2009-2010 Season
Outlooks
Women's Outlook
Warrior
women’s golf coach Steve
Tilden says one of things he
looks forward to every
season is seeing who steps
up from the new faces on the
team and can handle all the
little things that come with
playing college golf.
This season,
Tilden doesn’t have a
choice. The newcomers have
to be counted on in a big
way, especially if the
Warriors are to qualify for
their sixth straight NAIA
national tournament in May.
The Warriors
had a senior-dominated
lineup last year and came on
strong during the second
half of the season. After
standing in the top 10 for
most of the national
tournament, the Warriors
wound up finishing 12th
overall and just 15 shots
out of sixth place.
LCSC,
however, returns only one
player who went to nationals
last year in senior Cortney
Shrout. The 5-foot-3 product
of Okanagan, WA., had a
stellar junior season when
she tied for overall
medalist honors in the
Frontier Conference after
six conference tournaments.
That helped her earn
co-Player of the Year in the
league.
“It’s huge to
have her back,” Tilden says.
“She had a great season last
year and will also be our
team leader this season."
Shrout and
Sue James are the lone
seniors on
the roster this season.
With last year’s
Frontier Conference Freshman
of the Year Madeline Jarrett
staying closer to home in
Oregon this season, the
Warriors have five
players back from a year
ago. Joining Shrout and
James are
juniors Alana Norris of
Nanaimo, British Columbia,
Brittney Wheeler of Hyde
Park, Utah, and Jordan Knapp
from Clarkston, WA. Norris
was the conference’s
Freshman of the Year in 2008
when she also earned
second-team all-league
honors. She will be heavily
counted on to provide both
leadership and solid scores
for the Warriors.
Wheeler, who
missed the 2008 season with
an injury, and Knapp both
were regularly shooting in
the mid-80s by the end of
last season and have worked
on their games during the
summer.
“Our goals
are basically the same every
year,” Tilden says. “Our
first goal is to win the
conference. I think we have
a chance. It seems every
year it comes down to LCSC
and Rocky Mountain and I
think we have a good chance
this year.”
To have that
chance, LCSC will need a
couple of the five freshmen
on the roster to step up and
be ready to play right
away. Three of the players
– Rachel Fike, Shanna
Herman, and Idah Whisenant –
are from Lewiston, while
Heather Bruce is from
Enterprise, Ore., and Kelsey
Haycock is from Ogden, Utah.
Herman was a redshirt on the
team last season while the
other four are true
freshmen.
All the
freshmen come with
impressive credentials, but
will need to make a smooth
transition to college golf
at LCSC. That means two
consecutive weekend road
trips to Montana in the fall
where players compete in 36
holes on opening day and
then 18 on the second day.
The spring schedule includes
two home tournaments as well
as the Frontier Conference
Championships.
The key to a
good year, Tilden says, will
be hard work and playing as
a team.
“We are going
to have to have a lot of
good practices between the
start of school and the
first tournament, which is
about a 3-4 week period,”
Tilden says. “Hopefully
we’ll get some good
practices in and work on the
right things that we need to
work on to have a successful
season."
Men's Outlook
After rolling
to the Frontier Conference
title by 57 strokes last
year and having four of its
top six golfers returning,
the Lewis-Clark State
College men’s golf team
would appear to have a big
target on its back as the
favorite again this season.
“I think
we’re strong enough to win
the conference,” LCSC coach
Paul Thompson says. “I
probably have the strongest,
in fact I do have the
strongest team since I’ve
been here.”
Thompson,
however, says even with a
strong team that features
only two seniors, the
Warriors may not be the
favorite. Each season, the
Warriors and Rocky Mountain
are the top two finishers in
the conference and Rocky has
added two players from
Sweden who Thompson said
will make it tough for the
Warriors to win their eighth
conference title in the past
11 years.
The
conference also has changed
the way it determines its
champion this season. In the
past, the combined team
scores from six conference
tournaments were used to
declare the overall winner.
That allowed LCSC and Rocky
to break away from the field
and make it a two-team race.
This season,
however, there will be only
three conference tournaments
and those combined team
scores will only be used to
determine the regular season
conference champ and the
seedings for the conference
tournament. The regular
season champion will be the
No. 1 seed at the conference
tournament and will meet the
No. 8 seed in an 18-hole
match to determine who
advances to the semifinals.
To win the conference
tournament, a team must win
three consecutive 18-hole
matches over a three-day
period. Thompson, who is
not a fan of the new format,
feels there will be no room
for error in order to win
the conference tournament.
Still, the
Warriors boast a solid club,
led by the return of all-FC
First Team selections Connor
McCracken, a junior from
Eagle, Idaho, and senior
Scott Mooney of Boise,
Idaho. McCracken had the
lowest overall individual
score in the six conference
tournaments last year and
earned the conference’s
Player of the Year honor. He
edged out teammate Chris
Kneen, who has since
transferred to Washington
State University, for the
title, while Mooney wound up
fifth overall.
They are
joined by junior Ben House,
who came on strong at the
end of last season and was
one of five players to
represent LCSC at the NAIA
National Tournament last
season, where the Warriors
finished No. 27 overall.
Also
returning is Chris Jarrett,
a senior from Bend, Ore.,
who has been among the top
five all three previous
seasons. Jarrett had an
average round of just a
little over 76 in his 15
rounds in conference
tournaments, which placed
him in the top 15 overall.
Thompson, who
was named the FC’s Coach of
the Year in 2009, also had a
strong recruiting class with
two junior college transfers
and the top two players from
last year’s Lewiston High
School squad. Tony Azzara
played for South Mountain
Community College in Phoenix
in
2004-05 and Brad Tracy comes
to LCSC from Skagit Valley
CC where he also played
baseball. Kyler Nilsson,
the son of Lewiston High
golf coach Shawn Nilsson,
and Andy Hasenoerhl will be
the two freshmen on the
squad.
“I think we
have a solid team and one
that will contend for the
conference title,” Thompson
said. “I’m excited to see
what happens this season.”
2008-09 outlook
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