Completed Event: Women's Golf at Bandana Invitational on September 23, 2025 , , 2nd of 15 (+23)
Final

Women's Golf
at Bandana Invitational
Dartmouth College varsity teams compete as members of the Ivy League, ECAC and NCAA Division I
Ivy Champions (3) | Â Division Champions (2) |
---|---|
Women's Cross Country - Softball - Men's Soccer | Â Baseball (Red Rolfe) - Softball (North) |
National Championship Appearances (9) | Nationally Ranked Teams (11) |
Women's Cross Country (NCAA) Sailing (ICSA) Skiing (NCAA) Men's Soccer (NCAA) Softball (NCAA) Women's Tennis (NCAA) Heavyweight Crew (IRA) Women's Indoor Track & Field (NCAA) Women's Outdoor Track & Field (NCAA) |
Women's Cross Country (20) |
First Team All-Ivy Athletes: 41 (Does not include Equestrian) Total All-Ivy Athletes: 100 (Does not include Equestrian) Ivy League Player of the Year (5): Katie McEachern '16 (Softball/Player), Taylor Ng '17 (Women's Tennis), Duncan Robinson '16 (Baseball/Pitcher), Kristen Rumley '15 (Softball/Pitcher), Dovydas Sakinis '16 (Men's Tennis) Ivy League Rookie of the Year (2): Ciro Riccardi '18 (Men's Tennis); Miles Wright '18 (Men's Basketball) All-America (6): Dylan Brooks '16 (Skiing), Patrick Caldwell '17 (2x - Skiing); Dana Girodano '16 (Indoor Track 2nd Team), Lizzie Kistler '16 (Skiing), Silas Talbot '15 (Skiing), Kaitlin Whitehorn (Outdoor Track 2nd Team) |
National Champions (2): Patrick Caldwell '17 (NCAA Skiing: 10K Freestyle), Anna Knowles '16 (Equestrian: McDonald Scholarship Challenge) National Academic All-America (1): Hugh Danilack '15 (Men's Soccer) District Academic All-America (5): Alex Mitola '16 (Men's Basketball), Kyle Bramble '16 (Football), Jacob Flores '16 (Football), Ben Spiritos '15 (Football), Hugh Danilack '15 (Men's Soccer) Other Major Awards: Chad Riley (Men’s Soccer): Ivy League Coach of the Year; Shannon Doepking (Softball): Ivy League Coach of the Year; |
BASEBALL (Bob Whalen, Head Coach — 528-496-1, 26 yrs)   21-22, 16-4 Ivy (1st/Rolfe Division) |
The Big Green won their eighth straight Rolfe Division title in dominating fashion, besting second-place Harvard by a league-record nine games. Dartmouth also swept all 12 games against its divisional foes, becoming just the second Ivy team to accomplish the feat. But the team came up short at Columbia in the ILCS, falling in three games. Junior Duncan Robinson was named the league’s Pitcher of the Year, one of six Big Green players to earn All-Ivy honors. He was joined on the first team by senior shortstop Matt Parisi and freshman reliever Patrick Peterson, who was also a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American.  |
MEN'S BASKETBALL (Paul Cormier, Head Coach — 132-193, 12 yrs)   14-15, 7-7 Ivy (4th) |
Dartmouth ended a 59-year postseason drought by qualifying for the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, thanks to winning its final five Ivy games. Thrilling non-conference wins over IPFW and Northern Illinois at the buzzer highlighted the first half of the season, and the Big Green served notice to the league early by toppling Harvard in Cambridge after falling behind by 14 in the second half. The Big Green lost in the first round of the CIT at Canisius, but had two players —senior Gabas Maldunas and junior Alex Mitola — earn sports on the All-Ivy Second Team, while freshman Miles Wright was named the Ivy Rookie of the Year.  |
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL (Belle Koclanes, Head Coach — 19-37, 2 yrs)   14-14, 5-9 Ivy (6th) |
In just her second season at the helm, Belle Koclanes’s squad went from five wins to 14 in the course of a year. The Big Green began the season on a four-game winning streak and won the Cal Poly / Share SLO Holiday Tournament. The team finished the season on a high note, winning three of its last four games. The five Ivy league wins were the most since 2009-10 when the team went 6-8. Sophomore Fanni Szabo was named to the All-Ivy Second Team after she led the team in scoring (16.3) and finished second in the league. |
MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY (Barry Harwick ’77, Head Coach — 23 yrs)   4th at Heps, 9th at Northeast Regional |
Senior captain Silas Talbot ran a 24:47.2 to take 11th overall and earn Second-Team All-Ivy League recognition at Heps at West Windsor Fields. Tim Gorman also earned second-team honors for the second year in a row, taking 14th in 24:52.6. The Big Green won the Dartmouth Invitational with 21 points, led by a first-place finish on the 8K course from junior Curtis King in 24:25.3. Â |
WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY (Courtney Jaworski, Head Coach — 1 yr)   1st at Heps, 3rd at Northeast Regional, 20th at NCAA Championship |
There was no title hangover in Hanover for the 2014 women’s cross country team. Under first-year head coach Courtney Jaworski, the Big Green captured their second straight Ivy League Heptagonal Championship win at Princeton’s West Windsor Field 6K course, led by second-place finisher Dana Giordano (20:28.1) in early November. Dartmouth’s victory marked the sixth Ivy League crown in program history after winning four straight between 1994-97 and again in 2013.  |
EQUESTRIAN (Sally Batton, Head Coach — 26 yrs)   2nd at Ivy Show |
Dartmouth claimed the Reserve Team Championship at the Ivy Show in the spring. The highlight of the year was Junior Anna Knowles claiming the 2015 National Championship in the McDonald Scholarship Challenge, while freshman Nathalie Ferneau earned the title of Reserve National Champion in the competition the first weekend of May. Sophomore Meaghan Haugh claimed seventh in Novice Flats at IHSA Nationals as well. Â |
FIELD HOCKEY (Amy Fowler, Head Coach — 127-133, 15 yrs)   5-12, 3-4 Ivy (T-5th) |
Amy Fowler became the program’s all-time winningest head coach with her 127th victory on the Big Green sidelines on Oct. 18 against Yale. For the third straight season, senior Ali Savage was named a unanimous selection to the All-Ivy First Team, while also being tabbed NFHCA All-Northeast Region First Team for the third time in as many season. The Australian native led Dartmouth in 2014 in goals (10) and points (27), while second in assists (9). Savage led the Ivy League with five game-winning goals, accounting for her team’s entire output this fall.  |
FOOTBALL (Buddy Teevens ’79, Head Coach — 66-82-2, 15 yrs)   8-2, 6-1 Ivy (2nd) |
The Big Green enjoyed its best season in 17 years, finishing second in the Ivy standings. Five of the six conference victories were by at least 18 points, while the Green rallied from a 14-point deficit at Yale to pull out a thrilling 38-31 triumph. Junior quarterback Dalyn Williams was a finalist for the Bushnell Cup as he led the league in completion percentage and passing efficiency while throwing for 2,119 yards with 21 touchdowns and only 3 interceptions. As a team Dartmouth boasted 17 All-Ivy League honors, including 10 on the first team — including senior Ryan McManus at two positions — to tie a conference record.  |
MEN’S GOLF (Rich Parker, Head Coach — 10 yrs)   6th at Ivy Championship |
Men’s golf had a great fall season, winning back-to-back invitationals in September. At the Bucknell Invitational, sophomore Charles Cai finished sixth overall with a 12-over 222. In the Big Green’s second victory, sophomore Scott Jaster shot an 11-over for fifth place. The squad finished the season in sixth place at the Ivy Championship, with Jaster finishing tied for 14th.  |
WOMEN’S GOLF (Alex Kirk, Head Coach — 3 yrs)   7th at Ivy Championship |
Heading into the Ivy League Championship, women’s golf secured a win in a dual over Brown,316-322. Freshmen Jessica Kittelberger and Isabelle Kane tied for first place in the event and had a great rookie campaign for the Big Green. Dartmouth had a pair of third place finishes at the Dartmouth Invitational and the Chesapeake Bay Invitational during the fall season.  |
MEN’S HOCKEY (Bob Gaudet ’81, Head Coach — 261-258-67, 18 yrs)   17-12-4, 12-8-2 ECAC (T-4th); 7-2-1 Ivy (2nd) |
Dartmouth was in the hunt for the 2014-15 Ivy League title until the final day of the season, taking second for the third straight year. Eric Neiley was tabbed as a unanimous First Team All-Ivy League selection and a Second Team All-ECAC Hockey honoree as he led the team in nearly every statistical category. The Big Green swept Princeton in the first round of the postseason before bowing out in the league quarterfinals at Colgate. Head coach Bob Gaudet reached two major milestones as he picked up his 250th win at Dartmouth and his 350th overall coaching victory in 2014-15. Â |
WOMEN’S HOCKEY (Mark Hudak, Head Coach — 218-124-30, 12 yrs)          13-15-2, 9-11-2 ECAC (8th); 4-5-1 Ivy (4th) |
For the fifth consecutive year, Dartmouth advanced to the postseason by earning a spot in the ECAC Hockey Tournament. For the second year in a row, the Big Green were knocked out of the tournament by top-seeded Clarkson. At the close of the 2014-15 campaign, Lindsey Allen and Laura Stacey were selected to the All-Ivy Honorable Mention Team, while Karlee Odland was named Academic All-Ivy and was a finalist for the Mandi Schwartz Award. Â |
MEN’S LACROSSE (Brandon Callahan, Head Coach — 5-8, 1 yr)   5-8, 1-5 Ivy (7th) |
Equipped with a whole new coaching staff, 14 new players and new philosophies, Dartmouth returned to the field in 2015 in hopes of improving on its 2-10 campaign last season. The Big Green’s first win of the season came four games into the year, and that was followed up with two more wins, including a thrilling 12-11 double-overtime victory over Harvard to start Ivy League play. After the close of the season, Phil Hession was named to the All-Ivy first team, while Robert Osgood was tabbed to the second team. The last time the Big Green had a first and second team selection in the same year was in 2010.  |
WOMEN’S LACROSSE (Amy Patton, Head Coach — 241-130, 23 yrs)   3-11, 3-4 Ivy (5th) |
The trials and tribulations of a challenging season were lessened with two straight wins to wrap-up the year. Dartmouth finished the season with three wins — all against Ivy competition — and were just one game out of earning a berth in the Ancient Eight postseason tournament. For the second straight season, Jaclyn Leto was named to the conference’s first team, while senior and solo captain Frances Bird was recognized with a spot on the second team.  |
MEN’S HEAVYWEIGHT ROWING (Wyatt Allen, 1 yr)   12th at Eastern Sprints |
As they did last season, the Big Green ended their season at the IRA National Regatta, a three-day championship on Mercer Lake. All five of Dartmouth’s boats improved throughout the weekend, finishing as high as seventh in the country. Throughout the year, the Big Green picked up first place finishes against Columbia, Holy Cross and MIT (April 4) and in the Packard Cup against Syracuse (May 9). They also placed 11th at the EARC Sprints Regatta at the end of May.  |
MEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT ROWING (Sean Healey, 3 yrs)   9th at Eastern Sprints |
The lightweight rowing team ended the 2014-15 season at the EARC Sprints Regatta by coming in ninth place after the varsity eight, second varsity eight and third varsity eight boats competed in the Petite Final. The Big Green narrowly missed out on qualifying for the IRA National Regatta. Â |
WOMEN’S ROWING (Linda Muri, 1 yr)   T-7th Ivy League Championship |
The Dartmouth women’s rowing team ended the year at the Ivy League Championship, tying for seventh place with Columbia with 19 points after two of the Big Green’s boats competed in the Petite Final and another two made it to the Grand Final. Prior to competing in the Ivy Championship, Dartmouth had a big second place finish at the Eastern Sprints Regatta.  |
SAILING (Justin Assad, 5 yrs)   4th at ICSA Women’s National Championship |
Dartmouth once again put itself among the nation’s best programs in 2014-15. The women finished fourth at the ICSA National Championship in late May after finishing first in the national semifinals days earlier. The year began by claiming the Pine and the Harry Anderson Jr. Trophies in Connecticut in September, setting the table for a strong campaign against the nation’s best teams the rest of the year.   |
SKIING (Ruff Patterson, Cami Thompson, Peter Dodge ’78 and Chip Knight, Coaches)   2nd in EISA, 6th at NCAAs |
The ski team finished second at every carnival and placed nine on the All-East First Team with freshman Foreste Peterson earning the EISA Women’s Alpine Rookie of the Year and Chip Knight the EISA Alpine Coach of the Year. At the NCAA Championships, the Big Green finished sixth as Caldwell won the national championship in the 10K Freestyle. Junior Lizzie Kistler and sophomore Dylan Brooks both earned second-team All-America honors in the giant slalom, as did Caldwell in the 20K Classic and senior Silas Talbot in the 10K Free.  |
MEN’S SOCCER (Chad Riley, Head Coach — 18-12-6, 2 yrs)   12-5-2, 5-1-1 Ivy (T-1st) |
Postseason soccer returned to Hanover for the first time since 2008, as the Big Green hosted Fordham in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Since 2008, the Big Green have made the tournament three other times (all on the road). Second-year head coach Chad Riley saw a six-game win increase in 2014 along with being named the Ivy League Coach of the Year. Dartmouth placed seven players on the All-Ivy Team and saw senior Hugh Danilack receive a spot on the Capital One Academic All-America® Division I soccer First Team. Assistant coach Chris Gbandi was named the NSCAA East Assistant of the Year. Seniors Alex Adelabu and Gabe Hoffman-Johnson were tabbed to the NSCAA All-East Region team.  |
WOMEN’S SOCCER (Ron Rainey, Head Coach — 8-5-4, 1 yr)   8-5-4, 3-1-3 Ivy (2nd) |
Juniors Corey Delaney and Jackie Friedman were named to the All-Ivy First Team. The duo were also honored by the NSCAA and secured a spot on the All-Mid-Atlantic Region team. Senior Tatiana Saunders claimed the goalkeeper spot on the second-team All-Ivy. The team finished the season with a 4-0-3 home record at Burnham Field. Â |
SOFTBALL (Shannon Doepking, Head Coach — 25-18, 1 yr)   25-18, 16-4 Ivy (1st - North Division/Postseason Champion) |
Led by first-year had coach Shannon Doepking, the softball team won the Ivy League North Division for the third consectuive season and its second straight Ivy title and played in the Tallahassee Regional against No. 9 Florida State and South Carolina. Junior Katie McEachern won the Ivy League Player of the Year award and is the third player in league history to win both Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year. Senior Kristen Rumley became the first hurler to win Pitcher of the Year three straight years. Â |
MEN’S SQUASH (Hansi Wiens, Head Coach — 54-47, 5 yrs)            8-8, 2-5 Ivy (T-6th) |
Men’s squash finished with its best season since 2011-12 and despite falling to Princeton in the championship round of the Hoehn Cup. An in-season win over Cornell was the first win for the Big Green over their Ivy foe since the 2007-08 season. Juniors Kyle Martino and James Fisch and sophomore Glen Brickman each finished with nine wins on the year.  |
WOMEN’S SQUASH (Hansi Wiens, Head coach — 45-52, 5 yrs)                   8-8, 1-6 Ivy (6th) |
The Big Green sat in the CSA top 10 for a good portion of the season and fell to Stanford in the championship of the Kurtz Cup. Junior Lydie McKenzie competed in the Holleran Cup at the CSA Individual Championship along with classmate Tori Dewey. Â |
MEN’S SWIMMING (Jim Wilson, Head Coach — 54-173-1, 22 yrs)   1-7, 0-7 Ivy (8th at Ivy Championship) |
At the Ivy League Championship, Dartmouth took eighth with 468 points. Highlighting the weekend was James Verhagen, who broke his own school record in the 200 back (1:43.84), and David Harmon, who re-set his school record in the 100 fly (48.16). At his third Zone A Diving Regional Championship, Brett Gillis finished in 17th place on the 1-meter board (259.05 points) and 3-meter (610.90). At the end of the season, Dartmouth was announced as a Division I Scholar All-America team for having a grade point average of 3.0 or higher. Â |
WOMEN’S SWIMMING (Jim Wilson, Head Coach — 41-68, 9 yrs)   0-7, 0-7 Ivy (8th at Ivy Championship) |
Dartmouth finished in eighth place at the Ivy League Championship and was highlighted by Kendese Nangle breaking her own record in the 100 back (54.78) to take third, AnnClaire MacArt re-setting the Dartmouth record in the 500 free (4:45.48) to finish in third and the 400 free relay touching in fourth place (3:23.05). At the conclusion of the season, Dartmouth was announced as a Division I Scholar All-America team by the CSCAA for having a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or higher. Â |
MEN’S TENNIS (Chris Drake, Head Coach — 72-41, 6 yrs)   14-10, 5-2 Ivy (T-2nd) |
Dartmouth wrapped up 2015 with a dramatic upset of Harvard (4-3) on senior day, ending the year with an overall record of 14-10, which included victories over seven ranked opponents. The Big Green swept two of the three major postseason conference awards, with Dovydas Sakinis being named Player of the Year and Ciro Riccardi being selected as the Rookie of the Year. Sakinis was also a first-team selection for singles and doubles, while Chris Kipouras was tabbed to the second team in both categories. Sakinis became the first Dartmouth men’s tennis player since 1994 to qualify for the NCAA singles championship, falling to Wichita State’s Tin Ostojic in the first round.  |
WOMEN’S TENNIS (Bob Dallis, Head Coach — 125-123, 12 yrs)   19-6, 5-2 Ivy (2nc) |
The Dartmouth women’s tennis team had a historic season: the Big Green were undefeated through the first 11 matches of the spring and ended up with an overall record of 19-6 and a conference mark of 5-2 to take second in the Ivy League. They were ranked as high as 18th in the nation and earned the team’s first-ever bid to the NCAA Championship, defeating William & Mary, 4-1, in the first round before falling to UNC, 4-0, in the second. Taylor Ng was the unanimous selection for Ivy League Player of the Year and was selected to the All-Ivy first team for both singles and doubles, while Kristina Mathis was a first-team doubles selection. Ng became the program’s first player to ever qualify for the NCAA Singles Championship, falling to Texas A&M’s Saska Gavrilovksa in the first round.  |
MEN’S TRACK AND FIELD (Barry Harwick ’77, Head Coach, 23 yrs)   Heps: 6th (in), 5th (out) |
The Dartmouth men won both the Dartmouth Relays and the meet with Vermont, Maine and Colgate inside Leverone during the indoor season’s January stretch. The Big Green claimed sixth at Heps in March before moving on to the outdoor season where they finished fifth. Jacob Shippee won the javelin in Philadelphia the second weekend in May, while Curtis King was the 5000m champ and Nico Robinson claimed the heptathlon crown at Harvard’s indoor meet two months earlier.   |
WOMEN’S TRACK AND FIELD (Sandra Ford-Centonze, Head Coach, 23 yrs)   Heps: 3rd (in), 7th (out) |
The Dartmouth women once again got big showings from their distance group as Dana Giordano won three Ivy League titles between indoor (2) and outdoor (1) seasons. Kaitlin Whitehorn repeated in the outdoor high jump, becoming the first Dartmouth woman to win the event in consecutive seasons in three and a half decades. She would make it all the way to the NCAA Championship meet where she earned All-America Second-Team honors. The team was fourth at the conference meet during the indoor campaign and seventh at the outdoor meet. Â |
WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL (Erin Lindsey, Head Coach — 44-58, 4 yrs)           13-12, 4-10 Ivy (T-6th) |
The Big Green kicked off the 2014 with three consecutive road tournaments, going 8-2 (and defeating Big East powerhouse St. John’s in straight sets) before opening play at home. One of the highlights of the season was defeating Harvard (3-1) and snapping the Crimson’s five-match winning streak at its first Ivy League match of the year. Paige Caridi was named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District second team and was named to the Academic All-Ivy team and was a second-team All-Ivy honoree, while Emily Astarita was an Honorable Mention.  |