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2026 NCAA Women's Golf: USC Leads After Round 1 — How to Watch

Southern California grabbed a one-shot lead over top-ranked Stanford as Round 1 wrapped at Omni La Costa. Here's the leaderboard.

2026 NCAA Women's Golf Championship: Round 1 Leaderboard, How to Watch & Schedule
Women’s College Golf
Round 1 Report & How to Watch · 2026 NCAA Division I Championship
A golfer follows through on a shot at the NCAA Division I women's golf championship.
Round 1 of the 2026 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship is complete at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California. Photo: NCAA.com

Southern California seized the early lead at the 2026 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship, posting a 7-under opening round to edge top-ranked Stanford by a single stroke at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California. Round 2 begins today, Saturday, May 23, with all 30 teams still alive in a national title chase that will not be settled until May 27.

How to Watch — Quick Guide

Event
2026 NCAA DI Women’s Golf Championship
Round 2
Today, Saturday, May 23, 2026
Location
Omni La Costa Resort & Spa, Carlsbad, Calif.
TV
GOLF Channel (live coverage of the final three days)
Live scoring
NCAA.com
Title decided
Wednesday, May 27

Round 1 Recap: USC Sets the Pace

The Ann Arbor Regional champion and No. 2-ranked Trojans were the most consistent team on the course in the opening round, riding a balanced effort — Bailey Shoemaker, Kylie Chong and Catherine Park all broke par — to a one-shot edge. Stanford answered in kind, getting to 6 under even as two of its five starters finished over par, a reminder of the depth that makes the Cardinal so dangerous. The biggest surprise sits in third: No. 21 Oklahoma State, five under and squarely in the title conversation.

PosTeamRankTo Par
1Southern CaliforniaNo. 2−7
2StanfordNo. 1−6
3Oklahoma StateNo. 21−5
4Iowa StateNo. 17−4
T5Eastern MichiganNo. 27−2
T5ArkansasNo. 7−2
7MissouriNo. 32−1
T8SMUNo. 16E
T8TexasNo. 5E
T8LSUNo. 34E

Round 1 team leaderboard, top 10. Full standings and live scoring at NCAA.com.

The opening round was less kind to several contenders. Host Texas opened at even par in a tie for eighth — in striking range, but with work to do. Texas A&M, one of the deepest teams in the field, sits at 1 over. The roughest starts belonged to ranked heavyweights: No. 3 Florida (+9), No. 8 Wake Forest, the 2023 national champion (+12), and No. 6 Auburn, which trails the field at 14 over. With 54 holes of stroke play still to come before the cut, there is room to recover — but not much margin.

How to Watch the 2026 NCAA Women’s Golf Championship

Round 2 plays today, Saturday, May 23, with live scoring for every team and player available throughout the day at NCAA.com. The GOLF Channel carries live television coverage of the championship’s final three days — the fourth stroke-play round, when the individual title is decided, and the team match-play bracket that crowns the national champion. All six days of competition are staged at Omni La Costa, with the University of Texas serving as host.

2026 NCAA Women’s Golf Championship Schedule

DateRound
May 22Round 1 stroke play — Complete: USC leads at 7 under
May 23Round 2 stroke play — Today
May 24Round 3 stroke play — team field cut to the top 15
May 25Round 4 stroke play — 72-hole individual champion crowned; field cut to the top eight teams
May 26–27Team match play; national champion decided Wednesday, May 27

How the Championship Format Works

The path is famously grueling. All 30 teams play 54 holes of stroke play before the field is trimmed to the top 15 squads and the top nine individuals not on an advancing team. One more stroke-play round crowns the 72-hole individual champion and narrows the team race to eight. From there it is pure match play — head-to-head golf, with the national champion decided May 27. The format rewards stamina as much as ball-striking, and after one round there is plenty of golf left to reshuffle the board.

Stanford Lurks — Exactly Where It Wants to Be

A year ago, Stanford walked off the closing holes at La Costa one match short of a national championship. The Cardinal opened this title bid in second place, one off the lead, and did it the way Anne Walker’s program has all season — with depth. Sophomore Megha Ganne fired a 4-under round to share the individual lead, and Meja Örtengren and Kelly Xu both added under-par cards, more than covering for a slow start elsewhere in the lineup. With six wins this season, an ACC Championship and five players ranked inside the top 18, Stanford remains the team to beat — and the memory of last May’s 3–2 final-match loss still hangs over the chase.

One round in, the leaderboard reads the way many expected: USC and Stanford clear, and a long week ahead to settle it.

Texas, the Host, and the Chase Pack

Host Texas is very much in the hunt despite an even-par opener, and the Longhorns have the individual firepower to climb: Farah O’Keefe, the clubhouse leader for the ANNIKA Award, opened at 3 under and ranks among a large group one shot off the individual lead. Texas A&M, behind sophomore Vanessa Borovilos, will look to find another gear after a 1-over start. Watch, too, for Oklahoma State and Iowa State, the round’s overachievers, and for Arkansas, the No. 7 team that quietly sits inside the top five.

Six Regions, Six Champions

Southern California logo
Ann Arbor
Southern California
Regional Champion
Texas logo
Chapel Hill
Texas
Regional Champion
Auburn logo
Louisville
Auburn
Regional Champion
Stanford logo
Stanford
Stanford
Regional Champion
Wake Forest logo
Tallahassee
Wake Forest
Regional Champion
SMU logo
Waco
SMU
Regional Champion

The Individual Race After Round 1

Stanford’s Megha Ganne and Oklahoma State’s Ellie Bushnell share the individual lead at 4 under, with a deep pack of 10 players another shot back at 3 under — among them Texas’s Farah O’Keefe and TCU individual qualifier Kirstin Angosta. Because the 72-hole champion is crowned before match play begins, the medal rewards four straight days of sharp golf. One round in, the race is wide open, and Texas A&M’s Vanessa Borovilos — a pre-tournament favorite at 1 over — has plenty of time to make her move.

NCAA Women’s Golf Championship History

History favors the bluebloods. Arizona State has won the championship a record eight times, and Stanford, Duke and Southern California have combined for much of the modern era. But the match-play format, adopted in 2015, has proven a great equalizer. Northwestern’s breakthrough last spring was the reminder: the team playing best in late May, not the one seeded highest in April, is the one that lifts the trophy. With Round 2 underway, the 2026 title chase is only just taking shape.

2026 NCAA Women’s Golf Championship FAQ

Who leads after Round 1 of the 2026 NCAA women’s golf championship?
Southern California leads the team race at 7 under, one shot ahead of top-ranked Stanford. Stanford’s Megha Ganne and Oklahoma State’s Ellie Bushnell share the individual lead at 4 under.
When is Round 2 of the championship?
Round 2 is played today, Saturday, May 23, 2026. The championship runs through Wednesday, May 27.
Where is the 2026 NCAA women’s golf championship held?
At Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, with the University of Texas serving as host.
What channel is the NCAA women’s golf championship on?
The GOLF Channel provides live coverage of the final three days. Live scoring is available all week at NCAA.com.
Who won the NCAA women’s golf championship in 2025?
Northwestern won its first national title in 2025, defeating Stanford 3–2.
AmateurGolf.com Rankings
2026 season — official results & points
PosPlayerFromScoresPoints
1Farah O'KeefeTX69-69-68-70=2761,500
2Megha GanneNJ68-71-69-70=2781,000
3Rianne Mikhaela MalixiPhilippi73-69-68-69=279700
+49 more — Premium members see every point earnedFull Women's National Ranking

AmateurGolf.com Staff

Editorial Team

Reporting and analysis from the AmateurGolf.com editorial team.