Florida State University Athletics

Last Updated: May 27, 2025By


TALLAHASSEE – Lottie Woad and Mirabel Ting, who led the Florida State women’s golf team to a program-best third place finish at the 2025 NCAA Championship Finals, have been named as First-Team All-Americans by the Women’s Golf Coaches Association.

Woad is the first player in school history to be named a First-Team All-American by the WGCA three times during her career as a Seminole. It’s the second consecutive year Ting has earned All-American honors as a Seminole; she earned Honorable All-American honors in 2024. The honors for Woad and Ting it mark the second time in school history that a pair of Seminoles has earned First-Team All-American honors as named by the WGCA in the same season. Woad and Charlotte Heath both earned the honor during the 2022-23 season.

Woad is now a five-time First-Team All-American selection. She has been named as a First-Team All-American by the WGCA in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and as a First-Team All-American by Golfweek in 2023 and 2024.

Woad has earned All-American First-Team honors as named by the WGCA three times and as named by Golfweek two times. She has also been named to the NCAA Championship All-Tournament team with a pair of top-10 finishes in the last two NCAA championships (second in 2024 and eighth in 2025).

Woad finished the 2025 season with a 70.06 stroke average – the second best single-season stroke average in her career and the third-best single-season stroke average in school history. She earned two victories during her junior season (at the Landfall Tradition and at the Moon Invitational), totaled 10 top-three individual finishes, finished out of the top three only once during the entire 2024-25 fall and spring seasons, and finished below par in 11 of 12 events including at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Woad is the No. 1 ranked golfer in school history with a career-stroke average of 70.42 in 30 career tournaments. She has five career individual wins, a school-record 27 top-10 finishes, and carded a school-record tying 65 a program-record four times.

Woad is currently ranked No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings (a spot she has held for 41 consecutive weeks) and finished her collegiate season ranked No. 4 in the NCAA by Scoreboard by Clippd. Ting is ranked No. 2 in the WAGR and as the No. 1 collegiate player (a spot she has held since March 12, 2025).

Ting has earned All-American honors as named by the WGCA in each of her first three collegiate seasons. She was named a Second-Team All-American in 2023, as an Honorable Mention All-American in 2024, and as a First-Team All-American in 2025.

Ting was named as the 2025 ACC Golfer of the Year and was presented with the 2025 ANNIKA Award as the nation’s top golfer during the National Championship Finals in Carlsbad, Calif., on May 20. She became the first women’s golfer in school history to be named as the top collegiate player.

Ting set the school record for the lowest stroke average in a single season as a Seminole (68.77) in finishing as Florida State’s top ranked golfer in 2025. She earned nine top six finishes in nine events, won five individual championships, never finished lower than sixth in the individual standings in any of her collegiate events as a junior, was below par in each of her nine collegiate events, and finished the 2024-25 season at an incredible 80 strokes under par.

Ting is ranked second in school history with a 70.48 stroke average in 16 events and 48 rounds as a Seminole.

Florida State and Stanford, who met in the semifinals of match play at the NCAA Championship Finals, are the only two teams in the nation with multiple First-Team All-American selections.

Division I WGCA All-Americans

First Team


Mirabel Ting, Florida State University

Lottie Woad, Florida State University

Carla Bernat, Kansas State University

Carolina Chacarra, Wake Forest University

Megha Ganne, Stanford University

Eila Galitsky, University of South Carolina

Jasmine Koo, University of Southern California

Maria José Marin, University of Arkansas

Paula Martín Sampedro, Stanford University

Meja Örtengren, Stanford University

Andrea Revuelta, Stanford University

Kiara Romero, University of Oregon

 

Second Team

Hannah Darling, University of South Carolina

Anna Davis, Auburn University

Kary Hollenbaugh, The Ohio State University

Lauren Kim, University of Texas

Marie Eline Madsen, North Carolina State University

Farah O’Keefe, University of Texas

Catherine Park, University of Southern California

Patience Rhodes, Arizona State University

Louise Rydqvist, University of South Carolina

Amanda Sambach, University of Virginia

Rocío Tejedo, Louisiana State University

Kendall Todd, University of Arkansas

Suvichaya Vinijchaitham, University of Oregon

Kelly Xu, Stanford University

 

Honorable Mention Team

Brooke Biermann, Michigan State University

Vanessa Borovilos, Texas A&M University

Pinky Chaisilprungruang, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Lauren Clark, University of Kansas

Beth Coulter, Arizona State University

Cayetana Fernández García-Poggio, Texas A&M University

Cindy Hsu, University of Texas

Grace Kilcrease, Oklahoma State University

Chloe Kovelesky, Wake Forest University

Mackenzie Lee, Southern Methodist University

Vivian Lu, University of Washington

Kyra Ly, Oregon State University

Caitlyn Macnab, University of Mississippi

Ava Merrill, Vanderbilt University

Camille Min-Gaultier, Texas Christian University

Lauryn Nguyen, Northwestern University

Megan Propeck, University of Virginia

Paula Schulz-Hanssen, Arizona State University

Andie Smith, Duke University

Clarisa Temelo, University of Arkansas

Karen Tsuru, University of Oregon

Avery Weed, Mississippi State University

Ashley Yun, Northwestern University

Reagan Zibilski, University of Arkansas

 


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