Woodbridge tops Tars, creating third-place tie
Chris Yemma
It was an emotional, wet, soggy and routine day all in one for the
Newport Harbor High girls golf team in Thursday’s match against
Woodridge at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course.
It was the last scheduled Sea View League match of the season for
the Sailors, the last regular-season contest for the seniors. The
Sailors (8-7, 5-5 in league) lost, 229-244, but this one wasn’t
necessarily about the score.
“This is the end of something that was really good,” said Sailor
senior Kayleigh Horn, with tears running down her face. “It is also
the beginning of something new. I’m going to miss them so much.
“It was a wonderful season, I couldn’t have asked for more.”
There will be more, however, since the loss dropped the Sailors
into a third-place tie with Woodbridge (10-6, 5-5).
The tie will be decided by team scores taken from Monday’s league
individual tournament at San Juan Hills Golf Course in San Juan
Capistrano.
If Newport wins the team tiebreaker, it will earn a berth into the
Southern divisional team tournament, scheduled Nov. 5 at El Prado
Golf Course in Chino.
Both teams were playing what Newport Coach Marianne Towersey
called, a “lift, clean and place” game, due to the course being so
soggy from the previous day’s rain. Most shots lodged into the
spongy, muddy grass, so the players were allowed to remove shots from
embedded lies, clean the ball and place it atop the playing surface.
Newport Harbor junior Natalie Draganza shot 42 to share medalist
honors with Woodbridge’s Kelly Cabana. It was the seventh time in 10
league matches that Draganza carded the lowest nine-hole round. Horn
was the medalist in the other three.
“[Draganza has] definitely lived up to expectations this year,”
Towersey said of the two-time defending league individual champion.
“Her average [nine-hole score] for league is around 39. Both Kayleigh
and Natalie have a very good shot at being the top two on Monday.”
Horn, third at the league individual tournament last fall, shot 47
Thursday, tied for third overall.
Ashley Jacobs (48), Kendall Horn (53), Iko Kagasoff (54) and Katie
McKay (57) also scored for Newport Harbor.
The sixth hole on the par-36 course gave the Sailors the most
trouble. It was the shortest par 4 at 297 yards, but the lake on the
left side, just before the green, threw the visiting Sailors off.
Two Newport golfers drove into the water and two more, perhaps
compensating, saw their drives sail right of the cart path bordering
the fairway.
It was not a day the team had hoped for.
“I didn’t do very well,” said Draganza, who parred four holes.
“I’m really disappointed, I wanted to do well. The team needed to
win. We could have done better.”
But for the seniors, this was a day that anything would have been
acceptable, just as long as they were all playing together.
“This is the last match with girls I have played with for three
years,” McKay, unaware at the time of Monday’s tiebreaker, said after
knocking in her last putt. “We came together as a team and this was a
good season.”
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