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Stanford Eyes Redemption as 30 Teams Tee It Up at La Costa

One match short a year ago, Stanford returns to Omni La Costa as the favorite.

Stanford Eyes Redemption as 30 Teams Tee It Up at La Costa
Women’s College Golf
Championship Preview · 2026 NCAA Division I Season

 

A golfer follows through on a shot at the NCAA Division I women's golf championship.
The 2026 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship returns to Omni La Costa Resort & Spa, where the title will be decided in match play. Photo: NCAA.com

A year ago, Stanford walked off the closing holes at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa one match short of a national championship, watching Northwestern celebrate the first title in program history. On Friday, the Cardinal return to the same fairways with the same goal — and, this time, the look of a team built to finish the job.

The 2026 NCAA Division I Women’s Golf Championship runs May 22–27 at La Costa, where 30 teams and six individual qualifiers will chase a trophy that has rarely been harder to forecast. Texas serves as the championship host, and the GOLF Channel will carry the final three rounds live.

A Format Built to Test Everyone

The path is famously grueling. All 30 teams open with 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 — three days of head-to-head golf, with the national champion decided Wednesday. It rewards stamina as much as ball-striking: a season’s work distilled into a string of one-on-one duels under the California sun.

Championship at a Glance

Dates
May 22–27, 2026
Site
Omni La Costa Resort & Spa — Carlsbad, Calif.
Field
30 teams · 6 individual qualifiers
Format
54 holes stroke play, then a cut to 15 teams; team title decided by match play
Defending
Northwestern (first title, def. Stanford 3–2)
Most titles
Arizona State, 8
TV
GOLF Channel (final three rounds)

Stanford Is the Standard

No team enters with a stronger case than Stanford. Anne Walker’s program won six times during the 2025–26 season, capped by an ACC Championship, and its depth chart reads like a national ranking unto itself: Paula Martín Sampedro, Andrea Revuelta, Megha Ganne, Meja Ortengren and Kelly Xu all sit inside the top 18 individually. Revuelta arrives in form, having claimed the Stanford Regional for her second regional title of the season, while Ortengren’s six top-10 finishes have given the Cardinal the week-to-week consistency that wins match play.

What Stanford does not have is closure — and the memory of last May’s 3–2 loss is its own kind of motivation.

The Host Has Other Ideas

Standing in the way is a host with ambitions of its own. Texas, the Chapel Hill Regional champion, leans on Farah O’Keefe, the clubhouse leader for the ANNIKA Award and a WGCA Player of the Year contender who has finished inside the top 10 in all 11 of her starts this season — three of them victories. When O’Keefe is on, the Longhorns are a problem for anyone, and a national title on home-state turf would be the program’s signature moment.

Texas A&M may be the deepest team in the bracket. The Aggies rolled through the Waco Regional behind sophomore Vanessa Borovilos, who ran away with medalist honors and arrives as a genuine individual-title threat. Add Florida, an SEC tournament champion this spring; Auburn, fresh off a Louisville Regional win; Wake Forest, the 2023 national champion and Tallahassee Regional victor; and Southern California, the Ann Arbor Regional champion and a perennial contender — and the field has no obvious soft spots.

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 Race Within the Race

The individual chase may be the week’s best subplot. O’Keefe and Borovilos headline a group of players capable of going low for four straight days, and Stanford’s quintet ensures the medal could be decided within a single locker room. Because the 72-hole champion is crowned before match play even begins, the individual title rewards the player who can stay sharp through a long, hot stretch — a separate prize, decided on its own clock.

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.

That is the pull of La Costa. Five days, 30 teams, one course, and a format that turns months of work into a series of one-on-one duels. Stanford has the talent and the motivation. Texas has the host’s edge and a Player of the Year frontrunner. Everyone else has five days to prove the seedings wrong. Play begins Friday.

How to Follow

Stroke play opens Friday, May 22, with team match play running through Wednesday, May 27, at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, Calif. The GOLF Channel carries live coverage of the final three rounds; live scoring is available throughout the week at NCAA.com.

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.