2014wgolfguide

Page 1



Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Roster / Schedule

2013-14 University of Delaware Women’s Golf Roster

Player Cl. Vimonthip Benjasupawan *...................So. Marie Bogenez.....................................Fr. Annie Bowlsby **.................................Jr. Grace Chua...........................................Fr. Nathalie Filler *....................................So. Emma Sills *.........................................Jr. Andi Slane *.........................................Jr. Vitoria Teixeira.....................................Fr. Amanda Terzian **...............................Jr. Baralee Theinthong **..........................Jr.

Hometown/High School Bangkok, Thailand/American School of Bangkok Marly, France/Georges de la tour Monterey, Calif./Santa Catalina School White Rock, British Columbia/Semiahmoo Secondary School Bloomfield, Conn./Westminster School Bear, Del./Red Lion Christian Academy Temecula, Calif./Great Oak Rio de Janeiro, Brazil/IMG Academy (Fla.) Haverford, Pa./Episcopal Academy Bangkok, Thailand/Niva International School

Head Coach: Patty Post (Wisconsin ‘99) Assistant Coach: Brendon Post Home Course: Deerfield Golf Club * Letters Earned

2013-14 University of Delaware Women’s Golf Schedule

Date September 8-9 September 14-15 October 14-15 October 21-23 October 26-27 March 15-17 April 4-5 April 18-20

Tournament Location Tignanelli Towson Invitational at Towson Golf & Country Club Phoenix, Md. Princeton Invitational at Springdale Golf Club Princeton, N.J. Rutgers Invitational at Rutgers Golf Course Piscataway, N.J. Florida International/Pat Bradley Invitational at Lakewood Ranch Golf Course Lakewood Ranch, Fla. University of Delaware Invitational at Rehoboth Beach Country Club Rehoboth Beach, Del. C&F Bank Intercollegiate at Kingsmill Resort Williamsburg, Va. UNCW Seahawk Invitational at River Landing Golf Course Wilmington, N.C. Colonial Athletic Association Championships at St. James Plantation Golf Course Southport, N.C.

What is a Blue Hen?

University of Delaware’s athletic teams have one of the most unique nicknames in all of college athletics – “The Fightin’ Blue Hens.” It is a name they carry with pride that stretches back over 200 years of history of the state of Delaware. The Blue Hen nickname has been continuously used by all University of Delaware intercollegiate teams since 1911. On December 9, 1775, the Continental Congress resolved that a military battalion was to be raised from the lower three counties along the Delaware River. Thus was born the Delaware Regiment, a group of eight companies representing New Castle, Kent and Sussex counties. The second company was composed of men from Kent County and was under the command of Captain John Caldwell, an avid fan and owner of gamecocks. The militia often amused themselves by staging cock fights with these birds which were of a breed known as the Kent County Blue Hen, having some blue plumage. The renown of these chickens spread rapidly during that time when cock fighting was a popular form of amusement, and the “Blue Hens’ Chickens” quickly developed a reputation for ferocity and fighting success.

Capt. Caldwell’s company likewise acquired a considerable reputation for its own fighting prowess in engagements with the British at Long Island, White Plains, Trenton, and Princeton, and was soon known as “the Blue Hen Chicken” company. One version of the story states that Caldwell’s company rushed into battle screaming “We’re sons of the Blue Hen and we’re game to the end!” Captain Caldwell’s company was part of Col. John Haslet’s first Delaware regiment that formed near the outset of the Revolution in January, 1776, and in August, 1781, remnants of the regiment were still battling at Eutaw Springs, SC. Although often referred to as “The Fighting Delawares,” Haslet’s regiment also won the sobriquet, “The Blue Hen Chickens,” which has become the nickname for all Delawareans. The name was formally adopted by the Delaware General Assembly in April, 1939 when the “Blue Hen Chicken” was named the official state bird. UD’s College of Agricultural Sciences maintains a breeding group of the Blue Hen Chicken on its campus farm. The UD mascot, YoUDee, made his debut in September 1993. YoUDee stands 6-foot, 8-inches tall with a 6-1 wing-span and size 28FF sneakers.

About this Guide

The 2013-14 University of Delaware women’s golf media guide was designed, written, and edited by Kevin Tritt using Adobe InDesign 5.0.4 on MacIntosh computers. Covers designed by Kevin Tritt using PhotoShop 7.0.

Table of Contents 2013-14 Roster / 2013-14 Schedule..................................1 Coaching Staff..........................................................................2 Andi Slane.................................................................................3 Amanda Terzian........................................................................4 Annie Bowlsby..........................................................................5 Emma Sills.................................................................................6 Baralee Theinthong..................................................................7 Vimonthip Benjasupawan.......................................................8 Nathalie Filler...........................................................................9 Marie Bogenez.......................................................................10 Grace Chua..............................................................................11 Vitoria Teixeira......................................................................12 2012-13 Results and Statistics...........................................13 Colonial Athletic Association................................................14 Blue Hen Records...................................................................15 All-Time Results/Letterwinners..........................................16 UD Administration.................................................................17 University of Delaware....................................................18-19 UD Alumni...............................................................................20

Quick Facts Location............................................... Newark, Delaware 19716 President...................................................... Dr. Patrick T. Harker NCAA Faculty Representative ............ Dr. Lynn Snyder-Mackler Director of Athletics & Recreation Services ........... Eric Ziady Deputy Athletic Director/SWA.........................Samantha Huge Sr. Assoc. AD/Operations & Capital Projects....... Joe Shirley Senior Associate AD/Athletic Development..............Tim Ford Assistant AD/Operations................ Dr. Susan Groff Costa, Ed.D Associate AD/Business Operations.....................Scott Eatough Associate AD/Fin. Strategies & Athlete Perf..Augie Maurelli Associate AD/External Relations..... Stacey Bunting-Thompson Associate AD/Recreation Services...................... Jake Olkkola Associate AD/Compliance.......................................Rick Stumpf Compliance Coordinator....................................... Lauren Harris Assistant AD/Operations............................Alicia Greco Walker Assistant AD/Marketing.....................................Kristy Fletcher Assistant AD/Ticket Operations..........................Trent Bartling Asst. AD/Sports Medicine Physician........Dr. Andrew Reisman Assistant AD/Athletic Training..............................Dan Watson Associate Head Athletic Trainer..............................Joan Couch Assistant Athletic Trainers..... Courtney Butterworth, Jon Boone, ................................................................................ Kelly Stafford Assistant AD/Media Relations....................... Scott Selheimer Assistant SID (women’s golf contact)......................Kevin Tritt Office Phone...................................................... 302-831-8715 Cell Phone.......................................................... 302-383-5005 Email..................................................................ktritt@udel.edu Assistant SID........................................................ Maggie Hayon Sports Information Assistant.........................Jessica Calderone Athletics Media Relations Phone...................... 302-831-2186 Athletics Media Relations Fax.......................... 302-831-8653 Email Address..................................................36246@udel.edu Website......................................................... www.bluehens.com Head Coach..........................................Patty Post (Wisconsin ‘99) Office Phone..................................................... 302-831-6678 Assistant Coach...................................................... Brendon Post Home Course............................................................ Deerfield CC 2012-13 Record.................................................. 0-0 (5th, CAA) All-Time Record............................................... 1-0 (two seasons)

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

1


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Coaching Staff

PATTY POST

joined the Hoyas after serving as the Assistant Golf Professional at Lakewood Country Club in Rockville, Md. for two years (2004-05). At Lakewood, Post ran weekly tournaments, provided lessons, conducted clinics and assisted in the merchandising for the golf shop.

HEAD COACH THIRD SEASON AT UD WISCONSIN ‘99

During that time, Post was also pursuing a professional playing career. From 2003-05, Post played regularly on the Futures Golf Tour, earning exempt status on the tour that is known as the “Gateway to the LPGA.” She had two top-20 finishes in events during the 2003 and 2004 seasons. Her playing resume also includes Runner-up finishes in the Maryland Women’s Open from 2003-05, named Middle Atlantic PGA Women’s Player of the Year in 2002, 2005, 2006,and 2007, named LPGA Northeast Section Teaching and Club Professional Player of the Year in 2007, and was only the second female to qualify for the PGA National Club Professional Championship.

Patty Post begins her third season leading the University of Delaware women’s golf program in the 2013-14 season. During the 2011-12 season, women’s golf became the 23rd varsity sport at the University of Delaware and the first new sport at UD since women’s rowing was added to the fold prior to the 1998-99 season. During the program’s inaugural season in 2011-12, Post helped lead the Blue Hens to top 10 finishes during eight of 10 tournaments on the year. Delaware finished among the top five in three tournaments, including a season-best fourth at The Spider at St. James Invitational. During the 2012-13 campgain, the Blue Hens posted six top-10 finishes on the year, including a fifth place showing at the Colonial Athletic Association Championships. Post (nee Frohna) joined Georgetown University as the women’s golf head coach in 2006 and guided a young program that has become one of the best in the BIG EAST Conference and in the region. In her third year at the helm, during the 2008-09 season, the Hoyas posted eight top-10 finishes in 10 tournaments, including three top-five finishes in the Spring. Those finishes were highlighted by a team third place finish at the Big East Championships and a win at the NIU Snowbird Intercollegiate, the third team win in program history. She was named LPGA Northeast Section Coach of the Year 2009.

Prior to that, she spent two years (2003-04) at Admiral’s Cove Golf Club in Jupiter, Fla. and was the Teaching Professional at Fair Oaks Golf Park in Fairfax, Va. from 2001-05.

A 1999 kinesiology and zoology graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Post enjoyed a stellar amateur career. She was the Wisconsin Amateur Champion in 1998 and was named the most valuable player on the Wisconsin team in 1997 and 1999. Post won the 1999 Notre Dame Invitational and also earned CoSIDA Academic All-American honors during her career. Post and her husband, Brendon, himself an accomplished golfer who served as Patty’s assistant coach at Georgetown and now at Delaware, have two daughters, Miranda (3), and Kiera (2), and a son, Landon, who was born June 24, 2013.

BRENDON POST ASSISTANT COACH THIRD SEASON AT UD Brendon Post begins his third season as an assistant coach with the University of Delaware women’s golf program in the 2013-14 season. Post, the husband of Blue Hen head coach Patty Post, currently serves as a PGA teaching professional with the Clubgolf Performance Center in Gaithersburg, Md. During the program’s inaugural season, Post helped lead the Blue Hens to top 10 finishes during eight of 10 tournaments on the year. Delaware finished among the top five in three tournaments, including a seasonbest fourth at The Spider at St. James Invitational. Last season the Blue Hens posted six top-10 finishes on the year, including a fifth place showing at the Colonial Athletic Association Championships.

Two of her golfers - Chelsea Curtis and Carly Hunt - earned All-BIG EAST honors for the second-straight season. Six of the seven members of the women’s golf team were selected to the All-BIG EAST Academic Team and Hunt, Robyn English and Joan Dulieu were named to the National Golf Coaches Association Scholar All-American list. Georgetown also served as the team host for the 2009 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship at Caves Valley Golf Course in Owings Mills, Md.

Post, who has worked with Clubgolf since 2004, has more than 20 years of teaching experience and spent two years playing professionally on the Golden Bear Tour and Maverick Tours in Florida.

In her second season, the Blue and Gray posted eight top-10 finishes and finished in fifth place at the BIG EAST Championship. Four members of the team - Christine Curley, English, Hunt and Madeline Nguyen - were named to the National Golf Coaches Association Scholar All-American list.

Post is a Class A PGA Professional, certified Titleist Performance Institute (TPI) Level 3 Golf Professional, and a TPI Level 2 Junior Instructor.

Post guided the Hoyas to a fourth place finish at the 2007 BIG EAST Championship and to four top-five finishes and four top-10 finishes during her first season at the helm of the program. In addition to her leadership of the team on the links, Post herself enjoyed a solid season of play. She played in the LPGA’s Sybase Classic in May 2008, qualified for the LPGA Championship in June, 2010 and capped off her year by playing in the 40th PGA Professional National Championship. Post came to Georgetown after spending the previous six years as a teaching professional and a player. She 2

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

Prior to arriving at Clubgolf, Post served as Director of Golf at Fair Oaks Golf Park and Olney Golf Park where he taught and supervised junior camps, group lessons, clinics, golf schools for beginners through advanced players, and individual lessons. He is also an educational speaker for the LPGA and PGA, as well as Clubgolf’s well-respected Power Swing Clinics. Post served as assistant women’s golf coach at Georgetown along with Patty, and has also worked as an Assistant Golf Professional at Admirals Cove (Jupiter, Fla.), Columbine Country Club (Littleton, Colo.) and Cliffside Country Club (Simsbury, Conn.).

As a player, Post qualified for the Professional PGA National Championship from 2007 through 2010. He won the 2008 Mid-Atlantic PGA Head Professional Championship, the 2008 and 2009 MAPGA Pro-am, and the 2008 and 2009 Central Chapter Pro-Junior Championship. In 2009 Post qualified for the Nationwide Tour Event – Melwood Open and separately shot his career-low competitive score of 63. Brendon and Patty have two daughters, Miranda (3), and Kiera (2), and a son, Landon, who was born June 24, 2013.


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Andi Slane

ANDI SLANE Junior • Temecula, Calif. • Great Oak At Delaware: Third-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned one letter •  has appeared in 14 career tournaments, posting a 79.43 average round • serving as team captain along with Amanda Terzian • team representative on the UD Student-Athlete Advisory Council. 2012-13 Season: Appeared in the final three tournaments during the fall season, averaging 78.88 shots per round •  missed the entire spring with a shoulder injury •  tied for 21st place at the Rutgers Invitational with an 81-76-157 •  also fired a season-low round of 76 at the FIU Pat Bradley Invitational •  was the Blue Hens’ top finisher at the Indiana Hoosier Fall Classic and tied for the team lead at the FIU Pat Bradley Invitational •  earned the UD Team Sportsmanship Award. 2011-12 Season: Named UD Alumni Association Team MVP •  one of four Blue Hens to compete in all 11 events during the year •  ranked second on the team with a 79.59 average round •  was Delaware’s top finisher at the Rutgers Invitational (9th), The Spider at St. James Invitational (T-7th), C&F Bank Intercollegiate (T-6th), and CAA Championships (T-16) •  led the squad with three top 10 finishes and four top 20 finishes on the season • posted 11 rounds in the

70s on the season including a season-low 73 at the C&F Bank Intercollegiate, tied for the lowest round by a Blue Hen on the year •  helped lead Delaware to eight top 10 finishes during the program’s inaugural season • named CAA Women’s Golfer of the Week on Oct. 19 and National 5&10 Best of the Blue Hens Athlete of the Week on Apr. 23. High School/Juniors: First team All-Southwestern League and All-Valley Region selection during her junior and senior seasons at Great Oak High School • served as team captain during senior year • member of athletic captains council • qualified for the 2009 California State Championship • ranked No. 215 by Golfweek • posted six top 10 FCWT finishes during the 2010-11 season • earned medalist honors at the FCWT event in Wigwam, Ariz. in January, 2011 • selected second team FCWT All-American. Personal: Andrea “Andi” Slane • born May 6, 1993 • daughter of Brian and Susan Slane • has an older brother, Patrick • father was a pole vaulter at Ohio State • chemical engineering major at Delaware • did not start playing golf until the end of eighth grade •  served as an intern over the summer with the department of transportation.

Andi Slane at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2011-12 2012-13 Totals

11 3 14

29 8 37

2308 631 2939

79.59 78.88 79.43

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

73 76 73

155 157 155

228 235 228

3 - 3

4 - 4

T-6th T-21st T-6th

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

3


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Amanda Terzian

AMANDA TERZIAN Junior • Haverford, Pa. • Episcopal Academy At Delaware: Third-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned two letters •  has averaged

legiate after carding 79-74-76-229 •  posted a team-high 13 rounds in the 70s including a 73

81.24 shots per round while competing in 19 career tournaments • serving as team captain along

at the Anteater Invitational, tied for the lowest by a Blue Hen on the season •  named National

with Andi Slane.

5&10 Best of the Blue Hens Athlete of the Week on Apr. 23 •  helped lead Delaware to eight top 10 finishes during the program’s inaugural season.

2012-13 Season: Named UD Alumni Association Team Most Valuable Player •  appeared in all but two tournaments during the year •  ranked second on the team with an 80.76 average

High School/Juniors: Four-year varsity member of the Episcopal Academy women’s golf team

round •  tied for eighth place at the C&F Bank Intercollegiate after carding a 78-73-151 •  her

• was the low scorer on the team during her final three seasons • won the high school individual

second round 73 was tied fo the lowest by a Blue Hen during the season •  also was Delaware’s

championships during her senior year • served as team captain as a senior • Merit Scholar •

top finisher at the Purdue Mount Vintage Invitational and the UNCW Seahawk Classic •  posted

finished third at the IJGT at Seaview Resort tournament in 2010.

14 rounds in the 70s during the season, the most on the team. Personal: Amanda Suzanne Terzian • born April 1, 1993 • daughter of Dr. Lor Terzian and 2011-12 Season: Appeared in 10 tournaments during the year for the Blue Hens • ranked

Deb Terzian • has a brother, Alex, who played club hockey at Wake Forest • also has a half

fourth on the team with an 81.69 stroke average •  was Delaware’s top finisher at the Wisconsin

brother, Justin • art history major at Delaware • enjoys playing billiards and tennis during her

Badger Invitational (10th), Sir Pizza Cards Challenge (56th), Anteater Invitational (24th), and

free time.

CAA Championships (16th) •  finished a season-best tied for ninth at the C&F Bank Intercol-

Amanda Terzian at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2011-12 2012-13 Totals

4

10 9 19

26 25 51

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

2124 2019 4143

81.69 80.76 81.24

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

73 73 73

176 151 151

229 236 229

2 1 3

3 2 5

T-9th T-8th T-8th


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Annie Bowlsby

ANNIE BOWLSBY Junior • Monerey, Calif. • Santa Catalina School At Delaware: Third-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned two letters.

High School/Juniors: Was the top player at Santa Catalina School • earned first team AllLeague and Central Coast Section honors during all four years of high school • served as team

2012-13 Season: Appeared in all but two tournaments for Delaware •  averaged 82.38

captain during senior year • Gold Chord and honor roll student all four years • posted a 313

strokes per round •  recorded five rounds in the 70s, including a season-low 73 at the C&F Bank

ranking by Golfweek • placed second at the Central Coast Section Tournament as a senior •

Intercollegiate •  finished 26th at the Colonial Athletic Association Championships and tied for

qualified for the Callaway Junior Worlds Tournament • won the AT&T Del Monte Tournament in

29th at the C&F Bank Intercollegiate •  tied for the team lead at the FIU Pat Bradley Invitational

2009 • finished 11th at the Walmart First Tee Open in 2010 • posted three top 10 finishes on

• named to CAA Academic Honor Roll.

the Future Collegians World Tour as a senior • received the Payne Stewart Award from the AT&T Pebble Beach Junior Golf Association during the spring of 2011.

2011-12 Season: One of three Blue Hens to compete in all 11 tournaments during the year •  ranked third on the team with an 80.93 average round •  tied for 19th place at The Spider at

Personal: Annie Bowlsby • daughter of Bruce and Tina Marie Bowlsby • father was a swimmer

St. James and tied for 20th place at the Rutgers Invitational •  recorded eight rounds in the 70s,

at BYU, while mother was on the ski team at Oregon State and the women’s soccer team at

including a season-low 71 during the second round of the FIU Pat Bradley Invitational •  helped

Colorado State • business major at Delaware.

lead Delaware to eight top 10 finishes during the program’s inaugural season.

Annie Bowlsby at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2011-12 2012-13 Totals

11 9 20

29 24 53

2347 1977 4324

80.93 82.38 81.58

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

71 73 71

159 156 156

241 235 235

- - -

2 - 2

T-19th 26th T-19th

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

5


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Emma Sills

EMMA SILLS Junior • Bear, Del. • Red Lion Christian Academy At Delaware: Third-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned one letter •  team repre-

the Delaware High School Championships • also earned four letters with the cross country team

sentative on the UD Student-Athlete Advisory Council.

• class officer • honor roll student • played on the Philadelphia Junior Tour and Philadelphia College Tour • also participated with DSGA Junior Golf, the International Junior Golf Tour, and

2012-13 Season: Did not appear in any tournaments during the season.

the Future Collegiate World Tour.

2011-12 Season: Competed in three events for Delaware •  averaged 94.33 strokes per

Personal: Emma Rebecca Sills • born August 31, 1992 • daughter of David and Denise Sills •

round •  carded a season-low round of 92 at the Fighting Camel Fall Classic •  helped lead

has two brothers, Jahmere and David, and a sister, Abigail • sociology major at Delaware with a

Delaware to eight top 10 finishes during the program’s inaugural season.

minor in journalism • enjoys skiing and scuba diving in her free time •  father started Eastern Christian Academy which has become one of the top high school football schools in the East.

High School/Juniors: Earned five letters on the women’s golf team at Red Lion Christian Academy • first team All-Conference selection during each of her final three years • finished 19th in

Emma Sills at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2011-12 Totals

6

3 3

6 6

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

566 566

94.33 94.33

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

92 92

190 190

279 279

- -

- -

66th 66th


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Baralee Theinthong

BARALEE THEINTHONG Junior • Bangkok, Thailand • Niva International School At Delaware: Third-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned two letters •  has appeared

Cal State Monterey Bay •  helped lead Delaware to eight top 10 finishes during the program’s

in 20 career tournaments, averaging 82.26 shots per round.

inaugural season • earned team’s Sportsmanship Award •  National Golf Coaches Association All-American Scholar •  named to CAA Academic Honor Roll.

2012-13 Season: Appeared in all but one tournament for Delaware, ranking fourth on the squad with an 81.63 average round •  led the Blue Hens by finishing a season-best 17th at the

High School/Juniors: Attended Niva International School in Bangkok, Thailand • earned

Colonial Athletic Association Championships •  also was Delaware’s top finisher at the John Kirk

academic award and school ambassador award • medalist at the Singha-ISF Junior Golf Open

Panther Intercollegiate •  carded seven rounds in the 70s during the year •  Capital One/Co-

in 2010 • was a Bangkok Golf Team Qualifier for the Thailand Central Regional I during the

SIDA Academic All-American nominee •  Women’s Golf Coaches Association All-American Scholar

spring of 2011.

•  named to CAA Academic Honor Roll. Personal: Baralee Theinthong • born December 15, 1992 • daughter of Bancha and Phiraya 2011-12 Season: Competed in all but one tournament for the Blue Hens •  averaged 82.89

Theinthong • sister, Banchalee, is a senior on the women’s golf team at the University of Min-

shots per round •  finished a season-best tied for 28th place at The Spider at St. James Invi-

nesota • also has an older sister, Laksana • finance major at Delaware.

tational •  carded seven rounds in the 70s during the year, including a season-low 75 against

Baralee Theinthong at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2011-12 2012-13 Totals

10 10 20

27 27 54

2238 2204 4442

82.89 81.63 82.26

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

75 75 75

170 160 160

242 238 238

- - -

- 1 1

T-40th T-17th T-17th

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

7


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Vimonthip Benjasupawan

VIMONTHIP BENJASUPAWAN Sophomore • Bangkok, Thailand • American School of Bangkok At Delaware: Second-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned one letter.

High School/Juniors: Served as captain of The American School of Bangkok team in 2012 •  won the TrueVisions Singha Junior in Bangkok on Oct. 26-28, 2010 •  finished second at the

2012-13 Season: Was the only Blue Hen to appear in all 11 tournaments during her fresh-

19th SICC/DBS Junior Invitational in Singapore on Dec. 7-9, 2010 •  tied for 18th place at the

man year •  ranked third on the team with an 81.37 average round •  was Delaware’s top

Golf Pride Junior Classic at Pinehurst on July 5-7, 2011 •  tied for 11th place at the Cleveland

finisher at the Pinehurst Challenge after carding a 74-79-80-233 •  posted four top-30 finishes

Health Care Foundation Junior in Shelby, N.C. on July 19-21, 2011.

on the year, including a season-best 21st at the Rutgers Invitational and Colonial Athletic Association Championships •  carded nine rounds in the 70s during the year •  named to CAA Academic

Personal: Vimonthip “Pare” Benjasupawan • born June 1, 1994 • daughter of Suwaluck and

Honor Roll.

Taweechai Benjasupawan • younger brother, Keerati, is studying in China for high school • international business major at Delaware.

Vimonthip Benjasupawan at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2012-13 Totals

8

11 11

30 30

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

2441 2441

81.37 81.37

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

74 74

156 156

233 233

- -

- -

T-21st T-21st


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Nathalie Filler

NATHALIE FILLER Sophomore • Bloomfield, Conn. • Westminster School At Delaware: Second-year member of the Blue Hens who has earned one letter.

High School/Juniors: Served as captain of the boys’ golf team at Westminster School •  won the 10th Stan Trojanowski Northern Junior •  was the club champion for two consecutive years

2012-13 Season: Appeared in all but one tournament during her freshman season • aver-

at The Hartford Golf Club •  played in the U.S. Girls’ Junior in 2011 at Whistling Straits in

aged 81.93 shots per round •  carded a 74-77-151 in her Blue Hen debut to tie for third place

Chicago.

at the Tignanelli Towson Invitational • was Delaware’s top finisher at the Michigan Wolverine Invitational •  led the Blue Hens at the Colonial Athletic Association Championships by posting an

Personal: Nathalie Filler • born January 12, 1994 •  daughter of Andrew and Jennifer Filler

81-85-79-245 •  recorded seven rounds in the 70s during the season.

• has two younger sisters, Emma and Maisie • father played ice hockey and baseball at Trinity College •  English-professional writing major at Delaware.

Nathalie Filler at Delaware Year Tournaments Rounds Strokes Avg. 2012-13 Totals

10 10

27 27

2212 2212

81.93 81.93

Low 18

Low 36

Low 54

Top 10

Top 20

Best Finish

74 74

151 151

241 241

1 1

2 3

T-3rd T-3rd

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

9


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Marie Bogenez

MARIE BOGENEZ Freshman • Marly, France • Georges de la tour At Delaware: First-year member of the Blue Hens who will look to immediately contribute to

Personal: Marie Lucie Bogenez • born January 21, 1996 •  daughter of Pierre and Christine

the program.

Bogenez • has a younger brother, Paul • father is a CEO of a country club and mother is a business manager •  international business major at Delaware.

Club/Juniors: Club champion from 2009-12 •  ranked 52nd in the 2012 junior amateur girls rankings •  2012 regional women’s champion •  was the 2011 regional junior champion and 2012 regional junior vice champion • carded a low round of 71.

10

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Grace Chua

GRACE CHUA Freshman • White Rock, British Columbia • Semiahmoo Secondary School At Delaware: First-year member of the Blue Hens who will look to immediately contribute to

the 2011 CN Future Links Pacific Championship • qualified for the 2011 and 2012 Callaway

the program.

Junior world golf championships •  earned the 2011 and 2012 Award of Excellence • top grade 11 social studies, top grade 9 Spanish, and top grade 9 science student.

High School/Juniors: Medalist at the 2010 and 2012 U.S. Junior Girls sectionals to qualify for the championship • was a three-year member of Team BC for the 2010-12 North Pacific Team

Personal: Grace Jia Hui Chua • born June 28, 1996 in Singapore •  daughter of David Chua

Matches • won the individual bronze and team gold medals for Team BC at the 2011 Western

and Kasi Mok • has two sisters, Cherie and Cheryl, who play on the South Carolina State women’s

Canada Summer Games • played for Team BC at the 2012 Girls Junior America’s Cup and was

golf team • father is a developer and mother is a real estate agent • finance major at Delaware

the champion at the 2012 Junior PGA series tournament at Arborlinks, Neb. • finished third at

who aspires to become a stock broker.

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

11


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

Vitoria Teixeira

VITORIA TEIXEIRA Freshman • Rio de Janeiro, Brazil • IMG Academy (Fla.) At Delaware: First-year member of the Blue Hens who will look to immediately contribute to

Classic during that month •  placed 20th at the 2012 South American Amateur Championship in

the program.

Colombia • was fifth at the South American Junior Championship in Bolivia.

High School/Juniors: Earned medalist honors at the IMG Leadbetter Golf Junior Tour in Febru-

Personal: Vitoria Branco Teixeira • born May 5, 1995 •  daughter of Luiz Teixeira and Antonia

ary, 2011 and the HJGT at Tara Preserve in October, 2011 • finished 13th at the Orange Bowl

Cupello • engineering major at Delaware.

International Junior Championship in December, 2012 • was 17th at the Doral Publix Junior

12

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

2012-13 Results & Statistics

2012-2013 University of Delaware Women’s Golf Results

Date September 9-10 September 22-23 October 5-6 October 13-14 October 23-25 March 9-10 March 17-19 March 25-26 April 1-2 April 6-7 April 19-21

Opponent Tignanelli Towson Invitational at Towson Golf & Country Club (Phoenix, Md.) Michigan Wolverine Invitational at University of Michigan Golf Course (Ann Arbor, Mich.) Rutgers Invitational at Rutgers Golf Course (Piscataway, N.J.) Indiana Hoosier Fall Invitational at Belterra Resort Golf Course (Florence, Ind.) 35th Annual FIU Pat Bradley Invitational at Lakewood Ranch Golf Course (Lakewood Ranch, Fla.) Purdue Mount Vintage Invitational at Mount Village Plantation Golf Course (North Augusta, S.C.) C&F Bank Intercollegiate at Kingsmill Resort (Williamsburg, Va.) John Kirk Panther Intercollegiate at Eagle’s Landing Country Club (Stockbridge, Ga.) Pinehurst Challenge at Pinehurst #6 Golf Course (Pinehurst, N.C.) UNCW Seahawk Classic at River Landing Golf Course (Wallace, N.C.) Colonial Athletic Association Championships at Reserve Golf Course at St. James Plantation (Southport, N.C.)

Results 4th Place (of 18) 12th Place (of 14) T-6th Place (of 21) 13th Place (of 13) 9th Place (of 14) 5th Place (of 6) 7th Place (of 28) 11th Place (of 14) 14th Place (of 19) 12th Place (of 14) 5th Place (of 9)

2012-2013 University of Delaware Women’s Golf Statistics

Name Rounds Andrea Slane..............................................................8 Amanda Terzian.........................................................25 Vimonthip Benjasupawan............................................30 Baralee Theinthong....................................................27 Nathalie Filler............................................................27 Annie Bowlsby............................................................24 Frida Nilsson..............................................................22 Kayleigh Reed.............................................................5 Team....................................................................... 11

Strokes 631 2019 2441 2204 2212 1977 1828 429 13,908

Average Score 78.88 80.76 81.37 81.63 81.93 82.38 83.09 85.80 82.79

Low Round 76 (Rutgers/FIU) 73 (C&F Bank) 74 (Pinehurst) 75 (Pinehurst) 74 (Towson/C&F Bank) 73 (C&F Bank) 75 (FIU) 81 (Purdue/C&F Bank) 73 (C&F Bank)

2012-2013 University of Delaware Women’s Golf Individual Results Name Vimonthip Benjasupawan Annie Bowlsby Nathalie Filler Frida Nilsson Kayleigh Reed Andrea Slane Amanda Terzian Baralee Theinthong

Name Vimonthip Benjasupawan Annie Bowlsby Nathalie Filler Frida Nilsson Kayleigh Reed Andrea Slane Amanda Terzian Baralee Theinthong

Towson 35th (79-85-164) 35th (79-85-164) 3rd (74-77-151) 12th (77-79-156) - - - 60th (88-84-172)

Purdue 25th (87-84-82-253) - 29th (87-88-84-259) 33rd (89-85-97-271) 32nd (98-86-81-265) - 19th (87-78-77-242) -

Michigan 52nd (82-86-81-249) 67th (91-85-80-256) 41st (82-83-81-246) 58th (87-88-77-252) - - 62nd (79-93-82-254) 62nd (89-83-82-254)

C&F Bank 29th (81-75-156) 29th (73-83-156) 29th (74-82-156) 94th (84-83-167) 74th (83-81-164) - 8th (78-73-151) 56th (82-78-160)

Rutgers 21st (78-79-157) 50th (82-81-163) 67th (88-79-167) 15th (78-76-154) - 21st (81-76-157) 34th (79-81-160) 54th (85-79-164)

John Kirk Panther 63rd (87-86-83-256) 66th (82-89-88-259) 65th (92-83-83-258) 62nd (85-85-85-255) - - 40th (91-78-78-247) 26th (76-82-83-241)

Indiana 67th (81-82-86-249) - 46th (77-83-81-241) 72nd (84-78-91-253) - 44th (80-78-81-239) 57th (80-78-88-246) 69th (85-83-83-251)

Pinehurst 31st (74-79-80-233) 85th (85-81-83-249) 82nd (80-85-82-247) - - - 47th (76-80-81-237) 56th (82-75-82-239)

UNCW Seahawk 34th (76-81-80-237) 54th (86-77-84-247) 48th (79-82-81-242) 54th (79-88-80-247) - - 31st (78-79-79-236) 42nd (79-80-81-240)

FIU Pat Bradley 50th (80-79-82-241) 36th (75-81-79-235) 49th (80-85-75-240) 36th (81-78-76-235) 45th (80-78-80-238)

CAA 21st (77-82-87-246) 26th (81-84-83-248) 17th (81-85-79-245) 21st (82-85-79-246) 17th (77-80-88-245)

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

13


Blue Hen Women’s Golf With nearly three decades of success athletically and academically, the Colonial Athletic Association has built a reputation as one of the nation’s top collegiate conferences. The CAA encompasses many of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas with a geographic footprint that stretches from Boston to Charleston, S.C. The conference has produced 16 national team champions in five different sports, 33 individual national champions, 13 national players of the year, 12 national coaches of the year and 13 Honda Award winners. Just as impressive, however, are the honors accumulated away from competition, which include five Rhodes Scholars and 23 NCAA post-graduate scholars. In 2012-13, more than 1,900 of the league’s 4,000 student-athletes received the Commissioner’s Academic Award after posting at least a 3.2 grade point average while lettering in a varsity sport. The conference had 23 teams in 15 different sports receive NCAA Public Recognition Awards based on the latest Academic Progress Report released in 2013. The landscape of the conference stretches along the majority of the East Coast, and includes several of the nation’s top media markets – New York (1), Philadelphia (4), Boston (7), Washington, D.C. (9) and Baltimore (25). The number of television homes in the CAA market exceeds 20 million. The CAA conducts championships in 22 sports. Male athletes compete for championships in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field. Female athletes battle for conference titles in basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. In 2012-13, 27 teams earned NCAA Tournament berths and 43 student-athletes received All-America honors in 14 different sports. The conference has made its presence known nationally in men’s basketball with two teams – George Mason (2006) and VCU (2011) – advancing to the NCAA Final Four over the past seven years. CAA teams have combined to win 41 games in CAA Commissioner postseason play since 2006, including 14 victories in the NCAA Tournament. The CAA has posted at least one NCAA Tournament Tom Yeager win in six of the past eight years, including the last four in a row. The conference has seen five or more teams reach postseason play in four of the last five seasons. In women’s basketball, 2013 CAA champion Delaware defeated West Virginia and North Carolina to become the 12th CAA team to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. Behind the play of Honda Award winner Elena Delle Donne, the Blue Hens finished the season ranked #13 in the final USA Today Coaches Top 25 poll. Drexel captured the WNIT championship with a 46-43 victory over Utah and James Madison reached the quarterfinals of the WNIT. CAA teams have gone 20-9 in postseason play over the past two years. The conference also excels in many other sports. CAA squads have combined to win 10 field hockey national titles since the championship began in 1981. Three men’s soccer teams earned NCAA Tournament berths last season and each current member of the conference has reached the NCAA Tournament since 2006. In softball, Hofstra reached the NCAA Super Regionals in 2012 and the CAA placed two teams (Hofstra and James Madison) in the NCAA’s for the first time last season. At least two women’s soccer teams have reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament three times in the past six seasons. William & Mary’s men’s cross country squad has made the NCAA Championship in 12 of the past 14 years and the women’s team had two runners (Elaina Balouris and Emily Stites) earn All-America honors in 2012. Delaware and Towson have each reached the Final Four of the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship. The CAA sent three teams to the NCAA Baseball Championship in 2013 and has had at least 11 players selected in nine of the last 11 Major League Baseball drafts. The conference also had individuals earn All-America honors in women’s lacrosse, track and field and swimming & diving last season and had players nationally ranked in tennis and golf. CAA member institutions are committed to excellence in the classroom. The Colonial Academic Alliance was created in 2002 by the league’s presidents with a goal of expanding their partnership to all aspects of university education and life outside of intercollegiate athletics. Among the programs that have been established are an undergraduate research conference, coordination of study abroad programs, visiting faculty programs and a recent partnership with NBC Learn to provide educational videos to over 8,500 public schools across the United States. CAA schools are also very active in community service projects. The CAA Blood Challenge, which is held each fall, has raised more than 36,000 units of blood over the past 11 years. The first-ever CAA Food Drive Challenge last winter resulted in over 9,500 pounds of donated food. 14

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

Colonial Athletic Association Colonial Athletic Association 8625 Patterson Avene Richmond, Va. 23229 Phone: 804-754-1616 Fax: 804-754-1830 www.caasports.com Commissioner:.........................................................................................................Tom Yeager Deputy Commissioner for Basketball:...............................................................Ron Bertovich Chief Operating Officer:.................................................................................... Cindy Williams Executive Assistant:....................................................................................... Raven Wilkinson Senior Associate Commissioner, Championships/Marketing:...................Robert Goodman Senior Associate Commissioner, Compliance & Governance/SWA:......Kathleen Batterson Associate Commissioner, Communications:.....................................................Rob Washburn Associate Commissioner, Broadcast Services:......................................................Peter Hock Associate Commissioner, Integrated Digital Strategies:...................................Scott Meyer Assistant Commissioner, Championships:.........................................................Steve Kanaby Assistant Commissioner, Championships:.........................................................Ashley Bolton Assistant Commissioner, Women’s Basketball:...................................................Katie Lowe Assistant Commissioner, Creative Services/Communications:...................... Niki DeSantis Director of Football Communications and Operations:..................................... Zach Burrus Director of Corporate Partnerships:................................................................Brian Edmonds Director of Video Services:.....................................................................................Alex Souza Assistant Director of Video Services:..............................................................Bobby Broyles Assistant Director of Compliance & Student-Athlete Services:...................Vincent Pierson Officiating Administrator:...................................................................................Pamela Stone Communications Intern:..................................................................................... Tim McDonnell Commissioner Thomas E. Yeager has guided the CAA since its inception. The conference traces its roots back to 1983 when two of its current members- James Madison University and the College of William and Mary - were aligned with East Carolina University, George Mason University, the United States Naval Academy and the University of Richmond as a basketball league (ECAC South). During the next two years, the league added 11 sports, acquired two new members (the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and American University) and decided to form a new conference. The transformation from ECAC South to CAA took place on June 6, 1985. Old Dominion University joined the CAA in 1991 and was followed by Virginia Commonwealth University in 1995. The conference added the University of Delaware, Drexel University, Hofstra University and Towson University in 2001. Georgia State University and Northeastern University became members of the conference in 2005 and the College of Charleston began its first year as a CAA member on July 1, 2013. Elon University will join the conference beginning in 2014-15. CAA Membership History Current Membership College of Charleston (2013-present) University of Delaware (2001-present) Drexel University (2001-present) Hofstra University (2001-present) James Madison University (1983-present) University of North Carolina-Wilmington (1985-present) Northeastern University (2005-present) Towson University (2001-present) College of William and Mary (1983-present) Past Members American University (1985-2001) East Carolina University (1983-2001) George Mason University (1983-2013) Georgia State University (2005-2013) United States Naval Academy (1983-1991) Old Dominion University (1991-2013) University of Richmond (1983-2001) Virginia Commonwealth University (1995-2012) Future Member Elon University (2014)


Blue Hen Women’s Golf ALL-TIME COACHING RECORDS Coach Years Record (Pct.) Patty Post....................................... 2011-Present  (2)............................................. 1-0 (1.000) Totals................................................2 Seasons...............................................1-0 (1.000)

TEAM RECORDS Wins in a Season: 1 (1-0), 2011-12 Winning Pct.: 1.000, (1-0), 2011-12 Lowest Team Match/Tournament Strokes: 18 holes: 299 at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/19/02 36 holes: 621 (314-207) at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va, 3/17-19/13 54 holes: 930 (323-299-308) at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/18-20/12 Season: 81.66, 2011-12 (12,903/158 rounds)

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Lowest Match Score, One Round: 71, Annie Bowlsby at FIU Pat Bradley Invitational, Pelican Preserve GC, Ft. Myers, Fla., 10/24/11 73, Annie Bowlsby at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Kingsmill GC, Williamsburg, Va., 3/19/13 73, Amanda Terzian at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Kingsmill GC, Williamsburg, Va., 3/19/13 73, Amanda Terzian at UC Irvine Invitational, Dove Canyon GC, Dove Canyon, Calif., 3/26/12 73, Andrea Slane at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Kingsmill GC, Williamsburg, Va., 3/19/12 74, Nathalie Filler at Tignanelli Towson Invitational, Towson Golf & CC, Phoenix, Md., 9/9/12 74, Nathalie Filler at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Kingsmill GC, Williamsburg, Va., 3/17/13 74, Vimonthip Benjasupawan at Pinehurst Challenge, Pinehurst #6 GC, Pinehurst, N.C., 4/1/13 74, Amanda Terzian at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Kingsmill GC, Williamsburg, Va., 3/19/12 74, Amanda Terzian at Sir Pizza Cards Challenge, Weston Hills GC, Weston, Fla., 2/27/12 74, Andrea Slane at Badger Invitational, University Ridge GC, Madison, Wis., 9/25/11 Most Rounds in the 70’s, Season: 14, Andrea Slane, 2011-12; Amanda Terzian, 2012-13 Most Rounds in the 70’s, Career: 27, Amanda Terzian, 2011-present LOWEST MATCH SCORE, TWO ROUNDS: 151 (78-73), Amanda Terzian at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/17-19/13 151 (74-77), Nathalie Filler at Tignanelli Towson Invitational, Phoenix, Md., 9/9-10/12 154 (78-76), Frida Nilsson at Rutgers Invitational, Piscataway, N.J., 10/5-6/12 155 (76-79), Andrea Slane at Rutgers Invitational, Piscataway, N.J., 10/14-15/11 155 (75-80), Sarah Skurla at Towson Invitational, Phoenix, Md., 9/11-12/11 156 (73-83), Annie Bowlsby at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/17-19/13 156 (81-75), Vimonthip Benjasupawan at C&F Bank Intercollegiate,Williamsburg, Va., 3/17-19/13 156 (74-82), Nathalie Filler at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/17-19/13 156 (77-79), Frida Nilsson at Tignanelli Towson Invitational, Phoenix, Md., 9/9-10/12

Blue Hen Records LOWEST MATCH SCORE, THREE ROUNDS: 228 (75-73-80), Andrea Slane at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/18-20/12 229 (79-74-76), Amanda Terzian at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/18-20/12 233 (74-79-80), Vimonthip Benjasupawan at Pinehurst Challenge, Pinehurst, N.C., 4/1-2/13 233 (78-73-82), Amanda Terzian at UC Irvine Invitational, Dove Canyon, Calif., 3/26-27/12 233 (79-75-79), Amanda Terzian at Badger Invitational, Madison, Wis., 9/25-26/11 234 (80-79-75), Andrea Slane at CAA Championships, Southport, N.C., 4/20-22/12 234 (80-76-78), Amanda Terzian at CAA Championships, Southport, N.C., 4/20-22/12 235 (75-81-79), Annie Bowlsby at FIU Pat Bradley Invit., Lakewood Ranch, Fla., 10/23-25/12 235 (81-78-76), Andrea Slane at FIU Pat Bradley Invit., Lakewood Ranch, Fla., 10/23-25/12 236 (78-79-79), UNCW Seahawk Classic, Wallace, N.C., 4/6-7/13 236 (79-76-81), Sarah Skurla at FIU Pat Bradley Invitational, Fort Myers, Fla., 10/23-25/11 236 (80-78-78), Sarah Skurla at Badger Invitational, Madison, Wis., 9/25-26/11 237 (76-81-80), UNCW Seahawk Classic, Wallace, N.C., 4/6-7/13 237 (76-80-81), Amanda Terzian at Pinehurst Challenge, Pinehurst, N.C., 4/1-2/13 237 (85-76-76), Frida Nilsson at C&F Bank Intercollegiate, Williamsburg, Va., 3/18-20/12 237 (78-79-80), Frida Nilsson at FIU Pat Bradley Invitational, Fort Myers, Fla., 10/23-25/11 237 (74-82-81), Andrea Slane at Badger Invitational, Madison, Wis., 9/25-26/11

Lowest STROKE Average, Season (Min. 10 rounds): 79.38, Sarah Skurla, 2011-12 (1032/13 rounds) 79.59, Andrea Slane, 2011-12 (2308/29) 80.76, Amanda Terzian, 2012-13 (2019/25) 80.93, Annie Bowlsby, 2011-12 (2347/29) 81.37, Vimonthip Benjasupawan, 2012-13 (2441/30) 81.63, Baralee Theinthong, 2012-13 (2204/27) 81.69, Amanda Terzian, 2011-12 (2124/26) 81.71, Frida Nilsson, 2011-12 (2288/28) 81.93, Nathalie Filler, 2012-13 (2212/27) 82.38, Annie Bowlsby, 2012-13 (1997/24) Lowest STROKE Average, CAREER (Min. 25 Rounds): 79.43, Andrea Slane, 2011-Present (2939/37) 81.24, Amanda Terzian, 2011-Present (4143/51) 81.37, Vimonthip Benjasupawan, 2012-Present (2441/30) 81.58, Annie Bowlsby, 2011-Present (4324/53) 81.93, Nathalie Filler, 2012-Present (2212/27) 82.26, Baralee Theinthong, 2011-Present (4442/54) 82.32, Frida Nilsson, 2011-Present (4116/50) YEAR BY YEAR LOWEST STROKE AVERAGE LEADER Year 2012-13 2011-12

Golfer Amanda Terzian Sarah Skurla

Stroke Avg. 80.76 79.38

Rds./Strokes 9-2019 13-1032

157 (81-76), Andrea Slane at Rutgers Invitational, Piscataway, N.J., 10/5-6/12 157 (78-79), Vimonthip Benjasupawan at Rutgers Invitational, Piscataway, N.J., 10/5-6/12

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

15


Blue Hen Women’s Golf ALL-TIME RESULTS 2011-12 Head Coach: Patty Post Sept. 11-12 Sept. 25-26 Oct. 14-15 Oct. 23-25 Oct. 31-Nov. 1 Feb. 27-28 Mar. 10-11 Mar. 18-20 Mar. 26-27 Mar. 28

Towson Invitational................................................................. T-5th Place Wisconsin Badger Invitational.....................................................9th Place Rutgers Invitational....................................................................5th Place FIU Pat Bradley Invitational................................................... T-10th Place Fighting Camel Fall Classic..........................................................8th Place Sir Pizza Cards Challenge.........................................................14th Place The Spider at St. James Plantation..............................................4th Place C&F Bank Intercollegiate............................................................7th Place UC Irvine Invitational...............................................................12th Place vs. Cal State Monterey Bay..................................................... W 308-321

Apr. 20-22

CAA Championships....................................................................7th Place 2012-13 Head Coach: Patty Post

Sept. 9-10 Sept. 22-23 Oct. 5-6 Oct. 13-14 Oct. 21-23 Mar. 9-10 Mar. 17-19 Mar. 25-26 Apr. 1-2 Apr. 6-7 Apr. 19-21

16

Tignanelli Towson Invitational.....................................................4th Place Michigan Wolverine Invitational................................................12th Place Rutgers Invitational....................................................................6th Place Indiana Hoosier Fall Invitational...............................................13th Place FIU Pat Bradley Invitational........................................................9th Place Purdue Mount Vintage Invitational..............................................5th Place C&F Bank Intercollegiate............................................................7th Place John Kirk Panther Intercollegiate..............................................11th Place Pinehurst Challenge..................................................................14th Place UNCW Seahawk Classic.............................................................12th Place CAA Championships....................................................................5th Place

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

Results / Letterwinners ALL-TIME LETTERWINNERS Benjasupawan, Vimonthip............................................................................................................... 2013 Bowlsby, Annie..................................................................................................................... 2012, 2013 Filler, Nathalie................................................................................................................................ 2013 Nilsson, Frida....................................................................................................................... 2012, 2013 Sills, Emma.................................................................................................................................... 2012 Skurla, Sarah................................................................................................................................. 2012 Slane, Andrea................................................................................................................................. 2012 Terzian, Amanda.................................................................................................................. 2012, 2013 Theinthong, Baralee............................................................................................................. 2012, 2013


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

DR. PATRICK T. HARKER UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE PRESIDENT Patrick T. Harker became the 26th president of the University of Delaware in July 2007. Concurrent with his appointment as president, Dr. Harker is a professor of Business Administration in the Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics and a professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering in UD’s College of Engineering. In May 2008, Dr. Harker unveiled a sweeping strategic plan, UD’s Path to Prominence, predicated on excellence in undergraduate, graduate and professional education, environmental leadership, global engagement and service to the community. He has established numerous research centers, as well as the Office of Economic Innovation and Partnerships, which stimulates invention and entrepreneurship and translates UD research into economy-driving technologies. To establish Delaware as a health sciences hub, UD has partnered with the region’s leading health care providers in the Delaware Health Sciences Alliance. In February 2000, Dr. Harker was appointed dean of the Wharton School and Reliance Professor of Management and Private Enterprise. He was a senior fellow at the Wharton Financial Institutions

ERIC ZIADY UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS & RECREATION SERVICES Eric Ziady begins his second year as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Recreation Services at the University of Delaware during the 2013-14 season. Ziady arrived at Delaware after spending the previous 14 years at Boston College - most recently as senior associate athletics director for business operations - and nine years before that at Northeastern University. He served as assistant director of athletics at Northeastern during his final four years in Brookline. At Boston College, Ziady was responsible for handling both the long-range fiscal and strategic planning for the department as well as the day-to-day administration of all business and financial operations. In addition, he handled football game scheduling and contract administration, as well as overseeing five of the men’s and women’s athletic programs (football, men’s and women’s golf, and men’s and women’s sailing). Ziady served as chair of both the ACC Women’s Golf Committee as well as the Conference’s Awards Committee. He has previously served on the ACC and Hockey East Finance Committees as well as on competition committees in both the America East (baseball) and Big East (golf) conferences. He has twice served on NCAA certification subcommittees for fiscal integrity, both at Northeastern and BC. A 1988 Providence College graduate, Ziady began his career at Northeastern as an assistant to the athletic director, handling compliance responsibilities, coordinating facility management and operations on game days, and assisting in marketing efforts. In 1991, he was appointed athletic business manager and was responsible for all of the department’s fiscal activities, while also serving as the liaison with outside booster and support groups.

UD Administration Center and held a secondary appointment as a professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering at Penn. Previously, Dr. Harker was chair of Wharton’s Operations and Information Management Department. Dr. Harker is a member of the board of directors of Pepco Holdings Inc. and Huntsman Corporation, and a founding member of the board of advisors of Decision Lens Inc. He previously served as a trustee of the Goldman Sachs Trust and Goldman Sachs Variable Insurance Trust. Dr. Harker is a Class B director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, and a member of the boards of directors of the NCAA–Division I, Christiana Care Health Systems, First State Innovation, Catholic Relief Services and Easter Seals of Delaware. He is a member of the Regional Leadership Initiative Steering Committee at the Council on Competitiveness, a member of the CEO Council for Growth at the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce and a trustee of Howard University. Dr. Harker received his B.S.E. and M.S.E. in Civil Engineering in 1981, an M.A. in Economics in 1983 and a Ph.D. in Civil and Urban Engineering in 1983, all from the University of Pennsylvania. When he was named UPS Transportation Professor of the Private Sector in 1991, Dr. Harker became the youngest faculty member in Wharton’s history awarded an endowed professorship. Dr. Harker has published or edited nine books and more than 100 professional articles. From 1996–99, he served as editor-in-chief of the premier journal Operations Research. President George H.W. Bush named Dr. Harker a White House Fellow in 1991, and he served from 1991–92 as a special assistant to FBI Director William S. Sessions. Dr. Harker was named a Fellow of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) in October 2012, and a Charter Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors in December 2012. Dr. Harker is married to the former Emily Grace Saaty and is the father of three children.

In 1994, Ziady was promoted to assistant director of athletics at Northeastern. He served on the Huskies’ senior management team that planned long-range departmental goals and policies. Included among this group’s assignments was the development of a five-year strategic plan to address Title IX and gender equity issues. Ziady, who earned both a master’s degree in sports management and a master’s of business administration degree from Northeastern, has twice served as a marketing consultant. He is also a member of the College Athletic Business Management Association. In 1990, he worked on a corporate marketing project with the North Atlantic Conference and in 1992, he assisted the Boston Organizing Committee in marketing and fundraising in an attempt to attract national and international amateur events to the city.

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

17


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

University of Delaware

A leader in international education, UD offered the first study-abroad program in the world in 1923, and celebrates its 90th anniversary of study abroad in 2013. UD ranks third nationally among public doctoral institutions in study-abroad participation. More than one of every three UD undergraduate students (34.7%) studies overseas; programs are offered in nearly 50 countries. In 2010, the Education Advisory Board’s University Leadership Council cited UD’s study-abroad program as a model.

UD’s freshman retention rate, 92 percent, ranks in the 97th percentile among universities nationwide. At 77 percent, UD’s six-year graduation rate is more than 21 percentage points higher than the national average. UD’s four-year graduation rate, 61.8 percent, is nearly double the national average. UD’s Latino and African American students also graduate in numbers far higher than the U.S. average—nearly 23 percentage points higher and 18 points higher, respectively.

UD’s exceptional faculty includes internationally known authors, scientists and artists, among them a Nobel laureate, Guggenheim and Fulbright fellows, members of the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering and American Association for the Advancement of Science.

18

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide


Blue Hen Women’s Golf

University of Delaware

UD has graduated 12 Rhodes scholars since the celebrated program began in 1904. Our most recent Rhodes scholar—2011 graduate Matthew Watters—is now studying global health science at Oxford. UD also produces numerous Marshall and Truman scholars, and has been named a Truman Scholarship Honor Institution for its outstanding record of Truman scholars selected.

Many of UD’s doctoral programs were ranked among the best in the U.S. in a recent National Research Council survey that examined criteria such as student financial support, average time to degree completion, student career plans and diversity of the academic environment. UD graduate programs in physical therapy, engineering, education, business, city management, mathematics and public affairs have been recognized in recent Best Graduate Schools guides published by U.S. News Media Group.

A citation in the Princeton Review once referred to the UD campus as “absolutely the most gorgeous anywhere,” and a 2007 Washington Post story noted, “with its elegant, elongated Green, [UD] is a stunning landscape of Georgian Colonial red-brick, white-columned architecture to rival anything conceived by Thomas Jefferson.”

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

19


Blue Hen Women’s Golf Since its inception in 1743, the University of Delaware has steadily produced some of the most productive and accomplished members of our society. From statesmen to scientists to sports figures, the Blue Hen family boasts a lengthy list of prominent alumni. Delaware is one of only five colleges in the nation to have produced a signer of the Declaration of Independence, a Secretary of State, and a Vice President. Harvard, Princeton, William & Mary, and Yale are the only other institutions to have a similarly prestigious alumni base. The Blue Hen family also consists of several worldrenowned inventors and a pioneer in the computer industry. Astronauts and acclaimed aeronautical experts also have been known to call Newark home during their collegiate careers. In the entertainment industry, Delaware has been a steady producer of both top-flight athletes and award-winning entertainers. From Hall of Fame professional athletes to Emmy-nominated actors, Delaware has continued to supply the world with entertainment. Below is a list of some prominent Blue Hen alumni: Mike Adams............................................. Safety, Denver Broncos Kurt Akeley................................... Principal Researcher, Microsoft Susan Barnett............................ Emmy-winning Co-Anchor, CBS 3 Joe Biden................................................................Vice President Scott Brunner.........................................Former NFL Quarterback Thomas Carper......................................................... U.S. Senator Bob Carpenter Jr. .................Former Owner, Philadelphia Phillies Chris Christie............................................. Governor, New Jersey Kenneth Daly..... President, National Assoc. of Corporate Directors Richard Dean..............................................Fashion Photographer Dave DeWalt....................................................CEO, McAfee, Inc. John Elias............................. Co-Inventor, Touchscreen Technology Joe Flacco.....................................Quarterback, Baltimore Ravens Yvette Freeman...................................................... Actress, “ER” Rich Gannon.................................2002 NFL Most Valuable Player Bryan Gordon....Emmy-nominated director, Curb Your Enthusiasm Robert Gore....................................................Inventor, Gore-Tex Dallas Green.........................Manager, 1980 Philadelphia Phillies

20

2013-14 Delaware Women’s Golf Media Guide

UD Alumni Scott Green...........................................Referee, Super Bowl XLIV Steve Harris................................................. Actor, “The Practice” Page Kennedy...............................Actor, “Desperate Housewives” Mike Koplove............................2008 Olympic Medalist, Baseball Scott Levy.......................................................Raven of the WWE Thomas McKean............... Signer of Declaration of Independence Louis McLane...................................................Secretary of State Tom Mees....................................................Original ESPN Anchor Kevin Mench............................................. Former Major Leaguer Robin Miller.................... Host, Food Network’s “Quick Fix Meals” Steve Mosko........................................ President, Sony Television Daniel Nathans..............................................Nobel Prize Winner Adam Osborne.................................................Computer Pioneer Ben Patrick................................................. Former NFL Tight End Jeff Pearlman.............................................................. Journalist Larry Probst..............Chairman, United States Olympic Committee Dave Raymond.......................................Original Phillie Phanatic George Read..................... Signer of Declaration of Independence Omer Sabanci.......................................... Billionaire Businessman James Smith...................... Signer of Declaration of Independence LizAnn Sonders..........Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab Susan Stroman..............................................Tony Award Winner Mark Swinger...................................................Pilot, Blue Angels George Thorogood.......................... Musician, “Bad to the Bone” Dilshad Vadsaria...............................................Actress, “Greek” Lodewijk van den Berg............................. Astronaut, Challenger John Wallace............Former Associate Justice, N.J. Supreme Court Wayne Westerman............. Co-Inventor, Touchscreen Technology Marna Whittington.....................................Director, Macy’s, Inc. Vic Willis.........................National Baseball Hall of Fame Inductee


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