2013-14 UTSA Women's Golf Media Guide

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Ta b l e o f Co n t en t s Introduction

Meet the Roadrunners

Roster _______________________________________ 2

Fabiola Arriaga___________________________30-31

Schedule_____________________________________ 3

Chelsea Bretcher__________________________32-33

Quick Facts__________________________________ 3

Taylor Newlin____________________________34-35

The Alamo Invitational_________________________ 4

Brogan Townend__________________________36-37 Aimee Ponte_________________________________38

This Is UTSA

Libby Thomas________________________________39

UTSA______________________________________ 6-7

Head Coach Carrie Parnaby_______________40-41

Campus Life________________________________ 8-9

Associate Head Coach Ian Parnaby____________42

Campus Recreation________________________10-11

Director of Golf Development Bill Rogers_________43

Academic Services________________________12-13

Volunteer Assistant Coach Summer Batiste_______44

Career Services___________________________14-15

Team Photo__________________________________44

Athletic Medicine____________________________16

Director of Athletics Lynn Hickey________________45

Strength & Conditioning_______________________17

President Dr. Ricardo Romo____________________46

UTSA Spirit_______________________________18-19 Conference USA__________________________20-21

History & Records

Building Champions__________________________22

2013 Fall Review____________________________48

NCAA Host Institution_________________________23

2012-13 Season Review___________________49-50

San Antonio______________________________24-27

Returnees Career Scoring_____________________51

NCAA Compliance___________________________28

Conference Honor Roll________________________52 Conference History___________________________53

Credits The 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide was designed, written and edited by Assistant AD/ Athletics Communications Kyle Stephens and Athletics Communications Assistant Sarah Flores with assistance from Assistant Athletics Communications Director Jordan Korphage. Photography Bryan Bullon, Jeff Huehn, Mark McClendon, Patrick Dunn, San Antonio Convention & Visitor’s Bureau, supporting golf courses.

NCAA Regional History_______________________53 Individual Single-Season & Career Records______54 Team Top-10 Lists_____________________________55 Individual Top-10 Lists_________________________56 Year-By-Year Results________________________57-63 Annual Team Awards_________________________64 All-Time Letterwinners_________________________64


2 0 1 3 -1 4 U T SA Road ru n n e r s

Fabiola Arriaga Sr. • Torreon, Mexico

Chelsea Bretcher Sr. • Austin, Texas

Taylor Newlin Sr. • Frisco, Texas

Aimee Ponte Fr. • St. Sampson’s, U.K.

Libby Thomas Fr. • Midland, Texas

Brogan Townend So. • Blackburn, England

Carrie Parnaby Head Coach

Bill Rogers Director of Golf Development

Ian Parnaby Associate Head Coach

Summer Batiste Volunteer Assistant Coach

2 0 1 3 -1 4 Ro s t e r Name

Ht.

Yr.-Exp.

Hometown/Previous School(s)

Fabiola Arriaga

5-6

Sr.-3L

Torreon, Mexico/Colegio Los Angeles

Chelsea Bretcher

5-7

Sr.-3L

Austin, Texas/Lake Travis HS

Taylor Newlin

5-8

Sr.-3L

Frisco, Texas/Wakeland HS

Aimee Ponte

5-3

Fr.-HS

St. Sampson’s, U.K./St. Sampson’s HS

Libby Thomas

5-4

Fr.-HS

Midland, Texas/Lee HS

Brogan Townend

5-9

So.-1L

Blackburn, England/Clitheroe Royal

Head Coach: Carrie Parnaby (sixth year, Tennessee ‘03) Associate Head Coach: Ian Parnaby (fifth year, Tennessee ‘04) Director of Golf Development: Bill Rogers (sixth year, Houston ‘73) Volunteer Assistant Coach: Summer Batiste (first year, UTSA ‘12)

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2 0 1 3 -1 4 Sc h ed u le Fall Date Event

Course

Location___________

Sept. 9-11

The “Mo”Morial

The Traditions G.C.

Bryan, Texas

Sept. 20-22

Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championship

Cherokee C.C.

Knoxville, Tenn.

Oct. 13-15

Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational

University of Texas G.C. Austin, Texas

Oct. 27-29

The Alamo Invitational

Briggs Ranch G.C.

San Antonio, Texas

Course

Location___________

Spring Date Event Feb. 23-25

Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate Championship English Turn G.C.

New Orleans, La.

March 14-16

SunTrust Gator Invitational

Mark Bostick G.C.

Gainesville, Fla.

March 21-23

LSU Tiger Classic

University Club

Baton Rouge, La.

April 4-6

SMU Invitational

Dallas Athletic Club

Dallas, Texas

April 21-23

Conference USA Championship

Peninsula G.C.

Gulf Shores, Ala.

May 8-10

NCAA Regional

TBD

TBD

May 20-23

NCAA Championship

Tulsa C.C.

Tulsa, Okla.

Home events in bold

Q u i c k Fact s General Information Name________ The University of Texas at San Antonio Location_______________________San Antonio, Texas Founded__________________________________ 1969 Enrollment_____________30,474 (25,979 undergrad.) President________________________ Dr. Ricardo Romo Alma Mater____________________________ Texas ‘67 Athletic Director_______________________ Lynn Hickey Alma Mater__________________ Ouachita Baptist ‘73 NCAA Faculty Representative______ Dr. Gregg Michel Affiliation________________________ NCAA Division I Conference_______________________ Conference USA Nickname___________________________ Roadrunners Mascot_____________________Rowdy the Roadrunner Colors__ Navy Blue (289), Orange (1665) and White

Team Information Head Coach____________ Carrie Parnaby (sixth year) Alma Mater________________________ Tennessee ‘03 Office Phone_____________________ (210) 458-4814 E-mail___________________ carrie.parnaby@utsa.edu Associate Head Coach_________________ Ian Parnaby Alma Mater________________________ Tennessee ‘04 Director of Golf Development____________ Bill Rogers Alma Mater__________________________Houston ‘73 Volunteer Assistant Coach___________ Summer Batiste Alma Mater____________________________ UTSA ‘12 First Season of Golf______________________2005-06 All-Time Tournament Championships______________ 7 Athletics Communications Assistant AD/Men’s Golf Contact______ Kyle Stephens Office Phone_____________________ (210) 458-4551 Office Fax_______________________ (210) 458-4569 E-mail_____________________ kyle.stephens@utsa.edu Website____________________________ goUTSA.com Mailing Address_____ UTSA Athletics Communications _______________________________ One UTSA Circle _______________________ San Antonio, Texas 78249

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Th e A la mo In vitation a l Briggs Ranch Golf Club 6,248 Yards • Par 72

2013 The Alamo Invitational Final Results Team Standings 1___ Oklahoma_______________278-286-276—840 (-24) 2___ LSU____________________285-279-284—848 (-16) 3___ Arkansas________________279-283-289—851 (-13) 4___ Florida___________________ 280-292-283—855 (-9) 5___ UTSA____________________ 285-286-289—860 (-4) ____ Texas A&M_______________ 281-286-293—860 (-4) 7___ TCU____________________ 289-285-292—866 (+2) 8___ Texas State______________ 292-292-286—870 (+6) 9___ Louisville________________ 290-296-286—872 (+8) 10__ Tulane_________________ 290-291-294—875 (+11) 11__ SMU__________________ 287-291-300—878 (+14) 12__ Florida State____________ 289-301-293—883 (+19) 13__ Baylor_________________ 297-295-297—889 (+25) 14__ Texas__________________ 295-304-294—893 (+29) 15__ Tennessee______________ 290-304-305—899 (+35)

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Individual Top 10 1___ Lindsay Gahm, LSU____________ 68-68-69—205 (-11) 2____Alexandra Kaui, Oklahoma_____ 68-73-65—206 (-10) 3____Sara Schober, Florida____________67-71-71—209 (-7) 4____Katerina Ruzickova, Texas A&M___71-70-70—211 (-5) 5____Anne Tanguay, Oklahoma________69-72-71—212 (-4) _____Emily Tubert, Arkansas___________68-71-73—212 (-4) 7____Taylor Newlin, UTSA____________69-70-74—213 (-3) _____Emily Collins, Oklahoma_________71-72-70—213 (-3) _____Chirapat Jao-Javanil, Oklahoma___72-69-72—213 (-3) _____Laura Lonardi, Baylor____________72-67-74—213 (-3) _____Gaby Lopez, Arkansas___________73-68-72—213 (-3) _____Caroline Nistrup, LSU____________71-71-71—213 (-3)


This Is UTSA


About UTSA The University of Texas at San Antonio was founded on June 5, 1969, by the Texas Legislature to be a “university of the first class.”

This is

UTSA serves the San Antonio metropolitan area and the broader region of South Texas through programs and services offered from its four campuses: Main Campus, Downtown Campus, Hemisfair Park Campus and Park West Campus. With nearly 31,000 students and more than 600 tenured and tenure-track faculty, UTSA is the third-largest component in The University of Texas System. UTSA offers more than 140 degree programs at the bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral levels in the colleges of Architecture, Business, Education and Human Development, Engineering, Liberal and Fine Arts, Public Policy and Sciences, as well as the Honors College, University College and Graduate School. The university’s four campuses provide access and opportunity for large numbers of historically underserved students. More than half of UTSA’s students come from groups underrepresented in higher education. Many students are the first in their families to attend a college or university.

Dr. Ricardo Romo, a San Antonio native, became UTSA’s fifth president in 1999 and is the first Hispanic president in the university’s history.

Main Building

As the region’s largest generator of engineers, artists, business professionals, teachers, scientists and technology managers, UTSA has produced more than 96,000 graduates since awarding its first degree in 1974. UTSA has more than 600 tenure and tenure-track faculty positions. Ninety-eight percent of full-time tenured and tenure-track faculty hold doctorates or equivalent terminal degrees. UTSA has a total of 59 endowed academic positions, a measure of academic excellence.

In 1973 construction began on UTSA’s original campus, now known as the Main Campus, on a 600-acre tract in the rolling foothills of San Antonio’s northwest side

In addition to the educational advantages UTSA offers, its economic impact directly and indirectly produces 1.2 billion in annual business revenues and supports an estimated 15,720 jobs in the San Antonio metropolitan statistical area. UTSA’s research specialties include health, cyber security, energy, sustainability, and human and social development. Source: UTSA Office of University Communications

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UTSA opened the 11-acre Downtown Campus in 1997.


UTSA

University Center

Mi s s i on S tat e m e n t

The University of Texas at San Antonio is dedicated to the advancement of knowledge through research and discovery, teaching and learning, community engagement and public service. As an institution of access and excellence, UTSA embraces multicultural traditions and serves as a center for intellectual and creative resources as well as a catalyst for socioeconomic development and the commercialization of intellectual property — for Texas, the nation and the world. Research and sponsored programs expenditures at UTSA increased to more than $79 million in 2011, a 71 percent increase during the last five years. UTSA is one of only 66 universities in the nation designated as a National Center of Excellence in Information Assurance by the National Security Agency.

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C a m p us L i f e Laurel Village

UTSA has five housing complexes on its Main Campus offering several styles of group living. On-campus housing accommodates more than 4,00 students. Students living on-campus are close to classrooms, the student center, food courts, library, athletics facilities and the student recreation center. San Saba Hall, Chaparral Village and Laurel Village are the newest on-campus residences and all three offer two- and four-bedroom suites with cable television, high speed Internet and kitchenettes, study rooms, a computer lab, a swimming pool and basketball courts.

C h a pa r r a l V i l l a g e

R o a d r u n n e r C a f é C o mm o n s

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UTSA’s four libraries — John Peace, Downtown Campus, Applied Engineering and Technology and Special Collections — contain more than 1.2 million books, 422,000 e-books, 34,500 e-journal subscriptions, 62,000 audiovisual items and 345 electronic databases.


Conveniently located in front of the John Peace Library on the Main Campus, the Sombrilla is a popular gathering place for UTSA students.

UTSA students, faculty and staff have many options for dining on campus.

Real Food on Campus at Roadrunner Café, located adjacent to Chaparral Village, is an all-you-care-to-eat residential restaurant that includes fresh deli sandwiches and brick oven pizza.

Other on-campus dining options include Smoothie King inside the Recreation and Wellness Center, Einstein Bros. Bagels in the Biotechnology, Sciences & Engineering Building, Extreme Pita in the Business Building and a Subway, Grill Works, Pizza and Wings, Home Zone, Monterey Cafe and C3 Convenience Store at the Downtown Campus.

The University Center (UC) Food Court houses Chili’s Too, Taco Cabana, Panda Express and Burger King, while Starbucks, Subway and a C3 Convenience Store are a short walk away.

The John Peace Library (JPL) Food Court houses Chick-fil-A, Subway, Sushic-The Sushi Company, Starbucks, Smoothie King, Bene Pizza & Pasta and a C3 Convenience Store.

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enter R e c r e at i o n & W e l l n e s s C

The UTSA Recreation & Wellness Center received the National Intramural and Recreational Sports Association Outstanding Facility Award in 2009.

Campus Rec The UTSA Recreation & Wellness Center is one of the largest campus recreation centers in the state of Texas, containing nearly 300,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor space. The facility consists of six program areas — fitness and wellness, open recreation, intramural sports, club sports, outdoor pursuits and aquatics.

The UTSA Recreation & Wellness Center houses more than 24,000 square feet of weight and cardio space.

Campus Recreation offers personal training, fitness assessments, nutritional guidance and group exercise for no additional fee. Group exercise consists of more than 25 classes ranging from yoga to kickboxing.

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The 18,000 square-foot cardio room features numerous machines ranging from tread mills, ellipticals and stationary bikes to rowers and spin bikes.

The Outdoor Aquatics Center features a three-lane lap pool, leisure pool, lazy river, hot tubs, ample lounge space, a pair of beach volleyball courts and a basketball court.

The jogging track, one-sixth of a mile in length, circles above four regulation basketball courts.

The 54-foot rockclimbing wall is the largest of its kind on any campus in the state of Texas.

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A Focus oN Academic Services M i s s i o n S tat e m e n t Team Academics was established in order to provide academic services for student-athletes. We provide the necessary academic support services for all studentathletes to be successful in the classroom and pursue an undergraduate degree while competing as an athlete. The center is dedicated to the academic and personal development of all student-athletes. Consistent with the mission of the University of Texas at San Antonio, the Athletics Department is committed to provide an environment in which student-athletes can be successful academically, athletically and socially. In doing so, the department dedicates itself to absolute compliance with the rules of the University of Texas System, the university, Conference USA and the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

V i s i o n S tat e m e n t The UTSA Athletics Department will be successful in its mission when … • Student-athletes achieve academically and compete athletically at the highest level and are prepared with skills for life. • It achieves a level of social responsibility, honesty and integrity higher than is expected by the public and is required by laws, policies, guidelines and rules. • Athletics is the focal point for school identity, pride and spirit among students, faculty, staff, alumni and the surrounding community. • The community benefits from public service, affordable entertainment and economic growth derived from athletics.

Academic Success UTSA student-athletes have earned numerous academic awards during the past decade. A league-best 27 Roadrunners were named Southland Conference Student-Athlete of the Year in their respective sports, the conference’s top honor for academic and athletics success. UTSA has had 16 student-athletes chosen as an Academic All-American, one of the top honors that can be bestowed upon a collegiate athlete, while 34 have earned Academic All-District accolades since 2003. In the last 10 years, more than 800 student-athletes have earned Southland and Western Athletic Conference academic honors.

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Academics C olin H ow le t t

In April 2009, a state-of-the-art academic learning center opened its doors to UTSA student-athletes. The 4,000 square-foot Bodenstedt Athletic Learning Center houses five study carrels, two large conference

A s s o c i a t e AD / Academic Services

rooms, a classroom, computer lab and office space for the Academic Services staff.

Colin Howlett is in his fourth year as Associate Athletics Director for Academic Services at UTSA. He is responsible for overseeing academic support services for the entire department. Howlett came to UTSA from Virginia Tech, where he was a member of the Student-Athlete Academic Support Services for 13 years. He began his tenure as Assistant Director in August 1997 and served in that capacity until his promotion to Associate Director in August 2001. He also was the Interim Director from July 2008-January 2009. While in Blacksburg, Howlett was responsible for developing and implementing academic success programs and providing academic, career and personal counseling to studentathletes in the sports of football, men’s and women’s cross country, men’s golf, men’s and women’s soccer and women’s volleyball. He also assisted in the planning and development of the department’s Learning Assistance Program, served as the liaison to the Registrar’s Office and to the Office of Services for Students with Disabilities and helped coordinate the tutorial, peer mentor and study hall programs for all student-athletes. Prior to his tenure at Virginia Tech, Howlett was an Academic/Athletic Counselor at Maine from 1996-97. He also spent two years at Austin Peay where he served as an Academic Services Intern from 1994-95 and as the Interim Compliance Coordinator for six months before joining the staff at Maine. Howlett earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration with an emphasis on human resource management from Susquehanna University in 1990. He received a master’s degree in health and physical education with an emphasis in athletic administration from Southern Mississippi in 1994.

Matt Leituala

Sara Gothelf

Emily Patton

Bill Hickey

A s s i s ta n t AD/ Academic Services

A c a d e m i c C o o r d i n at o r

A c a d e m i c C o o r d i n at o r

L i f e S k i ll s C o o r d i n at o r

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Student-Athlete Career Services

Career

Co n n e ct i n g U TSA S t u d e n t - At hletes to C a re e r De ve l o p m e n t R e sour ces “There are more than 380,000 student-athletes and most of them go pro in something other than sports.” — NCAA Public Service Announcement The mission of the UTSA University Career Center is to assist students and alumni in identifying and developing the skills necessary to pursue lifelong career goals. The Career Center provides comprehensive career planning, job search skill development and a wide range of tools and resources designed to assist students and alumni in conducting a successful job search. The Career Center’s website, hireroadrunners.com, contains full-time professional, internship, co-op, work-study and parttime job listings, which are updated daily. Dozens of employers visit campus each year to interview UTSA students for full-time professional positions, as well as intern, co-op and other jobs. Multiple career fairs are held each semester and are attended by hundreds of employers from a variety of disciplines. These events offer information on full- and part-time jobs, internships and more. The Career Center employs a total of 11 career counselors, one of which, Stefanie Cisneros, is dedicated to serving student-athletes at UTSA. Individual career counseling appointments are available with counselors to discuss any aspect of your career development. They will use a variety of methods to help you learn more about career interests, including free online career assessments. In addition, career counselors can assist you in developing job search skills such as resumé writing, interview preparation and networking skills. Throughout the year, a variety of workshops are offered on various career-related topics, including several designed specifically for student-athletes.

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Why do employers seek student-athletes?

Student-Athletes possess many of the skills and abilities which are often sought by organization recruiters. Characteristics such as mental toughness, self-confidence, and performing under pressure are needed to be successful in any workplace. Listed below are additional qualities athletes can transfer from the playing field into the workplace. TEN QUALITIES OF T EAM P LAYERS • Time management • Teamwork • Goal-directed • Competitive • Confidence • Persistence and endurance • Loyalty • Discipline • Ability to accept constructive criticism • Resilience Adapted from: Bohac, Jennifer. Career Game Plan for Student-Athletes, Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 2000.


Services Career Center Partner Organizations

Hundreds of employers converge on the UTSA campus each year to participate in career fairs, information sessions and networking events and as guest speakers for workshops and in classrooms. Listed below is a sampling of just a few of the organizations with which the Career Center partners. Organizations marked with an asterisk have previously hired UTSA student-athletes for internships or full-time positions. AT&T * bp Energy * Capital Group Companies CIA CPS Energy Deloitte and Touche, LLP * Enterprise * Ernst & Young LLP FBI Frost Bank Harlandale ISD HEB Hyatt Hotels and Resorts * Judson ISD * KPMG LLP Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment * Medtronic * Microsoft Corporation NASA National Security Agency New York Life Northeast ISD Northrop Grumman Northside ISD Northwestern Mutual NuStar Energy Padgett Stratemann & Co., LLP Pape-Dawson Pepsi Bottling Group Planto Roe Financial Services, Inc. Raytheon San Antonio ISD Sapient Financial Group Southwest ISD Southwest Research Institute South San Antonio ISD Sportball Systems, Inc. Spurs Sports and Entertainment Target Corporation * TCEQ Tesoro Companies, Inc. Toyota Union Pacific Railroad United States Census Bureau U.S. Department of State U.S. Marshals USAA Valero Energy Corporation Veteran’s Administration Walgreens * Walt Disney World Wells Fargo Westin YMCA Zachry Holdings, Inc.

S t e fa n i e Cisneros Student-Athlete Career Counselor Stefanie Cisneros is in her sixth year as career counselor for all UTSA student-athletes and her 13th year as a staff member at the UTSA Career Center Office. During her tenure, Cisneros has had the opportunity to speak to national audiences through professional presentations at the Southern Association of Colleges and Employers Annual Conference, the American Humanics Management Institute, the California Association for Counseling and Development Regional Conference and as a co-presenter at the National Careers Conference. Her most recent presentation, “Transfer the Magic from Playing Field to Career Field”, addressed the career development needs of student-athletes and best practices for working effectively with student-athlete populations and athletics departments. Cisneros is currently involved in several professional organizations, including memberships in the National Career Development Association (NCDA), Southern Association of Colleges and Employers (SoACE), National Association for Colleges and Employers (NACE) and the Texas Cooperative Education and Internship Association (TXCEIA). Cisneros graduated from UTSA in 2001 with a bachelor of science degree in kinesiology and completed a master of arts degree in community counseling from UTSA in 2008.

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Athletic Medicine The UTSA Athletic Training Department is committed to providing the highest standard of sports medicine care to all Roadrunners studentathletes. This includes education, prevention, evaluation, recognition, treatment and rehabilitation of injuries and illnesses associated with athletic participation. Referral necessary for additional medical and psychological evaluation and treatment is also provided. The athletics training staff is dedicated to this mission and compliance with UTSA, Conference USA and NCAA rules and regulations. The UTSA training staff works under the direction of Associate Athletics Director for Athletic Medicine, Jerry Greeson. All of the physicians that work with the training staff come from the University of Texas Health Science Center Medical School and those physicians, along with selected non-physicians, compose the sports medicine team. The training staff is responsible for the care, prevention and rehabilitation of athletic injuries, taping and wrapping procedures, emergency situations should they occur, attendance of practices and home and away events that occur to 16 intercollegiate sports. UTSA student-athletes receive care from a centralized training center which has state-of-the-art therapeutic modalities and rehabilitation equipment to give student-athletes the best care available.

Jerry Greeson

Brenna Ellis

Rhodie Moss

A s s o c i at e A.D./ Athletic Medicine

A s s o c i at e H e a d Athletic Trainer

A s s i s ta n t A t h l e t i c Trainer

Richard Campbell

Robert Lamb

Meghan McCaffrey

A s s i s ta n t A t h l e t i c Trainer

A s s i s ta n t A t h l e t i c Trainer

A s s i s ta n t A t h l e t i c Trainer

Intern: Josh Modica Medical Consultants Richard Holcomb, Director of Sports Medicine; David Schmidt, Head Orthopaedic Physician; Timothy Palomera, Orthopaedic Physician; Jaime Garza, Surgeon

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UTSA student-athletes receive care from a centralized training center, which has state-ofthe-art therapeutic modalities and rehabilitation equipment to give them the best care available.


Strength & Conditioning UTSA student-athletes are running faster and getting stronger thanks to a commitment to an enhanced strength and conditioning program and a new weight room.

Mission Statement

The UTSA Strength & Conditioning Department provides athletes the means by which they can train consistently, sensibly and systematically over designated periods of time in a safe, clean and professional environment to help prevent injury and improve athletics performance.

Philosophy

The philosophy of the University of Texas at San Antonio strength & conditioning program adheres strictly to the three proven scientific principles of adaptation … Specificity The transfer of a training adaptation to a gain in competition performance. Overload Adaptation takes place when the magnitude of training is greater than normal and is achieved by prescribing the correct number of sets, repetitions and intensity of effort. The primary focus is the muscular and energy systems’ adaptation to overload. Periodization Training phases must be planned so that speed, agility, power and endurance will peak during the most important competitions.

Strength & conditioning Staff

Charlie Dudley

Travis Reust

Derrick Jenkins

Director

A s s o c i at e D i r e c t o r

A s s i s ta n t D i r e c t o r

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UTSA Spirit The Mascot

The Roadrunner, a bird representative of the Texas Hill Country and the Southwest, was voted the UTSA mascot in 1977, defeating the armadillo in a student election. The choice was officially adopted in early 1978.

Rowdy the Roadrunner was ranked No. 12 on Yahoo! Sports’ Top 25 Most Unique Mascots

The School Colors

Official colors of the University of Texas System are orange and white. Upon recommendation from the UTSA Student Representative Assembly, the Board of Regents approved the addition of navy blue to the orange and white for UTSA’s colors for athletics competition.

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UTSA Fight Song Go, Roadrunners, Go! On to vict’ry with all your might. Fight, Roadrunners, Fight! For the Blue and the Orange and the White. We fight for U-T-S-A Alma Mater proud and strong. Win, Roadrunners, Win! And unite in our battle song.

The Alma Mater

Music to “Hail UTSA,” the alma mater of the University of Texas at San Antonio, was composed by Dr. Joe Stuessy, Professor of Music. Lyrics were written by Dr. Alan Craven, Director of the Division of English, Classics and Philosophy at UTSA. HAIL UTSA From our hills of oak and cedar To the Alamo Voices raised will echo As, in song, our praises flow. Hail Alma Mater! Through the years our loyalty will grow. The University of Texas at San Antonio

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Conference USA

On May 4, 2012, UTSA accepted an invitation to join Conference USA. The Roadrunners officially joined the league on July 1, 2013, and will compete against teams from Charlotte, East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, FIU, Louisiana Tech, Marshall, Middle Tennessee North Texas, Old Dominion, Rice, Southern Miss, Tulane, Tulsa, UAB and UTEP.

“Today is another outstanding day to be a Roadrunner. We are very excited about our new partnership with Conference USA. It is a great fit for us, and it is a significant step forward for the University and the entire city of San Antonio.” — UTSA President Dr. Ricardo Romo

“We are pleased to welcome UTSA to Conference USA. They are an amazing University in a very dynamic and vibrant city. Without a doubt, they will be a good fit for us. What is truly impressive is the way they launched their football program, which is a tribute to the strong leadership in place.” — Conference USA Commissioner Britton Banowsky

UTSA Director of Athletics Lynn Hickey, UTSA President Dr. Ricardo Romo and Chairman of the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce Football Task Force John Montford announced the University’s move into Conference USA in a press conference on May 4, 2012.

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From its beginning in 1995, Conference USA’s dedication to excellence has been the league’s guiding principle and remains a common thread today and for a promising future. Throughout the changes during the C-USA history, the conference has held onto its strong foundation that reflects the league’s national presence. These 16 schools have compiled numerous athletic and academic achievements. Additionally, the C-USA footprint will grow by nearly 20 percent, while providing the geography that allows for a divisional scheduling model that will be beneficial to the student-athletes, fan-friendly and cost effective. Conference USA sponsors competition in 20 sports - nine for men (baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, tennis and indoor and outdoor track and field) and 11 for women (basketball, cross country, golf, rowing, softball, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and field and volleyball). The league sponsors numerous academic awards, including the Commissioner’s Honor Roll and the Commissioner’s Academic Medal, indicative of outstanding achievement in the classroom, in addition to sport specific AllAcademic teams. C-USA annually awards 12 postgraduate scholarships, along with the Sport Academic Award, Scholar Athletes of the Year and the Institutional Academic Excellence Award. Conference USA also added a Spirit of Service Award, recognizing student-athletes three times a year for a combination of significant community service efforts, good academic standing and participation in their elected sport. SUCCESS ON THE PLAYING FIELD Conference USA performers have achieved great success in competition, placing the league among the top conferences in the nation. Football • 72 teams have earned bowl bids • Member of the Bowl Championship Series • Bowl tie-ins with the AutoZone Liberty Bowl, Beef ‘O’ Brady’s St. Petersburg Bowl, Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl, Heart of Dallas Bowl, Military Bowl, R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl and Sheraton Hawai’i Bowl Men’s Basketball • Consistently rated as one of the top basketball leagues in the country • 108 postseason teams (50 NCAA, 42 NIT, 8 CBI, 8 CIT) • One National Championship title game appearance • Three Final Four teams • Seven Elite Eight NCAA Tournament teams • One NIT Champion and four NIT semifinalists • Inaugural CBI Champion • CIT Champion Women’s Basketball • 48 NCAA Tournament appearances • 43 WNIT appearances • One team in the NCAA Sweet 16 • Two WNIT semifinalists • One WBI Champion

Baseball • 58 NCAA appearances • Six College World Series appearances (2009, 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005 and 2001) • 14 Super Regional appearances • Has produced at least four NCAA teams in nine of the last 12 seasons In addition, 37 volleyball teams, 67 men’s and women’s soccer teams and 39 softball teams have earned NCAA Tournament bids. C-USA has sent three men’s soccer teams to the NCAA College Cup, three softball teams to the Women’s College World Series and three volleyball teams to the Sweet 16. The league has also had nine national champions in NCAA track and field competition, one national champion in diving and numerous NCAA individual and team competitors in cross country, golf, swimming, tennis and track and field. Overall, Conference USA teams and individuals have made more than 700 NCAA appearances. SUCCESS OFF THE FIELD C-USA institutions are among the nation’s best in academic performance among studentathletes, bolstered by the fact that student-athletes at league schools have a higher graduation rate than the general student population. Among C-USA’s 5,000 student-athletes, there are champions off the playing field as well. In 18 years, 176 student-athletes earned national Capital One Academic All-America honors, while 618 were named All-District. In addition, more than 26,000 student-athletes have been named to the Commissioner’s Honor Roll or received the Commissioner’s Academic Medal, indicative of outstanding achievement in the classroom. C-USA ON TV C-USA enjoys significant television exposure through partnerships with FOX Sports Media Group, CBS Sports Network and ESPN. The multi-tiered selection process that is rooted in partnering with all three networks has substantially increased the number of national and regional appearances for football, men’s and women’s basketball, and all other conference sports. As one the largest FBS conferences in 2013, C-USA membership will include institutions in 12 of the Top 65 television markets, eight in the Top 40 and four in the Top 25 media markets according to Nielson. C-USA home markets next year will include more than 14.5 million TV households, a 43 percent increase from a year ago. C-USA DIGITAL NETWORK The C-USA Digital Network officially launched in August of 2011. Network programming includes live streaming of nontelevised events, video on demand, a weekly C-USA studio show, podcasting, regularseason and championship event highlights and conference-produced feature stories. In its first year, 1,164 events were streamed live and 8,126 videos were posted and available on the C-USA Digital Network, and that number just keeps growing. Monthly and yearly subscriptions offer fans access to events offered on all of the C-USA member institution’s athletic websites as well as C-USA network programming.

C-USA IN THE COMMUNITY The conference’s current footprint is concentrated with 16 members in nine states and a combined area population of nearly 17 million. With a commitment to community involvement, the conference developed several initiatives to maintain strong ties in C-USA cities, as well as with fans and alumni across the country. C-USA schools also place a priority on giving back to their communities through volunteer service with local and national organizations. Individually, student-athletes are recognized each season through the Spirit of Service award. GOVERNANCE Conference USA has significant representation in the NCAA governance structure. The Presidents of the member institutions serve as the league’s Board of Directors. A PROUD HISTORY Conference USA was formed in 1995 and quickly emerged as one of the nation’s top conferences. The conference unveiled its name, logo and commissioner April 24, 1995 in Chicago. The league’s charter members included Charlotte, Cincinnati, DePaul, Houston, Louisville, Marquette, Memphis, Saint Louis, Southern Miss, Tulane, UAB and USF. Eleven of the institutions began athletic participation in 1995, while Houston joined competition in the fall of 1996. The league’s headquarters were established in Chicago and, after nine years, relocated to the current office in Irving, Texas. Britton Banowsky was named Commissioner in October 2002, succeeding Mike Slive, the league’s first commissioner. C-USA added East Carolina (September, 1996) and the United States Military Academy (March, 1997) as football members. ECU began league competition in 1997; Army in 1998 and UAB began football play in 1999. The league added TCU and ECU (1999) for all sports and they began competition in 2001. USF started C-USA football in 2003. Marshall, Rice, SMU, Tulsa, UCF and UTEP became full-time members of Conference USA in 2005. Conference USA officially got a new look on July 1, 2013, while maintaining the same commitment to excellence, integrity and leadership in athletics, academics and in our communities. Eight institutions, including the return of charter member Charlotte along with FIU, Florida Atlantic, Louisiana Tech, Middle Tennessee, North Texas, Old Dominion and UTSA, joined with East Carolina, Marshall, Rice, Southern Miss, Tulane, Tulsa, UAB and UTEP.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 21


Building Champions 2012-13 UTSA Accomplishments • Western Athletic Conference (WAC) Commissioner’s Cup Champions • Two WAC Championships (baseball and men’s indoor track & field) • Three NCAA team postseason appearances (baseball, women’s golf, men’s indoor track & field) • Three All-America honors • Two WAC Players or Athletes of the Year (McKenzie Adams, volleyball; Richard Garrett Jr., men’s indoor track & field) • 71 All-Western Athletic Conference honorees • 25 WAC Athlete or Player of the Week winners • 96 Western Athletic Conference All-Academic Team selections • National rankings for men’s tennis and women’s golf President Dr. Ricardo Romo and Athletics Director • Football finished with an 8-4 record in just its second season of Lynn Hickey pose with the Western Athletic competition and posted a fourth-place finish in the WAC Conference Commissioner’s Cup trophy. • Women’s golf earned the school’s first at-large bid to an NCAA Championship event in any sport

that included an 8-4 record ed st po am te BS) teams, The football l Subdivision (F w Bo ll ba ot Fo histor y. four wins over e first in school which were th

r third picked up thei am te lf go ’s en ter earning The wom appearance af al on gi Re consecutive NCAA r at-large selection to an NCAA st-eve the school’s fir event. Championship

22 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

The men’s indoor tra ck & field team cont inued its dominance in the ne w league by claiming the Western Athletic Conference Championship in Fe bruary. It was the eighth consecut ive league title for the program.

The baseball team finished off a perfe ct run through the Western Athletic Co nference Tourname nt with an 11-4 win over Dallas Ba ptist to earn the prog ram’s third appearance in an NCAA Regional.


NCAA Host Institution UTSA has served as the host institution for 12 NCAA Championship events during the past 14 years and will host three additional events, including NCAA Men’s and Women’s Golf Regionals in 2014 and 2015, respectively.

UTSA’s NCAA Championship Legacy

• 1997 Men’s Basketball Midwest Regional • 1998 Men’s Final Four • 1998 Men’s Golf Central Regional • 2001 Men’s Basketball Midwest Regional • 2002 Women’s Final Four • 2003 Men’s Basketball South Regional • 2004 Men’s Final Four • 2005 Women’s Volleyball Championship • 2006 Women’s Basketball San Antonio Regional • 2007 Men’s Basketball South Regional • 2008 Men’s Final Four • 2010 Women’s Final Four • 2011 Men’s Basketball Southwest Regional • 2011 Women’s Volleyball Championship • 2014 Men’s Basketball Second & Third Rounds • 2014 Men’s Golf San Antonio Regional • 2015 Women’s Golf Central Regional

Briggs Ranch Golf Club — the home of the UTSA golf teams — will serve as the host course for the 2014 NCAA Men’s San Antonio Regional and the 2015 NCAA Women’s Central Regional.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 23


About San Antonio

The Alamo

San Antonio has a population of approximately 1.3 million, making it the nation’s seventh-largest city. San Antonio was the fastest growing of the 10 largest cities from 2000-10. With more than 25 million visitors per year, San Antonio is one of the top tourist destinations in the United States. San Antonio boasts some of the state’s most-visited attractions: The Alamo, The River Walk, SeaWorld® San Antonio and Six Flags® Fiesta Texas®. Settled in 1718, San Antonio is one of the American West’s oldest cities and its rich history surfaces in its architecture, neighborhoods, food, culture and traditions. With 300 days of sunshine annually and an average temperature of 70 degrees, San Antonio is an ideal destination year round.

This is

San Antonio has 14,518 acres of parks and 118 miles of mostly urban hike-and-bike trails in the metropolitan area. San Antonio boasts one of the largest military concentrations in the country with Fort Sam Houston, Lackland Air Force Base and Randolph Air Force Base located in the city. San Antonio is home to five Fortune 500 companies: Valero Energy, Tesoro Petroleum, Clear Channel Communications, USAA and NuStar Energy. The largest medical research and care provider in South Texas, the South Texas Medical Center, calls San Antonio home. San Antonio is a sports town, as it is home to six professional sports franchises: the four-time NBA Champion Spurs, the WNBA’s Silver Stars, the American Hockey League’s Rampage, the San Diego Padres’ Double-A affiliate Missions, the Arena Football League’s Talons and the North American Soccer League’s Scorpions. San Antonio is a sports destination, as it annually hosts the Valero Alamo Bowl, the U.S. Army AllAmerican Bowl, the PGA Tour Valero Texas Open and the Champions Tour AT&T Championship. The city also has hosted three NCAA Men’s Final Fours, two Women’s Final Fours, six NCAA Basketball Regionals, three Big 12 Football Championship Games and Dallas Cowboys Training Camps. Sources: San Antonio Convention & Visitors Bureau

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Tower

of the

Americas


Alamodome

Six Flags F i e s ta T e x a s

SeaWorld

San Antonio The River Walk

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 25


S an A nt o n i o A D e sti n ati o n Cit y

It’s easy to see why more than 25 million people visit San Antonio each year. With 300 days of sunshine annually and an average temperature of 70 degrees, the nation’s seventh-largest city is an ideal destination year round. The Alamo City boasts some of the state’s most visited attractions: The Alamo, The River Walk, SeaWorld® San Antonio and Six Flags® Fiesta Texas®.

Schlitterbahn, in nearby New Braunfels, is the world’s top-ranked waterpark.

Two of the nation’s top theme parks, SeaWorld (left) and Six Flags Fiesta Texas, call San Antonio home.

The Alamo is one of five Spanish missions built along the San Antonio River between 1718-31.

26 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

Mission Concepcion

Mission San Juan

Mission San José

Mission Espada


Hundreds of hotels, restaurants, night spots and shops line the city’s urban core, including the magical River Walk.

The River Walk is one of the most visited tourist attractions in the state of Texas.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 27


N CA A Comp l i anc e The NCAA Rules

and

Fans

Compliance with NCAA rules is one of the highest priorities for our athletics program and institution. As a member of the NCAA, the University of Texas at San Antonio is accountable for the actions of its boosters and fans. Even the bestintentioned action on a fan’s part may be a violation of NCAA rules. Please contact the UTSA Compliance Office if you have any questions concerning what is permissible. Inquiries should be directed to the UTSA Compliance Office at this address: UTSA Compliance Office Intercollegiate Athletics One UTSA Circle San Antonio, TX 78249 Phone: (210) 458-5493

Representatives of Athletics Interests A “representative of UTSA’s athletics interests,” or booster, is anyone who: • Has ever participated in or is currently a member of the various athletics department support groups; • Has made a donation to the athletics program; • Has helped arrange summer and/ or vacation employment for studentathletes; or • Has been involved, in anyway, in the promotion of UTSA’s athletics program

Extra Benefits

Prospective and current studentathletes may not receive extra benefits. An extra benefit is any special arrangement by an institutional employee or representative of the institution’s athletic interests to provide a student-athlete or his/her family a benefit not authorized by NCAA legislation. Extra benefits would include, but are not limited to: • An employment arrangement for a prospect’s relatives; • Gifts of clothing or equipment; • Cosigning of loans; • Providing loans to a prospect’s relatives or friends; • Cash or like items; • Use of an automobile; • Any tangible items, including merchandise; • Free or reduced-cost services, rentals or purchases of any type; • Free or reduced-cost housing • Use of a college’s athletic equipment; • Sponsorship of or arrangement for an awards banquet for high school, prep school or two-year college athletes by a college, athletics representative or its alumni groups; • Employment of a student-athlete at a rate higher then the wages paid for similar work; and • Payment to a student-athlete for work not performed.

Recruiting

Only coaches and athletics department staff may be involved in the recruiting process. Athletic representatives are prohibited from contacting a prospective student-athlete or members of his/her family by telephone, letter, e-mail, or in person for the purpose of encouraging participation in athletics at The University of Texas at San Antonio. This includes contacting prospective student-athletes on social media (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) The prohibition remains in effect even after the prospect signs a national letterof-intent (scholarship offer). You can do your part by forwarding names of any potential recruits to the UTSA coaching staffs.

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Prospective Student-Athlete

A prospective student-athlete is a person who has started classes for the ninth grade. You can become a prospect even if you have not started the ninth grade, if a college gives you or your relatives any financial aid help or other benefits that it does not give others. Before a prospect can make an official visit to UTSA, he/she must present (1) a score from a PSAT, SAT or ACT test (through an official high school or testing agency), (2) an academic transcript, and (3) must register with the NCAA Eligibility Center and must be placed on the institution’s Institution Request List with the NCAA Eligibility Center.

Visiting UTSA Official Visit: An “official visit” is a visit paid in whole or in part by the university and cannot exceed 48 hours in length. A prospect can make a total of five official visits, with a limit of only one per university. Unofficial Visit: An “unofficial visit” is a visit made at the prospect’s own expense. The university may provide (a) three complimentary tickets to an on-campus athletics event in which the university’s team is competing and (b) transportation to view offcampus practice and competition sites within a 30-mile radius. Prospects can make as many unofficial visits as they want. More information concerning recruiting and initial eligibility can be found online at: ncaa.org goUTSA.com


Meet The Roadrunners


Fabiola Arriaga 5-6 • Senior Torreon, Mexico • Colegio Los Angeles 2012 Southland Conference Player of the Year 2011 Southland Conference Freshman of the Year Three-Time First-Team All-Conference Career Bests Round: 68(2x), last at 2013 Alamo Invitational 54-hole Score: 212, 2012 Golfweek Conference Challenge Finish: t-1st, 2011 Southland Conference Championship As a Senior (Fall 2013) Competed in all four fall tournaments … led the team with a 73.55 stroke average … tied for 13th at the Alamo Invitational after carding a 214 (6874-72) … helped the Roadrunners register a school-record four-under-par 860 in finishing fifth at The Alamo Invitational … recorded a 71-76-77—224 to place 20th at The “Mo”Morial … tied for 39th with a 70-76-76—222 at the Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate … posted a 76-73—149 tying for 39th at the Betsy Rawls Invitational. As a Junior (2012-13) Named first-team All-Western Athletic Conference … first player in program history to be named to the conference’s top squad in three consecutive years … played in all 11 tournaments and led the team with a 74.81 stroke average … posted 70 birdies to rank first on the team … notched top-10 finishes in five events, highlighted by a tie for second place at the Golfweek Conference Challenge where she set personal bests with a round of 68 and 54-hole score of 212 … posted a 71-73-71—215 en route to a fifth-place finish at the Dale McNamara Invitational … tied for sixth at the WAC Championship after carding a 223 (76-74-73). As a Sophomore (2011-12) Earned Southland Conference Player of the Year honors after leading the league and setting a school record with a 74.91 stroke average … second player in program history to be named to the conference’s top squad in back-to-back seasons … one of four players to appear in all 11 tournaments … recorded five top-five and seven top-10 finishes on the campaign … finished in sixth place or better at four of the six spring tournaments … earned individual medalist

A rriaga ’ s Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish 2010-11______ 32-2,440_________71___________76.25__________________ t1st at Southland Conference Championship 2011-12______ 33-2,472_________69___________74.91________________________________1st at The Alamo Invitational 2012-13______ 31-2,319_________68___________74.81_____________________ t2nd at Golfweek Conference Challenge Fall 2013______ 11-809__________68___________73.55___________________________________ t20th at The “Mo”Morial Totals_________ 107-8,040_________ 68___________75.14________________________________1st at The Alamo Invitational 30 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


honors and aided the team’s victory at The Alamo Invitational with a 213 (69-72-72), which was good for three-under-par … posted an identical score and a second-place finish at the Challenge at Onion Creek the following week … her first round scores of 69 in both events were personal bests. As a Freshman (2010-11 Named Southland Conference Freshman of the Year after recording a 76.25 stroke average that ranked second on the team … one of three players to appear in all 11 tournaments … became just the second freshman in program history to be named to the conference’s first-team … best finish came at the Southland Championship where she sank a 30-foot putt to on No. 18 to force a playoff … recorded five top-20 finishes … best 54-hole score was a 222 (74-75-73) at the Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate … recorded her best round (71) at the UCF Challenge … shot a finalround 72 to help UTSA set team records for 18 and 54-hole scores at the Mercedes-Benz Championship. Prior to UTSA Played for the Mexican National Team the last two seasons (200910) … placed fourth at the Naccional Inerizonas and competed at the National Athletic Olympics in 2010 … captured the Naccional Queretaro individual title and finished first at the US Girls Qualifier in 2009 … helped the national team place sixth at the 2009 Junior Americas Cup. Personal Full name is Fabiola Arriaga Bujdud … born on April 29, 1992, in Torreon, Mexico … daughter of Alfonso Arriaga and Luz Maria Bujdud … has one brother, Alfonso and one sister, Luz Maria … majoring in communications.

A rriaga on the C ourse Fall 2010 t16___ Chip-N Club Invitational_______________ 74-78—152 t21___ William K. Warren Irish Invitational___ 74-77-82—233 t59___ Mercedes-Benz Championship__________ 81-77-72—230 t24___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 77-73-75—225 Spring 2011 t28___ UCF Challenge____________________ 75-71-78—224 t20___ Islander Classic____________________ 79-74-76—229 t13___ Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate___ 74-75-73—222 t15___ BYU at Entrada Classic_____________ 76-82-72—230 t35___ Baylor Spring Invitational___________ 80-80-75—235 t1____ Southland Conference Championship__ 75-73-75—223 t77___ NCAA West Regional______________ 80-78-77—237 Fall 2011 t41___ The “Mo”Morial___________________ 75-77-85—237 t8____ Golfweek Conference Challenge______ 74-74-76—224 t45___ Susie Maxwell Berning Classic_______ 79-77-75—231 1____ The Alamo Invitational______________ 69-72-72—213 t2____ Challenge at Onion Creek___________ 69-72-72—213 Spring 2012 t58___ UCF Challenge____________________ 74-74-81—229 t4____ Islanders Classic___________________ 76-74-76—226 t3____ Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate___ 75-70-73—218 t6____ Anuenue Spring Break Classic_______ 74-74-74—222 2____ Southland Conference Championship__ 71-76-73—220 t84___ NCAA Central Regional____________ 82-80-77—239 Fall 2012 5____ Dale McNamara Invitational_________ 71-73-71—215 t2____ Golfweek Conference Challenge______ 75-68-69—212 t26___ Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate________ 75-74-73—222 t10___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 72-69-73—214 t34___ Seminole Match Up________________ 77-80-73—230 Spring 2013 t74___ Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate_______ 78-79—157 t38___ Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate__ 78-77-76—231 7____ Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout____________ 86-72—158 t13___ SMU Invitational___________________ 75-76-78—229 t6____ WAC Championship_______________ 76-74-73—223 t73___ NCAA Central Regional____________ 74-75-79—228 Fall 2013 t20___ The “Mo”Morial___________________ 71-76-77—224 t39___ Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate___________ 76-73—149 t39___ Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational_____ 70-76-76—222 t13___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 68-74-72—214

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 31


Chelsea Bretcher 5-7 • Senior Austin, Texas • Lake Travis HS Career Bests Round: 70, 2013 Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational 54-hole Score: 222, 2012 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Finish: t-26th, 2012 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate

As a Senior (Fall 2013) Competed in three fall events … posted a 78.78 stroke average … helped the Roadrunners register a school-record four-under-par 860 in finishing fifth at The Alamo Invitational … … recorded a career-best round of 70 while tying for 48th at the Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational. As a Junior (2012-13) Member of the WAC All-Academic Team … played in six tournaments … ranked fifth on the team with a 77.84 stroke average … set a personal-best finish (t26th) and 54-hole score (222) at the MercedesBenz Intercollegiate … carded a 224 at The Alamo Invitational to tie for 39th. As a Sophomore (2011-12) Named to the Southland Conference Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll … appeared as an individual at The Alamo Invitational, posting a 73-78-73—224 in tying for 27th-place. As a Freshman (2010-11) Saw action in a pair of tournaments and recorded a 79.80 stroke average … best round came in her first as a Roadrunner, a 77 in the opening round of the Chip-N Club Invitational … tied for 36th at the

B retcher ’ s Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish 2010-11________ 5-399___________77___________79.80_______________________t36th at Mercedes-Benz Championship 2011-12________ 3-224___________73___________74.67______________________________t27th at The Alamo Invitational 2012-13______ 19-1,243_________72___________77.84_______________________ t26th at Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Fall 2013_______ 9-709___________70___________78.78____________________ t48th at Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational Totals_________ 36-2,575_________ 70___________71.53_______________________ t26th at Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate

32 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


B retcher

on the

tournament, her best finish of the season … tied for 59th at the

C ourse

Fall 2010 t36___ Chip-N Club Invitational_______________ 77-79—156 t59___ Mercedes-Benz Championship__________ 83-78-82—243 Fall 2011 t27___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 73-78-73—224

Mercedes-Benz Championship with a 243 (83-78-82) … tied for 39th at the 2011 Texas Women’s Open with a 152 (73-79) … named to the Southland Conference Commissioner’s Honor Roll. Prior to UTSA Four-year letterwinner at Lake Travis High School … collected alldistrict, all-region and all-state honors as a senior … finished eighth

Fall 2012 t55___ Dale McNamara Invitational_________ t26___ Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate________ t39___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 52___ Seminole Match Up________________

with a two-day total of 156 (81-75) in the individual standings at

78-78-78—234 73-75-74—222 76-76-72—224 82-76-78—236

Spring 2013 t85___ Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate_______ 77-83—160 t50___ Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate__ 78-83-75—236 14___ Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout_____________ 87-80—167 Fall 2013 t58___ The “Mo”Morial___________________ 79-86-81—246 t48___ Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational_____ 80-74-70—224 79___ The Alamo Invitational______________ 80-80-79—239

the state tournament… named Most Valuable Player and garnered all-academic district, region and state accolades in 2010 … earned first-team all-district and all-region certificates and named honorable mention all-state in 2009 … helped her team win district titles fall four years … led her squad to regional titles in three of her four seasons. Personal Full name is Chelsea Rachel Bretcher … born on Feb. 11, 1992, in Plantation, Fla. … daughter of Jack and Jill Bretcher … has one brother, Richard … majoring in marketing and plans to work in either fashion or sports marketing.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 33


Taylor Newlin 5-8 • Senior Frisco, Texas • Wakeland HS Three-Time Second-Team All-Conference Career Bests Round: 69 (2x), last at 2013 Alamo Invitational 54-hole Score: 213, 2013 Alamo Invitational Finish: t1st, 2012 Islanders Classic

As a Senior (Fall 2013) Competed in all four fall tournaments … ranked third on the team with a 75.09 stroke average … broke the program record for the low 36-hole total by firing a 139 at The Alamo Invitational … posted a career-best 54-hole score of 213 (69-70-74) en route to a seventh-place finish at the event … helped the Roadrunners register a school-record four-under-par 860 in finishing fifth at The Alamo Invitational … carded a 74-75—149 to tie for 39th at the Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate. As a Junior (2012-13) Named second-team All-Western Athletic Conference … member of the WAC All-Academic Team and Women’s Golf Coaches Association’s All-American Scholar Team … played in all 11 tournaments and ranked third on the team with a 76.03 stroke average … recorded a 227 (73-79-75) at the WAC Championship to tie for 12th … tied for 15th at The Alamo Invitational with a 216 (72-73-71) … carded a 72-78-71—221 to tie for 23rd at the MercedesBenz Intercollegiate … posted 67 birdies which ranked second on the team. As a Sophomore (2011-12) Earned second-team All-Southland Conference honors … named to the Southland Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll … one of four players to appear in all 11 tournaments and recorded the third-best stroke average on the squad (76.88) … recorded three top-10 finishes, including her first career victory at the Islanders Classic … carded a 220 at that event and The Alamo Invitational for her low 54-hole scores of the season … low round of 70 came in the final 18 holes of The Alamo Invitational, where she finished in 16th place … her 61 birdies ranked fourth on the team and fired an eagle in the first round of the Insperity Lady Jaguar Invitational. As a Freshman (2010-11) Named second-team All-Southland Conference … garnered Southland Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll accolades … finished the year with a 76.28 stroke average in 11 tournaments … notched five top-15 finishes in her rookie campaign … averaged the most pars per round while her 48 birdies

N ewlin ’ s Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish 2010-11______ 32-2,441_________69___________76.28__________________ 4th at Southland Conference Championship 2011-12______ 33-2,537_________70___________76.88____________________________________ t1st at Islanders Classic 2012-13______ 31-2,357_________70___________76.03_______________________________ t12th at WAC Championship Fall 2013______ 11-826__________69___________75.09_______________________________ t7th at The Alamo Invitational Totals_________107-8,161_________69___________76.27____________________________________ t1st at Islanders Classic 34 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


ranked third on the squad … tied for fourth in her first collegiate tournament, the Chip-N Club Invitational … helped UTSA set thenschool records for lowest round (287) and 54-hole score (880) at the Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship … posted a personalbest low round (69) as part of a 217 at the event … finished fourth at the Southland Conference Championship to help UTSA secure its first conference title. Prior to UTSA Finished tied for 10th place at the Optimist International Junior Championships … four-year letterwinner at Wakeland High School … won the Texas 4A State Championships individual title with a even-par score of 144 (72-72), while her team finished fourth as a senior … also claimed the 4A District and Regional individual crowns that year … four-time winner of the Most Dedicated for Golf Award … named State Farm Texas Scholar Athlete … four-time alldistrict, all-region and all-state recipient … won the United State Army Reserve National Scholar Athlete Award. Amateur Runner-up at the 2012 Women’s Texas Golf Association Amateur Championship … she opened the event with a 66 for the top qualifying score before four match-play wins, including a victory over 2010 USGA Senior Women’s Amateur Champion Mina Hardin, in the semifinals … tied for 11th at the 2011 Texas Women’s Open with a 175 (73-72) … qualified for the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship and tied for 144th with a 163 (80-83). Personal Born on Aug. 2, 1990, in Houston, Texas … daughter of Chad and Kim Newlin … has one sister, Payton … her father played golf at Sam Houston State (1985-87) and her mother played softball at Sam Houston State (1984-88) … double major in accounting and marketing.

N ewlin on the C ourse Fall 2010 t4____Chip-N Club Invitational________________ 70-78—148 t47___William K. Warren Irish Invitational___ 80-81-79—240 t13___Mercedes-Benz Championship__________ 73-69-75—217 28___The Alamo Invitational______________ 75-75-76—226 Spring 2011 t58___UCF Challenge_____________________ t15___Islander Classic____________________ t30___Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate____ t22___BYU at Entrada Classic______________ t11___Baylor Spring Invitational____________ 4____Southland Conference Championship__ t84___NCAA West Regional_______________

75-79-79—233 74-75-79—228 79-73-74—226 78-79-75—232 77-71-79—227 80-72-74—226 79-78-81—238

Fall 2011 t46___The “Mo”Morial____________________ t81___Golfweek Conference Challenge______ t26___Susie Maxwell Berning Classic________ 16___The Alamo Invitational______________ t10___Challenge at Onion Creek___________

78-78-82—238 88-81-80—249 75-73-78—226 76-74-70—220 73-73-75—221

Spring 2012 t71___UCF Challenge_____________________ t1____Islanders Classic____________________ 18___Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate___ t42___Anuenue Spring Break Classic________ t9____Southland Conference Championship__ t84___NCAA Central Regional_____________

75-80-76—231 72-73-75—220 75-73-78—226 81-78-79—238 72-82-75—229 77-84-78—239

Fall 2012 t62___Dale McNamara Invitational_________ t52___Golfweek Conference Challenge______ t23___Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate________ t15___The Alamo Invitational______________ t36___Seminole Match Up_________________

84-77-75—236 80-77-75—232 72-78-71—221 72-73-71—216 73-79-71—231

Spring 2013 t60___Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate________ 70-84—154 t34___Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate__ 83-76-71—230 2____Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout_____________ 80-73—153 t20___SMU Invitational___________________ 77-78-76—231 t12___WAC Championship________________ 73-79-75—227 t62___NCAA Central Regional_____________ 74-80-72—226 Fall 2013 t49___The “Mo”Morial____________________ 77-81-80—238 t39___Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate___________ 74-75—149 t57___Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational_____ 75-78-73—226 t7____The Alamo Invitational______________ 69-70-74—213

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 35


Brogan Townend 5-9 • Sophomore Blackburn, England • Clitheroe Royal Career Bests Round: 67, 2013 Alamo Invitational 54-hole Score: 214, 2013 Alamo Invitational Finish: t-13th, 2013 ALamo Invitational

As a Sophomore (Fall 2013) Played in all four fall tournaments … posted a career-best low round of 67, which ranks second all-time in program history, in the second round of The Alamo Invitational … carded a career- best 214 (74-67-73) at the event to tie for 13th and help the Roadrunners register a school-record four-under-par 860 in finishing fifth … ranked second on the team with a 73.82 stroke average … recorded a 78-73-72—223 to tie for 17th at The “Mo”Morial … posted 27 birdies to lead the team.

As a Freshman (2012-13) Earned Western Athletic Conference All-Academic accolades … saw action in 10 tournaments … ranked fourth on the team with a 77.61 stroke average … carded a 241 (79-83-79) in her collegiate debut at the Golfweek Conference Challenge … recorded a 78-74-73—225 to tie for 18th at the Seminole Match Up … posted a season-low round of 68 to tie for 28th at The Alamo Invitational … tied for 28th at the WAC Championship after posting a 79-80-76—235 … posted 50 birdies to rank fourth on the team.

T ownend ’ s Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish 2012-13______ 28-2,173_________68___________77.61________________________________ t18th at Seminole Match Up Fall 2013______ 11-812__________67___________73.82______________________________t13th at The Alamo Invitational Totals_________ 39-2,985_________ 67___________76.54______________________________t13th at The Alamo Invitational

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Prior to UTSA Member of the English National Team … was a finalist for the 2012 English Women’s Golf Association (EWGA) Northern Ladies Championship … member of the 2011 Girls International Matches Championship team and, as an individual, won the Leveret Trophy Championship by five strokes … placed fifth at the 2011 Ladies British Open Amateur and earned an 18th-place finish at the 2011 British Girls Junior … member of Lancashire’s winning team at the English County Finals … notched a pair of wins on the Faldo Series, including the circuit’s Grand Finale.

Personal Full name is Brogan Jayne Townend … born on May 13, 1994, in Blackburn, England … daughter of Simon and Corby Townend

T ownend on the C ourse Fall 2012 73___Golfweek Conference Challenge_______79-83-79—241 t62___Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate_________85-78-71—234 t28___The Alamo Invitational_______________75-68-77—220 t18___Seminole Match Up__________________78-74-73—225 Spring 2013 t51___Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate______74-79-81—153 t69___Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate___80-80-82—242 t10___Texas A&M Shootout____________________80-80—160 23___SMU Invitational____________________76-76-80—232 28___WAC Championship_________________79-80-76—235 t85___NCAA Central Regional______________78-78-75—231 Fall 2013 t17___The “Mo”Morial_____________________78-73-72—223 t56___Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate____________77-75—152 t45___Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational______72-75-76—223 t13___The Alamo Invitational_______________74-67-73—214

… has one brother, Sam … majoring in business.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 37


Aimee Ponte 5-4 • Freshman St. Sampson’s, U.K. • St. Sampson’s HS Career Bests Round: 70, 2013 Alamo Invitational 54-hole Score: 219, 2013 Alamo Invitational Finish: t32nd, 2013 Alamo Invitational

P onte on the C ourse Fall 2013 t47___The “Mo”Morial ___________________ 78-80-79—237 t74___Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate___________ 75-80—155 t32___The Alamo Invitational______________ 74-75-70—219 As a Freshman (Fall 2013) Saw action in three fall tournaments … ranked fourth on the team with a 76.38 stroke average … recorded a 219 (74-75-70) to tie for 32nd at the Alamo Invitational … helped the Roadrunners register a school-record four-under-par 860 in finishing fifth at that tournament … posted a 78-80-79—237 in her collegiate debut to tie for 47th at The “Mo”Morial. Prior to UTSA Won the 2009 and 2011-13 Island Championships … claimed four consecutive Guernsey Girls Club crowns from 2009-12 … earned the 2011 and 2012 Channel Island titles … won the 2012 Hampshire Girls Championship … was a semifinalist in the Hants County Championship in 2011-2012 … finished 15th at the English Girls Championship … reached the final 32 at the British Girls Championship in 2012. Personal Full name is Aimee Louise Ponte … born on May 25, 1996, in St. Peter Port, U.K. … daughter of Nelio and Ricarda Ponte … has one brother, Danny … undeclared major.

P onte ’ s Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish Fall 2013_______ 8-611___________70___________76.38_____________________________ t32nd at The Alamo Invitational Totals___________ 8-611___________70___________76.38_____________________________ t32nd at The Alamo Invitational

38 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Libby Thomas 5-4 • Freshman Midland, Texas • Lee HS Career Bests Round: 74, 2013 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 54-hole Score: 235, 2013 Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational Finish: 78th, 2013 Alamo Invitational

T homas on the C ourse Fall 2013 t84___ Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate____________74-83—157 t82___ Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational______75-84-76—235 78___ The Alamo Invitational_______________78-82-78—238 As a Freshman (Fall 2013) Played in three fall tournaments … ranked fifth on the team with a 77.63 stroke average … finished 78th at The Alamo Invitational with a 78-8278—238 while playing as an individual … carded a 235 (75-84-76) to tie for 82nd at the Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational … tied for 84th in her collegiate debut at the Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate. Prior to UTSA Three-year letterwinner at Midland Lee High School … earned firstteam all-district accolades her last three years … named second-team all-state in 2012 … helped her team win district in 2013 … named to the Texas Junior Golf’s All-Tour Team for the 2010-11 season … 2009 Texas Legends Golf Tour Player of the Year … earned the AJGA Bob Estes Sportsmanship Award. Personal Full name is Elizabeth Thomas … born on July 31, 1995 … daughter of David and Mitzi Thomas … has one brother, Cleve, and one sister, Leah … majoring in sport, event and tourism management.

T homas Y ear -B y -Y ear Year_________ Rds-Stks________ Low__________ Avg.______________________________________________ Top Finish Fall 2013_______ 8-621___________74___________77.63______________________________ 78th at The Alamo Invitational Totals___________ 8-621___________74___________77.63______________________________ 78th at The Alamo Invitational

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 39


Carrie Parnaby Head Coach Sixth Season Tennessee ‘03

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wo-time conference coach of the year Carrie Parnaby is in her sixth season at the helm of the UTSA women’s golf program. Since her hire in 2008, she steadily has transformed the Roadrunners into annual contender for conference championships and NCAA postseason appearances. From the beginning, Parnaby installed a new approach to the game from a mental and physical standpoint. Her philosophy has produced seven team titles, including back-to-back Southland Conference Championships in 2011-12, four runner-up showings and a total of 27 top-five finishes. UTSA has advanced to an NCAA Regional in each of the last three seasons, including the school’s first-ever at-large bid in 2013. Parnaby has guided the Roadrunners to nine individual wins, which includes two Southland Champions in Allie Jordan in 2009 and Shannon Jungman in 2012. She has coached 15 allconference performers, including eight first-team selections, and a pair of Southland Golfers of the Year in Fabiola Arriaga (2012) and Paola Valerio (2011). Additionally, the Roadrunners have improved their scoring average versus par by 14 strokes since her arrival and they have finished in the top 60 of the Golfstat National Rankings in each of the past three years, including a programrecord No. 47 in 2011. In addition to her players’ success on the course, several have earned accolades for their work in the classroom. Four have been named to conference all-academic teams, Paola Valerio was recognized as an Academic All-District selection in 2011 and Bruna Spengler and Taylor Newlin were named to the Women’s Golf Coaches Association All-American Scholar Team in 2010 and 2013, respectively. Additionally, UTSA recognized by the NCAA with a Public Recognition Award in 2013 for its outstanding multi-year Academic Progress Rate (APR). The Roadrunners have recorded

a perfect APR score of 1,000 each of the last four years to rank among the top 10 percent of all Division I women’s golf programs. This past fall, UTSA registered the program’s 35th top-five finish in record-setting fashion at The Alamo Invitational. Led by Newlin’s seventh-place and career-best 213 (69-70-74), which included a program-record 36-hole total of 139, the Roadrunners set school standards for low 36- and 54-hole totals with 571 and 860, respectively, en route to a fifth-place showing in a field that included 10 nationally-ranked teams. Parnaby’s fifth season saw the program establish yet another program first, as the Roadrunners earned the school’s first at-large bid to the NCAA postseason by any sport when they were selected to compete in the NCAA Central Regional in Norman, Okla. UTSA finished 17th at the tournament and registered their second straight top-50 final national ranking (No. 50) after climbing as high as 41st during the campaign. The team matched a school record for low round with a five-under-par 283 at The Alamo Invitational en route to a then-school-standard for 54 holes with an 863 to tie for third place. The Roadrunners posted three top-five finishes, including fourth in their first and only season in the Western Athletic Conference. Three Roadrunners were named all-conference, including a third straight first-team all-league selection for Arriaga. The Roadrunners once again re-wrote the record books in 2011-12, as they won four tournaments — surpassing the program’s total number of triumphs in its first six years combined — placed four players on the All-Southland teams and collected their second consecutive Southland Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance. UTSA won its home tournament, The Alamo Invitational, for the first time by topping No. 17 Texas A&M and No. 23 Baylor thanks, in part, to Arriaga’s winning score of three-under-par

40 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


213 (69-72-72). Summer Batiste and Newlin shared individual medalist honors while guiding UTSA to the Islanders Classic crown and Arriaga and Jungman led the charge in a victory at the Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate. UTSA carried its momentum into the Southland Championship and walked away with its second title, this time by five strokes over tournament host Texas State. Jungman led the way with a careerbest 217 (70-73-74) to claim the school’s second individual conference championship. The Roadrunners capped the season with a 20th-place showing at the NCAA Central Regional in Columbus, Ohio. UTSA reached new heights in 2010-11, as it placed a record four players on the all-conference teams including Valerio, the Player of the Year, and Arriaga, the Freshman of the Year, en route to the program’s first Southland Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance. Batiste and Newlin earned second-team accolades to round out the record-setting haul. UTSA notched top-five finishes at five consecutive tournaments, capped by a nine-stroke win over Lamar Head coach Carrie Parnaby guided UTSA to the 2011 team title at The Alamo at the Southland Championship in Corpus Christi. The Invitational, one of seven tournament championships captured under her watch. Roadrunners entered the NCAA West Regional in Auburn, Wash., as the No. 19 seed and finished 16th the 2003 U.S. Women’s Open. She was an SEC Academic Honor to end the most successful season in school history. Roll selection her final two campaigns. The Roadrunners excelled in Parnaby’s sophomore season, She spent her fifth year at Tennessee as a student assistant as they added the program’s second team title at the Northern coach and also went to FUTURES qualifying school to follow her Migration Invitational in March with a winning scorecard of 895 dream of playing professionally. Parnaby ultimately graduated from (298-296-301). Meanwhile, Valerio became the third Roadrunner Tennessee with a bachelor’s
degree in business marketing in 2003. to win an individual crown when she claimed the Husky Invitational After her collegiate career at Tennessee, Parnaby competed as title in just her third collegiate appearance. Parnaby also guided a member of the FUTURES Golf Tour from 2003-04. She played a her squad to five top-five finishes, including a runner-up showing full schedule in 2003 and then became fully exempt the following at the Husky Invitational and a third-place outing at the McNeese season. Parnaby worked with the American Junior Golf Association Cowgirl Classic. A trio of Roadrunners collected All-Southland (AJGA) in 2004, where she was involved with numerous aspects of honors, led by first-teamers Shelley Martinez and Valerio, while tournament operations. She traveled to each tournament to set up Batiste garnered second-team laurels. the site, assisted in running events and served as an on-site rules Parnaby’s first season in the Alamo City saw several notable official. team and individual accomplishments. Allie Jordan became the first Parnaby returned to her alma mater in 2004 as an assistant player in the program’s history to win an individual title at the Yale coach. Her main duties included day-to-day coaching, teaching, Intercollegiate and she also was the first Roadrunner to capture planning practices, on-and-off campus recruiting and scouting. She the 2009 Southland Individual Championship. Parnaby also led also coordinated team travel and taught a golf class each semester the squad to its first tournament title at the Stripes Islanders Spring focusing on specific areas of the game. Classic behind Martinez, who was that event’s medalist. During her coaching tenure at Tennessee, the Lady Vols made Parnaby’s career four consecutive trips to NCAA Regional play, including two extends from the collegiate regional crowns in 2005-06. They also made three consecutive to the professional level. NCAA Championship appearances with a top finish of sixth place. She played at She mentored five All-Americans, nine Academic All-Americans Tennessee from 1998-2002 and one player was a recipient of the prestigious Edith Cummings and during her stint with the Munson Golf Award. Lady Vols, Parnaby was a A native Texan, Parnaby was a standout at Mansfield High four-year letterwinner and School (MHS) near Fort Worth. She led the squad to a third-place earned honorable mention finish at the 1998 Class 5A State Tournament, while recording a All-Southeastern Conference seventh-place showing in the individual standings. Parnaby was honors as a junior. Tennessee honored as the 1998 Dallas/Fort Worth Player of the Year and was ranked as high as No. was presented the prestigious Fighting Tiger Heart award by MHS. 2 in the country at one point She was a three-time team captain, team Most Valuable Player and during her playing career won more than 30 titles as a 
junior, including the co-championship and she played on teams of the 1997 PING Texas State Junior. Parnaby competed in the throughout her career that 1997 Junior World and U.S. Girls Championship, was an alternate produced multiple current for the 1997 U.S. Women’s Open and was given the 1992 Texas and former LPGA and Gladiator Tour Sports Person of the Year award. European Tour players, one Parnaby resides in San Antonio with her husband, Ian, and of which she caddied for in their son, Cole.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 41


Ian Parnaby Associate Head Coach Sixth Season Tennessee ‘04

F

ormer Tennessee standout Ian Parnaby is in his first season as associate head coach for the UTSA men’s and women’s golf programs after serving as an assistant coach for two years and as a volunteer coach for three seasons. A native of Durham, England, Parnaby has helped tutor 21 all-conference performers and helped lead the programs to a combined 35 top-five finishes, including the back-to-back Southland Conference Championships for the women in 2011-12. During his tenure with the women, Parnaby has helped UTSA win seven tournaments, including the 2011 and 2012 Southland Conference Championships, and record 21 additional top-five finishes. The Roadrunners also have captured nine individual crowns, including a pair of Southland Conference titles by Allie Jordan (2009) and Shannon Jungman (2012). UTSA also has qualified for the NCAA Regionals the last three years, including the program’s first-ever at-large selection in 2013. He has helped tutor 15 all-conference honorees, including eight first-team selections, and a pair of Southland Golfers of the Year in Fabiola Arriaga (2012) and Paola Valerio (2011). Additionally, UTSA has collectied four academic all-conference certificates and one Academic All-District selection (Valerio, 2011). In his five-plus seasons with the men, Parnaby has helped lead UTSA to 27 top-10 finishes, including seven top-five showings. The Roadrunners captured their first team championship in 10 years by winning the 2013 Rice Intercollegiate. He also has helped tutor six all-conference performers, including two-time honoree and 2011 Southland Conference Freshman of the Year Ryan Werre, and three academic all-conference selections. During his four-year playing career at Tennessee, he collected second-team All-Southeastern Conference laurels and was a threetime Academic All-SEC honoree. Parnaby won the prestigious Ridges Intercollegiate in 2003 and posted five top-five finishes. He also participated in the 2003 NCAA Championship in his final season. In his last two years in Knoxville, the Volunteers were ranked in the top 25 several times, including as high as No. 12 during his junior season. After graduating from Tennessee in 2004, Parnaby turned professional a year later and spent five years playing on various professional tours around the globe, including in Asia, Europe and the United States. He then worked at Briggs Ranch Golf Club, where he discovered a passion for coaching.

Parnaby has one brother, Stuart, a professional soccer player who resides in Birmingham, England, while his parents, David and Jean, live in Durham, England. Parnaby resides in San Antonio with his wife, Carrie, who is UTSA’s head women’s golf coach, and their son, Cole.

42 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Bill Rogers Director of Golf Development Sixth Season Houston ‘73

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ill Rogers is in his third year as the Director of Golf Development at UTSA after serving the previous three seasons as an assistant coach for both the men’s and women’s programs. The former PGA Player of the Year has helped tutor 21 allconference performers and helped lead the programs to a combined 35 top-five finishes, including the back-to-back Southland Conference Championships for the women in 2011-12. During his tenure with the women, Rogers has helped UTSA win seven tournaments, including the 2011 and 2012 Southland Conference Championships, and record 21 additional top-five finishes. The Roadrunners also have captured nine individual crowns, including a pair of Southland Conference titles by Allie Jordan (2009) and Shannon Jungman (2012). UTSA also has qualified for the NCAA Regionals the last three years, including the program’s first-ever at-large selection in 2013. He has helped tutor 15 all-conference honorees, including eight first-team selections, and a pair of Southland Golfers of the Year in Fabiola Arriaga (2012) and Paola Valerio (2011). Additionally, UTSA has collection four academic all-conference certificates and one Academic AllDistrict selection (Valerio, 2011). In his five-plus seasons with the men, Rogers has helped lead UTSA to 27 top-10 finishes, including seven top-five showings. The Roadrunners captured their first team championship in 10 years by winning the 2013 Rice Intercollegiate. He also has helped tutor six all-conference performers, including two-time honoree and 2011 Southland Conference Freshman of the Year Ryan Werre, and three academic all-conference selections. Rogers is a former PGA Tour member who began his career in 1974. He collected 14 tour wins that featured six PGA wins and eight international victories during his 14-year career, including the 1981 British Open. His first pro win came on the Japan Golf Tour at the 1977 Pacific Masters and he then won his first PGA event a year later at the Bob Hope Desert Classic by a two-stroke margin over Jerry McGee. The following year, he won the Suntory World Match Play Championship and the Suntory Open. Rogers last PGA win came at the USF&G Classic on March 20, 1983. Rogers put together his best season in 1981. He was named the PGA Player of the Year after seven tournament triumphs, including four PGA victories at the British Open, Sea Pines Heritage, World Series of Golf and Texas Open. Rogers also finished runner-up at the U.S. Open. He capped off the season as a winning member of the 1981 Ryder Cup team, and 10 years later, he guided the Ryder Cup team to victory as an assistant coach. Prior to his professional career, Rogers was a four-year letterwinner at Houston, where he earned first-team All-America

honors in 1973. He later was inducted into the Houston Cougars Hall of Fame in 1987. Rogers was a board member of Golf San Antonio and the Director of Golf at the San Antonio Country Club from 1990-2000. He also brought the American Junior Golf Association to San Antonio and played a key role in the development of Briggs Ranch Golf Club. Rogers was inducted into the Texas Golf Hall of Fame in 1995 and San Antonio Sports Hall of Fame in 2004.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 43


Summer Batiste Volunteer Assistant Coach First Season UTSA ‘12

A

former standout player for the UTSA women’s golf program, Summer Batiste is in her first year as a volunteer assistant coach for the Roadrunners. Batiste was a four-year letterwinner in 2007-12 and served as team captain her final two seasons. She earned second-team AllSouthland Conference honors in both 2010 and 2011. The Spring, Texas, native shared individual medalist honors with teammate Taylor Newlin at the 2012 Islander Classic after shooting a 75-74-

71—220 and she posted four additional top-five finishes during her career. Batiste was a three-time winner of the UTSA Weight Room Warrior Award and her career scoring average of 77.64 ranks fourth on UTSA’s all-time list Batiste, the daughter of former Texas A&M and Miami Dolphins football player Dana Batiste, also currently is an assistant golf professional at San Antonio Country Club. She earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from UTSA in May 2012.

2013-14 UTSA Roadrunners

Standing (l-r): Head Coach Carrie Parnaby, Associate Head Coach Ian Parnaby, Chelsea Bretcher, Taylor Newlin, Fabiola Arriaga, Director of Golf Development Bill Rogers, former Volunteer Assistant Coach Allie Moore Sitting (l to r): Aimee Ponte, Brogan Townend, Libby Thomas

44 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Lynn Hickey Director of Athletics Lynn Hickey has made student-athlete welfare one of her top priorities while leading the UTSA Athletics Department to new heights. Under Hickey’s direction since 2000, UTSA has captured three conference commissioner’s cups and a pair of league all-sports trophies while consistently winning both team and individual academic and athletics awards in all 17 sports sponsored by the university. One of Hickey’s dreams to lead UTSA to the upper echelon of Division I Athletics was realized on Nov. 11, 2010, when the university received and accepted an invitation to join the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). The department claimed the 2012-13 WAC Commissioner’s Cup on the strength of league championships by the men’s indoor track & field and baseball teams in its first and only year in the conference. Hickey’s long-term goal of placing UTSA in a major conference was reached when Conference USA extended an invitation on May 4, 2012. The Roadrunners moved all 17 sports into that league on July 1, 2013. Hickey has overseen the addition of three sports during her tenure. Women’s golf and women’s soccer were added in 2005 and 2006, respectively, and both programs have emerged as annual league championship contenders. On Dec. 18, 2008, UTSA’s Athletics Initiative Business Plan was approved by the UT System Board of Regents, granting permission to start a football program. Hickey made a splash with the hiring of the first-ever head football coach, as two-time National Coach of the Year Larry Coker was introduced on March 6, 2009. The program kicked off its first season against Northeastern State on Sept. 3, 2011, to resounding success. The Roadrunners set NCAA start-up program records for inaugural game (56,743) and average home attendance (35,521) in six contests at the 65,000-seat Alamodome. In year two, UTSA posted an 8-4 overall record and finished fourth in the WAC with a 3-3 mark while averaging more than 29,000 fans. The third season saw the football team post a 7-5 overall record and finish second in the West Division of C-USA with a 6-2 mark while again topping the 29,000-mark in average home attendance. The 2010-11 academic year will go down in history as arguably the most successful in school annals, as the Roadrunners claimed the Southland Commissioner’s Cup and Women’s All-Sports Trophy, five championships and the first-ever NCAA postseason victory. UTSA followed that with four more league titles during the 2011-12 campaign, closing out two decades in the Southland with 58 team championships, a pair of Commissioner’s Cups and two All-Sports Trophies. Hickey has led the charge for UTSA and its hosting of numerous NCAA Championship events. Since her arrival on campus, UTSA has served as host institution for the 2001 NCAA Men’s Basketball Midwest Regional, 2002 Women’s Final Four, 2003 Men’s Basketball South Regional, 2004 Men’s Final Four, 2005 Women’s Volleyball Championship, 2006 Women’s Basketball South Regional, 2007 Men’s Basketball South Regional, 2008 Men’s Final Four, 2010 Women’s Final Four, 2011 Men’s Basketball Southwest Regional and 2011 Women’s Volleyball Championship. The school is slated to host the 2014 Men’s Basketball Second & Third Rounds, the 2014 Men’s Golf San Antonio Regional and the 2015 Women’s Golf Central Regional. In 2007, Hickey was named to the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee, one of the most prestigious appointments in all of

collegiate athletics. The 10-member committee oversees administration of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship, including the selection and seeding of teams for the tournament. Hickey, whose five-year term expired in 2012, became just the second female ever selected to the committee, joining Charlotte Athletics Director Judy Rose, who served from 1999-2003. Hickey has been honored nationally and locally for her hard work at UTSA. She was named the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators 2005 Division I-AAA Administrator of the Year. Hickey earned her second national award in June 2006 as the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics/ GeneralSports TURF Systems Division I-AAA West Region AD of the Year. The San Antonio Express-News tabbed her as its 2010 Sportswoman of the Year and she also was selected to and completed the Masters Leadership Program of San Antonio and Bexar County. In September 2011, she received the ATHENA Leadership from the North San Antonio Chamber of Commerce. “UTSA is very fortunate to have an athletic leader with both the administrative and coaching experience of Lynn Hickey,” UTSA President Dr. Ricardo Romo said. “Lynn not only is a leader who can take our athletic program to the next level, but she is also well respected nationally and serves as an excellent role model for all student-athletes at this university.” In serving as the fourth athletics director in UTSA history, Hickey assumed the lead athletics role at one of the youngest NCAA Division I universities in the country (UTSA began athletics competition in 1981). The only female Division I athletics director that oversees both men’s and women’s sports in the state of Texas, she served as President of the Southland from 2002-04 and as the league’s representative to the NCAA Championship/Competition Cabinet. Hickey also was a member of the Women’s Basketball Rules Committee from 2003-06, spending the last two years as chair. Hickey came to San Antonio from Texas A&M University, where she served as senior associate athletics director/senior woman administrator from 1994-2000. At Texas A&M, her responsibilities included event management and marketing and promotions for 16 of the university’s 19 Division I sports. She also represented the Big 12 Conference as a member of the NCAA Championship Cabinet. From 1984-94, Hickey served as head women’s basketball coach for Texas A&M. She directed the 1993-94 Aggies basketball team to the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16, becoming the lowest-seeded team to ever reach that milestone. Texas A&M finished the year ranked No. 19 in the CNN/USA Today Top 25 poll. Following the season, Hickey relinquished her coaching duties to accept the promotion to senior associate athletics director. She finished her coaching career with an overall mark of 279-167 in 15 years of collegiate coaching. Before her stint at A&M, Hickey was head women’s basketball coach at Kansas State University from 1979-84. She averaged more than 23 wins per season in posting a 125-39 (.762) record over five years and led the Wildcats to five consecutive national tournament berths. She was inducted into the Kansas State Athletics Hall of Fame in September 2004. A native of Welch, Okla., Hickey graduated summa cum laude from Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Ark., with a bachelor’s degree in education. She was an All-American for OBU’s nationallyranked basketball team and a member of the USA National Team in 1973. Hickey and her husband, Bill, have a daughter, Lauren Nicole.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 45


Dr. Ricardo Romo University President Ricardo Romo is the fifth president of The University of Texas at San Antonio, which was named by the Texas Legislature as an emerging Tier One research university and a leader in providing access to excellence in teaching, research and community outreach. Under his leadership, student enrollment has grown 68 percent. The university has added numerous programs and facilities to enhance student life and expand its research capacity. With total research expenditures of $56.8 million and total expenditures of $79.4 million for fiscal year 2011, it represents a six-fold increase in expenditures during Romo’s tenure. A San Antonio native who grew up on the city’s West Side, Romo graduated from Fox Tech High School before attending the University of Texas at Austin on a track scholarship. At UT Austin, he was the first Texan to run the mile in less than four minutes, a record that lasted 41 years. He earned a bachelor’s degree in education from UT Austin (1967) and holds a master’s degree in history from Loyola Marymount University (1970). Additionally, Romo earned a Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Los Angeles (1975). A nationally respected urban historian, Romo is the author of “East Los Angeles: History of a Barrio,” now in its ninth printing (one in Spanish). Romo began his academic career teaching social studies (1967-1970) at Franklin High School in Los Angeles. He went on to teach at the University of California at San Diego (1975-1979) and the University of Texas at Austin (1980-1999). He was a visiting professor at University of California, Berkeley in 1985 and a visiting scholar with the Stanford University Center for Advanced Studies in Behavioral Sciences (1989-1990). In 1993, he became vice provost for undergraduate education at UT Austin before becoming president of UTSA in 1999. Romo has received numerous awards and recognitions including 2006 Outstanding Friar Alumnus from the UT Austin Friar Society and the Isabel la Catolica award, the highest award given to nonSpanish subjects, bestowed upon him in 2007 by King Juan Carlos of Spain. In 2008, Romo received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the Texas Exes Alumni Association. In 2010, he received the San Antonio North Chamber Gov. Dolph Briscoe Salute to Excellence Award. In 2011, Romo was presented the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Chief Executive Leadership Award for transforming UTSA from a regional campus into an emerging Tier One research university. In February 2012, Romo received the Colonel W.T. Bondurant Sr. Distinguished Humanitarian Award from the San Antonio Academy of Texas Alumni Council. Romo received the prestigious 2013 Clark Kerr Award for Distinguished Leadership in Higher Education from the University of California, Berkeley. Created in 1968 as a tribute to UC President

Emeritus Clark Kerr, previous winners include nuclear physicist Herbert Frank York and Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren. In March 2013, Romo received the Wheaton College Otis Social Justice Award in Boston for promoting social justice through education and public service. Established in 1959, previous winners include Eleanor Roosevelt (U.S. first lady and first chair of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights), Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, Texas writer Molly Ivins and Senator Edward Kennedy. With a strong commitment to serve the community, Romo has served on a range of regional, national and international boards. He is vice chair of the Southwest Research Institute Board of Directors and on the boards of the American Council of Education, Philosophical Society of Texas, Humanities Texas, Austin Museum of Art and United States-Mexico Commission for Educational and Cultural Exchange (COMEXUS). In May 2011, President Barack Obama appointed Romo to the President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics. Romo is married to Dr. Harriett Romo, a UTSA professor of sociology and director of the UTSA Mexico Center and the Bank of America Child and Adolescent Policy Research Institute (CAPRI). Both first-generation college graduates, the Romos have a son, Carlos, who earned degrees from Stanford University and the University of Texas School of Law. Their daughter, Anadelia, a graduate of Princeton University, received a doctoral degree from Harvard University and teaches at Texas State University. The Romos are avid art collectors. Their private art collection is particularly strong in works on paper by Chicana/Chicano and U.S. Latino artists with a regional focus on Texas and the Southwest. The collection includes works by Luis Jimenez, Carmen Lomas Garza, Cesar Martinez and Vincent Valdez, as well as print suites from Self Help Graphics and Coronado Studio. Recently, more than 60 prints from their collection were on display San Antonio’s McNay Museum in an exhibit titled “Estampas de la Raza.” The traveling exhibit portrays the Latino experience in the United States through the work of 44 Mexican-American and Latino artists. These amazing prints are now on view at the Albuquerque Museum of Art and will continue to the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, followed by the Vincent Price Art Museum in Los Angeles. A talented photographer, Romo’s photos have been included in numerous regional art exhibits including “Havana,” a collection of photos taken in Cuba, and “South Africa,” a selection of his photos taken on a trip to rural South Africa. His “Small Town Texas” exhibit was displayed at the UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures. An assortment of his photos was featured in China’s most respected photography magazine, Popular Photography. Romo and four other Texas photographers showed their work in the exhibit “Infinite Horizons: Visions of Texas” as a Texas-China cultural exchange.

46 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


History


Fall 2013 Review Tournament Summary Date Sept. 9-11 Sept. 20-22 Oct. 13-15 Oct. 27-29

Tournament The “Mo” Morial Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational The Alamo Invitational

Rd-1 304 299 292 285

Rd-2 310 303 303 286

Rd-3 To Par 308 +58 ccd. +34 295 +26 289 -4

Total Finish Low Player 922 8th of 12 Brogan Townend 223 (+7) 602 14th of 17 Arriaga/Newlin 149 (+7) 890 t11th of 18 Fabiola Arriaga 222 (+6) 860 t5th of 15 Taylor Newlin 213 (-3)

Individual Statistics Player Fabiola Arriaga Brogan Townend Taylor Newlin AImee Ponte Libby Thomas Chelsea Bretcher

Events 4 4 4 3 3 3

Rounds 11 11 11 8 8 9

Avg. 73.55 73.82 75.09 76.38 77.63 78.78

Low Rd. 68 67 69 74 74 70

Low 54 214 214 213 219 235 224

Top Finish Par or Better Top 10s t-13th 1 0 t-13th 1 0 t-7th 1 1 t32nd 0 0 78th 0 0 t-48th 0 0

Individual Results

Fabiola Arriaga Date Tournament Sept. 9-11 The “Mo” Morial Sept. 20-22 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 13-15 Betsy Rawls Invitational Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 71-76-77=224 (+8) 76-73-ccd.=149 (+7) 70-76-76=222 (+6) 68-74-72=214 (-2)

Place 20th of 69 t-39th of 92 t-39th of 96 t-13th of 81

Chelsea Bretcher Date Tournament Sept. 9-11 The “Mo” Morial Oct. 13-15 Betsy Rawls Invitational Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 79-86-81=246 (+40) 80-74-70=224 (+8) 80-80-79=239 (+23)

Place t-58th of 69 t-48th of 96 79th of 81

Taylor Newlin Date Tournament Sept. 9-11 The “Mo” Morial Sept. 20-22 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 13-15 Betsy Rawls Invitational Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 77-81-80=238 (+22) 74-75-ccd.=149 (+7) 75-78-73=226 (+10) 69-70-74=213 (-3)

Place t-49th of 69 t-39th of 92 t-57th of 96 t7th of 81

Aimee Ponte Date Tournament Sept. 9-11 The “Mo” Morial Sept. 20-22 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 78-80-79=237 (+21) 75-80-ccd.=155 (+13) 74-75-70=219 (+3)

Place t-47th of 69 t74th of 92 t32nd of 81

Brogan Townend Date Tournament Sept. 9-11 The “Mo” Morial Sept. 20-22 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 13-15 Betsy Rawls Invitational Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 78-73-72=223 (+7) 77-75-ccd.=152 (+10) 72-75-76=223 (+7) 74-67-73=214 (-2)

Place t-17th of 69 t-56th of 92 t-45th of 96 t-13th of 81

Libby Thomas Date Tournament Sept. 20-22 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 13-15 Betsy Rawls Invitational Oct. 27-29 The Alamo Invitational

Score 74-83-ccd.=157 (+15) 75-84-76=235 (+19) 78-82-78=238 (+22)

Place t-84th of 92 t-82nd of 96 78th of 81

48 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


2012-13 Season Review Tournament Summary Date Sep. 17-18 Sep. 24-26 Oct. 12-14 Oct. 28-30 Nov. 15-17 Feb. 25-26 March 15-17 March 27 April 5-7 April 22-24 May 9-11

Tournament Dale McNamara Invitational Golfweek Conference Challenge Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Alamo Invitational Seminole Match Up Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational WAC Championship NCAA Central Regional

Rd-1 307 307 292 290 299 298 314 320 304 297 302

Rd-2 307 296 299 283 309 316 309 305 308 310 303

Rd-3 To Par 300 +50 301 +40 289 +16 290 -1 301 +45 --- +38 298 +57 --- +49 311 +59 300 +43 299 +40

Total 914 904 880 863 909 614 921 625 923 907 904

Finish Low Player 12th of 15 Fabiola Arriaga 215 (-1) 7th of 18 Fabiola Arriaga 212 (-4) 6th of 16 Taylor Newlin 221 (+5) t-3rd of 15 Fabiola Arriaga 214 (-2) 8th of 12 Brogan Townend 225 (+9) 17th of 18 Paola Valerio 152 (+8) t-9th of 18 Valerio/Newlin 230 (+14) 2nd of 2 Taylor Newlin 153 (+9) 5th of 15 Fabiola Arriaga 229 (+13) 4th of 7 Fabiola Arriaga 223 (+7) 17th of 24 Paola Valerio 221 (+5)

Individual Statistics Player Events Rounds Avg. Low Rd. Low 54 Top Finish Par or Better Top 10s Fabiola Arriaga 11 31 74.81 68 212 t-2nd 7 5 Paola Valerio 11 31 75.87 71 218 t-5th 5 1 Taylor Newlin 11 31 76.03 70 216 2nd 7 1 Brogan Townend 10 28 77.61 68 220 t-10th 2 1 Chelsea Bretcher 7 19 77.84 72 222 14th 1 0 Allie Johnston 8 22 79.82 72 230 t-10th 1 1

Individual Results Fabiola Arriaga Date Tournament Sept. 17-18 Dale McNamara Invitational Sept. 24-26 Golfweek Conference Challenge Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational Nov. 15-17 Seminole Match Up Feb. 25-26 Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate March 15-17 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout April 5-7 SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational April 22-24 WAC Championship May 9-11 NCAA Central Regional Chelsea Bretcher Date Tournament Sept. 17-18 Dale McNamara Invitational Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational Nov. 15-17 Seminole Match Up Feb. 25-26 Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate March 15-17 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout

Score 71-73-71=215 (-1) 75-68-69=212 (-4) 75-74-73=222 (+6) 72-69-73=214 (-2) 77-80-73=230 (+14) 78-79=157 (+13) 78-77-76=231 (+15) 86-72=158 (+14) 75-76-78=229 (+13) 76-74-73=223 (+7) 74-75-79=228 (+12)

Place 5th of 75 t-2nd of 89 t-26th of 89 t-10th of 77 t-34th of 63 t-74th of 90 t-38th of 99 7th of 15 t-13th of 78 t-6th of 34 t-73rd of 125

Score 78-78-78=234 (+18) 73-75-74=222 (+6) 76-76-72=224 (+8) 82-76-78=236 (+20) 77-83=160 (+16) 78-83-75=236 (+20) 87-80=167 (+23)

Place t-55th of 75 t-26th of 89 t-39th of 77 52nd of 63 t-85th of 90 t-50th of 99 14th of 15

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 49


2012-13 Season Review Allie Johnston Date Tournament Sept. 17-18 Dale McNamara Invitational Sept. 24-26 Golfweek Conference Challenge Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout April 5-7 SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational April 22-24 WAC Championship May 9-11 NCAA Central Regional

Score 80-83-76=239 (+23) 82-76-79=237 (+21) 79-80-78=237 (+21) 84-77-WD=WD 84-76=160 (+16) 82-82-89=253 (+37) 72-80-78=230 (+14) 85-78-79=239 (+23)

Place t-66th of 75 t-66th of 89 t-68th of 89 ---t-10th of 15 t-67th of 78 t-18th of 34 t-111th of 125

Taylor Newlin Date Tournament Sept. 17-18 Dale McNamara Invitational Sept. 24-26 Golfweek Conference Challenge Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational Nov. 15-17 Seminole Match Up Feb. 25-26 Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate March 15-17 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout April 5-7 SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational April 22-24 WAC Championship May 9-11 NCAA Central Regional

Score 84-77-75=236 (+20) 80-77-75=232 (+16) 72-78-71=221 (+5) 72-73-71=216 (E) 73-79-71=231 (+15) 70-84=154 (+10) 83-76-71=230 (+14) 80-73 =153 (+9) 77-78-76=231 (+15) 73-79-75=227 (+11) 74-80-72=226 (+10)

Place t-62nd of 75 t-52nd of 89 t-23rd of 89 15th of 77 t-36th of 63 t-60th of 90 t-34th of 99 2nd of 15 t-20th of 78 t-12th of 34 t-62nd of 125

Brogan Townend Date Tournament Sept. 24-26 Golfweek Conference Challenge Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational Nov. 15-17 Seminole Match Up Feb. 25-26 Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate March 15-17 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout April 5-7 SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational April 22-24 WAC Championship May 9-11 NCAA Central Regional

Score 79-83-79=241 (+25) 85-78-71=234 (+15) 75-68-77=220 (+4) 78-74-73=225 (+9) 74-79-81=153 (+9) 80-80-82=242 (+26) 80-80=160 (+16) 76-76-80=232 (+16) 79-80-76=235 (+19) 78-78-75=231 (+15)

Place 73rd of 89 t-62nd of 89 t-28th of 77 t-18th of 63 t-51st of 90 t-69th of 99 t-10th of 15 23rd of 78 28th of 34 t-85th of 125

Paola Valerio Date Tournament Sept. 17-18 Dale McNamara Invitational Sept. 24-26 Golfweek Conference Challenge Oct. 12-14 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 28-30 Alamo Invitational Nov. 15-17 Seminole Match Up Feb. 25-26 Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate March 15-17 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 27 Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout April 5-7 SMU Dallas Ath. Club Invitational April 22-24 WAC Championship May 9-11 NCAA Central Regional

Score 78-79-79=236 (+20) 73-75-78=226 (+10) 72-72-80=224 (+8) 71-73-74=218 (+2) 71-81-77=229 (+13) 77-75=152 (+8) 78-76-76=230 (+14) 74-82 =156 (+12) 76-78-77=231 (+15) 76-77-76=229 (+13) 76-72-73=221 (+5)

Place t-62nd of 75 t-32nd of 89 t-32nd of 89 t-22nd of 77 t-31st of 63 t-45th of 90 t-34th of 99 t-5th of 15 t-20th of 78 t-16th of 34 t-30th of 125

50 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Returnees Career Scoring Fabiola Arriaga Season 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Career

No. Tournaments 11 11 11 33

No. Rounds 32 33 31 99

Avg. Score 76.25 74.91 74.81 75.32

Vs. Par 4.25 3.09 2.81 3.38

Low Round 71 69 68 68

Par or better 3 6 7 16

Best Finish T1st 1st T2nd 1st

No. Rounds 5 3 19 27

Avg. Score 79.80 74.67 77.84 77.85

Vs. Par 7.80 2.67 5.84 5.44

Low Round 77 73 72 72

Par or better 0 0 1 1

Best Finish T36th T27th 14th 14th

No. Rounds 32 33 31 96

Avg. Score 76.28 76.88 76.03 76.41

Vs. Par 4.28 5.06 4.03 4.46

Low Round 69 70 70 69

Par or better 4 3 7 14

Best Finish 4th T1st 2nd T1st

No. Rounds 28 28

Avg. Score 77.61 77.61

Vs. Par 5.61 5.61

Low Round 68 68

Par or better 2 2

Best Finish T10th T10th

Chelsea Bretcher Season 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Career

No. Tournaments 2 1 7 10

Taylor Newlin Season 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Career

No. Tournaments 11 11 11 33

Brogan Townend Season 2012-13 Career

No. Tournaments 10 10

WOMEN’S GOLF 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 51


Coaching History

Individual Conference Champions

Holly Tothe 2004-07

Carrie Parnaby 2008-Present

Allie Jordan 2009 Champion

Shannon Jungman 2012 Champion

Best Southland Team Finish 4th place: 312-304-315—931 Top-5 Finishes 2005-06: 1 2006-07: 3 2007-08: 4

Southland Titles 2011, 2012 Top-5 Finishes 2008-09: 6 2009-10: 5 2010-11: 6 2011-12: 6 2012-13: 4 Team Tournament Titles 7 Individual Titles 9

Jordan became the first golfer in the program’s history to collect a Southland Conference Championship. The Monahans native turned in a scorecard of 7376-73—222 to capture the title by two strokes over Lacy McKinley from McNeese State and Ashley Watkins from Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

Jungman earned the program’s second individual conference title in 2012 after leading the Southland Championship from start to finish. The Pflugerville native carded a 70-73-74—217 to win the crown by three strokes over teammate Fabiola Arriaga as UTSA won its second consecutive team championship.

All-Conference Performers

Fabiola Arriaga 2012 Golfer of the Year 2011 Freshman of the Year 2011, ‘12, ‘13 First Team

Allie Jordan 2009 First Team

Shannon Jungman 2012 First Team

Second Team Laura Baker, 2006 Summer Batiste, 2010 & ‘11 Taylor Newlin, 2011, ‘12 & ‘13 Paola Valerio, 2012 & ‘13

52 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

Shelly Martinez 2010 First Team

Honorable Mention Laura Baker, 2008 & ‘09 Shelly Martinez, 2008

Paola Valerio 2011 Golfer of the Year 2010 & ‘11 First Team


Conference Championship History Year___ Champion____________________ Runner-Up________ UTSA ��������������� Individual Champion

2013____Denver (882)_____________________ San Jose State (894)______ 4th (907) �������������� Tonje Daffinrud, Denver (209) 2012____UTSA (896)_________________________ Texas State (901)________ 1st (896) ������������ Shannon Jungman, UTSA (217) 2011____UTSA (900)___________________________ Lamar (907)__________ 1st (900) ����������������Stine Pedersen, Lamar (223) 2010____Texas State (885)_________________Sam Houston State (887)____ 4th (889)____ Rebecca Sorenson, Central Arkansas (213) 2009____Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (912)_________ UTSA (913)__________ 2nd (913) ������������������ Allie Jordan, UTSA (222) 2008____Texas State (907)______________________ Lamar (910)__________ 4th (931) �����������Linn Gustafsson, Texas State (220) 2007____Sam Houston State (912)_______________ Lamar (925)__________ 7th (972)_____ Stephanie Page, Sam Houston State (221) 2006____Lamar (936)________________________ Texas State (957)_______ 6th (1,001) ��������������Theresa Nilsson, Lamar (223)

Top Individual Conference Finisher Year____ 2013___ 2012___ 2011___ 2010___ 2009___ 2008___ 2007___ 2006___

Name_____________ Fabiola Arriaga_____ Shannon Jungman___ Fabiola Arriaga_____ Paola Valerio_______ Allie Jordan_________ Laura Baker_________ Laura Baker_________ Laura Baker_________

2006-12

2013

Score________________ Place 76-74-73—223 ��������6th 70-73-74—217 �������� 1st 75-73-75—223 ������� t1st 77-70-73—220 ��������6th 73-76-73—222 �������� 1st 74-74-79—227 ������� t6th 75-74-84—233 ��������9th 73-74-81—228________t2nd

2014-

NCAA Regional History Year__________ Score Place Top UTSA Individual 2013___ 302-303-299—904___17th ���� Paola Valerio (221) 2012___ 317-326-319—962___20th___ Fabiola Arriaga (239) 2011___ 311-313-313—937___16th ���� Paola Valerio (234) Paola Valerio was UTSA’s top finisher at two of its three NCAA Regional appearances.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 53


Individual Single-Season & Career Records Single-Season Scoring Average vs. Par (min.15 rounds) Avg. vs. Par 1. Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)......... 74.81....... 2.81 2. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)......... 74.91....... 3.09 3. Paola Valerio (2010-11)............. 75.25....... 3.25 4. Paola Valerio (2012-13)............. 75.87....... 3.87 5. Paola Valerio (2009-10)............. 75.73....... 3.93 6. Taylor Newlin (2012-13)............ 76.03....... 4.03 7. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11)......... 76.25....... 4.25 8. Taylor Newlin (2010-11)............ 76.28....... 4.28 9. Shannon Jungman (2011-12)..... 76.27....... 4.47 10. Summer Batiste (2010-11).......... 76.67....... 4.67

Career Scoring Average vs. Par (min. 45 rounds) Avg. vs. Par 1. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres)....... 75.14....... 3.21 2. Paola Valerio (2009-13)............. 76.03....... 4.11 3. Taylor Newlin (2010-pres).......... 76.27....... 4.35 4. Summer Batiste (2007-12).......... 77.64....... 5.83 5. Shannon Jungman (2008-12)..... 78.23....... 6.28 6. Shelly Martinez (2007-10).......... 78.83....... 6.96 7. Laura Baker (2006-09)............... 79.37....... 7.39 8. Bruna Spengler (2008-12).......... 79.88....... 7.96 9. Allie Jordan (2006-09)............... 80.26....... 8.28 10. Madison McClain (2007-10)....... 80.91....... 9.00

1. 5. 8.

Rounds Played Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)............................33 Summer Batiste (2011-12).............................33 Taylor Newlin (2011-12)...............................33 Paola Valerio (2011-12)................................33 Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11)............................32 Taylor Newlin (2010-11)...............................32 Paola Valerio (2010-11)................................32 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)............................31 Taylor Newlin (2012-13)...............................31 Paola Valerio (2012-13)................................31

Rounds Played 1. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres)........................ 118 Taylor Newlin (2010-pres)........................... 118 3. Paola Valerio (2010-13).............................. 111 4. Shelly Martinez (2007-10)........................... 103 5. Shannon Jungman (2008-12)...................... 102 6. Summer Batiste (2007-12)............................. 99 7. Laura Baker (2006-09).................................. 98 8. Allie Jordan (2006-09).................................. 95 9. Madison McClain (2007-10).......................... 64 10. Bruna Spengler (2008-12)............................. 52

1. 3. 5. 7. 9.

Par or Better Rounds Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)..............................7 Taylor Newlin (2012-13).................................7 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)..............................6 Paola Valerio (2010-11)..................................6 Paola Valerio (2012-13)..................................5 Summer Batiste (2011-12)...............................5 Summer Batiste (2009-10)...............................4 Taylor Newlin (2010-11).................................4 Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11)..............................3 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)..........................3 Taylor Newlin (2011-12).................................3 Paola Valerio (2011-12)..................................3

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

Par or Better Rounds Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres).......................... 21 Taylor Newlin (2010-pres)............................. 17 Paola Valerio (2010-13)................................ 16 Summer Batiste (2008-12)............................. 11 Brogan Townend (2013-pres)........................... 6 Shannon Jungman (2008-12).......................... 5 Shelly Martinez (2007-10)............................... 4 Chelsea Bretcher (2011-pres)........................... 2 Allie Jordan (2006-10).................................... 2

1. 2.

Wins Allie Jordan (2008-09)....................................2 Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11 & 2011-12)............1 Laura Baker (2005-06)....................................1 Summer Batiste (2011-12)...............................1 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)..........................1 Shelly Martinez (2008-09)...............................1 Taylor Newlin (2011-12).................................1 Paola Valerio (2009-10)..................................1

1. 3.

Wins Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres)............................ 2 Allie Jordan (2006-09).................................... 2 Taylor Newlin (2011-pres)............................... 1 Laura Baker (2006-09).................................... 1 Summer Batiste (2007-12)............................... 1 Shannon Jungman (2008-12).......................... 1 Shelly Martinez (2007-10)............................... 1 Paola Valerio (2009-13).................................. 1

54 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Team Top-10 Lists Low Round Season Tournament Rd. Score 1. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitatonal.................................................. 2............... 283 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 2............... 283 3. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 1............... 285 4. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 2............... 286 2011-12..................Insperity Lady Jaguar Invitational.................................. 2............... 286 6. 2010-11..................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships.................... 3............... 287 7. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 3............... 289 2012-13..................Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate...................................... 3............... 289 2009-10..................Southland Conference Tournament................................ 2............... 289 10. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 1............... 290 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 3............... 290 2011-12..................Challenge at Onion Creek........................................... 2............... 290 2011-12..................Southland Conference Championship........................... 1............... 290 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 3............... 290 Low Round vs. Par Season Tournament Rd. Score vs. Par 1. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 2............... 283................... -5 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 2............... 283................... -5 3. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 1............... 285................... -3 4. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 2............... 286................... -2 2011-12..................Insperity Lady Jaguar Invitational.................................. 2............... 286................... -2 6. 2010-11..................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships.................... 3............... 287................... -1 7. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 3............... 289.................. +1 2012-13..................Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate...................................... 3............... 289.................. +1 9. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 1............... 290.................. +2 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 3............... 290.................. +2 2011-12..................Southland Conference Championship........................... 1............... 290.................. +2 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational................................................. 3............... 290.................. +2 Low 36-hole total Season Tournament Score vs. Par 1. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 571................... -5 2. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 573................... -3 3. 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 576.....................E 4. 2011-12..................Challenge at Onion Creek............................................................ 582................ +22 5. 2011-12..................Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate.............................................. 584.................. +8 2009-10..................Challenge at Onion Creek............................................................ 584................ +24 7. 2012-13..................Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate....................................................... 591................ +15 2010-11..................Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate.......................................... 591................ +15 2010-11..................Alamo Invitational........................................................................ 591................ +15 10. 2011-12..................Islanders Classic........................................................................... 592................ +16 Low 54-hole total Season Tournament Score vs. Par 1. 2013-14..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 860................... -4 2. 2012-13..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 863................... -1 3. 2011-12..................The Alamo Invitational.................................................................. 866.................. +2 4. 2011-12..................Challenge at Onion Creek............................................................ 878................ +38 5. 2012-13..................Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate....................................................... 880................ +16 2011-12..................Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate.............................................. 880................ +16 7. 2010-11..................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships..................................... 886................ +22 8. 2009-10..................Challenge at Onion Creek............................................................ 887................ +47 9. 2011-12..................Islanders Classic........................................................................... 888................ +24 2010-11..................Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate.......................................... 888................ +24

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 55


Individual Top-10 Lists 1. 2. 3. 8.

Individual Low Round Player (Season) Tournament Rd. Score Paola Valerio (2010-11)............... Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 3............... 66 Brogan Townend (2013-14).......... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 67 Fabiola Arriaga (2013-14)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 68 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge............... 2............... 68 Brogan Townend (2012-13).......... The Alamo Invitational ............................ 2............... 68 Paola Valerio (2009-10)............... UCF Challenge........................................ 1............... 68 Shelly Martinez (2009-10)............ Northern Migration Invitational................ 2............... 68 Taylor Newlin (2013-14).............. The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 69 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge............... 3............... 69 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 69 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... Challenge at Onion Creek....................... 1............... 69 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 69 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)....... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 69 Taylor Newlin (2010-11).............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 2............... 69 Paola Valerio (2010-11)............... UCF Challenge........................................ 2............... 69

1. 2. 3. 8.

Low Round vs. Par Player (Season) Tournament Rd. Score vs. Par Paola Valerio (2010-11)............... Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 3............... 66..................... -6 Brogan Townend (2013-14).......... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 67..................... -5 Fabiola Arriaga (2013-14)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 68..................... -4 Brogan Townend (2012-13).......... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 68..................... -4 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge............... 2............... 68..................... -4 Paola Valerio (2009-10)............... UCF Challenge........................................ 1............... 68..................... -4 Shelly Martinez (2009-10)............ Northern Migration Invitational................ 2............... 68..................... -4 Taylor Newlin (2013-14).............. The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 69..................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge............... 3............... 69..................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 69..................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... The Alamo Invitational............................. 1............... 69..................... -3 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)....... The Alamo Invitational............................. 2............... 69..................... -3 Taylor Newlin (2010-11).............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 2............... 69..................... -3 Paola Valerio (2010-11)............... UCF Challenge........................................ 2............... 69..................... -3

1. 2. 6. 9.

Low 36-hole total Player (Season) Tournament Score vs. Par Taylor Newlin (2013-14).............. The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 139................... -5 Brogan Townend (2013-14).......... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 141................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13).......... The Alamo Invitational ............................................. 141................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 141................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... Challenge at Onion Creek........................................ 141.................. +1 Fabiola Arriaga (2013-14)........... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 142................... -2 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)....... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 142................... -2 Taylor Newlin (2010-11).............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships................. 142................... -2 Brogan Townend (2012-13).......... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 143................... -1 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge................................ 143................... -1 Shannon Jungman (2011-12)....... Southland Conference Championship........................ 143................... -1 Paola Valerio (2009-10)............... UCF Challenge......................................................... 143................... -1 Summer Batiste (2009-10)............ Northern Migration Invitational................................. 143................... -1

Low 54-hole total Player (Season) Tournament Score vs. Par 1. Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Golfweek Conference Challenge................................ 212................... -4 Paola Valerio (2010-11)............... Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships................. 212................... -4 3. Taylor Newlin (2013-14).............. The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 213................... -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 213................... -3 5. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12)........... Challenge at Onion Creek........................................ 213.................. +3 6. Fabiola Arriaga (2013-14)........... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 214................... -2 Brogan Townend (2013-14).......... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 214................... -2 Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... The Alamo Invitational.............................................. 214................... -2 Summer Batiste (2009-10)............ Northern Migration Invitational................................. 214................... -2 10. Fabiola Arriaga (2012-13)........... Dave McNamara Inviational..................................... 215................... -1

56 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf


Year-By-Year Results 2005-06 Lady Cardinal Invitational Sept. 19-20 Brentwood CC Beaumont, Texas 2. Laura Baker, 75-73-76—224, 3. Allie Jordan, 79-76-73—228, t17. Stephanie Perez, 77-83-81—241, 23. Jenna Wessels, 82-84-80— 246, 32. Michelle Kowalick, 9083-91—264, 3rd of 6, 313-315310—938. Lady Indian Classic Oct. 10-11 Sage Meadows CC Jonesboro, Ark. t2. Stephanie Perez, 75-74—149, t10. Laura Baker, 78-76—154, t18. Allie Jordan, 80-77—157, t51. Jenna Wessels, 85-81—166, t72. Michelle Kowalick, 84-91—175, tied 4th of 14, 317-308-625 Ellingson Fall Classic Oct. 24-25 Waterwood National GC Huntsville, Texas 21. Jenna Wessels, 86-81-81— 248, t29. Laura Baker, 85-8981—255, t38. Allie Jordan, 8885-86—259, t38. Stephanie Perez, 91-85-83—259, t44. Michelle Kowalick, 93-88-84—265, 8th of 11, 350-339-329—1,018 Bronc Classic Nov. 7-8 Los Lagos GC Edinburg, Texas 24. Stephanie Perez, 79-80-80— 239, 30. Laura Baker, 86-7983—248, 31. Michelle Kowalick, 82-78-89—249, t32. Allie Jordan, 81-85-86—252, 36. Neely Hutchins, 90-99-90—279, 7th of 7, 328-322-338—988.

Islander Spring Classic Feb. 20-21 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas t70. Jenna Wessels, 79-83-87— 249, t75. Allie Jordan, 85-8483—252, 78. Laura Baker, 89-8482—255, 84. Michelle Kowalick, 90-91-81—262, 85. Neely Hutchins, 91-92-88—271, 16th of 16, 343-342-333—1,018.

Southland Championship April 10-12 Forest Course Kingwood, Texas t2. Laura Baker, 73-74-81—228, 19. Jenna Wessels, 83-83-82— 248, 25. Allie Jordan, 85-87-84— 256, 34. Michelle Kowalick, 9585-89—269, 35. Neely Hutchins, —285, 6th of 7, 33695-98-92­ 329-336—1,001.

UTSA Rowdy Round-Up March 20-21 Buckhorn GC Comfort, Texas t18. Laura Baker, 75-82-80—237, t44. Allie Jordan, 87-80-84—251, 58. Jenna Wessels, 90-89-86— 265, 65. Neely Hutchins, 93-9687—276, 66. Michelle Kowalick, 95-91-94—280, 11th of 14, 345342-337—1,024.

2006-07

Oregon Duck Invitational March 27-28 Emerald Valley GC Creswell, Ore. t39. Laura Baker, 81-81-81—243, t47. Jenna Wessels, 85-80-80— 245, t63. Allie Jordan, 85-84-84— 253, t81. Neely Hutchins, 94-9292—278, t81. Michelle Kowalick, 99-92-87—278, 14th of 16, 345337-332—1,014. CenturyTel Bobcat Classic April 3-4 Plum Creek GC San Marcos, Texas t15. Laura Baker, 82-81-74—237, t15. Allie Jordan, 79-84-74—237, 44. Jenna Wessels, 83-85-85— 253, t57. Michelle Kowalick, 9388-88—269, 61. Neely Hutchins, 95-88-91—274, 10th of 14, 337338-321—996.

North Texas Women’s Classic Sept. 11-12 Robson Ranch G.C. Denton, Texas 13. Lesan Gouge, 78-77-78—233, 17. Laura Baker, 75-84-75—234, 27. Shelly Martinez, 79-84-77— 240, t30. Madison McClain, 7776-88—241, t30. Allie Jordan, 8181-79—241, 40. Kayla McBride, 82-85-86—253*, 43. Neely Hutchins, 90-93-85—268*, tied 6th of 7, 309-318-309—936. McHaney Intercollegiate Sept. 18-19 Rawls Course Lubbock, Texas 34. Laura Baker, 75-76-79—230, 51. Lesan Gouge, 80-77-78—235, 54. Allie Jordan, 81-75-80—236, 71. Shelly Martinez, 81-82-77— 240, 79. Kayla McBride, 83-8279—244, 14th of 16, 317-310313—940. Wolf Pack Invitational Oct. 3-4 D’Andrea CC Reno, Nev. 3. Lesan Gouge, 81-74-73—228, 23. Allie Jordan, 81-78-85—244, 26. Laura Baker, 81-80-85—246, 28. Shelly Martinez, 86-86-77— 249, 39. Kayla McBride, 91-9182—264, 5th of 8, 329-318-317— 964.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 57


Ellingson Fall Classic Oct. 23-24 Waterwood National GC Huntsville, Texas 11. Madison McClain, 80-8078—238, t13. Laura Baker, 80-7981—240, t19. Lesan Gouge, 8680-79—245, t19. Shelly Martinez, 83-81-81—245, 30. Allie Jordan, 85-79-84—248, 31. Kayla McBride, 80-81-88—249*, 44. Neely Hutchins,95-86-101—282*, 45. Michelle Kowalick, 97-93100—290*, 8th of 11, 350-339329—1,018. * played as an individual Baja Invitational Feb. 12-13 Bajamar Resort Ensenada, Mexico t10. Laura Baker, 83-79-79—241, t10. Shelly Martinez, 82-78-81— 241, t20. Lesan Gouge, 79-8382—244, 28. Allie Jordan, 80-8685—251, 39. Madison McClain, 93-82-89—266, 3rd of 13, 324322-327—973. Islander Spring Classic Feb. 26-27 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas t20. Allie Jordan, 80-77-71—228*, t46. Laura Baker, 76-80-79—235, t52. Shelly Martinez, 77-79-82— 238, t57. Kayla McBride, 8183-76—240, t59. Lesan Gouge, 78-82-81—241, t59. Madison McClain, 79-84-78—241, 13th of 15, 310-324-314—948. * played as an individual SHSU/LU Invitational March 11-13 Beaumont CC Beaumont, Texas t11. Madison McClain, 78-79— 157, t29. Allie Jordan, 81-81—162, t36. Lesan Gouge, 82-83—165, t41. Shelly Martinez, 87-80—167, t51. Kayla McBride, 91-86—177, 8th of 10, 328-323—651.

Oregon Duck Invitational March 26-27 Shadow Hills CC Junction City, Ore. t21. Lesan Gouge, 78-82-77—237, t34. Madison McClain, 83-7684—243, t38. Laura Baker, 84-8576—245, t57. Allie Jordan, 8093-79—252, t69. Shelly Martinez, 83-90-85—258, 9th of 15, 324333-316—973. Southland Championship April 9-11 Ram Rock GC Horseshoe Bay, Texas 9. Laura Baker, 75-74-84—233, t23. Lesan Gouge, 86-85-73— 244, t28. Shelly Martinez, 83-8480—247, t36. Allie Jordan, 83-8883—254, 38. Madison McClain, 89-86-80—255, 7th of 8, 327329-316—972.

2007-08 North Texas Women’s Classic Sept. 10-11 Robson Ranch GC Denton, Texas t18. Allie Jordan, 75-79—154, t22. Janine Fellows, 75-80—155, t35. Shelly Martinez, 78-80—155, t35. Laura Baker, 76-82—158, t48. Kayla McBride, 84-76—160, tied 5th of 16, 304-315—619. Yale Intercollegiate Sept. 29-30 The Course of Yale New Haven, Conn. t18. Janine Fellows, 82-78—160, t23. Shelly Martinez, 75-86—161, t37. Laura Baker, 87-78—165, t53. Summer Batiste, 88-80—168, 75. Madison, McClain, 91-88—179, 6th of 15, 332-322—654. Hawkeye Invitational Oct. 6-7 Finkbine GC Iowa City, Iowa t9. Janine Fellows, 76-75-78—229, t27. Madison McClain, 83-82-

58 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

76—241, t29. Laura Baker, 80-8182—243, t29. Summer Batiste, 7783-83—243, t50. Shelly Martinez, 85-83-83—251, 7th of 13, 316321-319—956. UAB Beach Blast Nov.5-6 The Peninsula GC Gulf Shores, Ala. 2. Shelly Martinez, 75-71—146, 6. Janine Fellows, 73-75—148, t18. Laura Baker, 78-77—155, t35. Allie Jordan, 79-82—161, t45. Lesan Gouge, 79-84—163, 2nd of 14, 305-305—610. Koasati Pines Collegiate Classic Feb. 9-10 Koasati Pines GC Kinder, La. t7. Shelly Martinez, 74-76-78— 228, 14. Allie Jordan 77-8075—232, t29. Laeni Bendzik 8279-77—238, t39. Laura Baker 81-80-80—241, t63. Lesan Gouge 85-82-86—253, 5th of 16, 314315-310—939. Islander Spring Classic Feb. 25-26 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas 9. Laura Baker 75-80-79—234, t13. Shelly Martinez 77-83-76— 236, t13 Laeni Bendzik 79-7978—236, t42 Allie Jordan 8477-86—247, 54. Summer Batiste 81-86-88—255, tied 3rd of 11, 312-319-319—950. Oregon Duck Invitational March 26-27 Shadow Hills CC Junction City, Ore. t24. Allie Jordan, 76-77-79—232, t46. Laura Baker, 77-84-79—240, t51. Shelly Martinez, 80-80-83— 243, t64. Lesan Gouge, 82-8185—248, t71. Kayla McBride, 82-86-83—251, tied 12th of 15, 315-322-324—961.


Southland Championship April 21-23 Beaumont CC Beaumont, Texas t6. Laura Baker, 74-74-79—227, 15. Allie Jordan, 80-78-74—232, t24. Shelly Martinez, 80-74-83—237, 28. Kayla McBride, 81-78-80—239, 33. Lesan Gouge 78-82-82—242, 4th of 8, 312-304-315—931.

2008-09 North Texas Women’s Classic Sept. 15-16 Robson Ranch GC Denton, Texas t6. Bruna Spengler, 76-75-78—229, t12. Allie Jordan, 78-75-78—231, t15. Shelly Martinez, 77-77-79—233, t26. Laura Baker, 82-78-77—237, t39. Kayla McBride, 78-83-83—244, 4th of 9, 309-305-312—926. Yale Intercollegiate Sept. 27 The Course of Yale New Haven, Conn. 1. Allie Jordan, 71, t21. Laura Baker, 77, t29. Shelly Martinez, 78, t38. Kayla McBride, 79, t74. Bruna Spengler, 84, tied 2nd of 19, 305. McHaney/Morehead Intercollegiate Oct. 6-7 Rawls Course Lubbock, Texas t28. Madison McClain, 78-76-83— 237, t41. Shelly Martinez, 82-7978—239, t53. Allie Jordan, 85-7782—244, t62. Shannon Jungman, 82-81-85—248, 70. Laura Baker, 83-86-86—255, 12th of 13, 325313-328—966. UAB Fall Beach Blast Nov 3-4 The Peninsula Gulf Shores, Ala. t14. Shelly Martinez, 77-75—152, t22. Allie Jordan, 73-82—155, t24. Laura Baker, 76-80—156, t36. Madison McClain, 77-82­ —159, t41. Shannon Jungman, 80-81—161, 7th of 14, 621.

Koasati Pines Collegiate Classic Feb. 7-8 Koasati Pines GC Kinder, La. t7. Madison McClain, 74-7579—228, t10. Laura Baker, 73-7878—229, 25. Shelly Martinez, 7681-79—236, t32. Bruna Spengler, 83-78-78—239, t36. Allie Jordan, 83-80-77—240, tied 3rd of 16, 306-311-312—929. Stripes Islander Spring Classic Feb. 23-24 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas 1. Shelly Martinez, 76-73-74— 223, t14. Allie Jordan, 81-78-75— 234, t14. Shannon Jungman, 7782-78—234, t17. Bruna Spengler*, 80-77-78—235, t22. Madison McClain, 77-79-80—236, t-24. Laura Baker, 82-77-78—237 1st of 15, 311-307-302—920. * played as an individual Claud Jacobs Intercollegiate March 9-10 Victoria CC Victoria, Texas t8. Allie Jordan, 74-76-81—231, t8. Laura Baker, 76-81-74—231, t22. Shelly Martinez, 80-78-80— 238, 27. Bruna Spengler, 82-8275—239, t28. Shannon Jungman, 82-82-75—239, t58. Madison McClain*, 84-82-84—250, 4th of 14, 309-319-310—937. * played as an individual Baylor Spring Invitational March 16-17 Twin Rivers GC Waco, Texas t14. Laura Baker, 79-73-81—233, t23. Allie Jordan, 76-78-81—235, t35. Shelly Martinez, 81-76-83— 240, t47. Shannon Jungman, 8079-86—245, t54. 73-79-85—247, 10th of 14, 316-306-330—952.

Lady Mocs Classic April 6 Lookout Mountain GC Lookout Mountain, Ga. t9. Laura Baker, 83—83, t9. Allie Jordan, 83—83, t22. Madison McClain, 86—86, t33. Shelly Matinez, 88-88, t39. Bruna Spengler, 89—89, 3rd of 10, 340—340. Southland Championship April 21-22 Lake Charles CC Lake Charles, La. 1. Allie Jordan, 73-76-73-222, t10. Madison McClain, 78-7576—229, t15. Laura Baker, 8173-77—231, t29. Shelly Martinez, 77-87-75—239, t33. Shannon Jungman, 86-79-77—242, 2nd of 8, 309-303-301—913.

2009-10 Texas A&M “Mo” Morial April 11-12 Traditions GC Bryan, Texas t8. Shelly Martinez, 75—75, t8. Shannon Jungman, 75—75; t17. Madison McClain, 77—77, t30. Summer Batiste, 80—80, t30. Bruna Spengler, 80—80, 4th of 11, 314—314. Heather Farr Memorial Invitational Oct. 5-6 Colorado National GC Erie, Colo. t24. Shelly Martinez, 77-74-78— 229, t-28. Shannon Jungman, 7778-75—230, t36. Madison McClain, 75-80-77—232, t48. Summer Batiste, 79-74-82—235, t81. Kayla McBride, 78-79-87—244, 8th of 20, 307-305-312—924

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 59


Mercedes-Benz Championship Oct. 16-18 Fox Den CC Knoxville, Tenn. t39. Summer Batiste, 75-75-78— 228, 82. Shannon Jungman, 7980-80—239, 84. Shelly Martinez, 79-81-82—242, t85. Bruna Spengler, 80-82-81—243, t94. Madison McClain, 76-83-91—250, 18th of 18, 309-318-321—948. The Alamo Invitational Oct. 26-27 Briggs Ranch GC San Antonio, Texas t4. Summer Batiste, 72—72, t22. Shelly Martinez, 76—76, t35. Bruna Spengler, 78—78, t35. Madison McClain, 78—78, 58. Shannon Jungman, 87—87, t7th of 12, 304—304. Challenge at Onion Creek Nov. 2-3 Onion Creek GC Austin, Texas t8. Shelly Martinez, 75—75, t8. Shannon Jungman, 75—75; t17. Madison McClain, 77—77, t30. Summer Batiste, 80—80, t30. Bruna Spengler, 80—80, 18th of 21, 292-292-303—887. Koasati Pines Classic Feb. 15-16 Koasati Pines CC Kinder, La. 11. Summer Batiste, 85-77-74— 236, t13. Shelly Martinez, 82-7976—237, 18. Madison McClain, 81-79-78—238, t20. Bruna Spengler, 80-79-80—239, t23. Shannon Jungman, 88-77-75— 240, 3rd of 14, 328-312-303— 943. UCF Challenge March 1-2 Red Tail GC Sorrento, Fla. t17. Paola Valerio, 68-75-83— 226, t32. Shelly Martinez, 77-75-

78—230, t55. Shannon Jungman, 79-83-76—238, t85. Kayla McBride, 85-81-86—252, 14th of 17, 307-309-314—930. Northern Migration Invitational March 15-17 Poston Butte GC Florence, Ariz. 2. Summer Batiste, 73-70-71— 214, t5. Shelly Martinez, 79-6875—222, t29. Paola Valerio, 7679-76—231, t41. Bruna Spengler, 73-82-79—234, t41. Shannon Jungman, 76-79-79—234, 307309-314—929. Houston Baptist Intercollegiate April 5-6 Sienna Plantation GC Missouri City, Texas 1. Paola Valerio, 76-73-75—224, 4. Shelly Martinez, 78-76-78— 232, t9. Bruna Spengler, 75-8180—236, 12. Summer Batiste, 75-83-81—239, t16. Shannon Jungman, 78-84-79—241, 2nd of 8, 304-313-312—929. Baylor Spring Invitational April 12-13 Twin Rivers GC Waco, Texas t7. Shelly Martinez, 78-77-75— 230, t23. Paola Valerio, 76-7782—235, t42. Summer Batiste, 80-79-82—241, t53. Shannon Jungman, 82-83-79—244, t62. Bruna Spengler, 84-80-83—247, 7th of 16, 316-313-318—947. Southland Championship April 19-21 Raven Nest GC Huntsville, Texas 6. Paola Valerio, 77-70-73—220, t7. Summer Batiste, 77-73-71— 221, 12. Shelly Martinez, 78-7274—224, t21. Shannon Jungman, 75-74-84—233, t30. 82-83-75— 240, 4th of 8, 307-289-293—889.

60 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

2010-11 Chip-N Club Invitational Sept. 13 Wilderness Ridge GC Lincoln, Neb. t4. Taylor Newlin, 70-78—148; t11. Paola Valerio, 73-78—151; t16. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-78—152; t30. Shannon Jungman, 79-76—155; t36. Chelsea Bretcher, 77-79—156; 4th of 15, 294-310—604. William K. Warren Irish Invitational Oct. 2-3 Warren Golf Course Notre Dame, Ind. 10. Paola Valerio, 76-76-75—227; t21. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-77-85— 233; t47. Taylor Newlin, 80-8179—240; 64. Shannon Jungman, 82-80-86—248; t70. Bruna Spengler, 86-83-84—253; 12th of 13, 312-314-320—946. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships Oct. 8-10 Holston Hills CC Knoxville, Tenn. 5. Paola Valerio, 74-72-66—212; t13. Taylor Newlin, 73-69-75— 217; t45. Summer Batiste, 77-7674—227; t59. 81-77-72—230; 76. Chelsea Bretcher, 83-78-82—243; 8th of 15, 305-294-287—886. The Alamo Invitational Oct. 31-Nov. 2 Briggs Ranch GC San Antonio, Texas t13. Summer Batiste, 77-71-74— 222; t17. Shannon Jungman, 7274-77—223; t24. Fabiola Arriaga, 77-73-75—225; 28. Taylor Newlin, 75-75-76—226; t43. Paola Valerio, 74-82-75—231; 6th of 14, 298-293-300—891.


UCF Challenge Feb. 13-15 Red Tail GC Sorrento, Fla. t8. Paola Valerio, 75-69-72—216; t28. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-71-78— 224; t50. Summer Batiste, 77-7775—229; t58. Taylor Newlin, 7579-79—233; t69. Bruna Spengler, 77-81-78—236; 10th of 17, 302296-303—901. Islander Classic Feb. 28-March 1 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas t2. Paola Valerio, 73-73-74—220; t15. Taylor Newlin, 74-75-79— 228; t20. Summer Batiste, 73-7779—229; t34. Shannon Jungman, 79-76-79—234; t36. Bruna Spengler, 82-76-77—235; 4th of 16, 299-298-308—905. Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate March 13-14 Forest Hills GC Augusta, Ga. t13. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-75-73— 222; t16. Shannon Jungman, 7477-72—223; t20. Paola Valerio, 72-72-81—225; t30. Taylor Newlin, 79-73-74—226; t36. Summer Batiste, 76-75-78—229; 3rd of 17, 296-295-297—888. BYU at Entrada Classic March 21-22 Entrada at Snow Canyon St. George, Utah t15. Fabiola Arriaga, 76-82-72— 230; t22. Taylor Newlin, 78-7975—232; t26. Paola Valerio, 8277-75—234; t39. Summer Batiste, 80-75-83—238; t56. Shannon Jungman, 88-74-84—246; t4th out of 15, 316-305-305—926. Baylor Spring Invitational April 11-12 Twin Rivers GC Waco, Texas t7. Summer Batiste, 74-76-75—

225; t11. Taylor Newlin, 77-7179—227; t21. Paola Valerio, 7879-73—230; t35. Fabiola Arriaga, 80-80-75—235; t56. Shannon Jungman, 80-80-79—239; t3rd of 18, 309-306-302—917. Southland Championship April 18-20 Corpus Christi CC Waco, Texas t1. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-73-75— 223; 4. Taylor Newlin, 80-7274—226; t5. Paola Valerio, 75-7677—228; t5. Shannon Jungman, 76-76-76—228; t14. Summer Batiste, 81-79-72—232; 1st of 8, 306-297-297—900. NCAA West Regional May 5-7 Washington National GC Auburn, Wash. t63. Paola Valerio, 78-78-78— 234; t77. Fabiola Arriaga, 82-7877—237; t84. Taylor Newlin, 7978-81—238; t89. Summer Batiste, 77-85-77—239; t102. Shannon Jungman, 77-79-86—242; 16th of 24, 311-313-313—937.

2011-12 The “Mo”Morial Sept. 11-13 Traditions GC College Station, Texas t30. Paola Valerio, 79-71-84— 234; t41. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-7785—237; t46. Taylor Newlin, 7878-82—238; t49. Summer Batiste, 80-79-80—239; t64. Shannon Jungman, 82-82-84—248; 11th of 12, 312-318-319—958. Golfweek Conference Challenge Sept. 19-21 Red Sky GC Wolcott, Co. t8. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-74-76— 224; t16. Paola Valerio, 78-7870—226; 72. Summer Batiste, 7581-86—242; t81. Taylor Newlin, 88-81-80—249; 84. Bruna

Spengler, 77-88-86—251; t12th of 18, 304-314-312—930. Susie Maxwell Berning Classic Oct. 16-18 Jimmie Austin OU GC Norman, Okla. t26. Taylor Newlin, 72-73-78— 226; t45. Fabiola Arriaga, 79-7775—231; t51. Summer Batiste, 8077-75—232; t55. Paola Valerio, 80-74-79—233; t62. Shannon Jungman, 80-77-77—234; 15th of 17, 314-301-305—920. The Alamo Invitational Oct. 30-Nov. 1 Briggs Ranch GC San Antonio, Texas 1. Fabiola Arriaga, 69-72-72— 213; t5. Shannon Jungman, 7369-74—216; 16. Taylor Newlin, 76-74-70—220; t17. Paola Valerio 76-71-74—221; 26. Summer Batiste, 75-71-77—223; 1st of 14, 293-283-290—866. Challenge at Onion Creek Nov. 7-8 Onion Creek Club Austin, Texas t2. Fabiola Arriaga, 69-72-72— 213; t10. Taylor Newlin, 73-7375—221; t19. Shannon Jungman, 76-75-72—223; t39. Summer Batiste, 81-71-77—229; t42. Paola Valerio, 74-74-82—230; t2nd of 14, 292-290-296—878. UCF Challenge Feb. 12-14 Red Tail GC Sorrento, Fla. t43. Summer Batiste, 75-72-78— 225; t58. Fabiola Arriaga, 7474-81—229; t71. Taylor Newlin, 75-80-76—231; t71. Shannon Jungman, 75-77-79—231; t76. Paola Valerio, 78-77-78—233; 12th of 18, 299-300-311—910.

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 61


Islander Classic Feb. 27-28 Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas t1. Summer Batiste, 75-74-71— 220; t1. Taylor Newlin, 72-7375—220; t4. Fabiola Arriaga, 76-74-76—226; t4. Paola Valerio, 73-78-75—226; t4. Shannon Jungman, 76-75-75—226; 1st of 14, 296-296-296—888. Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate March 16-18 Forest Hills GC Augusta, Ga. t3. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-70-73— 218; t3. Shannon Jungman, 73-7174—218; t5. Summer Batiste, 7572-72—219; 18. Taylor Newlin, 75-73-78—226; t22. Paola Valerio, 78-73-77—228; 1st of 14, 298-286-296—880. Anuenue Spring Break Classic March 26-27 The Bay Course Kapalua, Hawaii t6. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-74-74— 222; t12. Shannon Jungman, 7674-74—224; t28. Paola Valerio, 79-76-76—231; t44. Taylor Newlin, 81-78-79—238; t61. Summer Batiste, 79-87-81—247; 5th out of 14, 308-302-303—913. Southland Championship April 16-18 Vaaler Creek GC Blanco, Texas 1. Shannon Jungman, 70-7374—217; 2. Fabiola Arriaga, 7176-73—220; t9. Taylor Newlin, 72-82-75—229; t16. Summer Batiste, 81-78-78—237; t18. Paola Valerio, 77-79-82—238; 1st of 8, 290-306-300—896. NCAA Central Regional May 10-12 Ohio State Scarlet Course Columbus, Ohio t84. Fabiola Arriaga, 82-80-77— 239; t84. Taylor Newlin, 77-84-

78—239; t99. Paola Valerio, 8081-82—243; t104. Summer Batiste, 78-83-84—245; t116. Shannon Jungman, 87-82-82—251; 20th of 24, 317-326-319—962.

2012-13 Dale McNamara Invitational Sept. 17-18 GC of Oklahoma Tulsa, Okla. 5. Fabiola Arriaga, 71-73-71— 215; t55. Chelsea Bretcher, 7878-78—234; t62. Paula Valerio, 78-79-79—236; t62. Taylor Newlin, 84-77-75—236; t66. Allie Johnston, 80-83-76—239; 12th of 15, 307-307-300—914. Golfweek Conference Challenge Sept. 24-26 Red Sky GC Wolcott, Colo. t2. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-68-69— 212; t32. Paola Valerio, 73-7578—226; t52. Taylor Newlin, 8077-75—232; t66. Allie Johnston, 82-76-79—237; 73. Brogan Townend, 79-83-79—241; 7th of 18, 307-296-301—904. Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Oct. 12-14 Holston Hills CC Knoxville, Tenn. t23. Taylor Newlin, 72-7871—221; t26. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-74-73—222; t26. Chelsea Bretcher, 73-75-74—222; t32. Paola Valerio, 72-72-80—224; t62. Brogan Townend, 85-7871—234; 6th of 16, 292-299289—880. The Alamo Invitational Oct. 28-30 Briggs Ranch GC San Antonio, Texas t10. Fabiola Arriaga, 72-6973—214; t15. Taylor Newlin, 7273-71—216; t22. Paola Valerio,

62 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

71-73-74—218; t28. Brogan Townend, 75-68-77—220; t39. Chelsea Bretcher, 76-76-72—224; t3rd of 16, 290-283-290—863. Seminole Match Up Nov. 15-17 Southwood GC Tallahassee, Fla. t18. Brogan Townend, 78-7473—218; t31. Paola Valerio, 7181-77—233; t34. Fabiola Arriaga, 77-80-73—230; t36. Taylor Newlin, 73-79-79—231; 52. Chelsea Bretcher, 82-76-78—236; 8th of 12, 299-309-301—909. Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate Feb. 25-26 English Turn Golf & CC New Orleans, La. t45. Paola Valerio, 77-75—152; t51. Brogan Townend, 74-79— 153; t60. Taylor Newlin, 70-84— 154; t74. Fabiola Arriaga, 7879—157; t85. Chelsea Bretcher, 77-83—160; 17th of 18, 298316—614. Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate March 15-17 Forest Hills GC Augusta, Ga. t34. Paola Valerio, 78-76-76— 230; t34. Taylor Newlin, 83-7671—230; t38. Fabiola Arriaga, 78-77-76—231; t50. Chelsea Bretcher, 78-83-75—236; t69. Brogan Townend, 80-80-82—242. t9th of 18, 314-309-298—921. Texas A&M/UTSA Shootout March 27 Miramont Country Club Bryan, Texas 2. Taylor Newlin, 80-73—153; t5. Paola Valerio, 74-82—156; 7. Fabiola Arriaga, 86-72—158; t10. Brogan Townend, 80-80—160; t10. Allie Johnston, 84-76—160; 14. Chelsea Bretcher, 87-80—167; 2nd of 2, 320-305—625.


SMU Dallas Athletic Club Invitational April 5-7 Dallas Athletic Club Dallas, Texas t13. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-7678—229; t20. Taylor Newlin, 77-78-76—231; t20. Paola Valerio, 76-78-77—231; t67. Allie Johnston, 82-82-89—253; 5th of 15, 304308-311—923. WAC Championship April 22-24 Longbow GC Mesa, Ariz. t6. Fabiola Arriaga, 76-74-73— 223; t12. Taylor Newlin, 73-7975—227; t16. Paola Valerio, 7677-76—229; t18. Allie Johnston, 72-80-78—230; 28. Brogan Townend, 79-80-76—235; 4th of 7, 297-310-300—907. NCAA Central Regional May 9-11 Jimmie Austin OU GC Norman, Okla. t30. Paola Valerio, 76-72-73—221; t62. Taylor Newlin, 74-80-72—226; t73. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-75-79— 228; t85. Brogan Townend, 7878-75—231; t111. Allie Johnston, 82-78-79—239; 17th of 24, 302303-299—904

2013-14 The “Mo” Morial Sept. 9-11 Traditions GC Bryan, Texas t17. Brogan Townend, 78-7372—223; t20. Fabiola Arriaga, 71-76-77—224; t47. Aimee Ponte, 78-80-79—237; t49. Taylor Newlin, 77-81-80—238; t58. Chelsea Bretcher, 79-86-81—246; 8th of 24, 304-310-308—922. Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate Sept. 20-22 Cherokee Country Club Knoxville, Tenn. t39. Fabiola Arriaga, 76-73—149; t39. Taylor Newlin, 74-75—149; t56. Brogan Townend, 77-75—152; t74. Aimee Ponte, 75-80—155; t84. Libby Thomas, 74-83—157; 14th of 17, 299-303-ccd.—602. Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational Oct. 13-15 University of Texas GC Austin, Texas t39. Fabiola Arriaga, 70-76-76— 222; t45. Brogan Townend, 72-7576—223; t48. Chelsea Bretcher, 80-74-70—224; t57. Taylor Newlin, 75-78-73—226; t82. Libby Thomas, 75-84-76—235; t11th of 18, 292303-295—890. The Alamo Invitational Oct. 27-29 Briggs Ranch GC San Antonio, Texas t7. Taylor Newlin, 69-70-74—213; t13. Fabiola Arriaga, 68-74-72— 214; t13. Brogan Townend, 74-6773—214; t32. Aimee Ponte, 7475-70—219; t79. Chelsea Bretcher, 80-80-79—239; 78. Libby Thomas _78-82-78—238; t5th of 15, 285286-289—860. * played as an individual

2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf • 63


Annual Team Awards

Player of the Year Allie Jordan_____ 2008-09 Shelly Martinez__ 2009-10 Paola Valerio____ 2010-11 Fabiola Arriaga__ 2011-12 Fabiola Arriaga__ 2012-13

Highest GPA Award Bruna Spengler___ 2008-09 Laeni Bendzik____ 2009-10 Bruna Spengler___ 2010-11 Bruna Spengler___ 2011-12 Taylor Newlin____ 2012-13

Captain Award Allie Jordan_____ 2008-09 Shelly Martinez__ 2009-10 Madison McClain__ 2009-10 Summer Batiste___ 2010-11 Summer Batiste___ 2011-12 Taylor Newlin____ 2012-13 Paola Valerio____ 2012-13

Allie Jordan Give My All Award Allie Jordan_____ 2008-09 Shanon Jungman__ 2009-10 Paola Valerio____ 2010-11 Taylor Newlin____ 2011-12 Brogan Townend_ 2012-13

Weight Room Warrior Award Shanon Jungman__ 2008-09 Summer Batiste___ 2009-10 Summer Batiste___ 2010-11 Summer Batiste___ 2011-12 Paola Valerio____ 2011-12 Paola Valerio____ 2012-13

Laura Baker Spirit Award Laura Baker_____ 2008-09 Madison McClain__ 2009-10 Taylor Newlin____ 2010-11 Fabiola Arriaga__ 2011-12 Chelsea Bretcher_ 2012-13

All-Time Letterwinners Fabiola Arriaga____________________________ 2010-P Laura Baker__________________________________ 2005-09 Summer Batiste________________________________ 2007-12 Laeni Bendzik________________________________ 2007-10 Chelsea Bretcher___________________________ 2010-P Lesan Gouge__________________________________ 2006-08 Neely Hutchins________________________________ 2005-07 Allie Jordan__________________________________ 2005-09 Shannon Jungman_____________________________ 2008-12 Michelle Kowalick_____________________________ 2005-08

Shelly Martinez_______________________________ Kayla McBride________________________________ Madison McClain______________________________ Taylor Newlin______________________________ Stephanie Perez_______________________________ Aimee Ponte_______________________________ Libby Thomas______________________________ Brogan Townend___________________________ Bruna Spengler________________________________ Paola Valerio_________________________________ Jenna Wessels________________________________

64 • 2013-14 UTSA Women’s Golf

2006-10 2006-10 2006-10 2010-P 2005-06 2013-P 2013-P 2012-P 2008-12 2010-13 2005-06


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