The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 12

Page 17

SPORTS

THE HARVARD CRIMSON APRIL 21, 2023

17

GOLF

Junior Brian Ma has been an instrumental player to the Harvard men’s golf program this season. He went nineunder-par at the Princeton Invitational last weekend. COURTESY OF HARVARD ATHLETICS

Junior captain Meiyi Yan tees up for a stroke. Yan tied for ninth place at the Harvard Invitational with Crimson golfer Isabella Gomez with scores of three-over-par. COURTESY OF HARVARD ATHLETICS

Golf Gears Up for Ivy Title TEEING UP The Harvard golf teams will compete in the highest stakes tournament this year: the Ivy League title. BY JOSEPHINE S. ELTING CONTRIBUTING WRITER

W

hile the majority of Harvard students are hitting the books in preparation for finals, Harvard golf will be playing in its biggest tournament of the year at the Ivy League Championships this weekend. The stakes of the tournament are high — not only is an Ivy League crown on the table, but a trip to NCAA regionals is as well. Both the men’s and women’s

teams have had strong tournament finishes leading into the Ivy championship. Last weekend, the men won the Princeton Invitational against a field of teams similar to the ones they will face this weekend in Greenwich, Conn. The team’s success is due to the depth of the group, with several golfers scoring under-par, including junior Brian Ma, who went an outstanding nine-underpar. “​​Everyone has been stepping up to the occasion. Especially with their last two tournaments,” said Ma about the team’s overall performance. “I think all of us did our part.” This will serve them well against the strong set of Ivy teams they are set to face in Greenwich at the Stanwich Club, which has

held many other professional tournaments in the past, such as the USGA Mid-Am Championship and the Wyndham Cup. The women field a young team featuring four freshmen. Despite

Everyone has been stepping up to the occasion, I think all of us did our part. Brian Ma ’24 Harvard Men’s Golf

the team’s inexperience, it has found tremendous success this season, finishing in at least second place in all of its tournaments except for one. In the fall season, the team finished in seventh place in the Ivy

Intercollegiate. The tournament included Ivy League teams and stronger ACC teams that dominated the field, including Florida State University, UNC, Clemson, and Notre Dame. Since then, the group has improved and is primed to have a successful tournament this weekend. The team has shown tremendous growth this season and continues to grow to its full potential. Sophomore Catie Schernecker broke her personal best this season in the fall at the Yale Invitational, and junior captain Meiyi Yan won first place for the first time in her Ivy career at the Intercollegiate at Prospect Bay. Despite the Crimson’s recent success, winning the tournament will be no easy feat for either team — last weekend, Ma was trailed

closely by two Yale golfers who both finished 7-under-par, Gabriel Ruiz and Robert You. The Yale squad will force the Crimson golfers to have its strongest tournament if they want to pull out the win. On the women’s side, three Ivy golfers bested the top Harvard player, Charissa Shang, at last weekend’s Harvard Invitational. A Princeton, Penn, and Dartmouth golfer all went under-par while the Crimson were all onpar or above. If the team wants to continue its hot streak, all members, including the newcomers, will have to have a strong showing. “Generally our teams and a lot of Ivy teams are interested in winning the tournament next week — but only one can,” head coach Naree Song about the team’s goals

going into the tournament and the season in general. Song was named the head coach for the Harvard women’s golf program in January after guiding the team for 18 seasons in assistant coaching positions. The Bangkok, Thailand native has been an associate coach for the Crimson since 2015 after years of playing professional golf. She even played at the U.S. Open in 2000 and retired shortly after due to injury, changing course to education and coaching. The women are set to tee off at the Century Country Club in N.Y., while the men will travel to Conn. Both teams have had strong practice weeks at home and are eager to face off for the Ivy League crown.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Golf Gears Up for Ivy Title

2min
page 17

Gala for 50 Years of Title IX

7min
page 16

Harvard Streak Continues

4min
pages 15-16

Q&A: ORLANDO PATTERSON ON THE SOCIOLOGY OF SLAVERY, JAMAICAN PRIME MINISTER, AND CRICKET

3min
pages 14-15

FIFTEEN QUESTIONS

2min
page 14

‘The Orange Tree’ Review: Rich Patterns of Association

3min
page 13

Boston Ballet’s ‘Don Quixote’ Returns

5min
page 13

Annika Huprikar on Film Scoring and Following Passions

4min
page 12

Claire J. Saffitz ’09 on Bread, Butter, and the Roads Less Traveled

2min
page 12

Weld Boathouse Reopens to a New Generation of Rowers

3min
pages 11-12

City Broadband Report Released

4min
page 11

Harvard Students Run Boston Marathon

0
page 11

All Europe, All the Time —How Harvard is Failing Ethnic Studies

10min
page 10

Don’t Donate to Harvard

2min
page 9

An Open Letter from 45 Black Student Organizations and Supporters

2min
page 9

Take the Money Without the Values

3min
page 9

Harvard OCS Becomes Mignone Center for Career Success

1min
page 8

Bow & Arrow Press To Leave Adams House After Renovations

4min
page 8

Lawsuit Over Daguerreotypes Proceeds

2min
page 8

Seventeen Harvard Faculty Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences

5min
pages 7-8

Faculty Object to Comaroff’s Return

1min
page 7

HKS Receives $15M for Indigenous Governance and Development

1min
page 7

Inside the Clinic: Advancing Animal Rights

9min
pages 6-7

Harvard College Dean Khurana Affirms Importance of Free Idea Exchange

4min
page 5

Harvard IOP Director’s Internship Applicants Left Waiting Amid Delays

4min
page 5

Students Launch New Pro-Palestine Group

2min
pages 4-5

College’s DSO Considering New Club Freeze

3min
page 4

HUCTW Frustrated by Long Negotiations

5min
page 4

LAST WEEK 2

7min
pages 2-3

Black Orgs Condemn Response to Swatting

1min
page 1

Faculty Disapprove of Comaroff Returning

1min
page 1

Students Stage ‘Die-In’ at Harvard Art Museums, Demand Denaming of Sackler Buildings

1min
page 1
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.