The Spartans finished at 9-over 873 on the demanding layout outside of San Diego to earn a three-shot win over the top-ranked Stanford, which was looking for its fifth consecutive win of the season.
It turned into a two-team race between the two schools which are located a little more than 20 miles apart, as Arizona State finished a distant third, 11 strokes off the pace at 20-over 884.
Kajsa Arwefjäll, who helped Sweden to a third-place finish at The Spirit Invitational, led San Jose State's final-round comeback, carding a 2-under 70 to move 18 spots up the leaderboard into a tie for sixth place. San Jose State also counted a pair of 74s by Natasha Andrea Oon and Lucia Lopez-Ortega along with a 75 from Antonia Malate. Oon and Malate will be participating in the Augusta National Women's Amateur at the end of March.CHAMPION!#SpartanUp pic.twitter.com/PvSfZb9F9w
— San Jose State Women's Golf (@SanJoseStWGOLF) February 15, 2022
The victory was no fluke for Dana Dormann's Spartan squad, which had chalked up a trio of second-place finishes in its four fall events heading to The Farms.
"It's amazing," said Dormann, who was a three-time All-American for the Spartans before playing 10 years on the LPGA Tour. "We beat the No. 1 ranked team in the nation and a whole lot of other ranked teams. It was a total team effort."
This is the first tournament win for San Jose State since the 2018-19 season when the Spartans won two tournaments – Minnesota Invitational and The Gold Rush.
Stanford's Rachel Heck, who won six events last year as a freshman on her way to landing the ANNIKA Award, notched her seventh career win with a 5-under total of 211. The world's third-ranked female amateur posted rounds of 70-73-68 to earn a three-stroke victory over Ashley Menne of Arizona State, who finished at 2-under 214.
Oon was the only other player in the field who managed to break par at The Farms, finishing at 1-under 215 for a third-place finish.
Stanford freshman Rose Zhang, the top-ranked female amateur in the world who had won each of her first three collegiate events, finished tied for fourth at 1-over 217 on rounds of 69-73-75.
USC's heralded freshman Amari Avery, who joined the Trojans after the fall season, tied for sixth in her first collegiate stroke play event at 3-over 219.
