NCAA DI Women
2024/25 Awards Winners

June 16, 2025 • by Scoreboard

Rounding up the DI women's award winners from the 2024/25 season. Congratulations to all those listed below on a fine season.


ANNIKA Award Presented by Stifel

Mirabel Ting (Florida State)

FSU junior and one of the world’s top-ranked female amateur golfers, Mirabel Ting is the winner of the prestigious ANNIKA Award presented by Stifel, recognizing the most outstanding female NCAA Division I college golfer for the 2024-25 season. 

Ting, the top-ranked player in the Clippd rankings, and number two in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, earned her name on the ANNIKA Award presented by Stifel with her outstanding third year at Florida State University. 

Starting off her fall season with three straight wins and then adding two more wins in the spring season, Ting is the only player in the country to have five total wins during the 2024-2025 season. With a scoring average of 67.1 and finishing even par or better in 24 of her 25 rounds this season, she was named the 2025 ACC Golfer of the Year. 

Ting’s drive and resilience lead to one of the most successful seasons in women’s college

golf earning her name on the 2025 ANNIKA Award presented by Stifel. This makes her the first Malaysian player and the first from Florida State University named to the Award.

PING WGCA Player of the Year

DI: Mirabel Ting (Florida State)

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association has announced Mirabel Ting of Florida State University as the 2024-25 Division I PING WGCA Player of the Year, the organization’s highest player honor.

Recognized annually as the top honor in women's collegiate golf, the award was first given in 1987 and the names of recipients reads as a who's who of the best of the ladies game including Amanda Blumenherst (3-times), Lorena Ochoa (2-times) and Annika Sorenstam.

 A native of Miri, Malaysia, Ting broke the school record for the lowest stroke average in a single season. She never finished lower than sixth place in any event throughout the season and was below par in every event. The ACC Golfer of the Year, Ting claimed five individual victories and finished runner-up at both the NCAA Championship and the NCAA Lexington Regional.

WGCA Freshman of the Year Presented by StrackaLine

DI: Meja Örtengren

 The WGCA Freshman of the Year Presented by StrackaLine is awarded annually to the top Freshman in Division I, II, III and NAIA women's golf. Freshmen must have competed in a minimum of 15 competitive rounds to be considered.

Meja Örtengren finished in the top-10 in every tournament she played in during her first year, including a tie for 10th place at the NCAA Championships. She claimed her first tournament win at the San Diego State Classic where she not only won by eight strokes, which is the largest win in program history, but also tied a school record with her round of 62 (-10). The Linköping, Sweden native was also named ACC Freshman of the Year.

In addition, the WGCA has announced the Division I All-Freshman Team for the 2024-25 season. The Division I WGCA All-Freshman Team is selected by a prestigious collection of women’s collegiate golf coaches. Freshmen must have competed in a minimum of 15 competitive rounds to be considered. Watch her acceptance speech here.

Jackie Steinmann WGCA National Coach of the Year Presented by Golf Pride

DI: Emily Fletcher (Northwestern)

Emily Fletcher, head coach at Northwestern, is the 2024-25 Division I Jackie Steinmann WGCA National Coach of the Year Presented by Golf Pride. In addition, assistant coach Beth Miller has been named the 2024-25 Division I Golf Pride WGCA Assistant Coach of the Year. This marks the first time in the history of the awards that both recipients have come from the same program.

Fletcher and Miller have worked side by side at Northwestern for 17 years. This year, the Wildcats never placed outside of the top eight and collected seven top three finishes. Northwestern capped its impressive season by claiming the program’s first ever NCAA Championship title at La Costa in May.

Division I WGCA All-American Teams

First Team

Carla Bernat (Kansas State), Carolina Chacarra (Wake Forest), Megha Ganne (Stanford), Eila Galitsky (South Carolina), Jasmine Koo (Southern California), Maria José Marin (Arkansas), Paula Martín Sampedro (Stanford), Meja Örtengren (Stanford), Andrea Revuelta (Stanford), Kiara Romero (Oregon), Mirabel Ting (Florida State), Lottie Woad (Florida State)

Second Team

Hannah Darling (South Carolina), Anna Davis (Auburn), Kary Hollenbaugh (Ohio State), Lauren Kim (Texas), Marie Eline Madsen (North Carolina State), Farah O’Keefe (Texas), Catherine Park (Southern California), Patience Rhodes (Arizona State), Louise Rydqvist (South Carolina), Amanda Sambach (Virginia), Rocío Tejedo (Louisiana State), Kendall Todd (Arkansas), Suvichaya Vinijchaitham (Oregon), Kelly Xu (Stanford)

 Honorable Mention Team

Brooke Biermann (Michigan State), Vanessa Borovilos (Texas A&M), Pinky Chaisilprungruang (North Carolina), Lauren Clark (Kansas), Beth Coulter (Arizona State), Cayetana Fernández García-Poggio (Texas A&M), Cindy Hsu (Texas), Grace Kilcrease (Oklahoma State), Chloe Kovelesky (Wake Forest), Mackenzie Lee (Southern Methodist), Vivian Lu (Washington), Kyra Ly (Oregon State) Caitlyn Macnab (Ole Miss), Ava Merrill (Vanderbilt), Camille Min-Gaultier (TCU), Lauryn Nguyen (Northwestern), Megan Propeck (Virginia), Paula Schulz-Hanssen (Arizona State), Andie Smith (Duke), Clarisa Temelo (Arkansas), Karen Tsuru (Oregon), Avery Weed (Mississippi State),  Ashley Yun (Northwestern), Reagan Zibilski (Arkansas)

WGCA Division I All-Freshman Team

Eila Galitsky (South Carolina), Jasmine Koo (Southern California), Meja Örtengren (Stanford), Andrea Revuelta (Stanford), Suvichaya Vinijchaitham (Oregon)