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Canada’s Celeste Dao wins first collegiate event, leads Georgia to title

Feb 26, 2020 | 5:55 PM

Georgia Bulldogs women’s golf coach Josh Brewer has long believed that Celeste Dao is a special player.

She proved him right this week.

Dao, from Notre-Dame-de-L’Ile-Perrot, Que., won the Gold Rush golf tournament on Tuesday, finishing 7-under 209, a shot better than teammate Caterina Don. The Bulldogs placed three players in the NCAA event’s top four to run away with the team title, besting second-place Fresno State by 23 strokes.

Playing a shotgun start, Dao’s coaches and teammates first had to track her down on the course at the Old Ranch Country Club in Seal Beach, Calif., to tell her she had won and led the team to victory. Once Dao’s teammates had chased her down they all hugged to celebrate her first collegiate win.

“I think it says a lot about Celeste that when she was giving her victory speech she congratulated her team just 30 seconds into her speech on winning the team title,” Brewer said. “I’m just lucky as a coach to have an individual who is able to step back and say ‘what wonderful teammates I have.’

“That’s why the reaction was the way it was when she had won and she gave it right back to them.”

Dao was named the SEC Freshman of the Week for women’s golf on Wednesday following the victory. 

It’s the same sort of class that impressed Brewer when he first met Dao.

She had already won the Quebec Women’s Amateur title in 2017, and then the Mexican Junior Girls Championship and the Canadian Junior Girls Championship in 2018 when she and her family dropped in on Brewer at the University of Georgia’s campus in Athens. They spent 90 minutes together before parting company and then Brewer attended a nearby junior tournament Dao was competing in.

Brewer had already planned to attend the event for recruiting purposes and to support some of his student-athletes but followed Dao for a few holes.

She struggled in the first round of that event but then bounced back with rounds in the high 60s. That piqued Brewer’s interest.

“We both had good first impressions and the relationship just grew from there,” Brewer said. “She’s very upbeat, positive. Just works hard as far her golf game and is wanting to play professional golf, which we want.

“We want people who have big dreams and she wants to be the next Brooke Henderson, write her own chapter in women’s golf for Canada.”

Dao, an 18-year-old freshman, got better each round at the Gold Rush this week, shooting a 71-70-68. Brigitte Thibault of Rosemere, Que., who was named the 2019 female amateur of the year by the Golf Journalists Association of Canada, was 14th for Fresno State.

Brewer was impressed with Dao’s poise at the Gold Rush, holding on to her second-round lead.

“I would be fibbing if I didn’t say I didn’t know how she would respond. First time in that position, on a collegiate level,” Brewer said. “I think she handled the atmosphere well.

“It’s hard to close when you’re leading. I know she battled to the end and it was a tough one-shot victory. But again, winning in this sport is always to make par too when you’re coming down the stretch and you have a lead but she found a way to do it.”

PGA TOUR — Corey Conners of Listowel, Ont., is the top-ranked Canadian in the field this week at the Honda Classic at the PGA National Golf Club in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. He’ll be joined by Roger Sloan of Merritt, B.C., Mackenzie Hughes of Dundas, Ont., David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., and Michael Gligic of Burlington, Ont.

KORN FERRY TOUR — Adam Svensson of Surrey, B.C., moved up three spots in the Korn Ferry Tour rankings after tying for 26th at last week’s LEMCOM Suncoast Classic. He’ll be back at it on Thursday at the El Bosque Country Club for the Mexico Championship in Leon, Guanajuato, Mexico. Taylor Pendrith of Richmond Hill, Ont., and Vancouver’s Stuart Macdonald are also in the field.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 26, 2020.

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John Chidley-Hill’s weekly golf notebook is published on Wednesdays.

Follow @jchidleyhill on Twitter

John Chidley-Hill, The Canadian Press

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