007.
• The Blue Devils have 13 top-five finishes in the NCAA Championship.
• Lindy Duncan now owns a school-record eight under-par rounds in the NCAA Championship. She broke Amanda Blumenherst’s mark of five.
• Lindy Duncan closed her career with 21 top five finishes (T2nd), 32 top 10 finishes (2nd), 39 top 20 finishes (2nd), 72 even or under par rounds (2nd), 27 tournaments as Duke’s top scorer (3rd), 126 rounds played (T6th) and 23 rounds in the 60s (2nd).
• Duke’s other second place finish in the NCAA Championship was 2001 at Howey-in-the-Hills, Fla.
• Other runner-up finishers at the NCAA Championships for Duke include Jennie Lee (2006), Candy Hannemann (1999) and Jean Bartholomew (1988).

Duke Results
T7 2 Lindy Duncan Duke 72 71 71 70 284 -4
T5 T4 Celine Boutier Duke 69 73 71 74 287 -1
T17 T17 Laetitia Beck Duke 71 75 71 76 293 +5
T33 T50 Courtney Ellenbogen Duke 74 72 74 81 301 +13
T99 T58 Alejandra Cangrejo Duke 77 73 80 72 302 +14

Team Scores
T1 1 1 1 Southern California 284 276 285 288 1133 -19
3 3 2 2 Duke 286 289 287 292 1154 +2
T5 T5 T3 3 Purdue 289 289 295 300 1173 +21
T5 4 T3 4 UCLA 289 287 297 301 1174 +22

– News release

UNC’s Suarez-Malaguti makes it to NCAA tennis final 8

Suarez-Malaguti.
Suarez-Malaguti.
North Carolina senior Gina Suarez-Malaguti advanced to the national quarterfinals with a 6-1, 6-1 win over Kansas State’s Petra Niedermayerova Friday morning at the Atkins Tennis Center on the campus of the University of Illinois. Suarez-Malaguti is the first Tar Heel to advance to the final eight of the NCAA Singles Championship since Sanaz Marand in 2009 and just the fourth in school history.

After dropping the opening set in Thursday’s round of 16 match, Suarez-Malaguti has lost just four games over the course of four sets against Clemson’s Beatrice Gumulya and Niedermayerova. The Pembroke Pines, Fla., All-America performer rolled to a 6-1 first set win Friday before holding to opening the second set. Suarez-Malaguti then broke Niedermayerova and consolidated for a 3-0 lead and never looked back.

Suarez-Malaguti will now face Texas freshman Breaunna Addison in Saturday’s quartefinals. Addison defeated Arizona State’s Jacqueline Cako, 6-2, 6-4, to advance.

“I just focused on having fun and enjoying this last time I get to wear Carolina gear,” Suarez-Malaguti said after the match.

She joins Marand, 2002 quarterfinalist Kate Pinchbeck and 1993 finalist Cinda Gurney in the exclusive club of Tar Heels to reach the final eight of the NCAA Singles Championship.

“I think yesterday Pichi realized that she is capable of winning a national championship and that even though this is an individual tournament, she is still playing for Carolina and for her coaches and teammates,” head coach Brian Kalbas said. “She played a very talented opponent today and just put together a complete match.”

Sophomore Caroline Price saw her run in the singles tournament come to an end Friday with a 6-1, 6-2 loss to No. 41 Natalie Beazant of Rice. Despite the loss, Price ends her season with a team-best 34 singles wins. The Duluth, Ga., product has earned All-America, All-ACC and ITA National Team Indoor All-Tournament honors in 2013 and figures to be a key piece of the Carolina lineup in 2014.

NCAA Round of 16

#7 Gina Suarez-Malaguti, UNC (7) def #15 Petra Niedermayerova, KSU (9-16), 6-1, 6-1
#41 Natalie Beazant, RICE def. #46 Caroline Price, UNC, 6-1, 6-2

Duke golf solidly in second heading into final round of NCAAs

dukegolf2The third round of the 2013 Division I Women’s Golf tournament has finished as Southern Cal leads second-place Duke with a 19-under 845 heading into the final round Friday. The Blue Devils, the only other team under par, is a 2-under 862.

Purdue, Alabama and UCLA are 11 strokes behind Duke.

Individually, Duke’s Celine Boutier is 3-under, good enough for fifth, six strokes off the lead. Duke’s Lindy Duncan is 2-under and in seventh place. Only 13 players are under par.

UNC has two players in the final 16 of the NCAA singles tourney for 1st time

Caroline Price.
Caroline Price.
North Carolina’s Gina Suarez-Malaguti and Caroline Price advanced to the round of 16 with second round wins in the NCAA Singles Championship Thursday at the Atkins Tennis Center on the campus of the University of Illnois. The wins give Carolina two players in the final 16 of the singles tournament for the first time in school history, and Price now joins Suarez-Malaguti as an ITA All-America honoree for the first time in her career.

Price was the first Tar Heel in action Thursday, and she wasted no time in taking an early 3-0 lead against No. 12 Julie Elbaba of Virginia. Price took the first set, 6-2, before once again breaking in the second game of the set and consolidating for a 3-0 advantage. At that point, play was suspended due to rain and eventually moved inside.

But the stoppage only delayed the inevitable, as Price won three of four games on the indoor courts and moved into the round of 16 with a 6-2, 6-1 victory. Price, who will earn ITA All-America honors by virtue of advancing to the final 16, will face No. 41 Natalie Beazant of Rice. Beazant rallied from 5-2 down in the third and saved a match point in her win over Aeriel Ellis of Texas.

Suarez-Malaguti struggled out of the gate in her second round match against No. 40 Beatrice Gumulya of Clemson, dropping the opening set, 6-2. But the ACC Player of the Year steadied herself after the first set, and Suarez-Malaguti won 12 of the last 14 games to score a 2-6, 6-0, 6-2 victory and advance to the third round. Suarez-Malaguti, who was already assured All-America status by virtue of her No. 7 seed, will face No. 15 Petra Niedermayerova of Kansas State. Niedermayerova topped UCLA’s Kyle McPhillips in a third-set tiebreak to advance.

Carolina’s Zoe De Bruycker was also in action Thursday, and the Saratoga, Calif., senior fell to Clemson’s Yana Koroleva, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2. De Bruycker got down a break early in the third set and was unable to rally, ending her storied UNC career. De Bruycker finishes her career with three ACC titles in four years and an ITA All-America season in 2011.

NCAA Second Round
#46 Caroline Price, UNC def. #12 Julie Elbaba, UVA (9-16), 6-2, 6-1
#7 Gina Suarez-Malaguti, UNC (7) def. #40 Beatrice Gumulya, CLEM, 2-6, 6-0, 6-2
#16 Yana Koroleva, CLEM (9-16) def. #49 Zoe De Bruycker, UNC, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2

NC State doubles team loses in NCAA championship first round

Dave Thomson
Dave Thomson
NC State senior Dave Thomson and junior Sean Weber, the first Wolfpack doubles pair to make the field of 32 in NCAA Doubles Championship since 2008, fell to a team from Mississippi State Thursday night.

Playing at the Khan Outdoor Tennis Complex/Atkins Tennis Center on the campus of the University of Illinois, Thomson and Weber fell 7-6(5), 6-1 to MSU’s Jordan Angus and Malte Stropp.

Thomson and Web had seven wins over nationally ranked opponents this season and finished the year with a 19-12 record. Angus and Stropp advance after moving to 21-16 on the season.

Tar Heels embarrass Miami in ACC baseball tournament

ACC Pitcher of the Year Kent Emanuel allowed just four hits in eight scoreless innings and North Carolina won its opening game in Pool A of the ACC Championship via the mercy rule, 10-0, over Miami Thursday afternoon at Durham Bulls Athletic Park. Cody Stubbs and Brian Holberton drove in three runs apiece and ACC Player of the Year Colin Moran broke the UNC single-season record for RBIs with his 84th of the year.

Thursday marked Emanuel’s fourth career complete-game shutout and his third of the season. The Woodstock, Ga., junior needed just 97 pitches and allowed just one Hurricane baserunner past second base. His only real trouble came when he issued consecutive walks to open the top of the second. But Emanuel (9-3) induced a ground ball from Miami’s Alex San Juan and covered first to complete a double play. He then made another athletic defensive play, knocking down a sharp grounder from Garrett Kennedy and cutting down the Hurricane catcher with an acrobatic throw to first to end the threat.

Carolina (49-8) got all the offense it would need in the first as the Tar Heels sent eight men to the plate in a three-run frame. Chaz Frank and Landon Lassiter opened the inning with back-to-back singles, and Frank took third on a Miami throwing error. With runners on the corners, Moran delivered the record-breaking hit, a line drive single to right that scored Frank. Moran now stands alone atop the UNC single-season RBI list, passing Marshall Hubbard’s total of 83 from the 2004 campaign.

Holberton made it 3-0 with a two-run, two-out single, and UNC added runs in the third, sixth, seventh and eighth innings to invoke the tournament’s 10-run mercy rule.

Stubbs delivered the biggest of his four hits in the third, a two-run single that scored Moran and Skye Bolt and pushed the Carolina advantage to 5-0. The Waynesville, N.C., senior then provided the knockout blow in the eighth, singling down the left field line to score Moran and end the game.

Miami (35-22) starter Andrew Suarez labored through 5.1 innings, allowing seven runs on 11 hits to take the loss.

Carolina will face fifth-seeded Clemson Friday night at 7 in its second of three Pool A games. The Tigers are 0-1 so far in the tournament after losing to NC State 6-3 on Wednesday.

Boxscore

Private lessons up for auction at Duke

Online auctions offering private lessons in a wide variety of sports at Duke end over the last few days of May. The leading bid as of Thursday, May 23, is $360 for a one-hour private lesson offered by Duke lacrosse.

Other auctions are for lessons in wrestling, field hockey, fencing, swimming, soccer, baseball and golf. In addition, there are chances for good deals as there are no bids so far for lessons in tennis, diving and volleyball.

To check out the auction or to bid, please click here.

Wolfpack rallies late to top Tigers in ACC tourney play

NC State exploded for four runs in the bottom of the seventh inning to break open a tie game with Clemson in the nightcap of the ACC Championship’s opening day Wednesday at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park. The Wolfpack used the big inning to secure a 6-3 victory over the Tigers.

“They just did a better job hitting with men on base,” said Clemson coach Jack Leggett said after watching his manage just one run in a bases loaded, no out situation in the sixth, one inning before NC State got four runs out of a bases loaded situation just one inning later.

NC State (43-13) is off Thursday, but will be back in action at 11 a.m. Friday against Miami. The Wolfpack is in good shape with a win under their belts and their top pitchers still available. Clemson (39-18) is also off Thursday and will return to action Friday night at 7 p.m. against North Carolina.

Clemson starter Daniel Gossett (L, 9-4) limited NC State to just three hits over the first six innings, but he got himself in trouble with a couple of miscues in the seventh. After left fielder Bryan Adametz opened the inning with a single, Gossett added another base runner when he hit designated hitter Jake Armstrong.

“I just lost my command,” Gossett said. “I started leaving balls up, walking people and I hit a guy.”

After Gossett foiled an attempted sacrifice to get the lead runner at third base, he negated that stellar play when he wild-pitched the runners to second and third. Gossett then walked Wolfpack leadoff batter Trea Turner to load the bases with one out.

That was all the help the Pack needed. Jake Fincher ripped an RBI single between second and third and NC State added a second run on an errant throw from left fielder Tyler Slaton. Catcher Brett Austin drove in two more runs with a double to deep left-centerfield.

“The biggest part of that inning was getting the leadoff guys on,” Fincher said.

The four seventh inning runs made a winner of relief pitcher Josh Easley (W, 5-2), who pitched a strong four innings in relief of Wolfpack starter Brad Stone. The senior entered the game in the sixth with the bases loaded and no outs. He induced catcher Garrett Boulware to bounce into a double play, then struck out shortstop Tyler Krieger to end the threat and limit the Tigers to a single run in the inning.

Easley did allow a solo home run by Boulware in the ninth, but he faced just 12 batters to get the final 12 hours.

“When we got ahead, I thought we had it,” Austin, Easley’s catcher, said. “He had everything – fastball, slider and command of the first pitch.”

“I thought we played really, really good tonight,” State coach Elliott Avent said. “We played well a long time now, I think we won 24 of 28, but through that you do not always bring your A game. We played well but tonight we played really well. I thought Daniel Gossett is obviously one of the best pitchers in the country and I thought he was really good tonight. Brad Stone kept them at bay. We also played tremendous defense. We played pretty solid defense the second half of the season we did not start out that way. We played very good defense tonight.”

Boxscore

ACC baseball tourney opens in Durham with Heels the No. 1 seed

accbaseballtourneyUNC (21-7 in the ACC) earned the No. 1 overall seed and will head up Pool A in the 2013 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Championship, which will be held from Wednesday, May 22 through Sunday, May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park.

Carolina finished the regular season with a school-best 48 wins after defeating visiting Florida State following a two-out rally in the bottom of the eighth inning Monday night to scratch out a 4-3 win.

The Tar Heels will be joined by fourth-seeded NC State (42-13, 19-10), fifth-seeded Clemson (39-17, 18-12) and eighth-seeded Miami (35-21, 14-16).

Florida State (44-11, 20-10) earned the No. 2 overall seed and will be joined in Pool B by third-seeded Virginia (45-9, 22-8), sixth-seeded Virginia Tech (35-19, 15-14) and seventh-seeded Georgia Tech (33-23, 15-15).

All eight teams in this year’s ACC Championship field are ranked among the top 20 of the NCAA’s most recent RPI report. North Carolina is ranked as high as No. 2 nationally in the latest national polls, with NC State as high as No. 5, Virginia No. 7, Florida State No. 8, Clemson No. 14 and Virginia Tech No. 22.

Under the pool-play format, each team will play one game against each of the other three opponents in its pool Wednesday through Saturday (May 22-25). The two teams with the best records within their respective pools will advance to the title game on Sunday, May 26, with the winner earning the ACC’s automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.

Play begins on Wednesday at 11 a.m. with Florida State facing defending champion Georgia Tech. Virginia meets Virginia Tech at 3 p.m., followed NC State vs. Clemson at 7 p.m.

Virginia meets Georgia Tech in Thursday’s 11 a.m. game, while North Carolina swings into action against Miami at 3 p.m. Florida State faces Virginia Tech in the 7 p.m. Thursday game.

Friday’s slate opens with NC State against Miami at 11 a.m., followed by Virginia Tech vs. Georgia Tech at 3 p.m. North Carolina and Clemson square off in the 7 p.m. game.

Saturday’s opener finds Florida State facing Virginia at 11 a.m. Clemson will meet Miami at 3 p.m., followed by North Carolina vs. NC State at 7 p.m.

The championship game between the Pool A and Pool B winners will be played Sunday at 1 p.m.

Fans can still purchase tickets to next week’s competition. Complete books to all 13 games are available, as well as individual game tickets that can be purchased by calling the Durham Bulls ticket office at 919-956-BULL or by ordering on-line at: http://theacc.co/13Basetix.

All 13 games of this year’s ACC Baseball Championship will be televised for the seventh straight year. Regional Sports Networks from across the conference footprint and across the nation will carry all 12 games on Wednesday through Saturday. Please check theACC.com for RSN coverage of each game (http://www.theacc.com/live/rsn.html). Sunday’s 1 p.m. championship game will televised nationally by ESPN2.

All games will live-streamed via the Internet by ESPN3. In addition, all 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. games will be broadcast via satellite radio on Sirius XM 85. The 7 p.m. Wednesday (May 22) and Thursday (May 23) games will be broadcast on Sirius 93/XM 190. The Friday (May 24) 7 p.m. game will be carried on Sirius 111/XM 190, and the Saturday 7 p.m. game will be carried on Sirius 158/XM 190. Sunday afternoon’s championship game will be carried by Sirius XM 91 (College SportsNation).

Duke golf the only ACC team left in NCAA championships

Coming off claiming its eighth regional title in school history, the third-ranked Duke women’s golf team will travel to Athens, Ga., to compete in the NCAA Championship May 21-24 at the 6,372-Yard, Par 72 University of Georgia Golf Course.

Participating in the championship will be– Alabama, Arizona, Arizona State, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Michigan State, Northwestern, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Oregon, San Jose State, South Carolina, Southern California, Stanford, Texas, Tulane, UC Davis, UCLA, Vanderbilt and Wisconsin. Individuals participating are Kelly Shon (Princeton), Erica Popson (Tennessee), Olafia Kristinsdottir (Wake Forest), Ying Luo (Washington), Emilie Burger (Georgia), Jennifer Ha (Kent State).

dukegolfDuke, which earned No. 1 seed after winning the Central Regional, will tee off on Tuesday, May 21 at 12:03 p.m., in the first round off No. 1 and will return on Wednesday, May 22 at 7:30 a.m., in the second round. Tee times for Thursday and Friday will be determined by standings. The championship will be a four-day, 72-hole tournament with 18 holes played each day. Fans can follow the action live on the web at www.GoDuke.com.