Senior All-American Kim Ulander has the Lady Moccasins swinging for yet another national championship.
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE ALL-SPORTS SCORECARD 26 NCAA National Championships 11 Men’s Golf 9 Baseball 4 Women’s Golf 1 Men’s Basketball 1 Softball 16 NCAA National Runner-Up Finishes 13 NCAA National Third-Place Finishes 7 NCAA National Fourth-Place Finishes 52 NCAA Regional Championships 221 NCAA Post-Season Appearances 12 NCAA Individual National Champions 14 NCAA Individual Post-Season Appearances 125 Sunshine St. Conf. Regular Season Titles 32 Sunshine St. Conf. Postseason Titles 11 National Players of the Year 460 All-Americans 178 1st Team All-Americans 90 2nd Team All-Americans 50 3rd Team All-Americans 52 Honorable Mention All-Americans 5 Freshman All-Americans 35 Academic All-Americans 50 All-American Scholars 6 SSC Female Athletes of the Year 10 SSC Male Athletes of the Year 2 SSC Female Scholar Athletes of the Year 2 SSC Male Scholar Athletes of the Year 1,076 All-Sunshine State Conference honorees
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE MISSION STATEMENT Florida Southern College is committed to educational excellence and is a selective, comprehensive, private, United Methodist college with a strong liberal arts core and signature programs. The College enrolls a talented student body and includes an accomplished faculty who are dedicated to teaching excellence. Outstanding opportunities for engaged learning, student-faculty collaborative research and performance, service learning, study abroad, and honors study are distinctive features of the academic program at Florida Southern. The College offers exceptional student life programs, including a championship athletic program.
Annie Pfeiffer Chapel
Florida Southern College Founded by the United Methodist Church in 1883, Florida Southern is the oldest private college in the state of Florida. With an enrollment of approximately 1,800 students, Florida Southern offers more than 50 undergraduate majors and distinctive graduate programs in business administration, education and nursing. Florida Southern is listed in the prestigious Fiske Guide to Colleges, the nation’s top-selling college guide, and annually is ranked in the Forbes magazine, Princeton Review and U.S. News & World Report listing of the nation’s best colleges. Studies show that approximately 94% of Florida Southern graduates are working full-time or are enrolled in graduate school within six months of graduation. Situated on the north shore of Lake Hollingsworth, Florida Southern is home to the world’s largest single-site collection of architecture by renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright, including the recently refurbished Water Dome. The 100-acre campus also features a number of other outstanding facilities – the 2,500-seat George W. Jenkins Field House (for basketball and volleyball); Barnett Field (for softball and soccer); the 1,800-seat Branscomb Auditorium; 11 residence halls (all wired to the Internet); the Robert A. Davis Performing Arts Center; the Roux Library; and the Nina B. Hollis Wellness Center, which includes a state-of-the-art fitness center, recreational facilities and an NCAA competition-size outdoor swimming pool. Located in Lakeland (pop. 93,000), Florida Southern is in the heart of dynamic and growing central Florida and is only about an hour’s drive from the major metropolitan areas of Tampa and Orlando. Such well-known attractions as Walt Disney World, Universal Studios, Epcot Center, Sea World, Cypress Gardens and Busch Gardens are only a short drive from campus. Major League Baseball’s Detroit Tigers make Lakeland their annual spring training home and several other big league teams train in the nearby area. Money Magazine has ranked Lakeland among the top “Best Places to Live” for medium sized southern cities. Some of Florida Southern’s prominent alumni include professional golfers Lee Janzen and Rocco Mediate; Jim France, chairman of International Speedway Corp. (which owns Daytona International Speedway) and vice chairman of NASCAR; Publix Super Markets, Inc. Vice Chairman Barney Barnett and Florida Supreme Court Justice Fred Lewis.
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE WOMEN’S GOLF QUICK FACTS GENERAL INFORMATION Location ...................................................... Lakeland, Florida Founded .......................................................................... 1883 Enrollment ..................................................................... 1,800 President ......................................................Dr. Anne B. Kerr Athletic Director ................................................... Pete Meyer Associate AD/SWA (Compliance) ..................Marie Scovron Assistant AD.............................................................Al Green Nickname............................................................... Moccasins Colors ......................................................... Scarlet and White Affiliation .................................................. NCAA Division II Conference....................................................... Sunshine State Athletic Trainers ....................... Al Green, Lindsey Williams, Brian Simerville and Kelly Cox Sports Information Director................................ Bill Turnage Assistant Sports Info. Director ........................ Tim Carpenter Sports Information Phone ...............................(863) 680-4256 Assistant Sports Information ..........................(863) 680-3955 Sports Information Fax ...................................(863) 680-3953 Hotline ............................. (863) 680-3954 or 800 825-MOCS SID Home Phone ............................................(863) 701-8437 Assistant SID Home Phone ............................(863) 853-7030 Assistant SID email ...................... tcarpenter@flsouthern.edu Athletic Department Phone ............................(863) 680-4244 Athletic Department Fax ................................(863) 680-4122 Athletic Web Page ....................www.flsouthern.edu/athletics
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A Breakdown of Florida Southern's 11 Trips to the National Tournament National Champs
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Runner‐Up Third Place
1 1 1
Fourth Place Fifth Place
The Florida Southern women’s golf team has been among the most successful athletic teams in the country since its first season in 1995-96. Since then, the Moccasins have produced a total of 10 individual or team national champions, the most in Division II.
TABLE OF CONTENTS TEAM INFORMATION All-Time Letter Winners ................................... 20 Assistant Coach Norm Benn.............................. 9 Final 2008-09 Stats and Results ................. 18-19 Head Coach Robbie Davis ............................. 8-9 National Finishes........................................ 16-17 Player Bios................................................. 10-13 Postseason Honors ......................................... 14 Quick Facts ....................................................... 1 Records .......................................................... 15 Roster ..................................... Inside Back Cover Schedule ........................................... Back Cover Season Preview ............................................. 6-7 Sunshine State Conference Information .......... 21 Sunshine State Conference Hall of Fame ........ 23 2009 SSC Review ........................................... 22 Coaching History and Yearly Leaders.............. 13
TEAM QUICK FACTS Head Coach ........................... Robbie Davis (Kentucky, ’93) Years at Florida Southern ......................................... 14th year Assistant Coach .............................. Norm Benn (Drexel, ‘57) 2009 SSC Finish ........................................................... Fourth 2009 NCAA Finish ............................ Fifth at National Finals Letterwinners Returning/Lost ............................................ 6/3 Starters Returning/Lost ...................................................... 4/1 NCAA Post-Season Appearances .........13 (1996, 1998-2009) NCAA National Tournaments ............. 10 (1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009) National Championships ....... Four (2000, 2001, 2002, 2007) National Runners-Up ............. Four (1998, 1999, 2003, 2004) National Medalists ............................................................. Six Shanna Nagy (1996 & 1998), Lisa Cave (1999 & 2000), Jana Peterkova (2001 & 2002) SSC Tournament Championships ...Three (1999, 2002, 2007) 2008-09 MVP ............................................... Heather Burgner
COLLEGE INFORMATION Athletic Department Staff................................... 5 Athletic Director, Pete Meyer ............................. 4 Florida Southern College ................................ 2-3 Florida Southern Athletic Hall of Fame ............ 24 Florida Southern Athletic Scholarships ............ 25 Florida Southern Majors and Directions ........... 26 President, Dr. Anne B. Kerr ............................... 4
COACHES’ OFFICE PHONE NUMBERS Robbie Davis, Head Coach............................ (863) 680-4352 Norm Benn, Assistant Coach......................... (863) 616-6409
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
Florida Southern College Frank Lloyd Wright's "Child of the Sun"
The Danforth Chapel is one of two chapels on campus designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
The Thad Buckner Building is home to the Frank Lloyd Wright “Child of the Sun” Visitor Center.
The Nina B. Hollis Wellness Center houses a fullsized basketball court, weight and aerobic rooms, and a student lounge and is adjacent to an NCAA regulation size swimming pool.
Florida Southern is home to the world’s only Frank Lloyd Wright-designed planetarium.
Frank Lloyd Wright often visited Florida Southern during his 20year relationship with the college.
Annie Pfeiffer Chapel, completed in 1941, was the first of Wright's designs at Florida Southern College.
Founded by the United Methodist Church, Florida Southern College is one of the oldest private colleges in the state, tracing its beginnings to a small seminary in Orlando in 1885. The tie to its founding church has remained constant and is today, a proud part of the College's heritage and a bright beacon for the future. Florida Southern moved to Lakeland in the heart of Florida's citrus belt in 1922 and began the construction of a campus that would eventually become a national landmark. The beautiful 100-acre campus, on the north shore of Lake Hollingsworth, includes the world's largest collection of buildings by master architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Florida Southern’s West Campus, now known throughout the world, actually had its inception in the mind of Dr. Ludd M. Spivey, president of the college from 19251957.
In 1935 he conceived the idea of an ultra-modern campus, designed by the world's leading architect. Ground was broken two years later for the first building in the Wright collection, the Annie Pfeiffer Chapel. What Frank Lloyd Wright created on the campus is amazing. His original work is still as modern and exciting as the newest buildings still on many architect's drawing boards. It is, perhaps, symbolic that the greatest concentration of his genius should be located at a small, private institution of higher learning. Perhaps he describes it best, "...out of the ground and into the light, a child of the sun...the college of tomorrow." 2
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf As one of the four original buildings on the FSC campus, Joseph-Reynolds Hall (“JR”) offers one of the best views on campus. It sits atop a hill overlooking Lake Hollingsworth. Community life is big here - the women of JR form groups within the building as a whole and also within the “wings” and smaller hallways. JR and its companion hall, Spivey, are located in the center of campus between Edge Hall and Ordway and serve mainly as first-year female residence halls.
Florida Southern’s recently renovated Water Dome, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, made its premiere performance on October 25, 2007. The Water Dome features 74 jets powering streams of water 45-feet into the air. It took almost 260,000 gallons of water to fill the basin of the dome and at full power 4,800 gallons are water are pumped per minute.
Wesley Hall is one of two new twin residence halls at FSC, and opened in the fall of 2008. The second building, Nicholas Hall, opened in the fall of 2009. Each new residence hall includes 115 bedrooms with views of Lake Hollingsworth, meeting rooms, student lounges, kitchens, and study spaces.
All of Florida Southern College’s residence halls offer wireless access in the common lobby areas and every room offers cable TV and is wired for internet access. In addition, wireless hotspots on campus include the Roux Library, TûTû’s Cyber Cafe (which offers Starbucks products), Wynee’s Bistro (our cafeteria), and the Nina B. Hollis Wellness Center and pool area.
A grouping of three residence halls, the Publix Commons are close to just about everything on the Florida Southern campus. All three buildings offer suitestyle living in which six students each have their own rooms and share a living area and bathroom. The Publix Commons also is home to Florida Southern’s Greek organizations.
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf and includes numerous facility transformations. These include the newly completed Barnett Residential Life Center and the soon-to-be completed state-of-the-art Christoverson Humanities Building, both designed by world-renowned architect Robert A. M. Stern; TǔTǔ's Cyber Café in the Roux Library and the adjacent McKay Archives Center; the expansion of wireless Internet access, campus-wide technology upgrades, and the Rinker Technology Center, currently under construction; renovations to the student dining facility and residence halls; as well as a restoration of our world renowned Frank Lloyd Wright designed campus. Prior to assuming the presidency at Florida Southern, Dr. Kerr was Vice President for Advancement at both Rollins College and the University of Richmond. She earned her bachelor’s degree from Mercer University and her master’s and doctoral degrees from the Florida State University. She has held a number of community volunteer leadership roles and currently serves on the boards of SunTrust Bank Central Florida and All Saints’ Academy. An avid supporter of the arts, she is the current president of the Board of Trustees of the Polk Museum of Art. She is in the first year of her term as president of the Sunshine State Conference. She and her husband, Dr. Roy Kerr, have a fifteen-year-old son Ed. Roy Kerr has authored two books about baseball entitled “The Loving of the Game” (2007), and “Sliding Billy Hamilton: The Life and Times of Baseball’s First Great Leadoff Hitter” (2009).
Anne B. Kerr, Ph.D. College President Since her unanimous appointment as its 17th president in 2004, Dr. Kerr has provided Florida Southern College with extraordinary vision and leadership that is enhancing the student experience and increasing the College’s national prominence. Under her guidance, the institution has renewed its commitment to educating the whole person -academically, socially, spiritually, and physically -- so that students leave prepared to make a positive and consequential impact on our world. Early in her tenure, Dr. Kerr led a comprehensive Strategic Plan designed to enrich all facets of the College’s studentcentered culture. She is dedicated to enhancing a student life culture that provides opportunities for active learning and leadership; promoting a scholarly environment where professors have outstanding records of achievement that support innovative, engaged, and personalized instruction; and to strengthening further the College’s outstanding scholarathlete program that models the highest standards of NCAA Division II athletics. As part of her quest for excellence, Dr. Kerr commissioned a master plan that outlines the College’s vision for the campus
Florida Southern’s representative on the Sunshine State Conference Marketing Committee. As baseball coach, Meyer spent six full seasons as head coach, keeping the Moccasin program among the elite in NCAA Division II. In 2005, he guided the Moccasins to their ninth NCAA Division II national title with a 51-11 record, and was the American Baseball Coaches Association Division II Coach-of-the-Year. In addition to his national coaching honors from the ABCA, Meyer also was South Region, Sunshine State Conference, and Florida Diamond Club (scouting organization) Coach-of-the-Year. His head coaching record at Florida Southern was 257111-1, while his overall record as a head coach was 296-141-1. Thirty-four Moccasin baseball players were drafted or signed professional contracts during Meyer’s tenure at FSC. Before officially assuming the reigns of head coach, Meyer had served for over three years as Florida Southern’s top assistant coach under Chuck Anderson. He was also the program’s recruiting coordinator. Prior to joining the FSC coaching staff, Meyer spent five seasons at Valdosta State, working under the legendary head coach, Tommy Thomas. Before his stint at Valdosta State, Meyer was head baseball coach at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta, where he coordinated the start of the school’s Division III baseball program in 1991. He served as a graduate assistant at Valdosta State from 1988-90, while earning his M. Ed. in physical education. A four-year baseball letterman at the College of Wooster in Ohio, Meyer graduated in 1987 with a B.A. in speech communication. Meyer is married to the former Julie Newnum. The couple has three children, 21-year old Ross, 19-year old Mitchell and 18-year old Megan.
Pete Meyer Athletic Director In 2008-09, Pete Meyer served his first year as the Director of Athletics at Florida Southern College. Moccasin teams produced three Sunshine State Conference championships (men's cross country, men's basketball, softball) and a fifth-place national finish in women's golf. Eleven FSC teams went to NCAA postseason competition. Named to the position February 21, 2008, he officially assumed his duties July 1, 2008, when Lois Webb retired. Since 1972, he is just the fourth person to occupy the position of athletics director at Florida Southern - following Hal Smeltzly (1972-2000), Mike Roberts (2000-01) and Webb (2001-08). Meyer was the Moccasins’ head baseball coach from 2002 through 2008. In the fall of 2008, Meyer was given the additional title of Dean of Wellness, as the operation of the Hollis Wellness Center, as well as the water ski program and campus intramurals, also fall under his direction. Meyer, who has been at Florida Southern since 1998, had served as assistant athletics director for Webb since February of 2006, in addition to maintaining his baseball coaching duties. In his position as assistant athletics director, he was responsible for acquiring major gifts for the athletic department that included funding and equipment for the athletics weight room, and upgrading the baseball and men's basketball locker rooms. He coordinated all of the athletic department’s fundraising efforts, coordinated athletic facilities, and served as game administrator for various home events. He also served as
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
Moccasin Head Coaching Staff
Chris Bellotto Softball
Linc Darner Men’s Basketball
Robbie Davis Women’s Golf
Doug Gordin Men’s Golf
Trey Heath Men’s Tennis
Jamie Moreno Cross-Country Track & Field
Jarrod Olson Women’s Basketball
Trish Riddell Women’s Tennis
Hugh Seyfarth Men’s Soccer
Duncan Sherrard Swimming
Ben Strawbridge Women’s Soccer
Jill Stephens Volleyball
Jim Tyrrell Baseball
Rory Whipple Lacrosse
Moccasin Support Staff
Marie Scovron Associate AD Senior Woman Administrator NCAA Compliance
Al Green Assistant AD Head Athletic Trainer
Kelly Cox Athletic Trainer
Susan Sargeant Administrative Assistant
Bill Turnage Sports Information Director
Brian Simerville Athletic Trainer
Micki Watson Athletic Business Manager
Lindsey Williams Athletic Trainer
Ronnie Akins Equipment Manager
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Malcolm Manners Faculty Athletic Representative
Cornelius Jackson Grounds
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
2009-10 Florida Southern Women’s Golf Preview It seems like every year Florida Southern loses great players to graduation, but every year the Moccasins keep winning. The reason is pretty simple: every time one of them leaves, another one (or more) takes her place. That appears to be the case again this year too, as one All-American has moved on to the professional ranks, and not one, but two All-Americans remain on the roster to keep the program going. While it may seem easy, the truth is, it gets more difficult every year. That’s what makes the Florida Southern women’s golf team so special. Even with all of the everchanging faces, the Lady Mocs have remained one of the premier golf programs in Division II, and why this year, they’ll answer the challenge once again. Florida Southern will do so behind the play of six veteran golfers who are used to facing the best competition in the country. Of those six, five have already played in at least one national championship tournament. The sixth was a freshman last year who was the Mocs’ #2 golfer in the conference tournament, and had two top-10 finishes during the regular season. With those types of players, the Moccasins can put together a strong lineup one through five. Senior Kim Ulander has been a regular part of it for the last three years and should be again in this, her final collegiate season. A two-time all-conference selection, Ulander was also a First Team All-American as a freshman and has a career stroke average of just over 76.4. She may have taken a back seat to Heather Burgner last year, but Ulander has the ability to set the pace for the Moccasins throughout the year. Florida Southern’s second AllAmerican in the lineup is sophomore Silvie Dittertova, who is also a member of the Czech Republic National Team. As if there would be any doubt, Dittertova proved she
With eight top-five finishes in her career, junior Marianne Andersson has been one of Florida Southern’s top golfers over the last two seasons. Her 76.88 career stroke average is among the top five in team history.
belonged with the Moccasins right away last year when she finished second to Burgner in her first college tournament. She topped that by winning her second tournament, and spent the rest of the year making her mark as the NGCA National Freshman-of-the-Year. In the 15-year history of the program, only Ulander had a better stroke average as a freshman than Dittertova’s 76.36. It may only be a matter of time before junior Marianne Andersson joins Ulander and Dittertova on the All-American list. She’s been right on the edge for two years, and it’s hard to imagine a better golfer who hasn’t made it yet. Andersson has already made the all-conference team twice, and last year added five more top-five finishes to her résumé. That boosts her career total to eight. Another junior, Emily Flanigan, is looking to take another step forward in 2010, just as she did last year. A part-time member of the starting five as a freshman, Flanigan spent most of last year as one of the regulars and had some impressive outings. Among her three top-10 6
finishes was a seventh-place performance at the Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational. She also got her first taste of postseason play and the Mocs hope her strong finish at the regional tournament is a sign of better things to come. While she didn’t play in last year’s NCAA playoffs, senior Connie Reed has still been there, showing just how deep the Lady Mocs can go in their lineup. In the 2007 South Region Tournament, it was Reed who carried Florida Southern in a tense final round that lifted them to not only the region title, but secured their spot in the national finals. With Reed playing at that level, the coaches could have some tough decisions to make when it comes to setting their lineup. While each of those players has already put together a pretty good list of accomplishments, the Moccasins have another young one who’s already started one of her own. Sophomore M.J. Audette had a brilliant high school career and got into six tournaments her first season at Florida Southern. She seemed to
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE hit her stride late in the year with a seventh-place showing at the Barry Invitational, before finishing as the Lady Mocs’ number two golfer in the SSC Tournament. Audette is the type of golfer the Moccasins can build around in the future, but she could still be a big contributor in the present as well. As for this year’s newcomers, the Mocs have only two. Then again, they also had just two last year, and they’ve already turned into very good college players. Florida Southern’s lone freshman is Amy Hodgkinson, who the Mocs went across the country to get from Longmont, Colorado. Like all of the veteran Moccasin golfers, she too knows something about winning. Hodginson led Skyline High School to 11 wins in 12 tournaments last year, as well as the class 5A state title. It was the fifth championship for the Falcons this decade. She then went on to finish third at the Colorado PGA Junior Championship in June. While Hodgkinson joins the Moccasins straight from the high school ranks, Adrienne Twinem will be making her college debut as a senior. She’s not lacking in competitive experience though. Twinem helped two different Bradenton area high schools reach the state tournament during her prep career, and was the team MVP for both of them. As always, the Mocs will face a difficult path to the NCAA playoffs, and what they hope will be a fifth national title. It’s what they’re used to, though, and what they look forward to each and every year. Their conference opponents alone will provide a stern test, with five SSC schools ranked in the top seven of the preseason national poll; and three of them have already won a national championship in the last three years. So while the Moccasins are again among the favorites, they know every tournament will be a battle that should make them even stronger at the end of a long season.
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
The Moccasins are looking for junior Emily Flanigan (at left) and sophomore M.J. Audette (right) to continue the progress they each made last year. Flanigan averaged 78.4 strokes per round and became a regular in the lineup with three top-10 finishes; Audette had a 78.7 average and was the Lady Mocs’ #2 golfer in the SSC Tournament.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
Golf World/NGCA Preseason National Rankings School (1st place votes) Points 2009 Finish Nova Southeastern (10) 297 1st, National Rollins (1) 281 t‐3rd, National Grand Valley State (MI) (1) 269 2nd, National Florida Southern 242 5th, National Tarleton State (TX) 228 t‐6th, National Lynn 226 6th, South Region Barry 219 5th, South Region Indianapolis 218 t‐3rd, National Ferris State (MI) 207 t‐6th, National St. Edward’s (TX) 160 6th, West Region California (PA) 153 4th, East Region th Cal State‐Monterey May 135 7 , West Region Pfeiffer (NC) 135 7th, South Region Upper Iowa 130 8th, National Sonoma State (CA) 120 8th, West Region th Western Washington 119 5 , West Region West Florida 108 8th South Region Drury (MO) 92 t‐7th, East Region Nebraska‐Omaha 79 4th, West Region Concordia‐St. Paul (MN) 70 t‐9th, National Chico State (CA) 58 12th, National Newberry (SC) 52 ‐‐‐ Northern Kentucky 51 t‐7th, East Region North Carolina‐Pembroke 44 ‐‐‐ Central Oklahoma 36 9th, West Region
Ret. Starters 5 5 4 4 5 3 4 4 2 3 5 2 3 3 5 4 4 5 5 3 3 4 2 4 5
Receiving votes: Northeastern State (OK), Augustana (SD), Saint Leo, Grand Canyon, Western New Mexico, Southern Indiana, Catawba (NC), Dallas Baptist, Tusculum (TN), Saint Martin’s (WA), Queens (NC), Minnesota State, St. Andrew’s Presbyterian (NC), Lincoln Memorial (TN).
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
Head Coach Robbie Davis Robbie Davis’ tenure at Florida Southern has been marked by the type of success only seen on the résumé of a hall of fame coach. That honor is something Davis has already earned, as he tackles his 14th season as head coach of the Florida Southern women’s golf program. Hired in February of 1997, Davis has guided the Lady Moccasins to four national championships, four national runner-up finishes, and 10 trips to the NCAA Division II National finals. Going into the 2009-10 season, the Mocs have qualified for either the regional or national tournament 12 straight years, the longest current streak in the country. With Davis leading the Lady Mocs, Florida Southern has won national titles in 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2007; they’ve also finished as national runner-up four times (1998, 1999, 2003 and 2004), and placed third in 2005. During those years, the Lady Mocs had seven straight first- or second-place finishes from 1998-2004, a feat surpassed by only one other women’s golf team at any collegiate level. They’ve qualified for the national tournament 10 of the last 12 years, and finished in the top five in every one of them. Only one other NCAA school (Division III Methodist College) has done better in the last 12 years. Even in the three seasons Florida Southern didn’t make it to the national finals, Davis still had at least one player qualify as an individual. Three did so in 1997, when Davis took over the program in mid-season, leaving the Mocs one shy of making it as a team. Lindsey Bergeon qualified in 2006, and Heather Burgner made it in 2008. Both Bergeon and Burgner finished as the individual runner-up, as did Shanna Nagy in 1997. Under Davis, the Moccasins have dominated the national poll, never being ranked below #3 in the last 12 years. Even more recognition has come from Golf Digest, as the publication has Florida Southern as one of only two Division II schools in the country ranked among its top 60 women’s golf programs, and one of only three in the top 100. That puts FSC in the top five percent overall. What the Moccasins have done is even more amazing considering the competition they face in their own back yard. Since the NCAA split its college division postseason into separate D-II and D-III tournaments in 2000, a team from the Sunshine State Conference has won the national title every year; and in seven of those national tournaments, an SSC school has also been the runner-up. Even against that type of competition, Davis still finds a way for Florida Southern to normally come out on top. Last year saw the Lady Moccasins win four tournaments and finish second in four others. Two of those runner-up finishes came behind Division I teams; the other two found the Lady Mocs within three strokes at the end. Two years ago, Florida Southern was ranked #1 in the country for most of the season and finished in the top three in all but one tournament they played. Although Florida Southern came up short that season in a bid for a second straight national title, it was more an indication of the strength of teams in the South Region, and more specifically in the Sunshine State Conference. The SSC boasted five of the nation’s top six ranked
teams, and the Mocs went 16-9 against those schools in head-tohead meetings throughout the season. In 2007, Davis took Florida Southern to its fourth national championship, and it may have been the best team Davis has coached. Considering it was preceded by three other national championships, there’s at least room for debate. Nevertheless, the ’06-’07 team finished first or tied for first in eight of the 11 tournaments in which they played, setting a new school record. They swept through the postseason, and finished behind only three other Division II schools all season; and by the end of the year, four Lady Moccasins were named to the NGCA AllAmerican team. Altogether, Davis has had 32 All-Americans, including six players who have won that honor at least three times. That list includes recent graduates Jackie Barenborg, a 2-time AllAmerican from 2005-08; Heather Burgner, a 3-time First Team All-American from 2006-09; and 4-time All-American Heather Burgner, who also played at Florida Southern from 2005-08. All three former Moccasins are now playing on the Duramed Futures Tour. They joined another Florida Southern graduate, Kim Goedecke, who had been on the tour since 2006. Of the 32 All-American awards won by a Florida Southern golfer since Davis became head coach, 21 have been First Team selections, nine were Second Team and two were honorable mention. Five of them were named the NCAA Division II National Player-of-the-Year, most recently Pamela Feggans in 2005. Davis has also had two National Freshman-of-the-Year, with Silvie Dittertova winning that award in 2009. In addition to its four team championships, Florida Southern has had five individual national champions under Davis (Shanna Nagy in 1998; Jana Peterkova in 2001 and 2002; and Lisa Cave in 1999 and 2000). A Lady Moccasin has finished first or second at the national tournament in 10 of his 13 previous seasons as head coach and a total of 21 have finished in the top five.
Florida Southern Year‐by‐Year Under Davis Year 1996‐97* 1997‐98 1998‐99 1999‐00 2000‐01 2001‐02 2002‐03 2003‐04 2004‐05 2005‐06 2006‐07 2007‐08 2008‐09
SSC NA NA 1st 2nd t2nd 1st 3rd 2nd 2nd 4th 1st 2nd 4th
Regional NA NA NA NA NA 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 4th 1st 3rd 2nd
National Total Wins ‐‐‐ 1 2nd 1 nd 2 3 st 1 2 1st 5 st 1 6 2nd 2 2nd 0 rd 3 2 ‐‐‐ 1 1st 8 ‐‐‐ 4 5th 4
*Took over as head coach during the spring semester SSC Tournaments did not begin until 1999, regional tournaments did not begin until 2002
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
The individual honors don’t stop there. Rachel Bell was the 2001 National Freshman-of-the-Year in addition to the overall Player-of-the-Year, and was the Sunshine State Conference Female Athlete-of-the-Year as well. She’s one of five Lady Moccasins named the SSC Golfer-of-the-Year under Davis, with Heather Burgner claiming the award last year. Davis has been named GolfWeek Magazine National Coach-of-the-Year three times (2000, 2001, and 2002), as well as the NGCA National Coach-of-the-Year twice (2002 and 2007). Last year was the third time he was selected as the NGCA South Region Coach-of-the-Year, after previously winning that award in 2002 and 2007. His list of coaching honors also includes five SSC Coach-of-the-Year awards, and in 2007, Davis won all three coaching awards. The same year Davis won the coaching trifecta, he was also inducted into the Florida Southern Athletic Hall of Fame, joining two of his former players, Shanna Nagy and Lisa Cave. Since then, two other Davis protégés have moved into the hall, with Jana Peterkova becoming a member in 2008, and Lisa Ball moving in last year. Since Davis became head coach in 1997, Florida Southern has won a total of 39 tournaments, including 32 in the last nine
years. Among those are four national, two regional, and three conference tournaments. A Lakeland native, Davis is a 1988 graduate of Lakeland High School, located less than a mile from Florida Southern College. He played collegiately at the University of Kentucky where he received his B.A. in Finance in 1993. While at Kentucky, Davis was a two-time Academic All-American as a junior and senior, and a three-time member of the SEC AllAcademic Team. He twice won the Kentucky Intercollegiate Golf Championship. He still competes in amateur tournaments through the Florida State Golf Association and ended the summer of 2009 ranked among the top 10 percent of the more than 1,000 active players in the organization. Before coming to Florida Southern, Davis served as assistant golf coach at the University of Kentucky for one year before playing three years professionally on the Tommy Armour, Gary Player, Moonlight and Hooters Tours. He’s also served as a golf assistant at Lone Palm Golf Club, the home course of the Moccasins. Robbie and his wife Joy live in Lakeland and have three daughters: Perry (9), Lucy (6) and Susie (4).
Assistant Coach Norm Benn Norm Benn is in his 14th year as assistant women’s golf coach at Florida Southern, but has been a vital part of the Moccasin athletic program for a total of 26 years overall. As a member of both the Florida Southern Athletic Hall of Fame and the Sunshine State Conference Hall of Fame, Benn has helped coach teams to conference titles, regional championships and national tournament appearances in both women’s basketball and women’s golf. He’s the only coach in the school’s history to accomplish all three of those feats with two different teams. Benn first came to Florida Southern in 1984 as assistant women’s basketball coach and was elevated to head coach the following season. He guided the Moccasins to a 23-4 record that year (1985-86), at the time the best in team history. They compiled an 8-0 mark in the Sunshine State Conference, and won both the SSC regular season and tournament championships. He was named the SSC Coach-of-the-Year for his efforts, the first of four times he won that honor from the conference. The following year, Benn coached the program’s first AllAmerican in Kim Disbro, who at the time of her graduation was the team’s all-time leading scorer and rebounder. Disbro went on to become the first women’s basketball player in the Florida Southern Hall of Fame, but was later joined by three other players coached by Benn. One of those was three-time AllAmerican Tarra Blackwell in 2004, who was also inducted into the Sunshine State Conference Hall of Fame in that same year. The second was All-American Kelly Charron in 2008, and Stacey Ungashick joined that list just last year. In his 12 seasons as head coach of the Florida Southern women’s basketball team, Benn won 20 or more games eight times. That was highlighted by the 1994-95 team, which
advanced to the NCAA Division II Elite Eight and went 28-4 to set a school record for wins that still stands today. Benn retired from basketball at the end of the 1996-97 season ranked among the top 20 active Division II coaches in career wins. His career record of 251-96 (a .725 winning percentage) makes him the winningest basketball coach in Florida Southern history for either the women’s or men’s programs. His teams won five Sunshine State Conference regular season titles, six SSC Tournament titles and one NCAA South Regional (1995), the first SSC women’s basketball team to ever win an NCAA regional tournament. He took the Lady Moccasins to the NCAA Tournament three times overall, was SSC Coach-of-the-Year four times and the South Region Coach-of-the-Year once. Benn was later inducted into the SSC Hall of Fame in 2003 as only the second women’s basketball coach inducted, and the Florida Southern Hall of Fame in 2004. At the conclusion of his basketball career, Benn became the assistant women’s golf coach in the fall of 1997, joining a program started two years earlier. Since then, he’s been a part of all four national championships won by the Lady Mocs and all four national runner-up teams, recruiting many of the players who helped Florida Southern become one of the top collegiate golf programs in the country. A 1957 graduate of Drexel University in Philadelphia, Benn served as freshmen men’s basketball coach for six years at his alma mater, including two undefeated seasons. He was a three-year letterman in basketball and baseball at Drexel. In addition to his coaching duties at Florida Southern, Benn served as the NCAA Compliance Coordinator from 19922005, and was also the Assistant Athletic Director for Development and Special Projects. His wife, Kathy, is an instructor at Florida Southern College and the chair of the Physical Education Department.
9
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
The 2009-10 Florida Southern Moccasins MARIANNE ANDERSSON Junior · Bjuv, SWEDEN
2005, located near her home in southern Sweden… Played for the club team at Soderasens Golf Club in 2006, and Barseback Golf & Country Club in 2007… Played for coach Patrik Brorsson with both of those teams… Member of the 2007 national championship team with Barseback and had a stroke average just over 76… Team also won the 2008 national championship… Won the Schyberg Junior Open in 2007 and had four top-10 finishes in eight tournaments… Had five rounds of 71 or lower, including a 69 at the Skandia Tour Elit Flickor #4… Played in 17 tournaments in 2006 with four top-10 finishes and won the Skandia Tour Riks #2… Personal… Daughter of Per and Birgitta Andersson… Has one younger sister (AnnLouise, 19)… Finance major… Born November 5, 1986.
As a sophomore (2008-09)… Second Team All-Sunshine State Conference… Named to all-tournament team at the Kiawah Island Invitational… NGCA AllAmerican Scholar… NCAA Division II Academic Achievement Award winner… Florida Southern Athletic Director’s Scholar-Athlete award winner for women’s golf… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Third on the team with a 76.97 stroke average… Played in all 12 tournaments and was a team counter in 23 of her 30 rounds… Had five under-par rounds, one behind team leader Heather Burgner… Also had one round of even par… Led the team in scoring five times… Had five top-10 finishes, all of them also in the top five… Tournament runnerup at both the Saint Leo Invitational (shooting a 2-over par 146) and the Kiawah Island/Tusculum Intercollegiate (shooting a 1under par 143)… Second-place finish at Saint Leo came behind teammate Heather Burgner… Finished second at Tusculum’s tournament for the second year in a row… Has a total of five, first- or second-place finishes in her career… Also had a thirdplace finish at the Pat Bradley Invitational when she had a score of 70-74-71=215… Placed 20th at the NCAA Division II South Regional (78-86-75=239) and 21st at the Division II National Finals (82-75-80-78=315)… Florida Southern’s #2 golfer at nationals… Shot a career-best 4-under par 69 in her first round of the season at the Mountain Shootout (hosted by Northern Arizona) on September 15… That score tied the school record, but was broken the next day by Heather Burgner’s 6-under par 67… Ranked 10th in the nation in par-3 scoring, 10th in fairways hit… Ranked third in greens in regulation, the second year in a row she ranked in the top three of that category… As a freshman (2007-08)… Second Team All-SSC… SSC Golfer-ofthe-Week on March 3… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Averaged 79.0 strokes per round in the fall, but dropped that to 75.69 in the spring, which was second on the team to Heather Burgner… Played in a total of nine tournaments, including the final seven as a member of the main squad… Florida Southern’s top finisher in the first two spring tournaments, placing second at the Tusculum Intercollegiate (71-77=148) and winning the Lady Moc Classic (77-73-72=222)… Also finished second after a one-hole playoff at the Nova SE Spring Classic (7673=149)… Had five straight top-10 finishes to start the spring semester, including 7th place at the SSC Tournament (74-7480=228)… Also had five top-10 finishes overall, and three in the top-five… Placed 19th at the NCAA Division II South Regional with a 237 (80-81-76)… Season-best round of oneunder par 71 came in the opening round of the Tusculum Intercollegiate on February 9… Team counter in all 17 rounds she played during the spring, and in 18 overall… Led the team in scoring in seven rounds… Ranked third in the nation in fairways hit, first in greens in regulation, fifth in putting and seventh in total short game… Prior to Florida Southern… Graduated from the Tycho Brahe School in Helsingborg in
MARIANNE ANDERSSON YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg. Low 2007-08 9 24 1843 76.79 71 (-1) 2008-09 12 30 2309 76.97 69 (-4) CAREER
21
54
4152
76.89
69 (-4)
M.J. AUDETTE Sophomore · Lakeland, Florida As a freshman (20008-09)… Played in six tournaments, including three as a member of the regular lineup… Had two top-10 finishes, including 7th place at the Barry Buccaneer Invitational when she played as an individual… Team counter in seven of her eight rounds in the lineup… Shot a career-best 1-over 73 in the 2nd round of that tournament on April 20… Florida Southern’s #2 golfer in the SSC Tournament, placing 14th overall… In high school… 2008 graduate of George Jenkins High School, where she was a teammate of current Florida Southern All-American Heather Burgner as a freshman… Played for coach David Joyner at George Jenkins where she was the Lakeland Ledger Girls’ Golfer-of-the-Year as a senior… Won district title as a senior with a score of 75, and finished fourth at the regional tournament with a 77… Also won district title as a junior with a 74 and was runner-up as a sophomore with a 76… Named the 2008 Girls’ Player-of-theYear for the Callaway Golf PGA Junior Series… Earned that award by playing in five junior tournaments during the summer of 2008 and placing in the top five in all of them… Played in the Junior PGA Championship in August of 2008, placing 23rd (tournament was held at The TPC at River’s Bend in Maineville, Ohio)… Had scores of 81-72-72-79 during that tournament… Personal… Given name is Melanie… Daughter of Bill and Laura Hahn… Her grandfather also attended Florida Southern… Has one older sister (Samantha-22)… In addition to Burgner at Florida Southern, former teammate Dolores White now plays for Wake Forest while Cassie Boles is playing for Yale… Physical Education major… Born February 21, 1990. M.J. AUDETTE YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg. 2008-09 6 16 1259 78.69
10
Low 73 (+1)
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
SILVIE DITTERTOVA Sophomore · Mariánské Láznê, CZECH REPUBLIC
EMILY FLANIGAN Junior · Celebration, FL As a sophomore (2008-09)… NGCA AllAmerican Scholar… NCAA Division II Academic Achievement Award winner… Florida Southern Athletic Director’s Scholar-Athlete award winner for women’s golf… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Played in all but one of the Lady Mocs’ 12 tournaments, 10 of them as part of the regular lineup… Team counter in 15 of her 24 rounds… Lowered her average by nearly one stroke… Had three top-10 finishes, led by a 7th-place finish at the Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational… Shot a career-best evenpar 73 in the second round of the Mountain Shootout, hosted by Northern Arizona on September 16… That score was the Lady Mocs’ second lowest of the day and helped them establish a new single round team scoring record of 1-under par 291… Placed 17th at the NCAA Division II South Regional (81-79-77=237) and 35th at the Division II National Finals (80-79-81-83=323)… Ranked 3rd in the country in fairways hit, 9th in greens in regulation, and 5th in total short game… As a freshman (200708)… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll and had a 4.00 GPA both semesters… Played in seven of the Moccasins’ 10 tournaments, four with the main team, two with the “B” team and one as an individual… Placed 10th in her first appearance with the varsity squad at the Saint Leo Invitational, her highest finish of the season (77-77-77=231)… Nearly broke the top-10 playing as an individual at the Nova Southeastern Spring Classic, shooting a 155 to finish 11th… Was the “B” team’s top golfer in the two tournaments she played with them… Shot a career-best two-over par 74 in the second round of the Lady Falcon Invitational (Sept. 23)… Had eight of her 12 rounds count toward the team score… Played in one postseason tournament as the Lady Mocs’ fifth golfer in the SSC Tournament (79-79-89=247)… In high school… 2007 graduate of Celebration High School, half an hour from Lakeland... Played her first two years for coach Dave York, and her final two for Bruce Taylor... Team co-captain or captain all four years... Played in the Class A state tournament as a freshman... Orange Belt Conference champion in 2006... Finished in the top-10 in four of her five tournaments on the Florida Junior Tour in 2006-07, including ninth at the FWSGA Girls Junior Championship... Had a 79.1 stroke average during those tournaments... Had five top-10 finishes on the Florida Junior Tour in 2005-06, with another ninth-place finish at the Girls Junior Championship... Graduated 10th in a senior class of 338... Named an Academic All-Star every year at Celebration... Personal... Daughter of Dion and Jackie Flanigan... Has one older sister (Hilary, 24)... Physical Education major... Member of FCA… Born September 22, 1989.
As a freshman (2008-09)… NGCA Second Team All-American and National Freshman-of-the-Year… Second Team AllSunshine State Conference… SSC Freshman-of-the-Year… Named to the alltournament team at the Kiawah Island Invitational… Second on the team with a 76.37 stroke average, the second lowest in team history for a freshman (topped by only current teammate Kim Ulander’s 75.87 in 2006-07)… Played in all 12 tournaments and was a team counter in 27 of her 30 rounds… Had five under-par rounds, tied for second on the team with Marianne Andersson and one behind team leader Heather Burgner… Also had one round of even par… Led the team in scoring five times… Had seven top-10 finishes and five in the top five… Began her college career by placing second at the Mountain Shootout (hosted by Northern Arizona) with a 1under par 145, finishing behind only teammate Heather Burgner… Topped that by winning the Queens Invitational in her second college tournament, shooting a 2-under par 70 at an event shortened to one round by weather… Later had a runnerup finish at the Barry Buccaneer Invitational with a 4-over par 220, and was second once again to Burgner… Placed 10th at the NCAA Division II South Regional (74-82-76=232), and 25th at the Division II National Finals (81-79-80-77=317)… Careerbest score of 3-under 70 came in the first round of the Mountain Shootout on September 15… Finished 7th in the country in par-4 scoring, 4th in fairways hit and 5th in greens in regulation… Her total short game ranked 3rd in Division II… Prior to Florida Southern… Came to Florida Southern from the Czech Republic, but spent one year (2004-05) in Lakeland as an exchange student at Kathleen High School… Competed for the Red Devils while in Florida and also won two of the three events she played with the Greater Tampa Junior Golf Association… Graduated from Gymnasium Mariánské Láznê with honors in 2008… Has played on the Czech national team for head coach Keith Williams since 2003… Has also played for the women’s team of Royal Golf Club Mariánské Láznê since 2002… Played in the 2007 International European Ladies Amateur Championship… Personal… Daughter of Ales and Eva Dittert… International Business major… Born December 29, 1987. SILVIE DITTERTOVA YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg. Low 2008-09
12
30
2291
76.37
70 (-3)
DID YOU KNOW? During her four-year Florida Southern career, Shanna Nagy was a team counter in 93 of a possible 94 rounds. The one exception came in the Lady Moc Classic as a senior in 1998-99 when she was disqualified in the second round of that tournament. Her streak of 74 straight rounds as a counter is a school record.
EMILY FLANIGAN YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg.
11
Low
2007-08 2008-09
7 11
19 27
1502 2116
79.05 74 (+2) 78.37 73 (E)
CAREER
18
46
3618
78.65
73 (E)
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
AMY HODGKINSON Freshman · Mead, CO
ADRIENNE TWINEM Senior · Bradenton, FL
2009 graduate of Skyline High school in Longmont, Colorado... 4-year letter winner for coach Susan Jennings... 3-time allconference selection... All-State as a senior in 2009 when she led the Falcons to their fifth 5A state championship this decade... Helped Skyline win 11 of the 12 tournaments they played in during the 2009 season... Placed third at the state tournament individually... Also finished third at the Colorado PGA Junior Championship in June... Had two fourth-place finishes in her other two competitive tournaments during the summer after her senior year... Honor roll student all four years in high school... Personal... Daughter of Phil and Martha Hodgkinson... Has one younger sister (Callie-17)... Undecided on major... Born May 22, 1991.
Has spent the last three years at Florida Southern as a student but is joining the team for the first time this year... 2006 graduate of Lakewood Ranch High School in Bradenton... Played her final two seasons there for coach Greg McGrew after playing as a freshman and sophomore at Southeast High School... Twice named team MVP at Southeast, while playing for coach Tommy Jamisko, and was team MVP as a senior at Lakewood Ranch... Qualified for the regional tournament as a freshman and the state tournament as a junior... Also earned scholar-athlete award as a senior... Personal... Daughter of Bob and Brenda Twinem... Has one older sister, Amelia (24), who graduated from Florida Southern in 2005... Communications major with a minor in graphic design... Born April 24, 1988.
CONNIE REED Senior · Palm City, FL As a junior (2008-09)… Sunshine State Conference Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Played in three tournaments as a member of the Florida Southern “B” team… Finished 14th in a field of 62 at the Saint Leo Invitational in the fall… As a sophomore (2007-08)… Played in four tournaments overall, two with the regular squad and two with the “B” team… Best finish came at the Grand Canyon Fall Invitational where she was 22nd in a field of 87 golfers… Shot a season-best 75 in the second round of that tournament (Sept. 25)… Placed 15th in a field of 47 at the Saint Leo Invitational playing with the “B” team… As a freshman (2006-07)... Had an 80.5 stroke average for the year, but a 77.3 during the NCAA postseason... Placed 12th at the NCAA Division II South Regional with a score of 231 (77-81-73) and was 21st at the national tournament with a 310 (77-77-80-76)... Team counter in 12 of 23 rounds... Shot career-best 73 in the final round of the South Regional (May 2) when she birdied four holes, and had a 76 in the final round at nationals (May 12)... In high school... 2006 graduate of Martin County High School in south Florida... Four-year starter for coach Chuck Reed... Played in the state tournament all four years... Helped Stuart County win the state title in 2003... Starting member of three regional championship teams... Medalist in the regional tournament as a senior with a 72... Helped Stuart County finish fourth in the state tournament as a junior and senior... Personal... Daughter of Chuck and Teri Reed... Has one older brother (CJ-24)... Elementary Education major... Born October 23, 1987. CONNIE REED YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg.
AN ACE IN THE HOLE! On May 4, 2004, Sarah Coleson made Florida Southern women’s golf history in Pace, Florida. The senior became the first, and so far only, Lady Moccasin to ace a hole when she needed just one shot on the parthree #5 in Stonebrook Country Club. It came in the first round of the NCAA Division II South Region Tournament, and eventually helped the Lady Mocs to a second-place finish and a berth in the NCAA National Finals. Florida Southern earned that bid by finishing just one stroke ahead of third-place West Florida.
Low
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09
8 4 3
23 10 7
1852 796 583
80.52 73 (+1) 79.60 75 (+3) 83.29 80 (+8)
CAREER
15
40
3231
80.78
73 (+1)
12
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
KIM ULANDER Senior · Malmo, SWEDEN
All-Sunshine State Conference... Played in all 11 tournaments and tied Heather Burgner for the team lead with a 75.87 stroke average, the best ever for a Moccasin freshman... Won her first collegiate tournament by shooting an even-par 144 at the Bubba Watson Invitational hosted by West Florida (Sept. 25-26)... Tied a school record at the time with a four-under par 68 in the second round of that tournament... Florida Southern’s top golfer in four tournaments... Had seven top-10 finishes and four topfives... Began her career with six straight top-10s, including her victory at the Bubba Watson Invitational and a runner-up finish at the Tusculum Intercollegiate (Feb. 3-4)... Placed sixth at the SSC Tournament with a 230 (76-78-76)... Finished 14th at the NCAA South Regional with a 232 (75-80-77) and 12th at the National Championship with a 305 (81-73-70-81)... Her twounder par 70 in the third round of nationals was the best ever shot by a Lady Moccasin at the national finals... Team counter in 26 of her 30 rounds... Led the Mocs in scoring in nine rounds... Had a team-leading three rounds under par, including her record-tying 68 at the Bubba Watson Invitational and a 69 at the Tusculum Intercollegiate (Feb. 4)... Ranked fifth in the country in par-4 scoring… In high school... Ranked among the top 50 amateur golfers in Sweden... 2006 graduate of Sunds High School in Vellinge, Sweden... Played golf for coach Per Johansson from 2003-06 at Sunds... Also played for the women’s golf team at Vellinge Golf Club for coach AnnChristin Mansson... Finished as the runner-up at both the 2005 and 2006 Norberg Open, Junior Masters Invitational in Sweden... Placed ninth at the International Spanish Ladies Amateur Championships in 2006... Played in 11 tournaments overall in 2006, with four top-10 finishes... Personal... Daughter of Mikael and Anne Ulander... Has one older brother (Niclas25)... Physical Education major... Born May 6, 1987.
As a junior (2008-09)… NGCA AllAmerican Scholar… NCAA Division II Academic Achievement Award winner… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Fourth on the team with a 77.43 stroke average, a number that helps her begin her senior year fourth on the school’s career chart with a 76.45… Played in all 12 tournaments, all but one coming as a member of the starting five… Team counter in 23 of her 28 rounds… Shot even par in two rounds… Had six top-10 finishes, with a season-best third-place at the Lady Moc Classic… Florida Southern’s top golfer in that event… Tied with Silvie Dittertova for 10th place at the NCAA Division II South Regional (80-78-74=232)… Placed 31st at the Division II National Finals (81-77-85-80=320)… Had a season-best round of 72 in the opening round of the Pat Bradley Invitational on October 27, as well as the Lady Moc Classic on March 2… Her 72 carried Florida Southern to a second-place at the Lady Moc Classic, offsetting their three other counters in that round who shot a combined 239… Ranked 10th in the country in par-3 scoring, 9th in fairways hit, 7th in greens in regulation, and 6th in total short game… As a sophomore (2007-08)… First Team All-Sunshine State Conference… SSC Commissioner’s Honor Roll… Played in all 10 of Florida Southern’s tournaments and was third on the team with a 76.00 stroke average… Had six top-10 finishes and four in the top-five… Placed second at the Saint Leo Invitational after falling in a one-hole playoff… Florida Southern’s top golfer in two tournaments and its second golfer in four others… Placed 12th at the SSC Tournament (7579-75=229) and 23rd at the NCAA Division II South Regional (76-81-81=238)… Team counter in 24 of her 26 rounds… Led the Mocs in scoring in six rounds… Had a team-high three rounds under par and two more at even par… Shot a season-best three-under 69 in the final round of the Stetson Invitational… Ranked 10th in the country in par-4 scoring and sixth in par-5 scoring… Ranked first in putting and in total short game… Also ranked sixth in fairways hit and fourth in greens in regulation… As a freshman (2006-07)... NGCA First Team All-American...
KIM ULANDER YEAR-BY-YEAR Tourn. Rounds Strokes Avg.
Low
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09
11 10 12
30 26 30
2276 1976 2323
75.87 76.00 77.43
68 (-4) 69 (-3) 72 (E)
CAREER
33
86
6575
76.45
68 (-4)
FLORIDA SOUTHERN WOMEN’S GOLF YEAR-BY-YEAR Year
Coach
State
SSC
Regional
National
Tourn. Won
1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07
Lois Webb Lois Webb/Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis Robbie Davis
11th 8th 8th 7th t8th 7th 7th 11th 8th 10th 5th 2nd
NA NA NA 1st 2nd t2nd 1st 3rd 2nd 2nd 4th 1st
NA NA NA NA NA NA 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 4th 1st
4th --2nd 2nd 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 3rd --1st
1 1 1 3 2 5 6 2 0 2 1 8
2007-08 2008-09
Robbie Davis Robbie Davis
-----
2nd 4th
3rd 2nd
--5th
4 4
13
Top Stroke Average Shanna Nagy (Fr.), 81.15 Shanna Nagy (So.), 78.17 Shanna Nagy (Jr.), 77.19 Shanna Nagy (Sr.), 76.22 Lisa Cave (Sr.), 78.62 Rachel Bell (Fr.), 76.78 Jana Peterkova (So.), 76.04 Pamela Feggans (So.), 76.78 Pamela Feggans (Jr.), 76.97 Pamela Feggans (Sr.), 74.96 Lindsey Bergeon (So.), 74.81 Heather Burgner (So.), 75.86 Kim Ulander (Fr.), 75.86 Heather Burgner (Jr.), 74.80 Heather Burgner (Sr.), 74.27
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
ALL-TIME POSTSEASON AWARD WINNERS ALL-AMERICANS Lisa Ball........... (2000-1st, 2001-1st, 2002-1st) Jackie Barenborg .......... (2006-2nd, 2007-2nd) Rachel Bell .................... (2001-1st, 2002-1st) Lindsey Bergeon ............(2005-2nd, 2006-1st, 2007-1st, 2008-HM) Heather Burgner ............. (2007-1st, 2008-1st 2009-1st) Lisa Cave ...................... (1999-1st, 2000-1st) Sarah Coleson ............. (2002-2nd, 2003-HM, 2004-2nd) Silvie Dittertova ......................... (2009-2nd) Pamela Feggans............ (2003-1st, 2004-1st, 2005-1st) Teri Goolsby ............................... (2000-2nd) Shanna Nagy ................. (1996-1st, 1997-1st, 1998-1st, 1999-1st) Norie Nakagawa .......................... (2000-2nd) Jana Peterkova .............. (2001-1st, 2002-1st) Kelly Sheehan.............................. (1999-2nd) Kim Ulander ............................... (2007-1st)
HONDA AWARD FINALIST NCAA WOMAN ATHLETE OF THE YEAR Lisa Cave ........................................... (2000) Jana Peterkova ................................... (2002) ALL-AMERICA GOLF SCHOLARS Marianne Andersson......................... (2009) Jackie Barenborg .......................(2007, 2008) Lisa Cave ..................................(1999, 2000) Emily Flanigan .................................. (2009) Teri Goolsby ..............................(1999, 2000) Kirsten Knowles .................................. (2004) Maria Persson............................(2000, 2001) Megan Riley..................... (2003, 2004, 2005) Emily Tankey ...................................... (2003) Kim Ulander ...................................... (2009) SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE FEMALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR Rachel Bell ......................................... (2001) SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE GOLFER OF THE YEAR Shanna Nagy ...................................... (1999) Rachel Bell ......................................... (2001) Jana Peterkova ................................... (2002) Pamela Feggans................................. (2005) Heather Burgner ................................. (2009) SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Rachel Bell ......................................... (2001) Silvie Dittertova ................................. (2009)
ALL-SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE Marianne Andersson.... (2008-2nd, 2009-2nd) Lisa Ball............ (2000-2nd, 2001-1st, 2002-1st) Jackie Barenborg ................................ (2006) Rachel Bell .................... (2001-1st, 2002-1st) Lindsey Bergeon(2005, 2006, 2007, 2008-2nd) Heather Burgner .............. (2008-1st, 2009-1st) Lisa Cave ........................ (1999-1st, 2000-1st) Silvie Dittertova ........................... (2009-2nd) Pamela Feggans......... (2003-1st, 2004, 2005) Teri Goolsby ................................. (2000-1st) Shanna Nagy ................................. (1999-1st) Norie Nakagawa ............................(2000-2nd) Maria Persson ...............................(2000-2nd) Jana Peterkova .............................. (2002-1st) Kelly Sheehan................................ (1999-1st) Kim Ulander ........................(2007, 2008-1st) SSC ALL-TOURNAMENT Lisa Ball.............................................. (2002) Jackie Barenborg ................................ (2006) Rachel Bell ................................(2001, 2002) Lindsey Bergeon .............. (2005, 2006, 2008) Heather Burgner ........................(2007, 2008) Lisa Cave ........................................... (2000) Pamela Feggans........................(2003, 2005) Teri Goolsby ....................................... (1999) Shanna Nagy ...................................... (1999) Norie Nakagawa ................................. (1999) Jana Peterkova ................................... (2002) GOLFWEEK NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR Robbie Davis .............................(1999, 2001) NGCA NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR Robbie Davis .............................(2002, 2007) NGCA SOUTH REGION COACH OF THE YEAR Robbie Davis ................... (2004, 2007, 2009) SSC COACH OF THE YEAR Robbie Davis ..........(2000, 2001, 2002, 2007)
Lindsey Bergeon, a four-time AllAmerican from 2005-08, had three top-three finishes at the national tournament and had the lowest career stroke average in team history at the time of her graduation. NATIONAL PLAYER-OF-THE-YEAR Shanna Nagy ........................ (1998 - Rolex) Shanna Nagy .......................(1999 - WGCA) Rachel Bell ......... (2001 - NGCA, GolfWeek) Jana Peterkova .................... (2002 - NGCA) Pamela Feggans................. (*2005 - NGCA) NATIONAL FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Rachel Bell .......................... (2001 - NGCA) Silvie Dittertova .................... (2009-NGCA)
Pamela Feggans was a 3-time First Team All-American and one of four different Moccasins to be named the National Player-of-the-Year. She was also a 2-time runner-up at the NCAA Division II National Tournament.
14
No one in team history had quite a year like Rachel Bell had in 2001, when she was named the NGCA Freshman-of-theYear and Playerof-the-Year, won the same two awards in the Sunshine State Conference, and was also selected the SSC Female Athlete-of-the-Year, one of only two freshmen in SSC history to win the league’s highest individual season honor.
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN TEAM & INDIVIDUAL RECORDS LOW SCORE, TWO-ROUND TOURNAMENT 141 (-5) - Heather Burgner (N. Az. Mountain Shootout), Sept. 15-16, 2008 141 (-3) - Pamela Feggans (UCF Invitational), Feb. 7-8, 2005 142 (-2) - Shanna Nagy, (Snowbird Intercollegiate), Mar. 13-14, 1997 142 (-2) - Lindsey Bergeon (Grand Canyon Fall Inv.), Sept. 24-25, 2007 142 (-2) - Heather Burgner (Saint Leo Invitational), Oct. 20-21, 2008 143 (-1) - Pamela Feggans (UCF Invitational), Feb. 9-10, 2004 143 (-1) - Kim Ulander (Tusculum Intercollegiate), Feb. 3-4, 2007 143 (-1) - Marianne Andersson (Tusculum Inter.), Feb. 7-8, 2009 144 (E) - Lindsey Bergeon (Florida Gulf Coast Inv.), Oct. 1-2, 2005 144 (E) - Kim Ulander (Bubba Watson Inv.), Sept. 25-26, 2006 144 (E) - Lindsey Bergeon (Tusculum Intercollegiate), Feb. 3-4, 2007 144 (E) - Silvie Dittertova (Tusculum Intercollegiate), Feb. 7-8, 2009
LOW ROUND, TEAM (*score came on a par-73 course) 286 (-2) - Saint Leo Invitational (2nd round), 10/21/08 *291 (-1) - Northern Arizona Mountain Shootout (2nd round), 9/16/08 289 (+1) - Bubba Watson Invitational (2nd round), 9/26/06 290 (+2) - Barry Buccaneer Invitational (2nd round), 3/30/09 291 (+3) - Tusculum Intercollegiate (2nd round), 2/4/07 291 (+3) - Grand Canyon Invitational (1st round), 9/24/07 292 (+4) - Stetson Invitational (3rd round), 11/6/07 292 (+4) - Tusculum Intercollegiate (1st round), 2/7/09 LOW ROUND, INDIVIDUAL (*score came on a par-73 course) *67 (-6) - Heather Burgner (N. Arizona Mountain Shootout), 9/16/08 68 (-4) - Jana Peterkova (Hatter Spring Fling), 3/16/02 68 (-4) - Pamela Feggans (UCF Invitational), 2/7/05 68 (-4) - Kim Ulander (Bubba Watson Invitational), 9/26/06 68 (-4) - Heather Burgner (Saint Leo Invitational), 10/21/08 69 (-3) - Pamela Feggans (Unicco Fall Invitational), 10/18/04 69 (-3) - Pamela Feggans (NCAA Division II South Regional), 5/2/05 69 (-3) - Kim Ulander (Tusculum Intercollegiate), 2/4/07 69 (-3) - Heather Burgner (Stetson Invitational), 11/6/07 69 (-3) - Kim Ulander (Stetson Invitational), 11/6/07 69 (-3) - Heather Burgner (Barry Buccaneer Invitational), 3/30/09 *70 (-3) - Silvie Dittertova (N. Ariz. Mountain Shootout), 9/15/08 70 (-2) - Shanna Nagy (Snowbird Intercollegiate), 3/13/97 *71 (-2) - Rachel Bell (Lady Falcon Classic), 9/29/01 70 (-2) - Jana Peterkova (UCF Invitational), 2/12/02 *71 (-2) - Pamela Feggans (NCAA Division II Nationals), 5/16/03 70 (-2) - Kim Ulander (NCAA Division II Nationals), 5/11/07 70 (-2) - Lindsey Bergeon (Grand Canyon Fall Invitational), 9/24/07 70 (-2) - Heather Burgner (Grand Canyon Fall Invitational), 9/24/07 70 (-2) - Heather Burgner (NCAA Division II Nationals), 5/13/08 70 (-2) - Silvie Dittertova (Queens Invitational), 9/21/08 70 (-2) - Marianne Andersson (Pat Bradley Inv.), 10/27/08 70 (-2) - Silvie Dittertova (Barry Buccaneer Invitational), 3/30/09 70 (-2) - Heather Burgner (NCAA Division II South Regional), 5/3/09 71 (-1) - several times, most recently by Heather Burgner (Barry Buccaneer Invitational), 3/31/09
LOW SCORE, THREE-ROUND TOURNAMENT 214 (-2) - Heather Burgner (Barry Buccaneer Inv.), Mar. 30-31, 2009 215 (-1) - Marianne Andersson (Pat Bradley Inv.), Oct. 27-28, 2008 218 (+2) - Pamela Feggans (NCAA South Regional), May 2-3, 2005 218 (+2) - Kim Ulander (Saint Leo Invitational), Oct. 22-23, 2007 219 (+3) - Heather Burgner (Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational), Mar. 9-10, 2009 219 (+3) - Heather Burgner (NCAA South Regional), May 3-5, 2009 220 (+4) - Pamela Feggans (Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational), Mar. 14-15, 2005 220 (+4) - Silvie Dittertova (Barry Buccaneer Inv.), Mar. 30-31, 2009 LOW SCORE, FOUR-ROUND TOURNAMENT 293 (+1) - Pamela Feggans, 74-73-72-74 (NCAA Nationals) - May 11-14, 2005 291 (+3) - Heather Burgner, 70-74-74-73 (NCAA Nationals) – May 13-16, 2008 295 (+7) - Lindsey Bergeon, 72-74-74-75 (NCAA Nationals) - May 9-12, 2007 296 (+8) - Heather Burgner, 75-72-74-75 (NCAA Nationals) - May 9-12, 2007 301 (+13) - Shanna Nagy, 75-75-77-74 (NCAA Nationals) - May 12-15, 1998 LOW STROKE AVERAGE - FULL SEASON 74.27 - Heather Burgner, 2009 (2,228 strokes, 30 rounds, 12 tourn.) 74.80 - Heather Burgner, 2008 (2,244 strokes, 30 rounds, 11 tourn.) 74.81 - Lindsey Bergeon, 2006 (1,945 strokes, 26 rounds, 10 tourn.) 74.96 - Pamela Feggans, 2005 (1,949 strokes, 26 rounds., 9 tourn.) 75.87 - Heather Burgner, 2007 (2,276 strokes, 30 rounds, 11 tourn.) 75.87 - Kim Ulander, 2007 (2,276 strokes, 30 rounds, 11 tourn.)
Heather Burgner graduated in 2009 as the Mocs’ career record holder in stroke average, and also holds the top two positions on the season list. She had 11 top-10 finishes as a senior to break the previous mark of 10, which she’d established as a sophomore and junior. She set another mark with 34 top-10 finishes in her career. Lindsey Bergeon is second on that list with 25.
LOW STROKE AVERAGE - CAREER (min. 48 rounds) 75.65 - Heather Burgner, 2006-09 (8,548 strokes, 113 rnds., 43 tourn.) 75.88 - Lindsey Bergeon, 2005-08 (7,816 strokes, 103 rnds., 39 tourn.) 76.28 - Pamela Feggans, 2003-05 (6,331 strokes, 83 rnds, 31 tourn.) 76.45 - Kim Ulander, 2007-09 (6,575 strokes, 86 rnds, 33 tourn.) 76.89 - Marianne Andersson, 2008-09 (4,152 str., 54 rnds., 21 tourn.) 76.94 - Rachel Bell, 2001-02 (3,770 strokes, 49 rnds, 22 tourn.) 78.02 - Jackie Barenborg, 2005-08 (7,802 strokes, 100 rnds., 38 tourn.)
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN AT NATIONALS
2000 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
2001 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
(Euless, TX; hosted by Abilene Christian, par-71) 1. Lisa Cave 80 t4. Lisa Ball 77 t6. Norie Nakagawa 78 11. Teri Goolsby 83 13. Maria Persson 85 1. LADY MOCS 318
- 79 - 82 - 87 - 86 - 82 - 329
- 79 - 78 - 77 - 77 - 77 - 309
- 72 - 76 - 77 - 78 - 82 - 303
(Rock Hill, SC; hosted by the South Atlantic Conf., par-72)
= 310 = 313 = 319 = 324 = 326 = 1259
1. Jana Peterkova 74 2. Rachel Bell 75 5. Lisa Ball 82 t18. Maria Persson 83 t21. Lydia Gartrell 80 1. LADY MOCS 311
- 74 - 79 - 75 - 74 - 82 - 302
- 80 - 76 - 74 - 81 - 80 - 310
- 75 - 79 - 79 - 80 - 86 - 313
= 302 = 303 = 317 = 333 = 334 = 1250
(Pace, FL; hosted by West Florida, par-72)
(Allendale, MI; hosted by Grand Valley State, par-73) - 74 - 78 - 79 - 75 - 83 - 306
- 75 - 74 - 78 - 84 - 83 - 310
2007 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS
2002 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 1. Jana Peterkova 78 2. Lisa Ball 75 3. Sarah Coleson 81 t4. Rachel Bell 82 t17. Jenica Karol 85 1.LADY MOCS 316
- 78 - 75 - 78 - 86 - 85 - 316
3. Lindsey Bergeon 72 4. Heather Burgner 75 11. Jackie Barenborg73 12. Kim Ulander 81 21. Connie Reed 77 1. LADY MOCS 297
= 306 = 308 = 309 = 312 = 330 = 1234
16
- 74 - 72 - 80 - 73 - 77 - 296
- 74 - 74 - 75 - 70 - 80 - 293
- 75 - 75 - 76 - 81 - 76 - 302
= 295 = 296 = 304 = 305 = 310 = 1188
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN AT NATIONALS
Shanna Nagy Individual Champion 1996 (Fr.) 1998 (Jr.)
Lisa Cave Individual Champion 1999 (Jr.) 2000 (Sr.)
TOP 10 FINISHERS AT THE NCAA NATIONAL FINALS 1996
1
Shanna Nagy
77-84-76-76 = 313
1997
2
Shanna Nagy
80-77-83-77 = 317
1998
1 3
Shanna Nagy Kelly Sheehan
75-75-77-74 = 301 85-76-77-72 = 310
1999
1 3 8
Lisa Cave Shanna Nagy Teri Goolsby
77-81-75-80 = 313 76-84-78-78 = 316 76-81-85-80 = 322
2000
1 4 6
Lisa Cave Lisa Ball Norie Nakagawa
80-79-79-72 = 310 77-82-78-76 = 312 78-87-77-77 = 319
2001
1 2 5
Jana Peterkova Rachel Bell Lisa Ball
74-78-75-75 = 302 75-75-74-79 = 303 82-78-78-79 = 317
2002
1 2 3 4
Jana Peterkova Lisa Ball Sarah Coleson Rachel Bell
78-74-74-80 = 306 75-78-79-76 = 308 81-79-75-74 = 309 82-75-74-81 = 312
2003
2 6
Pamela Feggans Sarah Coleson
80-76-71-76 = 303 77-79-79-76 = 311
2004
3
Pamela Feggans
78-75-74-76 = 303
2005
2
Pamela Feggans
74-73-72-74 = 293
2006
2
Lindsey Bergeon
72-76-73 = 221
2007
3 4
Lindsey Bergeon Heather Burgner
72-74-74-75 = 295 75-72-74-75 = 296
2008
2
Heather Burgner
70-74-74-73 = 291
2009
9
Heather Burgner
78-76-79-76 = 309
Jana Peterkova Individual Champion 2001 (Jr.) 2002 (Sr.)
TEAM FINISHES AT THE NCAA NATIONAL FINALS 1996 .................................. National Fourth Place 1998 .............................. NATIONAL RUNNER-UP 1999 .............................. NATIONAL RUNNER-UP 2000 ..............................NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 2001 ..............................NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 2002 ..............................NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 2003 .............................. NATIONAL RUNNER-UP 2004 .............................. NATIONAL RUNNER-UP 2005 .................................... National Third Place 2007 ..............................NATIONAL CHAMPIONS 2009 ..................................... National Fifth Place
Lisa Ball was a part of three national championship teams in her three years at Florida Southern. A junior college transfer who joined the program in the fall of 1999, she was also a three-time First Team All-American.
17
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
2008-09 FINAL STATS AND RESULTS
18
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
2008-09 FINAL STATS AND RESULTS
19
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
ALL-TIME LETTER WINNERS Player Marianne Andersson Angie Armstrong M.J. Audette Beth Ann Baldry Kathleen Ball Lisa Ball Jackie Barenborg Mandy Barenbrugge Rachel Bell Lindsey Bergeon Jessica Branch Heather Burgner Keri Cardinellei Lisa Cave Sarah Coleson Amanda Crews Silvie Dittertova Pamela Feggans Emily Flanigan Lydia Gartrell Kim Goedecke Teri Goolsby Theresa Halse Kristi Hommel Katie Jared Brittany Johnson Jenica Karol Tori Kastl Kirsten Knowles Andrea Kosa Nikki Mussoline Shanna Nagy Norie Nakagawa Tara Parrish Maria Persson Jana Peterkova Caroline Rankin Connie Reed Megan Riley Sheri Ritter Stefanie Shaw Kelly Sheehan Erin Skelley Alicia Stauffacher Lauren Stechman Christine Suchy Emily Tankey Kim Ulander Amy Walker Kristina Walls Caroline White
Rounds 54 68 16 22 4 72 100 1 49 103 3 113 1 78 82 3 30 83 46 25 10 40 32 34 22 6 44 3 46 69 17 93 73 16 51 38 25 40 89 11 21 65 1 14 27 23 28 68 4 15 11
Avg. 76.89 84.25 78.69 86.09 86.75 78.50 78.02 89.00 76.94 75.88 82.67 75.65 104.00 81.51 79.37 88.33 76.37 76.28 78.65 82.40 82.70 80.63 84.38 83.35 81.95 94.83 84.09 89.00 85.93 85.45 93.41 78.04 82.74 90.06 82.08 76.55 81.36 80.78 82.39 83.45 85.81 81.82 104.00 84.14 83.93 81.62 82.61 76.45 97.00 88.40 85.55
Years 08-09 02-03-04-05 09 99-00-01-02 97 00-01-02 05-06-07-08 02 01-02 05-06-07-08 00 06-07-08-09 96 97-98-99-00 02-03-04 99-00 09 03-04-05 08-09 99-00-01 03-04 99-00 98-99-00-01 96-97 06-07-08-09 00-01 01-02-03 02 02-03-04-05 96-97-98 96 96-97-98-99 97-98-99-00 96 99-00-01 01-02 06-07 07-08-09 02-03-04-05 06-07-08 06-07-08-09 97-98-99 96 06-07 05-06-07-08 06-07 02-03 07-08-09 96 04-05-06 04-05-06
Shanna Nagy ranks among the best athletes ever to play at Florida Southern College. The first player ever signed to play women’s golf for the Moccasins, she was a four-time All-American, two-time National Player-of-the-Year and two-time medalist at the NCAA Division II/III National Tournament. Her nine tournament victories are still a Florida Southern record. She graduated in 1999 with a degree in Elementary Education. Nagy received another honor in 2005 when she became the first women’s golfer ever inducted into the Sunshine State Conference Hall of Fame, and that same year, she was inducted into the Florida Southern College Athletic Hall of Fame.
20
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
THE SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE Founded in 1975, the Sunshine State Conference has risen from a single sport organization to the Division II “Conference of Champions”. Since its inception, the conference has grown steadily in sports played, membership and national prominence. Sunshine State Conference member schools have won recent NCAA national titles (69 total) in Commissioner baseball, men’s basketball, men’s and Jay Jones women’s golf, softball, men’s and women’s tennis, men’s and women’s soccer, and women’s volleyball. The SSC is also nationally recognized in men’s and women’s cross country, women’s rowing and women’s basketball. The SSC sponsors championships in baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s and women’s golf, men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s tennis, women’s volleyball, softball and women’s rowing. The first national title won by an SSC member school was in 1978, by the Florida Southern baseball team. Most recently, the Lynn baseball team and Nova Southeastern women’s golf team won national championships in 2009. For more information, please contact:
SSC Member Schools School Location Enrollment Joined SSC Barry University...................Miami Shores........ 8,242 ............. 1988 Eckerd College ...................St. Petersburg....... 1,749 ............. 1975 Florida Southern College .....Lakeland............... 1,800 ............. 1975 Florida Tech........................Melbourne ............ 5,118 ............. 1981 Lynn University ...................Boca Raton........... 2,700 ............. 1997 Nova SE University .............Davie .................... 5,355 ............. 2002 Rollins College ....................Winter Park........... 1,759 ............. 1975 Saint Leo University ............Saint Leo .............. 1,200 ............. 1975 University of Tampa ............Tampa .................. 5,800 ............. 1981
Did You Know? Since 1996, when the NCAA began sponsoring Division II women’s golf, a team from the SSC has won the national title 11 times. From 1996‐99, the national tournament was combined with Division III, meaning that each year there has been a separate D‐II championship, the SSC has claimed the title. The league has also produced 10 runners‐up. Women’s Golf National Champions from the SSC 1997 ... *Lynn 2005 ..... Rollins 2000 ... Fla. Southern 2006 ..... Rollins 2001 ... Fla. Southern 2007 ..... Fla. Southern 2002 ... Fla. Southern 2008 ..... Rollins 2003 ... Rollins 2009 ..... Nova SE 2004 ... Rollins
Jay Jones, Commissioner Kelly Harrison, Asst. Commissioner for Internal Relations 7061 Grand National Drive, Suite 140 Orlando, FL 32819 (407) 248-8460
*SSC provisional members
Saint Leo
Rollins Florida Tech
Tampa Eckerd Florida Southern
Lynn Nova SE Barry
21
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
2009 SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE WRAP-UP 2009 ALL-SSC WOMEN’S GOLF TEAM First Team Heather Burgner, Fla. Southern Sr. 74.27 avg. Sandra Changkija, Nova SE So. 74.30 avg. Joanna Coe, Rollins So. 74.96 avg. Maria Garcia Austt, Nova SE Jr. 75.96 avg. Daniela Iacobelli, Florida Tech Sr. 74.92 avg.
2009 SSC TOURNAMENT (April 20-21) (Lake Region Yacht & CC in Winter Haven; hosted by Fla. Southern) 1. Rollins College 298 - 300 - 304 = 902 2. Nova Southeastern University 304 - 312 - 293 = 909 3. Lynn University 300 - 307 - 312 = 919 4. Florida Southern College 316 - 303 - 316 = 935 5. Barry University 309 - 311 - 317 = 937 6. Saint Leo University 332 - 327 - 332 = 991 7. Eckerd College 337 - 349 - 338 = 1024 8. Florida Tech 342 - 342 - 343 = 1027 TOP INDIVIDUALS 1. Joanna Coe (RC) 73 2. Maria Garcia Austt (NSU) 77 Brianna Seo (RC) 73 4. Sandra Changkija (NSU) 75 5. Daniela Vargas (RC) 73 6. Taylor Collins (NSU) 76 7. Heather Burgner (FSC) 78 Katy McNicoll (LU) 73 9. Megan Mangone (LU) 75 10. Maha Haddioui (LU) 77 Donia Scarello (LU) 75 12. Daniela Iacobelli (FT) 78 Johanna Soderstrom (BU) 75
-
75 77 74 78 76 77 75 77 77 74 79 73 74
-
75 69 76 71 76 74 75 78 77 80 77 81 83
= = = = = = = = = = = = =
Second Team Marianne Andersson, Fla. Southern Silvie Dittertova, Fla. Southern Maha Haddioui, Lynn Megan Mangone, Lynn Katy McNicoll, Lynn
223 223 223 224 225 227 228 228 229 231 231 232 232
So. Fr. Jr. Sr. Sr.
76.97 avg. 76.37 avg. 77.04 avg. 76.88 avg. 77.08 avg.
Honorable Mention none Golfer-of-the-Year Heather Burgner, Florida Southern Freshman-of-the-Year Silvie Dittertova, Florida Southern Coach-of-the-Year Kevin Marsh, Nova Southeastern
Year-by-Year SSC Tournament Results (Tournament expanded to three rounds in 2003) Year 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Winner (Score) Florida Southern (609) Rollins (615) Rollins (616) Florida Southern (617) Rollins (919) Rollins (900) Rollins (922) Rollins (922) Florida Southern (929) Nova Southeastern (900) Rollins (902)
Runner-Up (Score) Rollins (617) Florida Southern (617) Florida Southern, Lynn (638) Rollins (627) Lynn (938) Florida Southern (966) Florida Southern (933) Lynn (961) Rollins (934) Fla. Southern (910) Nova Southeastern (909)
Individual Champion Karen Calvesbert, Rollins (146, +2) Jennifer Beames, Rollins (146, +2) Rachel Bell, Fla. Southern (149, +5) Jana Peterkova, Fla. Southern (149, +5) Jennifer Beames, Rollins (227, +11) Charlotte Campbell, Rollins (216, +6) RemiJin Camping, Barry (225, +9) Mariana DeBiase, Rollins (225, +9) *Daniela Iacobelli, Florida Tech (226, +10) Sandra Changkija, Nova SE (221, +5) #Joanna Coe, Rollins (223, +7)
Site (Host) Lakeland (Fla. Southern) Lakeland (Fla. Southern) Saint Leo (Saint Leo) Saint Leo (Saint Leo) Orlando (Rollins) Miami (Barry) Saint Leo (Saint Leo) Saint Leo (Saint Leo) Viera (Florida Tech) Viera (Florida Tech) Winter Haven (Fla. Southern)
*Won individual title in 4-hole playoff with Maria Garcia Austt of Nova SE #Won individual title in 2-hole playoff with Brianna Seo of Rollins (eliminated on 1st hole) and Maria Garcia Austt of Nova SE
Year-by-Year NCAA Division II South Region Tournament Results Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Winner (Score) Florida Southern (620) Rollins (918) Rollins (904) Rollins (877) Rollins (899) Florida Southern (906)
Runner-Up (Score) Barry (656) Florida Southern (922) Florida Southern (966) Florida Southern (925) Lynn (906) Rollins (911)
2008 2009
Nova Southeastern (902) Nova Southeastern (912)
Rollins (909) Florida Southern (915)
Individual Champion Rachel Bell, Fla. Southern (149, +5) Mariana DeBiase, Rollins (221, +5) Charlotte Campbell, Rollins (224, +8) Charlotte Campbell, Rollins (215, -1) Natasha Morgan, Lynn (218, +2) Maria Garcia Austt, Nova SE (220, +4) Laura Fourdraine, Rollins (220, +4) Sandra Changkija, Nova SE (223, +7) Sandra Changkija, Nova SE (215, -1)
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Site (Host) Greenville, TN (Tusculum) Lakeland, FL (Fla. Southern) Pace, FL (West Florida) Lakeland, FL (Fla. Southern) Pace, FL (West Florida) Lakeland, FL (Fla. Southern) Howey-In-The-Hills, FL Howey-In-The-Hills, FL
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
SUNSHINE STATE CONFERENCE HALL-OF-FAME Lisa Ball, a 3-time First Team All-American in women’s golf who played on three national championship teams, and Wayne Raath, a 4-time All-American who also played on three national championship teams with the men’s program, were inducted into the SSC Hall of Fame in 2009. That brings the number of inductees from Florida Southern College to 41. Nine Moccasin representatives were inducted into the inaugural class in 1991-92, and FSC has had at least one inductee in 15 of the 18 classes since the Hall’s inception. Of the 41 inductees, 27 have been student-athletes, while 10 have come from the coaching ranks, and four from administrative and staff positions.
Lisa Ball Women’s Golf 2000-02
Wayne Raath Men’s Golf 1997-00
CLASS OF 1999-00 Chris Bellotto - softball coach John Hudek - baseball
CLASS OF 1991-92 Dana Cozine - volleyball John Ebeling - men’s basketball John Edwards - men’s basketball Tom Gleeton - men’s golf Sandy Hudson - volleyball Charley Matlock - men’s golf coach Tom Patri - men’s golf Hal Smeltzly - baseball coach / athletic director Lois Webb - volleyball coach
CLASS OF 2002-03 Becky Thyhsen - volleyball Norm Benn - women’s basketball coach Rocco Mediate - men’s golf CLASS OF 2003-04 Tarra Blackwell - Women’s Basketball
CLASS OF 1992-93 Joe Arnold - baseball coach Lee Janzen - men’s golf
CLASS OF 2004-05 Shelly Davis - softball Wayne Koehler - sports information director Shanna Nagy - women’s golf
CLASS OF 1993-94 Ed Jeffries - women’s tennis coach Jerry Johnson - men’s basketball Dori Stankewitz - softball
CLASS OF 2005-06 Lisa Cave - women’s golf Jeff Klauk - men’s golf James Vida - baseball
CLASS OF 1994-95 Bill “Doc” Connors - trainer Kris Kearney - men’s basketball
CLASS OF 2006-07 Duane Hopkins - faculty athletics representative B.J. Leach - baseball Traci Wood - softball
CLASS OF 1995-96 Chuck Anderson - baseball coach Terry Gilmore - baseball Missey Crain - volleyball
CLASS OF 2007-08 Julianne Coleman - softball Buck Dawson - cross-country coach Jana Peterkova - women’s golf
CLASS OF 1996-97 Hal Wissel - men’s basketball coach
CLASS OF 2008-09 Lisa Ball - women’s golf Wayne Raath - women’s golf
CLASS OF 1998-99 Kellie Robinson - softball
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN ATHLETIC HALL-OF-FAME CLASS OF 2002 Chuck Anderson - Baseball (1959-62) Baseball Coach (1984-2002) Chris Bellotto - Softball Coach (1982-present) John Ebeling - Men’s Basketball (1979-82) Ken Huebner - Baseball (1962-65) Lee Janzen - Men’s Golf (1983-86) Jerry Johnson - Men’s Basketball (1985-88) Floyd E. Lay - Men’s Basketball (1938-41) Charley Matlock - Men’s Golf Coach (1972-95) Greg Pryor - Baseball (1968-71) Kellie Robinson - Softball (1989-92) Charles Senger - Baseball/Basketball (1954-57) Hal Smeltzly - Baseball Coach (1958-1976) and Athletics Director (1977-2000) Lois Webb - Volleyball Coach (1977-2000) George Jenkins - Honorary Member
The Class of 2009
CLASS OF 2003 Joe Arnold - Baseball Coach (1977-83) Kim Disbro - Women’s Basketball (1984-87) Fred Lapper - Men’s Basketball (1950-53) Justice Fred R. Lewis - Men’s Basketball (1965-69) Andy McGaffigan - Baseball (1977-78) Rocco Mediate - Men’s Golf (1983-84) Jay Smith - Baseball (1971-73) Dori Stankewitz - Softball (1985-88) Dr. Hal Wissel - Men’s Basketball Coach (1977-82) Jimmie Sikes - Honorary Member
The eighth class of the Florida Southern College Athletic Hall of Fame was enshrined March 21, 2009. Pictured are – Front (L-R): Stacey Ungashick, Chrissy Teresi, Wanda Graham and Jill Stephens. Standing (L-R): Bob Gendron, Joe Sickles and Jack Varasse. Not pictured: Lisa Ball and Kim Crawford. CLASS OF 2007 Allison Avey - Women’s Tennis (1982-85) Robbie Davis - Women’s Golf Coach (1997-present) Doug Gordin - Men’s Golf Coach (1996-present) Simon Harper - Men’s Basketball (1971-72) Wayne Koehler - Sports Info. Director (1983-95, 1999-2002) B.J. Leach - Baseball (1998-99) Mohammed Sabie - Men’s Soccer (1954) Traci Wood - Softball (1992-96) Jack Slayton - Honorary Member
CLASS OF 2004 Norm Benn - Women’s Basketball Coach (1985-97) Rodney Butcher - Men’s Golf (1989-92) Katy Cortelyou - Softball (1992-95) Terry Gilmore - Baseball (1984-87) Kris Kearney - Men’s Basketball (1985-89) Tarra Blackwell - Women’s Basketball (1995-98) Tom Patri - Men’s Golf (1980-81) Becky Thyhsen - Volleyball (1989-91) Clarence “Blade” Kelley - Honorary Member
CLASS OF 2008 Alberto Bonfil - Men’s Tennis (1997-2000) Kelly Charron - Women’s Basketball (1992-95) Julianne Coleman - Softball (1996-99) Frank DeSavino - Men’s Basketball (1953-56) Jana Peterkova – Women’s Golf (2001-02) Wayne Raath – Men’s Golf (1997-2000) Steve Sokol - Men’s Golf (2001-02) Brett Tomko - Baseball (1995) George Hudson - Honorary Member
CLASS OF 2005 Bob Bowman - Men’s Basketball (1963-67) Jim Bush - Men’s Soccer Coach (1957-80); Men’s Tennis Coach (1959-85); Women’s Tennis Coach (‘79-80) Missey Crain - Volleyball (1988-90) Shelly Davis - Softball (1993-96) John Edwards - Men’s Basketball (1973-76) Tom Gleeton - Men’s Golf (1977-79) Shanna Nagy - Women’s Golf (1996-99) Basil “Rocky” Pegg - Men’s Basketball (1949-51) Marcus “Joker” Marchant - Honorary Member
CLASS OF 2009 Lisa Ball - Women’s Golf (2000-02) Kim Crawford - Volleyball (1993-94) Bob Gendron - Baseball (1981-82) Wanda Graham - Softball (1990-93) Joe Sickles - Baseball (1981-83) Jill Stephens - Volleyball (1991-1994) Chrissy Teresi - Softball (1991-92) Stacey Ungashick - Women’s Basketball (1990-93) Jack Varasse - Honorary Member
CLASS OF 2006 Cris Allen - Baseball (1986-89) Frank Cacciatore - Baseball (1974-75) Lisa Cave - Women’s Golf (1997-2000) A.L. “Buck” Dawson - Cross Country Coach (1995-2006) Alan Grossman - Men’s Soccer (1971-74) Sandy Hudson - Volleyball (1981-82) Dr. Ed Jeffries - Women’s Tennis Coach (1981-99) Jeff Klauk - Men’s Golf (1997-2000) Frank Szabo - Administrator James Vida - Baseball (1994-95)
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIPS Florida Southern College is proud to be able to provide distinct scholarships for most of its varsity sports. Established by gifts from many generous donors, these named scholarships were created to recognize and honor an individual or were created as memorials. All of them reflect a donor’s love of sports, a desire to assist exceptional student-athletes, and a commitment to higher education. Florida Southern’s Athletic Department is extremely grateful for the support from these outstanding individuals. If you are interested in contributing to a current scholarship or establishing a new one, please call Florida Southern Athletic Director Pete Meyer at 863680-4264. WOMEN'S SOCCER • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family - Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship • Taylor Greene Memorial Scholarship
BASEBALL • Jim & Phyllis Adams Scholarship • Chuck Anderson Scholarship • John Cedarburg Scholarship • John & Rebecca Rodda Scholarship • Hal Smeltzly Scholarship
SOFTBALL • Chris Bellotto Scholarship • Stanley Gaines Scholarship • Mary Meloy Scholarship
MEN'S BASKETBALL • The Blade and The Blu Scholarship • Scott Kelly Scholarship • John P. & William P. Buckley Scholarship
MEN'S SWIMMING • Hal & Marjorie Hollis Roberts Scholarship
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL • Dick Goding Scholarship
WOMEN'S SWIMMING • Hal & Marjorie Hollis Roberts Scholarship
MEN'S & WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY/TRACK • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family - Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship
MEN'S TENNIS • David & Carol Walters Scholarship • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family - Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship
MEN'S GOLF • Tommy Billings Scholarship • Dan Burton Scholarship • Bobby Hinson - Bobby Bates Memorial Scholarship • Conner Janzen Scholarship • George Jenkins Scholarship • James "Jimmie" Sikes Scholarship • Leon "Pop" Sikes, Sr. Scholarship • Hal Sherron Fund
WOMEN'S TENNIS • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family - Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship VOLLEYBALL • Ruby Adams - Ellene Szabo Scholarship • Dorothy Cofrin Scholarship • Herman & Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship • Stephens Family Scholarship • Irene Wagner Scholarship • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family Scholarship • Lois Webb Scholarship
WOMEN'S GOLF • Tommy Billings Scholarship • Dan Burton Scholarship • Bobby Hinson - Bobby Bates Memorial Scholarship • Nell W. Phelps Scholarship
GENERAL • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family Scholarship
MEN'S SOCCER • Hubert & Margaret Webb Family - Dorothy J. Lazarz Scholarship • Dick Wells Fund
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FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
2009‐10 Women’s Golf
DIRECTIONS TO FSC
FSC’s FINISHES IN NACDA CUP
From Orlando I-4 West to exit 33. Turn left off exit, and turn right at second stoplight. Continue to major intersection at Memorial Blvd and turn left. Go 1/2 mile to Ingraham Avenue and turn right. Go to McDonald and turn right. Parking lot is on the left, just past Barnett Field.
SEASON...................... PLACE........................ PTS 1995-96.......................... 13th .........................328.0 1996-97.......................... 27th .........................283.5 1997-98........................... 5th ..........................320.0 1998-99........................... 4th ..........................320.0 1999-00........................... 4th ..........................473.0 2000-01.......................... 30th .........................310.0 2001-02.......................... 24th .........................344.0 2002-03.......................... 40th .........................310.5 2003-04.......................... 26th .........................385.5 2004-05.......................... 13th .........................445.5 2005-06.......................... 15th .........................404.0 2006-07.......................... 10th .........................554.0 2007-08.......................... 39th .........................351.5 2008-09.......................... 36th .........................375.0
From Orlando Airport Take 417 South (toll road) to I-4 West and follow directions above. From Tampa/St. Petersburg/Fort Myers Follow I-4 East to Exit 27 (570E, Polk Parkway exit). Go approximately 6.1 miles to Exit 7 (South Florida Avenue toll: 50 cents). Turn left onto 37N (South Florida Avenue) and go to McDonald Street. Turn right on McDonald and turn go seven blocks to the campus. Park in the second parking lot on the right (Barnett Field).
MOCCASIN MEN WIN SSC MAYOR’S CUP
From Palm Beach/Fort Lauderdale Take the Florida Turnpike north to Yeehaw Junction (Highway 60). Take Highway 60 to 98 North in Bartow, and 98 North into Lakeland. Watch for the Grove Park Shopping Plaza (on the left) and turn left at Crystal Lake Drive. Go to Lake Hollingsworth Drive, turn right and go around the lake to Ingraham Avenue. Turn right again, and go to stop sign (McDonald) and turn left. Parking lot will be on the left, just past Barnett Field.
Florida Southern finished tied with Barry for first in the men’s division, and was second by one point to Rollins in the women's division for the Sunshine State Conference Mayor's Cup for all-sports competition last year. The award is sponsored by the mayors of the nine communities in which SSC schools are located. The Mayor's Cup recognizes competition in six sports for men (soccer, cross country, basketball, golf, tennis and baseball), and eight sports for women (soccer, cross country, basketball, golf, tennis volleyball, softball and rowing). Points in each sport are awarded by the number of schools sponsoring teams in the respective sports. Florida Southern has won the men’s division 11 times and the women's division 10 times, more than any other school in both divisions. Season 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 1993-94 1994-95 1995-96 1996-97 1997-98 1998-99 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09
FSC MEN Place 2nd 1st 1st 5th 3rd 2nd 3rd 3rd 6th 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 3rd 2nd 1st st t-1
MAJORS and FIELDS OF STUDY Florida Southern College offers a Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts degree and also offers master’s degrees in business administration, education and nursing. For more information, call the FSC admissions office at (863) 6804131 or 1-800-274-4131. The following is a list of undergraduate majors offered at Florida Southern:
FSC WOMEN Place 1st 1st 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 5th 4th 2nd 1st 4th 1st rd 3 nd 2
Accounting Art Art Education Art History Graphic Design Studio Art Athletic Training Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Biology Business Admin. Finance Information Tech. Mgt. International Business Management Marketing Chemistry Citrus Communication Advertising Broadcast Journalism Print Journalism Public Relations Computer Science/Math.
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Criminology Economics Education Educational Studies Elementary Education Pre-K/Primary Education Special Education Certification in Secondary Ed. English Environmental Studies History Horticulture Science Landscape Horticultural Design or Production Recreational Turf Mgmt. Landscape Design Humanities Mathematics Music Music Composition or Performance Music Education Music Management
Nursing Philosophy Physical Education Political Science Psychology Religion Social Science Sociology Spanish Sports Management Theatre Arts Pre-Professional Studies Pre-Dental Pre-Engineering Pre-Forestry Pre-Law Pre-Medicine Pre-Ministry Pre-Physical Therapy Pre-Veterinary
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
Pictured from left to right: Norm Benn (assistant coach), M.J. Audette, Emily Flanigan, Adrienne Twinem, Kim Ulander, Connie Reed, Marianne Andersson, Silvie Dittertova, Amy Hodgkinson, Robbie Davis (head coach).
2009‐10 Florida Southern College Moccasins Women’s Golf Roster Name Marianne Andersson M.J. Audette Silvie Dittertova Emily Flanigan Amy Hodgkinson Connie Reed Adrienne Twinem Kim Ulander
Class Jr So. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Sr. Sr.
Hometown Bjuv, Sweden Lakeland, FL Mariánské Láznê, Czech Republic Celebration, FL Mead, CO Palm City, FL Bradenton, FL Malmo, Sweden Robbie Davis – Head Coach Norm Benn – Assistant Coach
High School/Previous School Tycho Brahe School George Jenkins HS Gymnasium Mariánské Láznê Celebration HS Skyline HS Martin County HS Lakewood Ranch HS Sunds HS
2009‐10 FLORIDA SOUTHERN WOMEN’S GOLF SCHEDULE DATE
TOURNAMENT (HOST)
SITE
Sept. 21-22 Bubba Watson Invitational Pensacola (University of West Florida) Sept. 26-27 Lady Falcon Invitational (Daytona State College)
Daytona Beach
Oct. 12-13
NSU Shark Invitational (Nova SE University)
West Palm Beach
Oct. 19-20
Saint Leo Invitational (Saint Leo University)
Saint Leo
Nov. 2-3
Stetson Fall Classic (Stetson University)
Deland
Feb. 6-7
Tusculum Intercollegiate (Tusculum College)
Kiawah Island, SC
Mar. 1-2
Lady Moc Classic (Florida Southern College)
Lakeland
Mar. 8-9
Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational (Rollins College)
Winter Springs
Mar. 26-27 UC Spring Invitational (University of Cincinnati)
Connie Reed is just one of several battle‐tested veterans on this year’s roster. The senior already owns one national championship ring from 2007, and is looking to add another one in 2010.
Crystal River
Apr. 2-4
Moorhead State Invitational Ocala (Minnesota State-Moorhead )
Apr. 19-20
SSC Tournament (Nova SE University)
Ft. Lauderdale
May 2-4
NCAA South Regional (Catawba College)
Salisbury, NC
May 12-15
NCAA National Tournament Mesa, AZ (Mesa Convention and Visitors Bureau)
12th Annual Lady Moc Classic Played at The Club at Eaglebrooke NCAA Division II South Region Tournament played at The Country Club of Salisbury NCAA Division II National Tournament played at Longbow Golf Club
2000 National Champions
Silvie Dittertova was the 2009 NGCA Freshman‐of‐the‐ Year, as well as a Second Team All‐American. She finished in the top three of five different tournaments.
2001 National Champions
2002 National Champions
2007 National Champions