BIRMINGHAM, Alabama – LSU’s Latanna Stone rallied from one hole down with three to play to give LSU the clinching point in a 3.5-1.5 semifinal match play win over Alabama Saturday as the sun set on the Southeastern Conference Women’s Golf Championship at the Greystone Country Club’s Legacy Course.
LSU was able to get the three points necessary with wins from Carla Tejedo, Elsa Svensson and Stone. Ingrid Lindblad rallied to tie her match with a long birdie on the final hole and that match went to extra holes, but Stone ended things before they could complete the first hole of sudden death so that match was deemed a tie.
LSU and Florida, which upset No. 1 seed Auburn, 3-2, in the other semifinal will meet at 8 a.m. Sunday morning for the SEC Championship as the Tigers of LSU go for their first conference crown in 30 years. The match will be televised live on the SEC Network.
LSU earlier in the day needed just 30 minutes to finish off the rain delayed quarterfinals, 4-1, over Vanderbilt.
“That was a fun afternoon,” said LSU women’s golf coach Garrett Runion, whose team will be making its first appearance in the finals since the tournament changed to this format, after losing in the semifinals in 2021. “It feels amazing. So now we have one more to go and let’s see if we can’t finish this thing off.”
Stone was able to tie the match and then on the par 3 eighth hole (the 17th of the match), she hit a strong tee shot and made the birdie putt to swing the match back in LSU’s favor.
It proved to be pivotal with Tejedo and Svensson both in with their second wins of the day. Alabama already had one win and the Tide’s Benedetta Moresco had turned the 2-hole lead of LSU’s Ingrid Lindblad into a one-hole deficit after 17 holes with some amazing play.
So, with the Lindblad-Moresco match on the final green and Stone and Polly Mack heading down the fairway, Lindblad kept Alabama from a potential second point by finally getting a birdie putt to drop after several near misses on the last nine to force extra holes which eventually weren’t needed.
Stone, then did what she needed to do and put her approach behind the hole and with Mack facing a fairly long birdie effort to tie the match, Stone two-putted for par and after Mack missed her putt, the Tigers were celebrating a victory in the post-sunset finish.
Coach Runion talked about his freshman Svensson who was able to tie the last three holes to win her match 1UP after her opponent, Angelica Moresco, cut her lead in half, including a par save from trouble on the final hole (the course’s ninth hole).
Svensson, on the last hole, hit the cart path with her tee shot and the ball went into the woods. But she showed her talents to get it home with a par after a nine-iron third shot and a 10-footer to halve the hole.
“Elsa came up huge after having to punch out of trouble and was able to get up and down from (129 yards) to win the match. Latanna played great. She came through in the clutch and that putt by Ingrid on the final hole to give us a little breathing room was what we’ve come to expect,” the coach said.
Florida, meanwhile on the other side of the course, was able to rally with two straight late birdies to win the final match on the course that broke a 2-2 tie.
SEC WOMEN’S GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP
SEMIFINAL MATCH RESULTS
LSU 3.5, Alabama 1.5
1 Carla Tejedo 1UP over Isabella Vander Blest WIN LSU
2 Elsa Svensson 1UP over Angelica Moresco WIN LSU
3 Ingrid Lindblad TIED with Benedetta Moresco
4 Latanna Stone 1UP over Polly Mack WIN LSU
5 Emillie Overas 5&3 over Jessica Bailey
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