When Missouri women's golf arrived at the SEC Championship last month, the Tigers were no longer hoping to compete with the conference’s best teams. They expected it.
Missouri backed up that confidence with one of the best performances in program history, breaking multiple school records and finishing ninth against one of the toughest fields in college golf.
Now, as the Tigers compete in the NCAA Stanford Regional, their turnaround has become one of the biggest success stories in program history.
The regional opened Monday in Stanford, California, and runs through Wednesday. The top five teams from each regional will advance to the NCAA Championship from May 22 to 27.
Missouri earned a No. 5 seed in a regional that includes host Stanford, the nation’s top-ranked team, along with No. 11 Pepperdine, No. 13 Vanderbilt, No. 22 Arizona State and more.
But the turnaround did not happen overnight.
When senior Addie Dobson arrived at Missouri as a freshman, the program sat outside the top 100 nationally. Now, the Tigers are one of the top 35 teams in the country.
“We just really bought into the vision,” Dobson said. “We want to be the best, we want to push ourselves to be the best.”
Dobson, Melanie Walker and Jade Zamora helped guide the program through the rebuilding process during their four years in Columbia.
“There’s been times where they probably questioned me as a coach, but they stuck with me and they believed in the vision,” coach Caroline Westrup Gaeta said.
That trust started paying off early in the season.
Missouri opened the year by winning the Sam Golden Invitational with a school-record score of 40-under-par. The tournament quickly became a turning point for the team’s confidence.
Freshman Ebba Liljeberg helped lead the breakthrough despite feeling sick before the opening round.
“She goes out and shoots a 61,” Westrup Gaeta said. “And then the rest of the team was like, ‘Well, if she can do it, why shouldn’t I be able to do it?’”
Liljeberg, who is from Helsingborg, Sweden, finished the tournament at 19-under-par, nine shots ahead of second place. Her second-round 61 tied the lowest round in relation to par in NCAA history at 11-under.
The freshman continued building one of the best debut seasons in program history.
Liljeberg recorded a 71.48 scoring average this season, more than 1.5 strokes better than the previous freshman program record. She posted three top-five finishes during the fall season and earned a spot on the SEC all-freshman team.
She tied for third at the Rainbow Wahine Invitational, finished third at the Johnie Imes Invitational and helped lead Missouri to wins at the Westbrook Invitational and Valparaiso Augusta Invitational.
Dobson said the early success changed the team’s mindset moving forward.
“Winning is hard and believing you can win is something itself,” Dobson said.
The Tigers carried that confidence into the SEC Championship.
Missouri recorded a 54-hole score of 844, breaking last year’s school record by 25 strokes. The Tigers closed the tournament with an 18-hole score of 277 and finished ninth while beating four ranked SEC teams, including No. 6 Arkansas.
Liljeberg finished tied for 16th individually with an even-par 210, the lowest SEC Championship score in program history. Dobson shot a 211, tied for the second-lowest 54-hole total of her career.
Players said the team’s chemistry played a major role in the turnaround.
The Tigers spent time together outside the course by going to football games, baseball games and team dinners throughout the year.
“We really had one of the best cultures we’ve ever had,” Dobson said.
The competition inside the lineup helped raise the team’s level as well.
“Making the lineup is super hard here,” Dobson said. “Sometimes qualifying is more intense than a tournament.”
Missouri also adjusted practices leading into the Stanford Regional. Westrup Gaeta said the Tigers focused on tighter fairways, pressure situations and preparing for Stanford’s difficult course conditions.
The Tigers practiced at courses with narrow fairways and worked on hitting fairways and greens consistently during practice rounds.
“We can do it,” Westrup Gaeta said. “It’s just putting that pressure to the side as much as we can and just go out and focus on playing the golf that we’ve done all year.”
Missouri’s coaching staff also received national attention during the season. Westrup Gaeta was named to the watchlist for national coach of the year, while assistant coach Francisco Guarneri made the assistant coach of the year watch list.
Now, Missouri is trying to continue its season on one of college golf’s biggest stages.
“We have had an amazing season,” Westrup Gaeta said. “We want to make nationals obviously, but trying to just put that to the side and just go out and play our best golf.”
Dobson, who recently qualified for the U.S. Women’s Open, said the team has stayed focused on the present throughout the postseason run.
“One of the things we always say is being where your feet are,” Dobson said. “We’re confident, we’re ready to go, and we’re just super excited to be here.”
After the opening round Monday, Missouri sat tied for sixth place at 6-over-par. Jade Zamora led the Tigers with 2-under-par. The regional continues Tuesday.
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