Duke women’s golf finishes strong, secures 3rd place at the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate
By Max Rego | March 10, 2020After a disappointing start in the first two days, Duke ended this past weekend's tournament on a high note.
After a disappointing start in the first two days, Duke ended this past weekend's tournament on a high note.
Topping our list at No. 1: Women’s golf survives a series of tense matches on the last day of the NCAA tournament before clinching the program’s seventh NCAA title in extra holes on the final pairing of the day. The win marks the first national championship for any Duke team since 2015.
The team walked through the Oval Office and spoke with President Trump, but did it get the fast-food treatment offered to Clemson this January? Regardless of the President’s shortcomings on the golf course, everyone involved got a taste of something new during the expedition up north.
Gina Kim is a sophomore at Duke University from Chapel Hill who plays on the Duke women’s golf team. As a freshman, she was instrumental in the Blue Devils’ run to their seventh national championship, as she shot a birdie on hole 18 of the NCAA Division I Semifinals against Arizona to send her team to the finals.
This week, let the numbers take you inside the start of men's basketball's season, football's blowout loss, men's golf's first victory and another women's soccer tie.
Virginia Elena Carta continues to rake in awards and honors even after graduating.
When Virginia Elena Carta graduated from Duke in May, her accolades as an athlete spoke for themselves, but her greatest legacy at Duke has come off the fairway.
Gina Kim and Erica Shepherd were two of only 19 golfers to eagle at least one hole.
It will be Duke's first team competition since hoisting the program’s seventh national championship last May.
After bringing home the individual title in her freshman season, Virginia Elena Carta struggled to reach the same level of play dude to injuries for much of the next three seasons. But on the biggest stage, Carta came through for her teammates, helping the Blue Devils secure a national championship.
Second-seeded Duke secured the NCAA championship title Wednesday evening 3-2, taking down No. 5 seed Wake Forest in the final round of match play at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Ark.
No. 3 Duke is set to play at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Ark., for the first time ever with the NCAA championship on the line.
Duke earned a spot in the NCAA championship, which will be from May 17-22 at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Ark.
Duke came into the ACC Championship hoping to add to its collection of 21 conference title trophies, but the Blue Devils left the Sedgefield Country Club empty-handed.
Former Blue Devil and then-rising senior Jenny Chuasiriporn nearly won the 1998 U.S. Women's Open as an amateur, one of the last shining moments of her career.
Carta's eight-shot margin of victory and four-day score of 16-under-par were both NCAA championship records.
Despite a collection of solid performances Sunday, No. 5 Duke watched No. 17 Virginia hoist the ACC championship trophy for the second consecutive year, finishing in third place after posting a three-day score of 883.
The senior punched her ticket to the RICOH Women's British Open, the U.S. Women's Open and the Evian Championship later this summer.
The Duke freshman ascended to the top of the national rankings and earned three individual victories during a standout rookie campaign.
Freshman Lisa Maguire went hole-for-hole with Baylor freshman Lauren Whyte before falling on the sixth playoff hole Tuesday in Bradenton, Fla.