Women's Golf

2025 ACC Women's Golf Championship Set for April 16-19 in Greensboro, North Carolina

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (theACC.com) – The 15 Atlantic Coast Conference women’s golf teams will tee off at the 2025 ACC Women’s Golf Championship on Wednesday, April 16, and will run through Saturday, April 19, with the match-play final at the Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina.

With the tournament field expanding to 15 teams for the first time in ACC history, the format has been adjusted from years past. Teams will compete in three rounds of stroke play, beginning with 36 holes on Wednesday and 18 holes on Thursday. The top six teams from stroke play will advance to match play, with the top two receiving byes into the semifinals. The third-place team will face the sixth-place team, while the fourth-place team will square off against the fifth-place team in the first round of match play on Friday. The winners of those matchups will then take on the first- and second-place squads later that same day. The match-play final is set for Saturday at 9 a.m. ET.

Spectators are allowed at the 2025 ACC Women’s Golf Championship. The tournament is not a ticketed event.

ACC Notes
  • In the latest edition of the Mizuno Women’s Golf Coaches Association Coaches Poll announced on Friday, April 11, six ACC teams were listed, headlined by Stanford at No. 1. Florida State is No. 4, Wake Forest is No. 9, North Carolina is No. 12, Virginia is No. 13 and Duke is No. 23. California, NC State and Virginia Tech are currently receiving votes.
     
  • The ACC has six teams ranked in the top 25 in the most recent spring rankings by Scoreboard powered by Clippd (April 11), highlighted by Stanford coming in at No. 1. Also ranked in the top 25 are Florida State at No. 3, Wake Forest at No. 9, North Carolina at No. 12, Virginia at No. 13 and Duke at No. 23. SMU and California are just outside the top 25 at No. 33 and No. 35, respectively.
     
  • In the most recent Scoreboard powered by Clippd Individual Rankings (April 11), eight ACC players landed in the top 25, headlined by Florida State’s Mirabel Ting remaining at the No. 1 spot. Following Ting is Stanford’s Meja Örtengren (No. 4), Wake Forest’s Carolina Chacarra (No. 6), FSU’s Lottie Woad (No. 7), Stanford’s Paula Martín Sampedro (No. 8), Stanford’s Megha Ganne (No. 10), Wake Forest’s Chloe Kovelesky (No. 15) and Stanford’s Kelly Xu (No. 22). Virginia’s Amanda Sambach (No. 28), SMU’s Mackenzie Lee (No. 31) and North Carolina’s Megan Streicher (No. 37) are just outside the top 25.
     
  • Florida State’s Lottie Woad is currently the top-ranked player in the latest World Amateur Golf Rankings (WAGR). Woad’s teammate, Mirabel Ting, is currently second, while Stanford’s Megha Ganne rounds out the top 10 at No. 10. Stanford also has Paula Martín Sampedro (No. 14) and Meja Örtengren (No. 15) in the top 15, while Wake Forest’s Carolina Chacarra is No. 24 and Virginia’s Amanda Sambach is No. 25.
     
  • Throughout the spring season, ACC teams have won 12 team titles, while ACC players have claimed 10 medalist honors. For the 2024-25 season, ACC teams have combined for 25 team championships and 23 individual titles. Florida State’s Mirabel Ting has recorded a nation-best five individual titles this season.
     
  • Carolina Chacarra (Wake Forest), Megha Ganne (Stanford), Meja Örtengren (Stanford), Paula Martín Sampedro (Stanford), Mirabel Ting (Florida State) and Lottie Woad (Florida State) were named to the first Annika Award watch list of the spring.
     
  • The ACC was well represented at the 2025 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, April 2-5, in Augusta, Georgia, as 19 current and former women’s golf student-athletes. Four ACC players finished in the top 10, led by defending champion Lottie Woad, who placed third at 9-under. Stanford’s Andrea Revuelta tied for fourth at 8-under, while teammate Megha Ganne tied for seventh at 7-under despite a tournament-record 63 in the opening round. Wake Forest’s Carolina Charcarra finished ninth at 6-under.
     
  • Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina is set to host the ACC Women’s Golf Championship for the 12th time since and fourth time in the last six years. In 1953, the ACC was formed during a meeting in Sedgefield’s clubhouse.
     
  • Battling inclement weather all day long, including a nearly two-hour lightning delay in the morning and just under an hour-long weather delay in the championship match, Wake Forest was crowned the 2024 ACC Women’s Golf Team Champions at Porters Neck Country Club in Wilmington, North Carolina. The team title is the eighth in Wake Forest women’s golf history and the third in the last six years. Championship match play was called due to darkness with all but one match undecided.
     
  • Wake Forest’s Rachel Kuehn shot a final-round 5-under, 67, on Saturday, April 20, to finish the three rounds of stroke play with a 54-hole score of 10-under, 206 and be crowned the 2024 ACC Women’s Golf Individual Champion. She joined her mother Brenda Corrie-Kuehn as an ACC Women’s Golf Individual Champion, becoming the first-known mother-daughter to do so in ACC history. Corrie-Kuehn was the ACC Women’s Golf Individual Champion in 1986.
     
  • Eight ACC teams earned spots into the NCAA Regionals a season ago, while six teams - Clemson, Duke, Florida State, North Carolina, Virginia and Wake Forest – advanced to the 2024 NCAA Women’s Golf Championship, matching a conference record. The Tigers were the lone ACC representatives to advance to the Match Play quarterfinals.
2025 ACC Women’s Golf Championship Seed/Team (Scoreboard Ranking):
  • Seed 1: Stanford (1)
  • Seed 2: Florida St. (3)
  • Seed 3: Wake Forest (9)
  • Seed 4: North Carolina (12)
  • Seed 5: Virginia (13)
  • Seed 6: Duke (23)
  • Seed 7: SMU (32)
  • Seed 8: California (35)
  • Seed 9: Clemson (39)
  • Seed 10: NC State (44)
  • Seed 11: Virginia Tech (45)
  • Seed 12: Louisville (47)
  • Seed 13: Miami (53)
  • Seed 14: Boston College (79)
  • Seed 15: Notre Dame (84)
Based on seeding, please see below first-round pairings and tee teams for each team:
  • Hole 1 (10-minute intervals)
    • 7:30 AM – 8:10 AM:  #1 Stanford, #2 Florida St., #3 Wake Forest
    • 8:20 AM – 9:00 AM:  #7 SMU, #8 Cal, #9 Clemson
    • 9:10 AM – 9:50 AM: #10 NC State, #11 Virginia Tech, #12 Louisville
  • Hole 10 (11-minute intervals)
    • 7:45 AM – 8:29 AM: #4 North Carolina, #5 Virginia, #6 Duke
    • 8:40 AM – 9:24 AM:  #13 Miami, #14 Boston College, and #15 Notre Dame

2025 ACC Women’s Golf Championship Coverage
The semifinals and finals of the 2025 ACC Women’s Golf Championship match play will be televised live on ACC Network Extra. Tony Simeone (play-by-play) and Suzy Whaley (analyst) will provide the call. A championship recap show will air May 9 at 6:30 p.m. ET on ACCN. Owned and operated by ESPN in partnership with the Atlantic Coast Conference, ACC Network (ACCN) and its digital platform ACCNX is a 24/7 national network dedicated to ACC sports that launched on August 22, 2019.