2013 utsa women's golf media guide

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2012-13 UTSA WOMENS GOLF GUIDE BACK-TO-BACK SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS

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Page 1: 2013 UTSA Women's Golf Media Guide

2012-13 UTSA Women’S Golf GUide

Back-to-Back Southland conference championS

Page 2: 2013 UTSA Women's Golf Media Guide
Page 3: 2013 UTSA Women's Golf Media Guide

Table of Contents

2012-13 Roadrunners Info ______ 2-4UTSA _______________________5-23San Antonio ________________24-28Meet the Roadrunners ________29-40Meet the Coaches ____________41-46Home Courses ______________47-50History & Records ___________51-65

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions2

2012-13 RoAdRUnneRS

Arriaga Bretcher Johnston Newlin Townend Valerio

Name _____________ Ht. ___ Yr.-Exp. __________________Hometown/Last SchoolFabiola Arriaga ______ 5-6 _____ Jr.-2L ____________ Torreon, Mexico/Colegio Los AngelesChelsea Bretcher _____ 5-7 _____ Jr.-2L ____________________Austin, Texas/Lake Travis HSAllie Johnston ________ 5-7 _____ Fr.-HS _____________ Castle Rock, Colo./Rock Canyon HSTaylor Newlin ________ 5-8 _____ Jr.-2L _____________________Frisco, Texas/Wakeland HSBrogan Townend _____ 5-9 _____ Fr.-HS ______________Blackburn, England/Clitheroe RoyalPaola Valerio ________ 5-5 _____ Sr.-3L ____ Mexico City, Mexico/Thomas Jefferson Institute

Sitting (l to r): Paola Valerio, Head Coach Carrie Parnaby, Assistant Coach Ian Parnaby, Fabiola Arriaga.Standing (l to r): Allie Johnston, Brogan Townend, Taylor Newlin, Chelsea Bretcher.

RoSTeR

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 3

QUick fAcTS

SchedUle

Fall Dates Event Location/ResultSept. 17-18 ____________________ Dale McNamara Invitational _________ Tulsa, Okla./12th of 15Sept. 24-26 __________________ Golfweek Conference Challenge ______ Wolcott, Colo./7th of 18Oct. 12-14 ____________________ Suzie Maxwell Berning Classic ______ Knoxville, Tenn/6th of 16Oct. 28-30 ___________________ The Alamo Invitational __San Antonio, Texas/t-3rd of 15

SpringDate Event LocationFeb. 15-17 ________________________ Mash Up Invitational __________________ Tallahassee, Fla.Feb. 24-26 ___________________Allstate Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate ____________ New Orleans, La.March 15-17 ________________ Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate _______________Augusta, Ga.April 5-7 ___________________ SMU/Dallas Athletic Club Invitational ______________ Dallas, TexasApril 22-24 ______________Western Athletic Conference Championship _____________ Mesa, Ariz.May 9-11 ___________________________ NCAA Regional ______________________________ TBAMay 21-24 ________________________NCAA Championship ______________________Athens, Ga.

Location ____________________ San Antonio, TexasEnrollment ___________________________ 31,114Founded ______________________________ 1969Nickname _______________________ RoadrunnersColors ______ Navy Blue (289), Orange (1665) and WhiteConference ________________________ SouthlandAffiliation ____________________NCAA Division IPresident ____________________ Dr. Ricardo RomoAthletics Director __________________Lynn HickeyHead Coach ______Carrie Parnaby (Tennessee, ’03)Years at UTSA _____________________Fifth SeasonE-mail [email protected] Coach ______ Ian Parnaby (Tennessee, ’04)E-mail ___________________ [email protected]. of Golf Development ____ Bill Rogers (Houston, ’73)E-mail ________________________ [email protected] Office Phone______________(210) 458-4814

First Season for Women’s Golf ____________ 2005All-Time Tournament Championships ___________7Southland Championships ____________________2NCAA Regional Appearances (last) _____ 2 (2012)Letterwinners Returning/Lost _______________ 4/3Newcomers ________________________________2

Women’s Golf Contact _________ Jordan KorphageOffice Phone __________________(210) 458-4930E-Mail ______________ [email protected] Information Fax _________(210) 458-4569Mailing Address ________ UTSA Sports Information____________________________ One UTSA Circle____________________San Antonio, Texas, 78249

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions4

Media CoverageThe UTSA Sports Information office assists members of the media with their coverage of all Roadrunners sports by providing player and coach interviews, feature ideas, pregame notes and updated statistics. In addition to the 2012-13 women’s golf media guide, media members may check UTSA’s official athletics Web site goUTSA.com for the latest information on all of the department’s 17 sports.

InterviewsAll interviews with coaches and student-athletes must be arranged at least 24 hours in advance by contacting women’s golf Assistant Athletics Communications Director Jordan Korphage. Te lephone interviews are available to the media on a “call-back” basis at a time that is convenient for the coach or student-athlete.

Media ServicesMedia members are encouraged to contact the UTSA Sports Information Office for photography and media credentials at least 24 hours before a home match.

PracticesUTSA welcomes all media to attend golf practices during the season. Please call the Sports Information Office for practice times and interview requests. In most cases, coaches and student-athletes are available before and after practice.

InternetFans and media members can keep up with the latest information on all 17 UTSA sports on the official Web site for Roadrunners Athletics at goUTSA.com. You will find match recaps, box scores, updated statistics, weekly notes, player and coach biographies, schedules, rosters, archives, and photos.

For the latest information on all of UTSA’s 17 sports, log on to goUTSA.com. There, you can find game recaps, box scores, updated statistics, weekly notes, player and coach biographies, schedules, rosters, photos and archives. For just $5.95 a month or $49.95 a year, Rowdy Zone premium subscribers have access to live audio for selected volleyball, basketball, baseball and softball games, live video streaming for most home volleyball and basketball games, interviews with coaches and student-athletes, video-highlights and much more.

Jordan KorphageAssistant Athletics

Communications Director

Office: 210/459-4930Cell: 210/501-4006Fax: 210/458-4569

Email: [email protected]

San Antonio Express-NewsPhone: 210/250-3373

Email: [email protected]

The PaisanoPhone: 210/690-9301

Email: [email protected]

KABB (FOX TV)P: 210/442-6304 • F: 210-442-6333

KENS (CBS TV)P: 210/366-5001 • F: 210/377-8757

KSAT (ABC TV)P: 210/351-1270 • 210/351-1310

KWEX (UNVISION TV)P: 210/227-4141 • F: 210/226-0131

WOAI (NBC TV)P: 210/223-4742 • F: 210/476-1088

mediA infoRmATion/GoUTSA.com

The 2011-12 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide was designed, written and edited by Assistant Athetics Communications Director Jordan Korphage with editorial assistance by Assistant Athletics Com-munications Director Tony Baldwin. Photography by: Alamo Bowl, Alamodome, Bryan Bullon, Ross Davis, Patrick Dunn, Jeff Huehn, Mark McClendon, Dave Taylor, San Antonio Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, Schlitterbahn and Waterpark Resort.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions

UTSA

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

UTSA serves the San Antonio metropolitan area and the broader region of South Texas through programs and services offered from its three campuses: Main Campus, Downtown Campus and Hemisfair Park Campus.

With nearly 31,000 students enrolled in 134 undergraduate and graduate degree programs, UTSA is the third-largest component in The University of Texas System and has been one of the state’s fastest-growing public universities for much of the last decade.

UTSA listed an enrollment of 30,395 (25,893 undergraduates) for 2009-10, making it the sixth-largest school in the state of Texas.

UTSA offers 63 bachelor’s, 49 master’s and 22 doctoral degree programs in the colleges of Architecture, Business, Education and Human Development, Engineering, Honors, Liberal and Fine Arts, Public Policy, Sciences and in the Graduate School.

The university’s three 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.

As the region’s largest generator of engineers, artists, business professionals, teachers, scientists and technology managers, UTSA has produced more than 81,000 graduates since awarding its first degree in 1974.

UTSA has a total of 615 budgeted tenure/tenure-track faculty positions. Ninety-eight percent of full-time faculty hold doctorates or equivalent terminal degrees. UTSA has a total of 36 endowed academic positions, a measure of academic excellence. They include 14 distinguished chairs, six chairs, six distinguished professorships, nine professorships and one faculty fellowship

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. Purchases by UTSA in 2009 totaled $69 million, with $20 million or 29 percent designated or obtained from historically underutilized business (HUB) vendors.

T H I S I S U T S A

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.

Sources: UTSA Public Affairs Office

main Building

UTSA opened the 11-acre Downtown Campus in 1997.

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

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T H I S I S U T S A

MISSION STATEMENTThe 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, serving as a center for intellectual and creative resources as well as a catalyst for socioeconomic development for Texas, the nation and the world.

univerSity center

UTSA has plans for $110.8 million in construction over the next two years.

The Biotechnology, Sciences and Engineering Building is one of the largest and most sophisticated science facilities at any institution of higher education in Texas.

Research and sponsored programs expenditures at UTSA increased to more than $48.6 million in 2010, a 50 percent increase from the previous year.

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UTSA has four housing complexes on its Main Campus offering several styles of group living. On-campus housing accommodates approximately 3,700 students. Students living on-campus are close to classrooms, the student center, food courts, library, athletics facilities and the student recreation center.

Chaparral Village and Laurel Village are the two newest on-campus residences and both 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.

The UTSA Libraries offer personalized research assistance and a wide variety of study spaces through locations at the Main Campus, Downtown Campus and the HemisFair Park Campus. Students have access to 1.8 million volumes, including 800,000 e-books, 70,000 serial subscriptions, more than 300 online databases and 54,000 audiovisual items.

C A M P U S L I F E

chaparral village

roadrunner café commonS

laurel village

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The Recreation and Wellness Center is a state-of-the-art 300,000 square-foot facility housing a wide variety of programs and facilities from fitness and aquatics centers, basketball, racquetball and beach volleyball courts to massage studios and a rock-climbing wall.

recreat ion and WellneSS center

aquaticS center and

lazy river

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 a deli, brick oven pizza and stir-fry.

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.

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, Grille Works, Bene Pizza & Pasta, Home Zone, Monterey Cafe, and C3 Convenience Store at the Downtown Campus.

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CAMPUS REC

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

recreat ion & WellneSS center

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

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.

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 rock-climbing wall is the largest of its kind on any campus in the state of Texas.

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A FOCUS ON ACADEMICSmiSSion STATemenT

Team Academics was established in order to provide academic services for student-athletes. We provide the necessary academic support services for all student-athletes 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, the Southland Conference and the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

ViSion STATemenT

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 have been named Southland Conference Student-Athlete of the Year in their respective sports, the league’s top honor for academic and athletics success. UTSA has had 15 student-athletes chosen as a Capitol One Academic All-American, one of the top honors that can be bestowed upon a collegiate athlete, while 31 have earned Academic All-District accolades since 2003. In the last nine years, 696 student-athletes have been named to the Southland Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll, including a school-record 131 in the 2010-11 academic year.

academic ServiceS

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In April 2009, a state-of-the-art academic learning

center opened its doors to UTSA student-athletes. The

4,000 square-foot James and Catherine Bodenstedt

Athletic Learning Center houses five study carrels,

two large conference rooms, a classroom, computer

lab and office space for the Academic Services staff.

A FOCUS ON ACADEMICS

Colin Howlett is in his second 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 student-athletes 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.

COLINHOWLETTa S S o c i a t e a d /a c a d e m i c S e r v i c e S

SHAWN WORTHENAssistAnt AD/

AcADemic services

EMILY PATTONAcADemic ADvisor

BILL HICKEYLife skiLLs coorDinAtor

BEN WEGEMERLeArning coorDinAtor

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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 TEAM PLAYERS• 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.

CAREER SERVICESConnecting UTSA Student-Athletes to Career Development Resources

“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 Web site, utsa.edu/careercenter, contains full-time professional, internship, co-op, work-study and part-time 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.

Student-athlete

career ServiceS

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Stefanie Cisneros is in her fourth year as career counselor for all UTSA student-athletes and her 11th 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.

Career Center Partner OrganizationsHundreds 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 CompaniesCIA

CPS EnergyDeloitte and Touche, LLP *

Enterprise *Ernst & Young LLP

FBIFrost Bank

Harlandale ISDHEB

Hyatt Hotels and Resorts *Judson ISD *KPMG LLP

Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment *Medtronic *

Microsoft CorporationNASA

National Security AgencyNew York Life Northeast ISD

Northrop GrummanNorthside ISD

Northwestern MutualNuStar Energy

Padgett Stratemann & Co., LLPPape-Dawson

Pepsi Bottling GroupPlanto Roe Financial Services, Inc.

RaytheonSan Antonio ISD

Sapient Financial GroupSouthwest ISD

Southwest Research InstituteSouth San Antonio ISDSportball Systems, Inc.

Spurs Sports and EntertainmentTarget Corporation *

TCEQ Tesoro Companies, Inc.

ToyotaUnion Pacific Railroad

United States Census BureauU.S. Department of State

U.S. MarshalsUSAA

Valero Energy CorporationVeteran’s Administration

Walgreens *Walt Disney World

Wells FargoWestinYMCA

Zachry Holdings, Inc.

CAREER SERVICES

S T E FA N I EC I S N E R O SS t u d e n t - a t h l e t ec a r e e r c o u n S e l o r

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UTSA student-athletes receive care from a centralized training center, which has state-of-

the-art therapeutic modalities and rehabilitation equipment to give them the best care available.

The UTSA Athletic Training Department is committed to providing the highest standard of sports medicine care to all Roadrunners student-athletes. 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, Southland Conference 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 GREESONAssociAte A.D./AthLetic meDicine

RHODIE MOSSAssistAnt AthLetic

trAiner

BRENNA ELLISAssociAte heAD

AthLetic trAiner

ATHLETIC MEDICINE

MEGHAN McCAFFREYAssistAnt AthLetic

trAiner

ROB LAMBAssistAnt AthLetic

trAiner

Student trainerS

Juan Brionnes, David Cammack, Raquel De La Garza, Andrea Dunn, Kathryn Evans, Symone Irorhe, Mandy Izzary, Kyle Kratzenberg, Laura Larrumbide, Nia LeBlanc, Stefani Marion, Shantel Nemeth,

Yomi Sanchez, Heather Schlomisky, Marcus Stallings.team phySicianS

Richard Holcomb, Medical Director; David Schmidt, Orthopedic Consultant; Jaime Garza and Timothy Palomera, Consulting Physicians

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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.

The mission of the UTSA Strength & Conditioning staff is the improvement of athletic performance.

This is done through structured programs of lifting and conditioning and the prevention/reduction of athletic injuries. Utilizing a variety of techniques ranging from Olympic lifts and core work to sports-specific lifts, we strive for a continual improvement in strength, power, speed, agility and flexibility.

Through scientifically-based and researched-backed developed programs, we attempt to maximize an individual’s and teams’ performance.

CHARLIE DUDLEYDirector

DERRICK JENKINSAssistAnt Director

STRENGTH &CONDITIONING

TRAVIS REUSTAssociAte Director

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The School coloRSOfficial 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.

The mAScoTThe 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.

UTSA SPIRIT

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The AlmA mATeRMusic 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 UTSAFrom our hills of oak and cedar

To the AlamoVoices 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

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-AAlma Mater proud and strong.

Win, Roadrunners, Win!And unite in our battle song.

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A NEW HOME BUILDING CHAMPIONS

In a press conference on Nov. 11, 2010, UTSA President Dr. Ricardo Romo (left) and Athletics Director Lynn

Hickey accepted an invitation to join the Western Athletic Conference. The Roadrunners will move all 17 sports into the WAC on July 1, 2012, and will compete against teams from Denver, Idaho, Louisiana Tech, New Mexico State, San Jose

State, Seattle, Texas State, Utah State and UT Arlington.

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UTSA captured the 2010-11 Southland Conference Commissioner’s Cup — its second in the past four

years — and the Women’s All-Sports Trophy.

The men’s basketball team defeated top seed McNeese State, 75-72, to capture the 2011 Southland Conference

Tournament crown.

2010-11 utSa accompliShmentS

• Southland Conference Commissioner’s Cup

• Southland Conference Women’s All-Sports Trophy

• School-record five conference championships (men’s basketball, women’s golf, soccer, men’s indoor track & field, volleyball)

• Four team NCAA postseason appearances (men’s basketball, women’s golf, soccer, volleyball)

• First-ever NCAA postseason victory (men’s basketball defeated Alabama State, 70-61, in first round)

• Received and accepted an invitation to join the WAC in 2012

• School-record 131 student-athletes named to Southland Conference Commissioner’s Academic Honor Roll

• 83 All-Southland Conference honorees

• Two Southland Conference Student-Athletes of the Year (Devin Gibson, men’s basketball; Tyler Brown, men’s tennis)

• 14 Southland Conference All-Academic Team selections

BUILDING CHAMPIONS

The women’s golf squad claimed the six-year-old program’s first Southland Conference title with a seven-

shot victory at the 2011 league tournament.

The men’s track & field team captured its sixth straight Southland Conference Indoor Championship, matching

Lamar’s 26-year-old league record.

The soccer team upended top seed Southeastern Louisiana, 1-0, in overtime to win its first Southland Conference

Tournament Championship.

The volleyball squad upset No. 1 seed Central Arkansas in five sets to win the 2010 Southland Conference

Tournament.

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Ricardo Romo became the fifth president of The University of Texas at San Antonio in May 1999. As President, he leads one of the fastest-growing institutions of higher education in Texas and the

nation. UTSA, under his leadership, is now poised to become the state’s next premier research university. President Romo has led strategic efforts to enhance both access to education and excellence in scholarship and service at the University.

During President Romo’s tenure, UTSA’s enrollment has grown 53%, and the University has added numerous programs and facilities to enhance student life. The number of doctoral degree programs has increased from three to 21. He also has implemented new student support programs designed to help students succeed at earning a university degree. The number of advisers has tripled, and UTSA, with nearly 29,000 students in 2009, is recognized as a leader in “Closing the Gaps,” a statewide initiative by the Legislature to enroll more Texans in higher education.

A native of San Antonio’s West Side, President Romo graduated from Fox Tech High School and attended The University of Texas at Austin on a track scholarship. He served as captain of the track and cross-country team and earned All-American honors in 1966. Romo was the first Texan to run the mile in less than four minutes, and his mile record lasted 41 years.

He earned a B.S. degree in education (1967), a master’s degree in history from Loyola Marymount University (1970) and a Ph.D. in history from UCLA (1975). A nationally respected urban historian, Romo is the author of “East Los Angeles: History of a Barrio,” which is now in its ninth printing (one in Spanish).

Romo began his career as a social studies coordinator in the Los Angeles public schools in 1967. He taught as an assistant professor at California State University at Northridge (1970-1973) then at UC San Diego (1973-1980). In 1980, he returned to UT Austin to teach history. Prior to joining UTSA, Romo served at UT Austin as Vice Provost for

Undergraduate Education (1993-1999).Romo serves on nearly 20 boards, many of them in San Antonio.

He is active on several museum boards and is especially proud of his work with the United Way. In December 2004, Secretary of State Colin Powell appointed Romo as a U.S. representative to the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. In January 2005, Romo was appointed to the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, San Antonio branch, and was reappointed in 2007. He was elected chairman of the board for the San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (the largest U.S. Hispanic Chamber organization) for 2006. In 2007, Governor Rick Perry appointed Romo to serve on the Commission for College Ready Texas.

Romo has received many honors during his academic career. In 2006, Romo was honored by the UT Austin Friar Society as Outstanding Friar Alumnus. In November 2007, he was recognized with the Isabel la Catolica award, the highest award given to non-Spanish subjects, bestowed upon him by King Juan Carlos of Spain. In October 2008, Romo received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the Texas Exes Alumni Association.

President Romo is married to Dr. Harriett Romo, a Professor of Sociology at UTSA. She also serves as Director of UTSA’s Mexico Center and the Bank of America Child and Adolescent Policy Research Institute (CAPRI). They have one 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 presently teaches at Texas State University.

Members of the 2001 San Antonio Sports Hall of Fame Class from left to right: Robert Quiroga, Rudy Davalos, Nelson Wolff and Dr. Ricardo Romo

dr. ricardo romoUniVeRSiTy PReSidenT

(Texas • 1967)

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23

Lynn Hickey has made student-athlete welfare one of her top priorities as she continues to work to bring the UTSA Athletics Department to the upper echelon of the NCAA Division I standings.Under Hickey’s direction the last 11 years, UTSA has claimed

three Southland Conference all-sports championships while consistently winning both team and individual awards in all 17 sports sponsored by the university. 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.

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 and 2010 Women’s Final Four. It will serve as host for the 2011 Men’s Basketball Southwest Regional and 2011 Women’s Volleyball Championship. When the calendar is turned to 2012, UTSA will have hosted 14 NCAA Championship events in a 15-year period.

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 became just the second female ever selected to the committee, joining UNC

Charlotte Athletics Director Judy Rose, who served from 1999-2003.

Hickey has been honored nationally 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 (NACDA)/GeneralSports TURF Systems Division I-AAA

West Region AD of the Year (ADOY). She also was selected to and completed the Masters Leadership Program of San Antonio and Bexar County.

“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 athletic 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 Conference from 2002-04 and as the SLC’s representative to the NCAA Championship/Competition Cabinet.

“It has been an exciting time,” said Hickey, who served on the Women’s Basketball Rules Committee from 2003-06, the last two as Chair. “We have made some good strides to bring the program to prominence nationally. San Antonio is an outstanding city and is a tremendous asset to the unlimited potential of the UTSA athletics program.”

Hired by UTSA in October 1999, Hickey came to San Antonio from Texas A&M University, where she served as senior associate athletic director/senior woman administrator since 1994. 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 athletic 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 NCAA 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 nationally-ranked basketball team and a member of the USA National Team in 1973. Hickey and her husband, Bill, have one daughter, Lauren Nicole.

l y n n h i c k e ydiRecToR of AThleTicS

(OuachiTa BapTisT • 1973)

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24

THIS IS SAN ANTONIO

aBout San antonio

San Antonio has a population of approximately 1.3 million, making it the nation’s seventh-largest city. San Antonio was the third-fastest growing city in the country in 2009.

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 (1), The River Walk (6), SeaWorld® San Antonio (8) and Six Flags® Fiesta Texas® (15).

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.

San Antonio has 14,282 acres of parks and 114 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 four professional sports franchises: the four-time NBA Champion San Antonio Spurs, the WNBA’s Silver Stars, the American Hockey League’s Rampage and the San Diego Padres’ Double-A affiliate Missions.

San Antonio is a sports destination, as it annually hosts the Valero Alamo Bowl, the U.S. Army All-American 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 & Visitor’s Bureau

the alamo

toWer of the

americaS

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25

THIS IS SAN ANTONIOthe river Walk

alamodome

Six flagS fieSta texaS

SeaWorld

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26

The Alamo is one of five Spanish missions built along the San Antonio

River between 1718-31. Mission San José

Mission Concepcion Mission San Juan

Mission Espada

Two of the nation’s top theme parks, SeaWorld and Six Flags Fiesta Texas,

call San Antonio home.

Schlitterbahn, in nearby New Braunfels, is the

world’s top-ranked waterpark.

SAN ANTONIOA D E S T I N AT I O N C I T Y

It’s easy to see why more than 26 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 (1), The River Walk (6), SeaWorld® San Antonio (8) and Six Flags® Fiesta Texas® (15).

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27

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.

Museum Reach, a $72.1 million expansion of The River Walk, was completed in May 2009. Phase I of Mission Reach opened in June 2011.

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28

ncaa compliance

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 best-intentioned 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 OfficeIntercollegiate AthleticsOne UTSA CircleSan Antonio, TX 78249Phone: (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 student-athletes; or

• Has been involved, in anyway, in the promotion of UTSA’s athletics program

exTRA BenefiTSProspective and current student-

athletes 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.

RecRUiTinGOnly 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 prohibition remains in effect even after the prospect signs a national letter-of-intent (scholarship offer). You can do your part by forwarding names of any potential recruits to the UTSA coaching staffs.

PRoSPecTiVe

STUdenT-AThleTeA 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 off-campus 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.orggoUTSA.com

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Meet the RoadRunneRs

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions30

Paola ValeRio5-5 • Senior

ThomaS JefferSon inSTiTuTe • mexico ciTy, mexico

career BeSTS

round: 66, 2010 mercedeS-Benz Women’S championShip

54-hole Score: 212, 2010 mercedeS-Benz Women’S championShip

finiSh: 1ST, 2010 huSky inviTaTional

2011 SouThland Golfer of The year2010, 2011 all-SouThland firST Team

2012 all-SouThland Second Team2011 capiTal one academic all-diSTricT vi

2011 SouThland all-academic Team

As a senior: Played in all four tournaments in the fall and recorded a 75.33 stroke average ... best finish (t-22nd), low round (71) and low 54-hole score (218) came at The Alamo Invitational.

As a junior: Earned second-team All-Southland honors after recording a 77.06 stroke average … was one of four players to compete in all 11 tournaments … best finish came at the Islanders Classic, where she carded a 226 (73-78-75) to tie for fourth place … low 54-hole score was a 221 (76-71-74) to help UTSA to its first of four tournament titles on the campaign … her low round of 70 came in the final 18-holes of the Golfweek Conference Challenge … carded 56 birdies on the season.

As a sophomore: Named Southland Conference Golfer of the Year after leading the circuit and setting a school-record with a 75.25 stroke average ... one of three players to appear in all 11 tournaments ... became the first player in program history to earn first-team all-conference honors twice ... earned Capital One Academic All-District VI honors and was named to the Southland All-Academic Team ... set a school record with a final round 66 and 54-hole score of 212 (74-72-66) at the Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship ... that round helped UTSA set team records for a single-round (287) and 54-hole score (886) ... recorded five top-10 finishes with her best coming at the Islander Classic when she tied for second with a 220 (73-73-74) ... tied for fifth at the Southland Championship and was UTSA’s highest finisher at the NCAA West Regional (t63rd/78-78-78—234).

As a freshman: Named first-team All-Southland and led the team with a 75.73 stroke average during her rookie campaign … notched her first career individual win at the Husky Invitational … posted a pair of under-par rounds, including a career-best 68 in the first frame of the UCF Challenge … played in five of the six spring tournaments … made her Roadrunner debut with a four-under-par 68 in the first round of the UCF Challenge and finished tied for 17th with a two-day tally of 226 … carded a pair of 76s and 79 (231) at the Northern Migration Invitational … won the individual crown after shooting a 76-73-75—224 at the Husky Invitational … finished tied for 23rd with a three-

round total of 235 at the Baylor Spring Invitational … closed out the season on a high note with a sixth place showing at the conference championship with a career-best 220 (77-70-73).

Prior to UTSA: Ranked No. 1 by the Mexico Golf Federation in 2008 and 2009 … a member of the Mexican National Junior Team … was awarded Best Athlete Award in 2009… tied for 21st at the Thunderbird Tournament with a 77-78-73—228 … posted a top-10 showing (T-10) with a scorecard of 72-79-76-78—305 at the Optimist International Junior Golf Championship … has competed in the Junior World Championship the last three seasons (2006-08) and her best outing was 23rd place with scores of 77-75-76-79—307 … placed third at the 2008 AJGA Maykoba Junior Golf Classic … finished 13th at the 2008 Doral Publix Junior Golf Classic with rounds of 74, 73 and 82 (229) … had a ninth-place showing (79-75-78—232) at the Doral Publix Junior in 2007.

Amateur: Represented her native Mexico at the 2011 World University Games and shot a 308 (76-79-75-78) to tie for 35th ... fired a 293 (72-69-77-75) to tie for 40th at the 2010 Women’s World Amateur Championship.

Personal: Full name is Paola Valerio Valeria Mercado … born on Aug. 18, 1990, in Mexico City, Mexico … daughter of Ricardo and Elsie Valerio … has one brother, Ricardo … majoring in business.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 31

Fall 2012t62 Dale McNamara Invitational 78-79-79—236t32 Golfweek Conference Challenge 73-75-78—226t32 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 72-72-80—224t22 The Alamo Invitational 71-73-74—218

Spring 2012t76 UCF Challenge 78-77-78—233t4 Islanders Classic 73-78-75—226t22 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 73-78-73—228t28 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 79-76-76—231t18 Southland Conference Championship 77-79-82—238t99 NCAA Central Regional 80-81-82—243

Fall 2011t30 Texas A&M “Mo”morial 79-71-84—234t16 Golfweek Conference Challenge 78-78-70—226t55 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 80-74-79—233t17 The Alamo Invitational 76-71-74—221t42 Challenge at Onion Creek 74-74-82—230

Spring 2011t8 UCF Challenge 75-69-72—216t2 Islanders Classic 73-73-74—220t20 Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 72-72-81—225t26 BYU at Entrada Classic 82-77-75—234t21 Baylor Spring Invitational 78-79-73—230t5 Southland Conference Championship 75-76-77—228t63 NCAA West Regional 78-78-78—234

Fall 2010t11 Chip-N Club Invitational 73-78—15110 William K. Warren Irish Invitational 76-76-75—2275 Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship 74-72-66—212t43 The Alamo Invitational 74-82-75—231

Spring 2010t17 UCF Challenge 68-75-83—226t29 Northern Migration Invitational 76-79-76—2311 Husky Invitational 76-73-75—224t23 Baylor Spring Invitational 76-77-82—2356 Southland Conference Championship 77-70-73—220

Year-by-YearYear RNDS STKS AVG Low2009-10 15 1,136 75.73 682010-11 32 2,408 75.25 662011-12 33 2,543 77.06 702012-13 12 904 75.33 71Totals 92 6,991 75.99 66

Valerio on the course

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions32

faBiola arriaGa5-6 • Junior

coleGio loS anGeleS • Torreon, mexico

career BeSTS

round: 68, 2012 Golfweek conference challenGe

54-hole Score: 212, 2012 Golfweek conference challenGe

finiSh: T-1ST, 2011 SouThland conference championShip

2012 SouThland player of The year

2011 SouThland freShman of The year

2011, 2012 firST-Team all-SouThland

As a junior: Has played in all four tournaments this fall and leads the team and Western Athletic Conference with a 71.92 stroke average ... notched top-10 finishes in three 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 68 ... had three rounds in the 60s after only doing so twice in her first two seasons ... finished the fall with a No. 14 ranking on golfstat.com and No. 31 mark on golfweek.com.

As a sophomore: 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 honors and aided the team’s victory at The Alamo Invitational with a personal best 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: 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 final-round 72 to help UTSA set team records for 18 and 54-hole scores at the Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championsip.

Prior to UTSA: Played for the Mexican National Team the last two seasons (2009-10) … placed fourth at the Naccional Inerizonas and competed at the National Athletic Olypmics 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, Coahuila … daughter of Alfonso Arriaga and Luz Maria Bujdud … has one broth-er, Alfonso and one sister, Luz Maria … majoring in busi-ness.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 33

Fall 20125 Dale McNamara Invitational 71-73-71—215t2 Golfweek Conference Challenge 75-68-69—212t26 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 75-74-73—222t10 The Alamo Invitational 72-69-73—214

Spring 2012t58 UCF Challenge 74-74-81—229t4 Islanders Classic 76-74-76—226t3 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 75-70-73—218t6 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 74-74-74—2222 Southland Conference Championship 71-76-73—220t84 NCAA Central Regional 82-80-77—239

Fall 2011t41 Texas A&M “Mo”morial 75-77-85—237t8 Golfweek Conference Challenge 74-74-76—224t45 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 79-77-75—2311 The Alamo Invitational 69-72-72—213t2 Challenge at Onion Creek 69-72-72—213

Spring 2011t28 UCF Challenge 75-71-78—224t20 Islander Classic 79-74-76—229t13 Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 74-75-73—222t15 BYU at Entrada Classic 76-82-72—230t35 Baylor Spring Invitational 80-80-75—235t1 Southland Conference Championship 75-73-75—223t77 NCAA West Regional 80-78-77—237

Fall 2010t16 Chip-N Club Invitational 74-78—152t21 William K. Warren Irish Invitational 74-77-82—233t59 Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship 81-77-72—230t24 The Alamo Invitational 77-73-75—225

Year-by-YearYear RNDS STKS AVG Low2010-11 32 2,440 76.25 712011-12 33 2,472 74.91 692012-13 12 863 71.92 68Totals 77 5,775 75.00 68

Arriaga on the course

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions34

chelSea BreTcher5-7 • Junior

lake TraviS hS • auSTin, TexaS

career BeSTS

round: 73, 2012 mercedeS-Benz inTercolleGiaTe

54-hole Score: 222, 2012 mercedeS-Benz inTercolleGiaTe

finiSh: T-26Th, 2012 mercedeS-Benz inTercolleGiaTe

As a junior: Played in three tournaments during the fall ... ranked fourth on the team with a 75.56 stroke average ... set personal best finish (t26th), low round (73) and 54-hole score (222) at the Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate.

As a sophomore: Named to the Southland Conference Commissioner’s Honor Roll for the second time … appeared as an individual at The Alamo Invitational and set career bests with scores of 73 in the first and third rounds … set career bests by tying for 27th place and recording a 54-hole score of 224 (73-78-73).

As a freshman: 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 tournament, her best finish of the season ... tied for 59th at the Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship with a 243 (83-78-82).

Prior to UTSA: Four-year letterwinner at Lake Travis High School … collected all-district, all-region and all-state honors last season … finished eighth with a two-day total of 156 (81-75) in the individual standings at state in May … named Most Valuable Player and garnered all-academic distrist, region and state accolades last year … earned first-team all-district and all-region certificates and named honorable mention all-state in 2009 … helped her team win district from 2007-10 …

led her squad to regional titles from in three of her four years in high school.

Amateur: Tied for 39th at the 2011 Texas Women’s Open with a 152 (73-79).

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 on working in either fashion or sports marketing.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 35

Bretcher on the course

Fall 2012t55 Dale McNamara Invitational 78-78-78—234t26 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 73-75-74—222t39 The Alamo Invitational 76-76-72—224

Fall 2011t27 The Alamo Invitational 73-78-73—224

Fall 2010t36 Chip-N Club Invitational 77-79—156t59 Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship 83-78-82—243

Year-by-YearYear RNDS STKS AVG Low2010-11 5 399 79.80 772011-12 3 224 74.67 732012-13 9 680 75.56 72Totals 17 1,303 76.65 72

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions36

Taylor neWlin5-8 • Junior

Wakeland hS • friSco, TexaS

2011, 2012 Second-Team all-SouThland

career BeSTS

round: 69, 2010 mercedeS-Benz Women’S championShip

54-hole Score: 217, 2010 mercedeS-Benz Women’S championShip

finiSh: 4Th, 2011 SouThland conference championShip

As a junior: Played in all four fall tournaments and ranked third on the team with a 75.42 stroke average ... best outing came at The Alamo Invitational, where she finished tied for 15th with a 216 (72-73-71).

As a sophomore: Earned second-team All-Southland Conference honors and was named to the Southland Commissioner’s Honor Roll for the second consecutive year … one of four players to appear in all 11 tournaments and recorded the third-best stroke average on the squad (76.88) … recorded a 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: Named second-team All-Southland Conference and 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 ranked third on the squad ... tied for fourth in her first collegiate tournament, the Chip-N Club Invitational ... helped UTSA set school records for lowest round and 54-hole score with a 13-place finish at the Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship ... set personal bests for low round (69) and 54-hole score (217) at the event ... finished fourth at the Southland Conference Championship to help UTSA secure its first team 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 all-district, all-region and all-state repicient … 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: Full name is Taylor Newlin… 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) … majoring in mechanical engineering.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 37

Fall 20125 Dale McNamara Invitational 71-73-71—215t2 Golfweek Conference Challenge 75-68-69—212t26 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 75-74-73—222t10 The Alamo Invitational 72-69-73—214

Spring 2012t71 UCF Challenge 75-80-76—231t1 Islanders Classic 72-73-75—22018 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 75-73-78—226t42 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 81-78-79—238t9 Southland Conference Championship 72-82-75—229t84 NCAA Central Regional 77-84-78—239

Fall 2011t46 Texas A&M “Mo”morial 78-78-82—238t81 Golfweek Conference Challenge 88-81-80—249t26 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 75-73-78—22616 The Alamo Invitational 76-74-70—220t10 Challenge at Onion Creek 73-73-75—221

Spring 2011t58 UCF Challenge 75-79-79—233t15 Islander Classic 74-75-79—228t30 Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 79-73-74—226t22 BYU at Entrada Classic 78-79-75—232t11 Baylor Spring Invitational 77-71-79—2274 Southland Conference Championship 80-72-74—226t84 NCAA West Regional 79-78-81—238

Fall 2010t4 Chip-N Club Invitational 70-78—148t47 William K. Warren Irish Invitational 80-81-79—240t13 Mercedes-Benz Women’s Championship 73-69-75—21728 The Alamo Invitational 75-75-76—226

Year-by-YearYear RNDS STKS AVG Low2010-11 32 2,441 76.28 692011-12 33 2,537 76.88 702012-13 12 863 75.42 71Totals 77 5,841 76.40 69

Newlin on the course

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions38

allie Johnston5-7 • freShman

rock canyon hS • caSTle rock, colo.

Fall 2012t66 Dale McNamara Invitational 80-83-76—239t66 Golfweek Conference Challenge 82-76-79—237t68 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate* 79-80-78—237WD The Alamo Invitational* 84-77-WD—WD

Year RNDS STKS AVG Low2011-12 11 874 79.45 76

career BeSTS

round: 76, 2012 Golfweek conference challenGe

54-hole Score: 237, 2012 Golfweek conference challenGe and mercedeS-Benz inTercolleGiaTe

finiSh: T-66Th, 2012 dale mcnamara inviTaTional and Golfweek conference challenGe

As a freshman: Played in all four fall tournaments and recorded a 79.45 stroke average ... tied for 66th at the Dale McNamara Invitational and Golfweek Conference Challenge ... low round was a 76, which she carded at each of those events.

Prior to UTSA: Four-year letterwinner at Rock Canyon High School in Highlands Ranch, Colo. … ranked by Golfweek.com as the No. 29 recruit in the 2012 class … earned all-state honors in her final three seasons and capped her career with a second-place finish at the Colorado 5A Championships … also named by the Denver Post to its All-Colorado Team following her senior year … won the Colorado Women’s Golf Association (CWGA) Match Play Championship and teamed up to win the CWGA Mashie Championship in the summer of 2012 … earned Colorado State Player of the Year honors in 2011 … took home titles at the AJGA Lubbock Junior Tournament and Colorado Junior Stroke Play Championship … in addition, was a three-time Colorado Team Junior Americas Cup Member (2008, 2010 and 2011) and a two-time Women’s Amateur Public Links Participant (2010 and 2011) and USGA Girls Junior Participant (2009 and 2011) … earned an academic letter all four years and graduated with academic honors.

Personal: Full name is Allie Nicole Johnston … born on March 24, 1994, in Littleton, Colo. … daughter of Keith and Kim Johnston … has yet to decide a major.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 39

BroGan ToWnend5-9 • freShman

cliTheroe royal • BlackBurn, enGland

Fall 201273 Golfweek Conference Challenge 79-83-79—241t62 Mercedes-Benz Intercollegiate 85-78-71—234t28 The Alamo Invitational 75-68-77—220

Year RNDS STKS AVG Low2012-13 9 695 77.22 68

career BeSTS

round: 68, 2012 alamo inviTaTional

54-hole Score: 220, 2012 alamo inviTaTional

finiSh: T-28Th, 2012 alamo inviTaTional

As a freshman: Played in three tournaments during the fall and recorded a 77.22 stroke average ... best finish of the fall came at The Alamo Invitational, where she carded a 220 to tie for 28th.

Prior to UTSA: Is a member of the English National Team … in the summer of 2012, was a finalist for the English Women’s Golf Association (EWGA) Northern Ladies Championship … was a 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 … in addition, was a member of Lancashire’s winning team at the English County Finals and 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 … has a brother, Sam … has yet to declare a major.

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions40

2012-13 roadrunnerS

Arriaga Bretcher Johnston Newlin Townend Valerio

Name _____________ Ht. ___ Yr.-Exp. __________________Hometown/Last SchoolFabiola Arriaga ______ 5-6 _____ Jr.-2L ____________ Torreon, Mexico/Colegio Los AngelesChelsea Bretcher _____ 5-7 _____ Jr.-2L ____________________Austin, Texas/Lake Travis HSAllie Johnston ________ 5-7 _____ Fr.-HS _____________ Castle Rock, Colo./Rock Canyon HSTaylor Newlin ________ 5-8 _____ Jr.-2L _____________________Frisco, Texas/Wakeland HSBrogan Townend _____ 5-9 _____ Fr.-HS ______________Blackburn, England/Clitheroe RoyalPaola Valerio ________ 5-5 _____ Sr.-3L ____ Mexico City, Mexico/Thomas Jefferson Institute

Sitting (l to r): Paola Valerio, Head Coach Carrie Parnaby, Assistant Coach Ian Parnaby, Fabiola Arriaga.Standing (l to r): Allie Johnston, Brogan Townend, Taylor Newlin, Chelsea Bretcher.

RosteR

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Meet the CoaChes

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions42

Carrie ParnabyHead CoaCH • FiFtH SeaSon

tennessee ‘03

2011,2012 SoutHland ConFerenCe CoaCH oF tHe Year

Carrie Parnaby, the 2010-11 and 2011-12 Southland Confer-ence Coach of the Year, enters her fifth season at the helm of the UTSA women’s golf program. Since her hire in 2008, she steadi-ly has transformed the Roadrunners into a conference contender and, in just her third season, brought home the program’s first league crown, which UTSA successfully defended last spring.

From the beginning, Parnaby installed a new approach to the game from a mental and physical standpoint. Her philosophy has produced seven team titles, four runner-up showings and a total of 23 top-five finishes. She has guided eight Roadrunners to individual wins, which includes two Southland Conference Indi-vidual Champions — Allie Jordan in 2009 and Shannon Jung-man this past spring. Parnaby has coached 15 all-conference performers, including six first-teamers. The Roadrunners have improved their scoring average by 13 strokes and they finished the 2010-11 campaign with a No. 47 ranking in the golfstat.com poll, the highest ranking in program history.

In addition to her players’ success on the golf course, two have earned Southland All-Academic honors (Bruna Spengler 2009-10/Paola Valerio 2010-11) and Valerio was named second-team CoSIDA/Capital One Academic All-District VI as a sophomore.

The Roadrunners once again re-wrote the record books last season, 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 sec-ond consecutive Southland Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance.UTSA won its home tour-nament, The Alamo Invita-tional, for the first time by

topping No. 17 Texas A&M and No. 23 Baylor thanks, in part, to Southland Player of the Year Fabiola Arriaga, who set a per-sonal best with a three-under-par 213 (69-72-72). The squad also set a pair of records for best 18-hole score (283) and 54-hole mark (866). Senior Summer Batiste and sophomore Taylor Newlin guided the Roadrunners to the Islanders Classic crown and shared individual medalist honors, while Arriaga and Jung-man led the charge in a victory at the Insperity Lady Jaguar Inter-collegiate a few weeks later. 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. Jung-man led the way with a career-best 217 (70-73-74) to claim the school’s second individual conference championship. The Road-runners 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. Junior Summer Batiste and freshman Taylor Newlin earned second-team accolades to round out the record-setting haul. In addition to setting the single-season record for stroke av-erage at 75.25, Valerio led the Roadrunners to a record-setting final round of the Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships in October with a school-record 66. The momentum continued in the spring, as UTSA notched top-five finishes at five consecutive tournaments, capped by a nine-stroke win over Lamar at the

Southland Championship in Corpus Christi. The Road-runners entered the NCAA West Regional in Auburn, Wash., as the No. 19 seed and finished 16th to end the most successful season in school history.

The Roadrunners excelled in Parnaby’s sophomore season, as they added the program’s second team title at the Northern Migration Invitational in March with a record winning score-card of 895 (298-296-301). Meanwhile, Valerio became the third player to win an individual crown at

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 43

April’s Husky Invitational in just her third collegiate appearance.

Parnaby also guided her squad to five top-five finishes, including a runner-up showing at the Husky Invitational and a third-place outing at the McNeese Cowgirl Classic. A trio of Roadrunners collected All-Southland honors, led by first-teamers Shelley Mar-tinez and Valerio, while Batiste garnered second-team laurels.Parnaby’s first year saw several notable team and individual ac-complishments. Jordan became the first player in the program’s history to win an individual title at the Yale Intercollegiate and she also was the first Roadrunner to capture the Southland In-dividual Championship. Parnaby also led the squad to its first tournament title at the Stripes Islanders Spring Classic on Feb. 24, behind Martinez, who was the event’s medalist.

Parnaby’s career extends from the collegiate to the professional level.

She played at Tennessee from 1998-2002 and during her stint with the Lady Vols, Parnaby was a four-year letterwinner and earned honorable mention All-Southeastern Conference hon-ors as a junior. Tennessee was ranked as high as No. 2 in the country at one point during her playing career and she played on teams throughout her career that produced multiple current and former LPGA and European Tour players, one of which she caddied for in the 2003 U.S. Women’s Open. She was an SEC Academic Honor Roll selection her final two campaigns.

She spent her fifth year at Tennessee as a student assistant coach and also went to FUTURES qualifying school to follow her dream of playing professionally. Parnaby ultimately graduated from Tennessee with a bachelor’s degree in business marketing in 2003.

After her collegiate career at Tennessee, Parnaby competed as a member of the FUTURES Golf Tour from 2003-04. She played a full schedule in 2003 and then became fully exempt the following season. Parnaby worked with the American Junior Golf Associa-tion (AJGA) in 2004, where she was involved with numerous aspects of tournament operations. She traveled to each tourna-ment to set up the site, assisted in running events and served as an on-site rules official.

Parnaby returned to her alma mater in 2004 as an assistant coach. Her main duties included day-to-day coaching, teaching, planning practices, on-and-off campus recruiting and scouting. She also coordinated team travel and taught a golf class each semester focusing on specific areas of the game.

During her coaching tenure at Tennessee, the Lady Vols made four consecutive trips to NCAA Regional play, including two re-gional crowns in 2005-06. They also made three consecutive NCAA Championship appearances with a top finish of sixth place. She mentored five All-Americans, nine Academic All-Americans and one player was a recipient of the prestigious Edith Cummings Munson Golf Award.

A native Texan, Parnaby was a standout at Mansfield High School (MHS) near Fort Worth. She led the squad to a third-place finish at the 1998 Class 5A State Tournament, while recording a seventh-place showing in the individual standings. Parnaby

The Parnaby FileFull Name: Caroline ParnabyHometown: Mansfield, Texas

Coaching ExperienceHead Coach, UTSA (2008-Present)

Assistant Coach, Tennessee (2004-08)Student Assistant, Tennessee (2002-03)

Coaching HighlightsUTSA

2 Southland Conference Individual Champions2 Southland Team Championships

7 First-Team All-Southland members13 All-Southland selections

9 Individual Tournament wins7 Team Tournament wins

1 NGCA Academic honoree1 David Burnett Recipient

2 First-Team Southland All-Academic2 Former pupils on FUTURES Tour

TennesseeTop 25 team final rank (2004-08)/Highest ranking-sixth

2005 and 2006 NCAA Regional Champions2006 National Team of the Week

3 NCAA Championship Appearances (Best finish sixth place)4 NCAA Regional appearances

6 Team Tournament wins7 Individual Tournament wins

5 NGCA All-Americans9 NGCA Academic All-Americans1 SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year

1 Edith Cummings Munson Golf Award Recipient10 All-SEC performers

17 All-SEC Honor Roll members3 Former pupils on LPGA Tour

Playing ExperienceDuramed FUTURES Golf Tour (2003-04)

Tennessee (1998-2002)

Collegiate Playing HighlightsRecipient of the Carrie Cole Effort Award, 2002SEC Honorable Mention, 2001 and 2002

3 team tournament wins14 top-3 team finishes

5 top-25 individual finishes12th - Betsy Rawls Intercollegiate - Texas

1 top-10 individual finish7th - Green Wave Classic - Tulane

was honored as the 1998 Dallas/Fort Worth Player of the Year and was presented the prestigious Fighting Tiger Heart award by MHS. She was a three-time team captain, team Most Valuable Player and won more than 30 titles as a junior, including the co-championship of the 1997 PING Texas State Junior. Parnaby competed in the 1997 Junior World and U.S. Girls Champion-ship, was an alternate for the 1997 U.S. Women’s Open and was given the 1992 Texas Gladiator Tour Sports Person of the Year award.

Parnaby resides in San Antonio with her husband, Ian, and their son, Cole.

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions44

ian ParnabyaSSiStant CoaCH • SeCond SeaSon

tennessee ‘04

Former Tennessee standout Ian Parnaby enters his second season as assistant coach for both the men’s and women’s golf programs after spending the previous three as a volunteer assistant coach.

A native of Durham, England, Parnaby has helped tutor 21 All-Southland Conference performers and helped lead the programs to a combined 27 top-five finishes, including the back-to-back Southland Conference Championships for the women the past two springs.

Last season, he aided the women to a school-record four tourna-ment victories, including their second consecutive conference title and six top-five finishes. Four different players earned individual medalist honors during the campaign, including senior Shannon Jungman, who became the second player in program history to win an individual conference crown. UTSA matched the previous year’s record with four All-Southland selections, led by first-teamers Fabiola Arriaga, who also picked up Player of the Year honors, and Jung-man. Meanwhile, junior Paola Valerio and sophomore Taylor Newlin earned second-team laurels.

On the men’s side, Parnaby helped lead the Roadrunners to a six top-10 finishes, including a fifth-place effort at the Rice Intercollegiate. In addition, he mentored sophomore Ryan Werre, who picked up second-team All-South-land honors after a seventh-place finish at the conference championship.

In 2010-11, Parnaby helped lead the squad to nine top-10 finishes, including six in the top five, capped by the program’s first-ever South-land Championship and NCAA Tournament appearance. A record four Roadrunners were named all-conference, as Valerio (Player of the Year) and Arriaga (Freshman of the Year)

made the first team, while Summer Batiste and Newlin garnered second-team honors.

In his second season at UTSA, Parnaby helped the Roadrunners post their second team title and he helped guide Valerio to an individual title at the Husky Invitational in just her third collegiate appearance.

Parnaby played an important role during the 2008-09 campaign, as he helped the squad win the program’s first-ever tournament title (Stripes Islanders Spring Classic), three individual crowns and a runner-up showing at the 2009 Southland Championship.

During Parnaby’s four-year tenure with the women, UTSA has won seven team and eight individual championships, registered 23 top-five team finishes and garnered 15 all-conference certificates.

In his four seasons as a volunteer with the men’s team, the former Tennessee standout has helped lead UTSA to 17 top-10 finishes, including a quartet of top-five showings, and he also has tutored six All-Southland performers, including Werre, who was tabbed the 2011 Freshman of the Year.

During his four-year playing career at Tennessee, he collected sec-ond-team All-Southeastern Conference laurels and was a three-time 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 Champion-ship 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 profession-al tours around the globe, including in Asia, Europe and the United States. He then worked at Briggs Ranch Golf Club, where he discov-ered a passion for coaching.

Parnaby has one brother, Stuart, a profession-al 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 coach, and their son, Cole.

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2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions 45

bill rogersdireCtor oF GolF development

houston ‘73

Bill Rogers, who brings more than 30 years of experience to UTSA, is in his first season as the Director of Golf Develop-ment after serving the previous three years as an assistant coach for both the men’s and women’s programs.

In his three seasons as an assistant, Rogers guided 11 All-Southland Conference performers and four first-team selec-tions, including the women’s Player of the Year (Paola Vale-rio) and Freshman of the Year (Fabiola Arriaga) in 2011. Since his arrival in 2008, Rogers has helped the Roadrun-ners improve their stroke average by 12 swings and Valerio set a single-season record with a 75.25 average last season.

Rogers was a vital part of UTSA’s success in 2010-11, aiding the squad to its first Southland Championship, six top-five finishes and the program’s first NCAA Tournament appear-ance. Along with Valerio and Arriaga, Summer Batiste and Taylor Newlin earned second-team honors for a Southland-record four all-league picks. The Roadrunners turned in re-cord rounds at the Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships when Valerio shot a school-record 66 while the team’s scores for 18 (287) and 54 holes (886) also set program marks.

In 2009, Rogers proved to be a valuable asset for the Road-runners as they collected the program’s second team title at the Northern Migra-tion Invitational on March 17. Under his tutelage, Valerio won her first col-legiate individual medal at the Husky Invitational on April 6. He helped a Shelly Martinez and Vale-rio earned first- team All-Southland Conference honors, while Batiste gar-nered second-team all-league accolades.

As a first-year assistant, Rogers played an instru-

mental role in UTSA’s success during the 2008-09 season. The Roadrunners recorded seven top-five finishes to go along with three individual titles and the program’s first team title (Stripes Islander Spring Classic).

Rogers is a former Professional Golf Association (PGA) Tour member who began his career in 1974, before retiring in 1988.

He collected 14 tour wins that featured six PGA wins and eight international victories during his 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, as the PGA Player of the Year, seven tournament triumphs, including four PGA events the British Open, the Sea Pines Heritage, the World Series of Golf and the Texas Open and also finished runner-up at the U.S. Open. Rogers capped off the season as a winning member of the 1981 Ryder Cup team. Ten years later, he guided the Ryder Cup team to victory as an assistant coach.

Prior to his professional career, Rogers was a four-year let-terwinner at Houston, where he earned first-team All-Amer-ica honors in 1973. He later was inducted into the Houston Cougars Hall of Fame in 1981.

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 Ju-nior Golf Association to San Antonio and played a key role in the develop-ment 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.

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011, 2012 Southland Conference Champions46

allie Jordanvolunteer aSSiStant • SeCond SeaSon

utsa ‘09

Former Roadrunner and 2009 Southland Conference Champi-on Allie Jordan is in her second season as a volunteer assistant for the women’s golf team.

Last season, she aided the women to a school-record four tour-nament victories, including their second consecutive conference title and six top-five finishes. Four different players earned indi-vidual medalist honors during the campaign, including senior Shannon Jungman, who became the second player in program history to win an individual conference crown. UTSA matched the previous year’s record with four All-Southland selections, led by first-teamers Fabiola Arriaga, who also picked up Player of the Year honors, and Jungman. Meanwhile, junior Paola Vale-rio and sophomore Taylor Newlin earned second-team laurels.

Jordan spent 2010-11 playing on the Cactus Tour, a profes-sional women’s golf circuit in Phoenix, where she notched three top-10 finishes. The Monahans native served as a student as-sistant at UTSA during the 2009-10 season while completing her studies in general business administration.

A member of the program’s inaugural squad in 2005-06, Jor-dan finished third in the Roadrunners’ first-ever tournament. She became the first player in program history to earn an individual title with a win at the 2008 Yale Intercollegiate and, along with the only individual Southland title in school history, is the only player to win more than one event.

She set numerous records in the early years of the program including low round, 54-hole score and stroke average.

Prior to her time at UTSA, Jordan was a two-time first-team Class 3A all-state player at Monahans High School. She helped lead the team to a state runner-up finish, three district titles and a regional and school-record score of 635 during her career. As an individual, she won seven crowns, including district and regional championships during her senior campaign.

Page 49: 2013 UTSA Women's Golf Media Guide

Home Courses

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2011-12 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011 Southland Conference Champions48

Brackenridge Golf Course6,185 yards/Par 72

Dominion Country Club6,937 yards/Par 72

Set among rolling ranchland and majestic live oaks, Dominion Country Club incorporates 25 acres of man-made lakes created to enhance the area’s natural beau-ty. The course employs a unique tee-off system, labeled the “4-Tee Challenge System” by course designer Bill Johnston. Four separate and strategically-located tees on each hole both challenge and reward players of varying skills. The Dominion hosted a Champions Tour event for 17 years and serves as the home course for the Futures Tour’s Texas Hill Country Classic.

The Brackenridge Golf Course, the oldest 18-hole public course in the state, was designed in 1915 by renowned golf course architect A.W. Tillinghast, “Old Brack” was recently honored as the first golf facility listed in the Texas Registry of Historic Sites. It has also been inducted into the Texas Golf Hall of Fame and the Texas Open Hall of Honor, having hosted the first Texas Open in 1922. Today, the course is still a true test of shot-making. The front nine is lined by ancient oak and pecan trees, requiring accurate tee shots to score well. The back nine is more open, bringing the wind into play.

Briggs Ranch Golf Course7,206 yards/Par 72

Golf Club of Texas7,022 yards/Par 72

The home of the UTSA golf teams, Briggs Ranch Golf Club is ranked by Golfweek as the best residential golf course in Texas and sixth in the U.S. This Tom Fazio sig-nature course offers every player a challenge, yet may be their best golf experience ever. Fazio has enhanced the natural terrain, creating a course that seems to be in continuous motion. UTSA hosts the Lone Star Invita-tional at Briggs Ranch each October.

Texas’ only Lee Trevino Signature Course, The Golf Club of Texas features gently rolling fairways, water on 11 holes, 44 sand bunkers and a dazzling assortment of authentic Texas wildflowers, cacti and mesquite trees. Lucas Creek meanders through the course, linking four magnificent ponds. The Golf Club of Texas is more than just a great course it’s a true destination. The natural beauty of the south central Texas landscape make this one of the best golf experiences in Texas.

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2011-12 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011 Southland Conference Champions 49

Oak Hills Golf Course6,765 yards/Par 71

TPC at San Antonio7,406 yards/Par 72

The Club at Sonterra6,359 yards/Par 72

La Cantera7,021 yards/Par 72

Situated atop one of the highest points in San Anto-nio and across Loop1604 from the UTSA campus, La Cantera Golf Club showcases two breathtaking courses. Designed by Jay Morrish and Tom Weiskopf, the Resort Course hosted the PGA Tour’s Valero Texas Open from 1995-2009 and was named one of the top 10 public access courses by Golf Magazine. Pristinely perched on the edge of the Texas Hill Country, the Arnold Palmer-designed Palmer Course, offers spectacular scenery.

Located on the edge of the beautiful Texas Hill Country, the Club at Sonterra is home to a pair of gorgeous and grandiose courses. The North Course is built on fairly flat terrain and features wide fairways lined by many large oak trees that can affect shots. The Canyon Creek Course requires good aim and is highlighted by numer-ous elavation changes, sand bunkers and fast, sloping greens.

TPC San Antonio opened in January 2010 with 36 holes of golf designed by two of golf’s most innova-tive architects: Pete Dye and Greg Norman. Situated on 2,800 rolling acres at the base of the beautiful Texas Hill Country, both the AT&T Canyons Course by Pete Dye and AT&T Oaks Course by Greg Norman were built with the infrastructure to be host venues for PGA Tour tournaments.

Nestled within 200 acres of majestic oak trees and roll-ing hills within San Antonio’s Medical Center, Oak Hills Country Club is one of the most storied and respected courses in the country. A.W. Tillinghast’s trademark style is evident with tree-lined fairways, bunker-pro-teced reens and contoured putting surfaces. Oak Hills has hosted 24 PGA Tour events and has been the home of the Champions Tour AT&T Championship since 2002.

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2011-12 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011 Southland Conference Champions50

San Antonio Country Club6,833 yards/Par 72

Pecan Valley Golf Course7,010 yards/Par 71

One of the oldest and most storied courses in San Anto-nio, Pecan Valley is set within 200 lush, wooded acres along picturesque Salado Creek. Originally designed by J. Press Maxwell, the course has hosted the 50th PGA Championship, the 1967, 1969 and 1970 Texas Open and the 2001 U.S. Amateur Public Links Cham-pionship. Golf Digest recently featured Pecan Valley as one of the top 25 courses in the state of Texas.

Designed in 1907 by Alex Findlay, the exclu-sive San Antonio Country Club features nar-row, tree-lined fairways and small greens on a challenging, yet traditional layout. Water hazards come into play on a few holes and numerous strategically-placed sand bunkers will test each player’s shot-making ability.

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History & records

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions52

2011-12 review

Tournament SummaryDate Tournament Rd-1 Rd-2 Rd-3 To Par Total Finish Low PlayerSep. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 312 305 330 +83 947 11th of 12 Paola Valerio 234 (+18)Sep. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 304 314 312 +66 930 t-12th of 18 Fabiola Arriaga 224 (+8)Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 314 301 287 +17 920 15th of 17 Taylor Newlin 226 (+10)Oct. 30-Nov. 1 Alamo Invitational 293 283 290 +2 866 1st of 14 Fabiola Arriaga 213 (-3)Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 292 290 296 +38 878 t-2nd of 13 Fabiola Arriaga 213 (+3)Feb. 13-15 UCF Challenge 299 300 311 +46 910 12th of 18 Summer Batiste 225 (+9)Feb. 26-27 Islanders Classic 296 296 296 +24 888 1st of 14 Batiste/Newlin 220 (+4)March 13-14 Insperity Lady Jaguars Intercollegiate 298 286 296 +16 880 1st of 14 Arriaga/Jungman 218 (+2)March 21-22 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 308 302 303 +49 913 5th of 14 Fabiola Arriaga 222 (+6)April 18-20 Southland Conference Championship 290 306 300 +32 896 1st of 8 Shannon Jungman 217 (+1)May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 317 326 319 +98 962 20th of 24 Arriaga/Newlin 239 (+23)

Individual StatisticsPlayer Events Rounds Avg. Low Rd. Low 54 Top Finish Par or Better Top 10sFabiola Arriaga 11 33 74.91 69 213 1st 6 7Shannon Jungman 10 30 76.27 69 216 1st 3 4Taylor Newlin 11 33 76.88 70 220 t-1st 3 3Paola Valerio 11 33 77.06 70 221 t-4th 3 1Summer Batiste 11 33 77.52 71 219 t-1st 5 2Bruna Spengler 2 6 82.83 77 246 75th 0 0Chelsea Bretcher 1 3 74.67 73 224 t-27th 0 0

season recap Playing in its final season as a member of the South-land Conference, the 2012-13 UTSA women’s golf team left the circuit with a bang as it claimed back-to-back conference titles. Not only did the Roadrunners excel at the conference tournament, which was held at Vaaler Creek Golf Club in Blanco, but they set a new program standard with four tournament wins en route to their second consecu-tive NCAA Regional. Along with its team title, Shannon Jungman gave UTSA its second conference individual champion with a one-over-par 217. She became the first Roadrunner since Allie Jordan (2009) to claim and individual title and finished three shots ahead of second-place finisher Fabiola Arriaga. UTSA again took home a record haul of awards from the conference office, as Arriaga was named the South-land’s Golfer of the Year to headline four players on the all-conference squads. Jungman joinedher on the first team, while Taylor Newlin and Paola Valerio earned

second-team honors. In addition, head coach Carrie Parnaby took home her second Coach of the Year award in as many seasons. Under Parnaby’s tutelage, the Roadrunners have now earned a record 11 all-conference accolades over the last three seasons.

The team shows off its Southland Championship rings after a ceremony at Briggs Ranch Golf Club.

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2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions 53

2011-12 reviewFabiola Arriaga Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 75-77-85=237 (+21) t-41st of 68Sept. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 74-74-76=224 (+8) t-8th of 88Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 79-77-75=231 (+15) t-45th of 90Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational 69-72-72=213 (-3) 1st of 77Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 69-72-72=213 (+3) t-2nd of 73Feb. 12-14 UCF Challenge 74-74-81=229 (+13) t-58th of 99Feb. 27-28 Islanders Classic 76-74-76=226 (+10) t-4th of 77March 16-18 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 75-70-73=218 (+2) t-3rd of 73March 26-27 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 74-74-74=222 (+6) t-6th of 73April 16-18 Southland Conference Championship 71-76-73=220 (+4) 2nd of 40May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 82-80-77=239 (+23) t-84th of 126

Summer Batiste Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 80-79-80=239 (+23) t-49th of 68Sept. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 75-81-86=242 (+26) 72nd of 88Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 80-77-75=232 (+16) t-51st of 90Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational 75-71-77=223 (+7) 26th of 77Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 81-71-77=229 (+19) t-39th of 73Feb. 12-14 UCF Challenge 75-72-78=225 (+9) t-43rd of 99Feb. 27-28 Islanders Classic 75-74-71=220 (+4) t-1st of 77March 16-18 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 75-72-72=219 (+3) t-5th of 73March 26-27 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 79-87-81=247 (+31) t-58th of 73April 16-18 Southland Conference Championship 81-78-78=237 (+21) t-16th of 40May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 78-83-84=245 (+29) t-104th of 126

Chelsea Bretcher Date Tournament Score PlaceOct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational* 73-78-73=224 (+8) t-27th of 77* competed as individual

Shannon Jungman Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 82-82-84=248 (+32) t-64th of 68Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 80-77-77=234 (+18) t-62nd of 90Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational 73-69-74=216 (E) t-5th of 77Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 76-75-72=223 (+13) t-19th of 73Feb. 12-14 UCF Challenge 75-77-79=231 (+15) t-71st of 99Feb. 27-28 Islanders Classic 76-75-75=226 (+10) t-4th of 77March 16-18 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 73-71-74=218 (+2) t-3rd of 73March 26-27 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 76-74-74=224 (+8) t-12th of 73April 16-18 Southland Conference Championship 70-73-74=217 (+1) 1st of 40May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 87-82-82=251 (+35) t-116th of 126

Taylor Newlin Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 78-78-82=238 (+22) t-46th of 68Sept. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 88-81-80=249 (+33) t-81st of 88Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 75-73-78=226 (+10) t-26th of 90Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational 76-74-70=220 (+4) 16th of 77Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 73-73-75=221 (+11) t-10th of 73Feb. 12-14 UCF Challenge 75-80-76=231 (+15) t-71st of 99Feb. 27-28 Islanders Classic 72-73-75=220 (+4) t-1st of 77March 16-18 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 75-73-78=226 (+10) 18th of 73March 26-27 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 81-78-79=238 (+22) t-42nd of 73April 16-18 Southland Conference Championship 72-82-75=229 (+13) t-9th of 40May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 77-84-78=239 (+23) t-84th of 126

Bruna Spengler Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 77-88-86=251 (+35) 84th of 88Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational* 80-81-85=246 (+30) 75th of 77* competed as individual

Paola Valerio Date Tournament Score PlaceSept. 11-13 Texas A&M “Mo”Morial 79-71-84=234 (+18) t-30th of 68Sept. 19-21 Golfweek Conference Challenge 78-78-70=226 (+10) t-16th of 88Oct. 16-18 Susie Maxwell Berning Classic 80-74-79=233 (+17) t-55th of 90Oct. 30-Nov. 1 The Alamo Invitational 76-71-74=221 (+5) t-17th of 77Nov. 7-8 Challenge at Onion Creek 74-74-82=230 (+20) t-42nd of 73Feb. 12-14 UCF Challenge 78-77-78=233 (+17) t-76th of 99Feb. 27-28 Islanders Classic 73-78-75=226 (+10) t-4th of 77March 16-18 Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate 78-73-77=228 (+12) t-22nd of 73March 26-27 Anuenue Spring Break Classic 79-76-76=231 (+15) t-28th of 73April 16-18 Southland Conference Championship 77-79-82=238 (+22) t-18th of 40May 10-12 NCAA Central Regional 80-81-82=243 (+27) t-99th of 126

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2012-13 UTSA Women’s Golf Guide 2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions54

UTSA In The Southland 2012

Vaaler Creek Golf Club (Blanco, Texas)April 16-18, 2012

Team Finish: 1st/290-306-300—896Individual Champion: Shannon Jungman, 70-73-74—217

2011Corpus Christi Golf Club (Corpus Christi, Texas)

April 19-21, 2011Team Finish: 1st/306-297-297—900

2010Raven Nest Golf Course (Huntsville, Texas)

April 19-21, 2010Team Finish: 4th/307-289-293—889

2009 Lake Charles Country Club (Lake Charles, La.)

April 21-22, 2009Team Finish: 2nd/309-303-301—913

Individual Champion: Allie Jordan, 73-76-73—222 2008

Beaumont Country Club (Beaumont, Texas) April 21-23, 2008

Team Finish: 4th/312-304-315—9312007

Applerock Golf Course (Horseshoe Bay, Texas)April 9-11, 2007

Team Finish: 7th/327-329-316—9722006

Kingwood Country Club’s Forest Course (Kingwood, Texas) April 10-12, 2006

Team Finish: 6th/336-329-336—1,001

Allie Jordan2009 Champion

Jordan became the first golfer in the program’s history to collect a Southland Conference Championship. The Monahans turned in a scorecard of 73-76-73—222 to capture the title by two strokes over Lacy McKinley from McNeese State and Ashley Watkins from Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

Individual Southland Champions

soutHland all-conference Honors

Shelly Martinez2010, First Team

Paola Valerio2011, Golfer of the Year2010 & 2011, First Team

Allie Jordan2009, First Team

Second Team Laura Baker, 2006

Summer Batiste, 2006 & 2011Taylor Newlin, 2011 & 2012

Paola Valerio, 2012

Honorable MentionLaura Baker, 2008 & 2009

Shelly Martinez, 2008

Fabiola Arriaga2012 Golfer of the Year

2011, Freshman of the Year2011 & 2012, First Team

Shannon Jungman2012, First Team

Shannon Jungman2012 Champion

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.

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2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions 55

Coaching History

Fabiola Arriaga ______________2010-PLaura Baker ____________________ 2005-09Summer Batiste __________________ 2007-12Laeni Bendzik __________________2007-10Chelsea Bretcher _____________2010-PLesan Gouge ____________________ 2006-08Neely Hutchins __________________ 2005-07Allie Jordan ____________________ 2005-09Shannon Jungman _______________ 2008-12Michelle Kowalick _______________ 2005-08Shelly Martinez _________________ 2006-10Kayla McBride __________________ 2006-10Madison McClain ________________ 2006-10Taylor Newlin ________________2010-PStephanie Perez _________________ 2005-06Bruna Spengler __________________ 2008-12Paola Valerio ________________2010-PJenna Wessels __________________ 2005-06

UTSA All-Time Letterwinners

Holly Tothe2004-07

Carrie Parnaby 2008-Present

Best Southland Team Finish

4th place: 312-304-315—931Top-5 Finishes

2005-06: 12006-07: 32007-08: 4

Southland Titles2011, 2012

Top-5 Finishes2008-09: 62009-10: 52010-11: 62011-12: 6

Team Tournament Titles7

Individual Titles9

Team Awards

Player of the YearAllie Jordan ____ 2008-09Shelly Martinez _ 2009-10Paola Valerio ___ 2010-11Fabiola Arriaga _ 2011-12

Allie Jordan Give My All Award

Allie Jordan ____ 2008-09Shanon Jungman _ 2009-10Paola Valerio ___ 2010-11Taylor Newlin ___ 2011-12

Laura Baker Spirit Award

Laura Baker ____ 2008-09Madison McClain _ 2009-10Taylor Newlin ___ 2010-11Fabiola Arriaga _ 2011-12

Weight Room Warrior Award

Shanon Jungman _ 2008-09Summer Batiste __ 2009-10Summer Batiste __ 2010-11Summer Batiste __ 2011-12Paola Valerio ___ 2011-12

Captain AwardAllie Jordan ____ 2008-09Shelly Martinez _ 2009-10Madison McClain _ 2009-10Summer Batiste __ 2010-11Summer Batiste __ 2011-12

Highest GPA Award

Bruna Spengler __ 2008-09Laeni Bendzik ___ 2009-10Bruna Spengler __ 2010-11Bruna Spengler __ 2011-12

Dave Pelz AwardTaylor Newlin ___ 2010-11Taylor Newlin ___ 2011-12

Shannon JungmanPutting Award

Shannon Jungman _2011-12

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Single SeasonScoring Average vs. Par (min.15 rounds)

Avg. Vs. Par1. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) ........74.91 ...... 3.092. Paola Valerio (2010-11) ............75.25 ...... 3.253. Paola Valerio (2009-10) ............75.73 ...... 3.934. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11) ........76.25 ...... 4.255. Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ...........76.28 ...... 4.286. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) ....76.27 ...... 4.477. Summer Batiste (2010-11) .........76.67 ...... 4.678. Shelly Martinez (2009-10) .........76.52 ...... 4.839. Taylor Newlin (2011-12) ...........76.88 ...... 5.0610. Summer Batiste (2009-10) .........76.90 ...... 5.21

Rounds Played1. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) ...........................33 Summer Batiste (2011-12) ............................33 Taylor Newlin (2011-12) ..............................33 Paola Valerio (2011-12) ...............................335. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11) ...........................32 Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ..............................32 Paola Valerio (2010-11) ...............................328. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) .......................309. Summer Batiste (2009-10) ............................29 Shelly Martinez (2009-10) ............................29 Shannon Jungman (2009-10) .......................29

Par or Better Rounds1. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .............................6 Paola Valerio (2010-11) .................................63. Summer Batiste (2011-12) ..............................54. Summer Batiste (2009-10) ..............................4 Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ................................46. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-11) .............................3 Shannon Jungman (2011-12) .........................3 Taylor Newlin (2011-12) ................................3 Paola Valerio (2011-12) .................................310. Summer Batiste (2010-11) ..............................2 Shannon Jungman (2010-11) .........................2

Wins1. Allie Jordan (2008-09). ..................................22. 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

CareerScoring Average vs. Par (min. 45 rounds)

Avg. Vs. Par1. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres) ......75.57 ...... 3.662. Paola Valerio (2009-pres) ..........76.09 ...... 4.203. Taylor Newlin (2010-pres) .........76.58 ...... 4.684. Summer Batiste (2007-12) .........77.64 ...... 5.835. Shannon Jungman (2008-12) ....78.23 ...... 6.286. Shelly Martinez (2007-10) .........78.83 ...... 6.967. Laura Baker (2006-09) ..............79.37 ...... 7.398. Bruna Spengler (2008-12) .........79.88 ...... 7.969. Allie Jordan (2006-09) ..............80.26 ...... 8.2810. Madison McClain (2007-10) ......80.91 ...... 9.00

Rounds Played1. Shelly Martinez (2007-10) .......................... 1032. Shannon Jungman (2008-12) ..................... 1023. Summer Batiste (2007-12) ............................ 994. Laura Baker (2006-09) ................................. 985. Allie Jordan (2006-09) ................................. 956. Paola Valerio (2010-pres) ............................. 807. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres) ......................... 65 Taylor Newlin (2010-pres) ............................ 659. Madison McClain (2007-10) ......................... 6410. Bruna Spengler (2008-12) ............................ 52

Par or Better Rounds1. Paola Valerio (2010-pres) ............................... 82. Summer Batiste (2008-pres) ............................ 63. Taylor Newlin (2010-pres) .............................. 4 Shelly Martinez (2007-10) .............................. 45. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-pres) ........................... 36. Shannon Jungman (2008-pres) ....................... 2 Allie Jordan (2006-10) ................................... 2

Wins1. Allie Jordan (2006-09). .................................. 22. Fabiola Arriaga (2010-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-pres) ............................... 1

individual records

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2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions 57

TeamLow Round

Season Tournament Rd. Score 1. 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 2 .............. 2832. 2011-12 .................Insperity Lady Jaguar Invitational ................................. 2 .............. 2863. 2010-11 .................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................... 3 .............. 2874. 2009-10 .................Southland Conference Tournament ............................... 2 .............. 2895. 2011-12 .................Challenge at Onion Creek .......................................... 2 .............. 290 2011-12 .................Southland Conference Championship .......................... 1 .............. 290 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 3 .............. 2908. 2011-12 .................Challenge at Onion Creek .......................................... 1 .............. 292 2009-10 .................Challenge at Onion Creek .......................................... 1 .............. 292 2009-10 .................Challenge at Onion Creek .......................................... 2 .............. 292

Low Round vs. Par Season Tournament Rd. Score Vs. Par1. 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 2 .............. 283 .................. -52. 2011-12 .................Insperity Lady Jaguar Invitational ................................. 2 .............. 286 .................. -23. 2010-11 .................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................... 3 .............. 287 .................. -14. 2011-12 .................Southland Conference Championship .......................... 1 .............. 290 ................. +2 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 3 .............. 290 ................. +26. 2009-10 .................Southland Conference Tournament ............................... 2 .............. 289 ................. +5 2010-11 .................Alamo Invitational ...................................................... 2 .............. 293 ................. +5 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................ 1 .............. 293 ................. +59. 2010-11 .................Chip-N Club Invitational ............................................. 1 .............. 294 ................. +6 2010-11 .................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................... 2 .............. 294 ................. +6 2008-09 .................Islander Spring Classic ............................................... 3 .............. 302 ................. +6

Low 36-hole total Season Tournament Score Vs. Par1. 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................................. 576 ....................E2. 2011-12 .................Challenge at Onion Creek ........................................................... 582 ............... +223. 2011-12 .................Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ............................................. 584 ................. +8 2009-10 .................Challenge at Onion Creek ........................................................... 584 ............... +245. 2010-11 .................Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ......................................... 591 ............... +15 2010-11 .................Alamo Invitational ....................................................................... 591 ............... +157. 2011-12 .................Islanders Classic .......................................................................... 592 ............... +168. 2009-10 .................Northern Migration Invitational .................................................... 594 ............... +189. 2011-12 .................Southland Conference Tournament ................................................ 596 ............... +2010. 2009-10 .................Southland Conference Tournament ................................................ 596 ............... +28

Low 54-hole total Season Tournament Score Vs. Par1. 2011-12 .................The Alamo Invitational ................................................................. 866 ................. +22. 2011-12 .................Challenge at Onion Creek ........................................................... 878 ............... +383. 2011-12 .................Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ............................................. 880 ............... +164. 2010-11 .................Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships .................................... 886 ............... +225. 2009-10 .................Challenge at Onion Creek ........................................................... 887 ............... +476. 2011-12 .................Islanders Classic .......................................................................... 888 ............... +247. 2010-11 .................Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ......................................... 888 ............... +248. 2009-10 .................Southland Conference Tournament ................................................ 889 ............... +379. 2010-11 .................Alamo Invitational ....................................................................... 891 ............... +2710. 2009-10 .................Northern Migration Invitational .................................................... 895 ............... +31

all-time Bests

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all-time BestsIndividualLow Round

Player (Season) Tournament Rd. Score1. Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 3 .............. 662. Paola Valerio (2009-10) .............. UCF Challenge ....................................... 1 .............. 68 Shelly Martinez (2009-10) ........... Northern Migration Invitational ............... 2 .............. 684. 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 .............. 699. Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ............. Chip-N Club Invitational ......................... 1 .............. 70 Summer Batiste (2009-10) ........... Northern Migration Invitational ............... 2 .............. 70 Paola Valerio (2009-10) .............. Southland Conference Tournament ........... 2 .............. 70

Low Round vs. Par Player (Season) Tournament Rd. Score Vs. Par1. Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships...... 3 .............. 66 .................... -62. Paola Valerio (2009-10) .............. UCF Challenge ....................................... 1 .............. 68 .................... -4 Shelly Martinez (2009-10) ........... Northern Migration Invitational ............... 2 .............. 68 .................... -44. 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 .................... -38. Six tied ............................................................................................................................................... -1

Low 36-hole total Player (Season) Tournament Score Vs. Par1. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... The Alamo Invitational ............................................. 141 .................. -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... Challenge at Onion Creek........................................ 141 ................. +13. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) ...... The Alamo Invitational ............................................. 142 .................. -2 Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................ 142 .................. -25. 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 .................. -18. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) ...... Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ......................... 144 ....................E Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ..................... 144 ....................E Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. UCF Challenge ........................................................ 144 ....................E

Low 54-hole total Player (Season) Tournament Score Vs. Par1. Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................ 212 .................. -42. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... The Alamo Invitational ............................................. 213 .................. -3 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... Challenge at Onion Creek........................................ 213 ................. +34. Summer Batiste (2009-10) ........... Northern Migration Invitational ................................ 214 .................. -25. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) ...... The Alamo Invitational ............................................. 216 ....................E Paola Valerio (2010-11) .............. UCF Challenge ........................................................ 216 ....................E7. Shannon Jungman (2011-12) ...... Southland Conference Championship ....................... 217 ................. +1 Taylor Newlin (2010-11) ............. Mercedes-Benz Collegiate Championships ................ 217 ................. +19. Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ......................... 218 ................. +2 Fabiola Arriaga (2011-12) .......... Insperity Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate ......................... 218 ................. +2

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2011 & 2012 Southland Conference Champions 59

Fabiola Arriaga

SeasonNo.

TournamentsNo.

RoundsAvg.Score Vs. Par

LowRound

Par orbetter

BestFinish

2010-11 11 32 76.25 4.25 71 3 T1st2011-12 11 33 74.91 3.09 69 6 1stCareer 22 65 75.57 3.66 69 9 1st

Chelsea Bretcher

SeasonNo.

TournamentsNo.

RoundsAvg.Score Vs. Par

LowRound

Par orbetter

BestFinish

2010-11 2 5 79.80 7.80 77 0 T36th2011-12 1 3 74.67 2.67 73 0 T27thCareer 3 8 77.88 5.88 73 0 T27th

Taylor Newlin

SeasonNo.

TournamentsNo.

RoundsAvg.Score Vs. Par

LowRound

Par orbetter

BestFinish

2010-11 11 32 76.28 4.28 69 4 4th2011-12 11 33 76.88 5.06 70 3 T1stCareer 22 65 76.58 4.68 69 7 T1st

Paola Valerio

SeasonNo.

TournamentsNo.

RoundsAvg.Score Vs. Par

LowRound

Par orbetter

BestFinish

2009-10 5 15 75.73 3.93 68 2 1st2010-11 11 32 75.25 3.25 66 6 T2nd2011-12 11 33 77.06 5.24 70 3 T4thCareer 27 80 76.09 4.20 66 11 1st

career scoring for returners

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year-By-year results2005-06

Lady Cardinal InvitationalSept. 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, 90-83-91—264, 3rd of 6, 313-315-310—938.

Lady Indian ClassicOct. 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 ClassicOct. 24-25

Waterwood National GCHuntsville, Texas

21. Jenna Wessels, 86-81-81—248, t29. Laura Baker, 85-89-81—255, t38. Allie Jordan, 88-85-86—259, t38. Stephanie Perez, 91-85-83—259, t44. Michelle Kowalick, 93-88-84—265, 8th of 11, 350-339-329—1,018

Bronc ClassicNov. 7-8

Los Lagos GCEdinburg, Texas

24. Stephanie Perez, 79-80-80—239, 30. Laura Baker, 86-79-83—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 ClassicFeb. 20-21

Corpus Christi CC Corpus Christi, Texas

t70. Jenna Wessels, 79-83-87—249, t75. Allie Jordan, 85-84-83—252, 78. Laura Baker, 89-84-82—255, 84. Michelle Kowalick, 90-91-81—262, 85. Neely Hutchins, 91-92-88—271, 16th of 16, 343-342-333—1,018.

UTSA Rowdy Round-UpMarch 20-21 Buckhorn GC

Comfort, Texast18. Laura Baker, 75-82-80—237, t44. Allie Jordan, 87-80-84—251, 58. Jenna Wessels, 90-89-86—265, 65. Neely Hutchins, 93-96-87—276, 66. Michelle Kowalick, 95-91-94—280, 11th of 14, 345-342-337—1,024.

Oregon Duck InvitationalMarch 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, 94-92-92—278, t81. Michelle Kowalick, 99-92-87—278, 14th of 16, 345-337-332—1,014.

CenturyTel Bobcat ClassicApril 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, 93-88-88—269, 61. Neely Hutchins, 95-88-91—274, 10th of 14, 337-338-321—996.

Southland ChampionshipApril 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, 95-85-89—269, 35. Neely Hutchins, 95-98-92 —285, 6th of 7, 336-329-336—1,001.

2006-07North Texas Women’s Classic

Sept. 11-12 Robson Ranch G.C.

Denton, Texas13. Lesan Gouge, 78-77-78—233, 17. Laura Baker, 75-84-75—234, 27. Shelly Martinez, 79-84-77—240, t30. Madison McClain, 77-76-88—241, t30. Allie Jordan, 81-81-79—241, 40. Kayla McBride, 82-85-86—253*, 43. Neely Hutchins, 90-93-85—268*, tied 6th of 7, 309-318-309—936.* played as an individual

McHaney IntercollegiateSept. 18-19

Rawls CourseLubbock, 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, 83-82-79—244, 14th of 16, 317-310-313—940.

Wolf Pack InvitationalOct. 3-4

D’Andrea CC Reno, Nev.

3. Lesan Gouge, 81-74-73—228, 23. Allie Jordan, 81-78-85—244,

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26. Laura Baker, 81-80-85—246, 28. Shelly Martinez, 86-86-77—249, 39. Kayla McBride, 91-91-82—264, 5th of 8, 329-318-317—964.

Ellingson Fall ClassicOct. 23-24

Waterwood National GCHuntsville, Texas

11. Madison McClain, 80-80-78—238, t13. Laura Baker, 80-79-81—240, t19. Lesan Gouge, 86-80-79—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, 97-93-100—290*, 8th of 11, 350-339-329—1,018.* played as an individual

Baja InvitationalFeb. 12-13

Bajamar Resort Ensenada, Mexico

t10. Laura Baker, 83-79-79—241, t10. Shelly Martinez, 82-78-81—241, t20. Lesan Gouge, 79-83-82—244, 28. Allie Jordan, 80-86-85—251, 39. Madison McClain, 93-82-89—266, 3rd of 13, 324-322-327—973.

Islander Spring ClassicFeb. 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, 81-83-76—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 InvitationalMarch 11-13 Beaumont CC

Beaumont, Texast11. 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 InvitationalMarch 26-27

Shadow Hills CC Junction City, Ore.

t21. Lesan Gouge, 78-82-77—237, t34. Madison McClain, 83-76-84—243, t38. Laura Baker, 84-85-76—245, t57. Allie Jordan, 80-93-79—252, t69. Shelly Martinez, 83-90-85—258, 9th of 15, 324-333-316—973.

Southland ChampionshipApril 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, 83-84-80—247, t36. Allie Jordan, 83-88-83—254, 38. Madison McClain, 89-86-80—255, 7th of 8, 327-329-316—972.

2007-08North Texas Women’s Classic

Sept. 10-11Robson Ranch GC

Denton, Texast18. 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 IntercollegiateSept. 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 InvitationalOct. 6-7

Finkbine GC Iowa City, Iowa

t9. Janine Fellows, 76-75-78—229, t27. Madison McClain, 83-82-76—241, t29. Laura Baker, 80-81-82—243, t29. Summer Batiste, 77-83-83—243, t50. Shelly Martinez, 85-83-83—251, 7th of 13, 316-321-319—956.

UAB Beach BlastNov.5-6

The Peninsula GCGulf 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. 9-10Koasati Pines GC

Kinder, La.t7. Shelly Martinez, 74-76-78—228, 14. Allie Jordan 77-80-75—232, t29. Laeni Bendzik 82-79-77—238, t39. Laura Baker 81-80-80—241, t63. Lesan Gouge 85-82-86—253, 5th of 16, 314-315-310—939.

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Islander Spring ClassicFeb. 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 79-79-78—236, t42 Allie Jordan 84-77-86—247, 54. Summer Batiste 81-86-88—255, tied 3rd of 11, 312-319-319—950.

Oregon Duck InvitationalMarch 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, 82-81-85—248, t71. Kayla McBride, 82-86-83—251, tied 12th of 15, 315-322-324—961.

Southland ChampionshipApril 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.

2008-09North Texas Women’s Classic

Sept. 15-16 Robson Ranch GC

Denton, Texast6. 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 IntercollegiateSept. 27

The Course of YaleNew 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 IntercollegiateOct. 6-7

Rawls CourseLubbock, Texas

t28. Madison McClain, 78-76-83—237, t41. Shelly Martinez, 82-79-78—239, t53. Allie Jordan, 85-77-82—244, t62. Shannon Jungman, 82-81-85—248, 70. Laura Baker, 83-86-86—255, 12th of 13, 325-313-328—966.

UAB Fall Beach BlastNov 3-4

The PeninsulaGulf 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, 74-75-79—228, t10. Laura Baker, 73-78-78—229, 25. Shelly Martinez, 76-81-79—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 ClassicFeb. 23-24

Corpus Christi CCCorpus Christi, Texas

1. Shelly Martinez, 76-73-74—223, t14. Allie Jordan, 81-78-75—234, t14. Shannon Jungman, 77-82-78—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 IntercollegiateMarch 9-10Victoria CC

Victoria, Texast8. Allie Jordan, 74-76-81—231, t8. Laura Baker, 76-81-74—231, t22. Shelly Martinez, 80-78-80—238, 27. Bruna Spengler, 82-82-75—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 InvitationalMarch 16-17

Twin Rivers GCWaco, 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, 80-79-86—245, t54. 73-79-85—247, 10th of 14, 316-306-330—952.

Lady Mocs ClassicApril 6

Lookout Mountain GCLookout 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.

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Southland ChampionshipApril 21-22

Lake Charles CCLake Charles, La.

1. Allie Jordan, 73-76-73-222, t10. Madison McClain, 78-75-76—229, t15. Laura Baker, 81-73-77—231, t29. Shelly Martinez, 77-87-75—239, t33. Shannon Jungman, 86-79-77—242, 2nd of 8, 309-303-301—913.

2009-10Texas A&M “Mo” Morial

April 11-12 Traditions GCBryan, 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, 77-78-75—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

Mercedes-Benz Championship

Oct. 16-18 Fox Den CC

Knoxville, Tenn. t39. Summer Batiste, 75-75-78—228, 82. Shannon Jungman, 79-80-80—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.

Alamo InvitationalOct. 26-27

Briggs Ranch GCSan 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 CreekNov. 2-3

Onion Creek GCAustin, 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 ClassicFeb. 15-16

Koasati Pines CCKinder, La.

11. Summer Batiste, 85-77-74—236, t13. Shelly Martinez, 82-79-76—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 ChallengeMarch 1-2

Red Tail GCSorrento, 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 InvitationalMarch 15-17

Poston Butte GCFlorence, Ariz.

2. Summer Batiste, 73-70-71—214, t5. Shelly Martinez, 79-68-75—222, t29. Paola Valerio, 76-79-76—231, t41. Bruna Spengler, 73-82-79—234, t41. Shannon Jungman, 76-79-79—234, 307-309-314—929.

Houston Baptist IntercollegiateApril 5-6

Sienna Plantation GCMissouri City, Texas

1. Paola Valerio, 76-73-75—224, 4. Shelly Martinez, 78-76-78—232, t9. Bruna Spengler, 75-81-80—236, 12. Summer Batiste, 75-83-81—239, t16. Shannon Jungman, 78-84-79—241, 2nd of 8, 304-313-312—929.

Baylor Spring InvitationalApril 12-13

Twin Rivers GCWaco, Texas

t7. Shelly Martinez, 78-77-75—230, t23. Paola Valerio, 76-77-82—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 ChampionshipApril 19-21

Raven Nest GCHuntsville, Texas

6. Paola Valerio, 77-70-73—220, t7. Summer Batiste, 77-73-71—221, 12. Shelly Martinez, 78-72-74—224, t21. Shannon Jungman, 75-74-84—233, t30. 82-83-75—240, 4th of 8, 307-289-293—889.

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2010-11Chip-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, 80-81-79—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 CCKnoxville, Tenn.

5. Paola Valerio, 74-72-66—212; t13. Taylor Newlin, 73-69-75—217; t45. Summer Batiste, 77-76-74—227; t59. 81-77-72—230; 76. Chelsea Bretcher, 83-78-82—243; 8th of 15, 305-294-287—886.

The Alamo InvitationalOct. 31-Nov. 2

Briggs Ranch GCSan Antonio, Texas

t13. Summer Batiste, 77-71-74—222; t17. Shannon Jungman, 72-74-77—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 ChallengeFeb. 13-15 Red Tail GC

Sorrento, Fla.t8. Paola Valerio, 75-69-72—216; t28. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-71-78—224; t50. Summer Batiste, 77-77-75—229; t58. Taylor Newlin, 75-79-79—233; t69. Bruna Spengler, 77-81-78—236; 10th of 17, 302-296-303—901.

Islander ClassicFeb. 28-March 1 Corpus Christi CC

Corpus Christi, Texast2. Paola Valerio, 73-73-74—220; t15. Taylor Newlin, 74-75-79—228; t20. Summer Batiste, 73-77-79—229; t34. Shannon Jungman, 79-76-79—234; t36. Bruna Spengler, 82-76-77—235; 4th of 16, 299-298-308—905.

Administaff Lady JaguarIntercollegiateMarch 13-14

Forest Hills GCAugusta, Ga.

t13. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-75-73—222; t16. Shannon Jungman, 74-77-72—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 ClassicMarch 21-22

Entrada at Snow CanyonSt. George, Utah

t15. Fabiola Arriaga, 76-82-72—230; t22. Taylor Newlin, 78-79-75—232; t26. Paola Valerio, 82-77-75—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 InvitationalApril 11-12

Twin Rivers GCWaco, Texas

t7. Summer Batiste, 74-76-75—225; t11. Taylor Newlin, 77-71-79—227; t21. Paola Valerio, 78-79-73—230; t35. Fabiola Arriaga, 80-80-75—235; t56. Shannon Jungman, 80-80-79—239; t3rd of 18, 309-306-302—917.

Southland ChampionshipApril 18-20

Corpus Christi CCWaco, Texas

t1. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-73-75—223; 4. Taylor Newlin, 80-72-74—226; t5. Paola Valerio, 75-76-77—228; t5. Shannon Jungman, 76-76-76—228; t14. Summer Batiste, 81-79-72—232; 1st of 8, 306-297-297—900.

NCAA West RegionalMay 5-7

Washington National GCAuburn, Wash.

t63. Paola Valerio, 78-78-78—234; t77. Fabiola Arriaga, 82-78-77—237; t84. Taylor Newlin, 79-78-81—238; t89. Summer Batiste, 77-85-77—239; t102. Shannon Jungman, 77-79-86—242; 16th of 24, 311-313-313—937.

2011-12Texas A&M “Mo”morial

Sept. 11-13Traditions GC

College Station, Texast30. Paola Valerio, 79-71-84—234; t41. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-77-85—237; t46. Taylor Newlin, 78-78-82—238; t49. Summer Batiste, 80-79-80—239; t64. Shannon Jungman, 82-82-84—248; 11th of 12, 312-318-319—958.

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Golfweek Conference ChallengeSept. 19-21 Red Sky GCWolcott, Co.

t8. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-74-76—224; t16. Paola Valerio, 78-78-70—226; 72. Summer Batiste, 75-81-86—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 ClassicOct. 16-18

Jimmie Austin OU GCNorman, Okla.

t26. Taylor Newlin, 72-73-78—226; t45. Fabiola Arriaga, 79-77-75—231; t51. Summer Batiste, 80-77-75—232; t55. Paola Valerio, 80-74-79—233; t62. Shannon Jungman, 80-77-77—234; 15th of 17, 314-301-305—920.

The Alamo InvitationalOct. 30-Nov. 1

Briggs Ranch GCSan Antonio, Texas

1. Fabiola Arriaga, 69-72-72—213; t5. Shannon Jungman, 73-69-74—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 CreekNov. 7-8

Onion Creek ClubAustin, Texas

t2. Fabiola Arriaga, 69-72-72—213; t10. Taylor Newlin, 73-73-75—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 ChallengeFeb. 12-14 Red Tail GC

Sorrento, Fla.t43. Summer Batiste, 75-72-78—225; t58. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-74-81—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.

Islander ClassicFeb. 27-28

Corpus Christi CCCorpus Christi, Texas

t1. Summer Batiste, 75-74-71—220; t1. Taylor Newlin, 72-73-75—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 IntercollegiateMarch 16-18

Forest Hills GCAugusta, Ga.

t3. Fabiola Arriaga, 75-70-73—218; t3. Shannon Jungman, 73-71-74—218; t5. Summer Batiste, 75-72-72—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 ClassicMarch 26-27

The Bay CourseKapalua, Hawaii

t6. Fabiola Arriaga, 74-74-74—222; t12. Shannon Jungman, 76-74-74—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 ChampionshipApril 16-18

Vaaler Creek GCBlanco, Texas

1. Shannon Jungman, 70-73-74—217; 2. Fabiola Arriaga, 71-76-73—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 RegionalMay 10-12

Ohio State Scarlet CourseColumbus, Ohio

t84. Fabiola Arriaga, 82-80-77—239; t84. Taylor Newlin, 77-84-78—239; t99. Paola Valerio, 80-81-82—243; t104. Summer Batiste, 78-83-84—245; t116. Shannon Jungman, 87-82-82—251; 20th of 24, 317-326-319—962.