Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA women struggle at NCAAs

- TOM MURPHY

Birdies were hard to come by in Friday’s opening round of the NCAA Championsh­ips for the No. 20 University of Arkansas women’s golf team.

The Razorbacks posted just four of them en route to a 19-over 307, tied for the second-highest score of the day, at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Arkansas is tied with No. 5 San Jose State and No. 6 Oklahoma State for 21st among the 24 teams, with only Vanderbilt (+20) behind them.

“We got off to a slow start today,” Arkansas Coach Shauna Taylor said. “The beauty of this championsh­ip is that we have more days to climb the leaderboar­d.

“We couldn’t get anything going today, but I know we

are prepared for the climb up the board. We look forward to the challenge ahead of us.”

No. 19 Texas A&M and No. 17 Auburn, the Razorbacks’ playing partners, found the scoring a little easier. The Aggies led the 12-team morning

bunch at 4 over, while Auburn shot 8 over to tie for third with LSU among the morning group.

No. 1 Stanford, which had an afternoon tee time, toured the Raptor Course in 1-over 289, aided by 13 birdies plus an eagle by Rose Zhang, the individual leader at 4-under 68. The Cardinal leads by three strokes over Texas A&M.

Junior Kajal Mistry led the Razorbacks with a 1-over 73 on the 6,340-yard Raptor Course, with bogeys on Nos. 2 and 10 and a lone birdie on the par-5 11th.

Junior Julia Gregg carded a 2 over, with four bogeys and a team-high two birdies.

Arkansas also got counting scores from junior Ela Anacona and freshman Ffion Tynan, who shot matching 8-over 80s. Sophomore Miriam Ayora carded the non-counting score, an 85 that featured a pair of double bogeys.

The Razorbacks’ birdie count was the lowest of the day, two fewer than Oklahoma State’s six.

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