Harvard Shield masthead element Harvard University Gazette
Search the Gazette
HOME : Sports SPORTS Prev issues | Contact us | Harvard News Office
Current Issue:
November 08, 2001


News
News, events, features

Science/Research
Latest scientific findings

Profiles
The people behind the university

Community
Harvard and neighbor communities

Sports
Scores, highlights, upcoming games

On Campus
Newsmakers, notes, students, police log

Arts
Museums, concerts, theater

Calendar
Two-week listing of upcoming events

 

 


Sara Leventhal
Women's golf team co-captain Sara Leventhal '02 practices at a driving range in Lexington. (Staff photos by Kris Snibbe)

HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES

On the upswing

By Beth Potier
Gazette Staff

Harvard's women's golf team finished its official fall season in solid standing, but the season's high point came Oct. 28, when the team beat Yale in a scrimmage. "It was a real accomplishment for our team," said assistant coach Fred Schernecker '90, noting that Yale's women's team is usually the best in the East. "It was fun - especially beating Yale."

Women's golf at Harvard is on the upswing, thanks in part to Tiger Woods and Title IX, the 1972 federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in activities at schools and colleges that receive federal funds. Since 1998, the team has decreased its strokes per tournament round from 368 to 345, and Schernecker is confident that trend will continue this spring. That's due in part to golf's growing appeal to young women, boosted by Woods' youthful charisma and by the ever-lengthening shadow of Title IX, which has some universities now offering scholarships to women golfers.

Elisa Schaar
Elisa Schaar '04 takes a careful look at the result of a practice drive.

In addition, Schernecker and head coach Warren Smith have boosted the competitive commitment of the program. The seven student-athletes on the team have so many other demands on their time, said Schernecker, that "if they're going to choose to play golf, it should be something they can get a lot out of." In contrast to the inaugural season in 1993, when some team members "played their first 18 holes of golf at a tournament," Schernecker said that today most players have logged up to eight years of competitive golf before coming to Harvard.

Jee Joo Kang, '05, practices at a driving range in Lexington.
During the fall and spring seasons, the team practices three or four days each week, then travels to play two-day tournaments on the weekends. Members are encouraged to maintain a high level of fitness in the off-season because, contrary to stereotype, the game is physically demanding. In a four-hour tournament, players walk four to five miles carrying 30-pound golf bags.

For the Harvard women, the demands of the game are mitigated by their surroundings. Their practice course is one of the game's most prestigious: the Brookline Country Club. "We're very, very fortunate to have that as our home course," said Schernecker. "We have the best home course of any college team in the country."

Contact Beth Potier at beth_potier@harvard.edu

Women's Golf coach Warren Smith (left) and Assistant Women's Golf Coach, Fred Schernecker support the women's golf team as they practice.









Copyright 2002 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College