2012-2013 Season
Outlooks
Men's outlook
Missing out on the NAIA
National Tournament last
season is fueling the
Lewis-Clark State College
men’s golf team on its
mission to get back to the
big stage to cap its 2012-13
season.
Warrior coach Paul Thompson,
in his 11th year with the
program, says his team is
deeper and more mature than
the one that skidded to a
tough finish and finished
outside of the NAIA Top 25
poll.
James
Molner, a senior from
Longview, Wash. and the
Community Colleges of
Spokane, is back to anchor
the Warrior lineup as a
senior after missing his
junior campaign with
eligibility issues.
“He
was on the team that
finished fifth in the
country (in 2010), and we
want to get back at that
level or better,” Thompson
said. “It’s nice to have him
back, and he’s been playing
at 1 or 2-under par.”
Drew
Reinland, a junior from
College Place, Wash.
and Walla Walla High
School, held down the No. 1
spot in Molner’s absence
last season, and those two
should be interchangeable
atop the Warrior lineup to
begin 2012.
Alongside Molner and
Reinland, Thompson hopes to
fill out the lineup with a
mix of experience and youth.
James
Rooney is the other senior
on the team, and will
provide a steady, consistent
game for the Warriors.
Thompson is excited about a
pair of junior college
transfers who both hail from
the Caldwell area – junior
Bret Hogg and sophomore
Danny Torres.
Both
are in their early 20s,
Thompson said, and bring
with them the physical and
emotional maturity of more
seasoned players.
“Danny is about 6-foot-5 and
230 pounds,” Thompson said.
“He’s a long hitter that we
really think is going to
help us.”
Joel
Christensen, one of the
three incoming freshmen
recruited by Thompson, is
another long hitter, and
Helena, Mont., native Aiden
Clark is polished for a
young golfer.
The
wildcard among the newcomers
is Rylee Iacolucci, who has
impressed Thompson despite
his diminutive stature.
“I
wasn’t sure what I had
gotten myself into until I
saw him swing. He has one of
the most gorgeous swings
I’ve ever seen. We think
he’s going to give us
consistent numbers every
time out,” Thompson said.
To
reward his players for
putting in so much
off-season work, Thompson is
putting together an Oct. 9
fundraiser at Clarkston
Country Club that will send
the entire Warrior roster to
the Desert Classic in Las
Vegas to kick off the spring
season.
Overall, Thompson believes
the team he’ll put out for
the Warriors’ first Frontier
Conference meet of the
season in Butte, Mont. will
be better than the one that
finished league play 25th in
the nation last season.
Thompson expects Rocky
Mountain to be the chief
rival for the Warriors on
their quest for a league
title.
“We
feel that we’re stronger and
deeper than we were a year
ago,” Thompson said. “We
were really only three guys deep. You need
four and it’s really nice to
have five. Our kids were
playing every day this
summer and I see no reason
why we can’t win the league
and get to nationals.”
Women's
Outlook
On
the women’s side, the
Warriors return their top
four players from a squad
that reached the Frontier
Conference semifinals last
season and was the
highest-ranked team in the
NAIA not to qualify for
nationals.
Thompson has added four
freshmen to provide depth,
and is pleased with the
ability of all of his
players to hit with
consistent length off the
tee, even into wind and cold
weather.
“It’s
something we really need,”
he said. “In the past, some
of our girls weren’t strong
enough to get through the
ball in the cold weather,
and we’d slide away. These
girls are committed to a
workout program on their own
and have gotten a lot
stronger.”
Juniors Heather Bruce,
Brooke Dagner and Idah
Whisenant were all No. 1
players for stretches last
season, and senior Kelsey
Haycock was a valuable cog
as well.
Add
sophomore Paige Blackburn to
a quartet of talented
freshmen, and it may equal a
Frontier Conference
championship for the
Warriors.
Thompson said that Karina
Davila, from Córdoba,
Mexico is also ready to step
in and help the team
immediately.
“She’s a four or five handicap, and we feel like
she’s going to fill that
void that we needed,” he
said.
Trista Webb from Tacoma,
Wash., (Stadium High
School), Jordan Wyrick from
King’s High School in
Shoreline, Wash., and Morgan
Scott out of Columbus
(Mont.) High School, will
compete for playing time as
well.
“The
freshmen are mid-80s
shooters right now and
occasionally get into the
70s,” Thompson said. “We
think we’ll have a deeper
lineup this year.”
2011-12
outlooks
2010-11
outlooks
2009-10
outlooks
2008-09 outlooks
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