The Buffs won the team title by 43 strokes as Milligan had the low round on both days to finish at 608 strokes (300-308). The rest of the field was comprised of NCAA Division III opponents with Bridgewater finishing as the runner-up at 651 strokes and host Southern Virginia placing third at 652.
Castle claimed medalist honors for the second time in her career as she won the 36-hole tournament by seven strokes with a two-round total of (-1) 143. Castle shot (-1) 71 in the opening round and followed it with an even-par 72 on Tuesday.
Check him out as he strokes his hard cock and plays with his hole. Speaking of his hole, Adrian has an amazing ass which would explain his thighs. Man I want to watch a cock go deep into that for the first time. Adrian finished himself off and shot a couple of big squirts of thick creamy white cum all over his stomach.
The No. 27 Auburn golf team fired a final-round 2-under, 286, to win the 2014 Mobile Bay Intercollegiate by six strokes over runner-up No. 36 Kentucky. Niclas Carlsson was Auburn's top individual finisher, shooting a final-round even-par 72 for a three-round minus-4 to finish in second place.
Auburn entered the final round as the overall leader after Monday's first two rounds. The team then received sub-par final rounds from Will Long (71) and Jake Mondy (71) and even-par rounds from Carlsson and Gilchrest to give Clinard's team its first win of the season and the 12th tournament win under Clinard overall.
Playing on the Magnolia Grove Crossings Course, Long finished tied for third, a single stroke behind Carlsson at minus-3, while Mondy finished tied for 17th at plus-3. Gilchrest and Daniel Stringfellow each finished at plus-6, tied for 34th in the 75-player field.
Auburn's Blake Messer won the USA Individual Tournament with a final round 70 to finish at plus-3 on the Magnolia Grove Falls Golf Course. His final round 70 helped him to a four stroke victory over teammate Victor Wiggins, who tied for second at plus-7. Ryan Benton tied for fourth at plus-9 and Victory Henum tied for 17th at plus-15.
FARMVILLE, VA - The Southern Virginia University men's golf team concluded their participation at the Men's VGSA Championship, securing an eighth-place finish with a combined score of 610, which was +34 over par. The two-day event was marked by consistent performances, with all team members maintaining relatively stable scores throughout the tournament.
Leading the way for the Knights was Michael McCaffrey, who exhibited remarkable consistency over the two days. McCaffrey opened the tournament with a solid performance, carding a +3 on the first day, resulting in a score of 75. On the second day, the team collectively improved, posting a score of 304, which was two strokes better than the first day.
This consistency allowed Southern Virginia to maintain their position in the overall standings, and once again, Michael McCaffrey led the team, showcasing his skill with another impressive round. He matched his first-day score, carding another 75, for a total of +6 over the two days, which landed him in 23rd place overall.
Brogan Bennett followed closely behind McCaffrey, posting a +9 over the two days. Bennett shot four over on the first day and five over on the second, resulting in an overall score of 153 and a 30th place finish.
Robby Nielsen rounded out the team's efforts with a +13, finishing in 46th place overall.
The B-Team also were able to show solid performances when Jameson Harper carded +17 for 59th place and improved his stroke by three on the second day and Coleman Oettli jumped 11 places by finding his stroke on the second day to improve his swing by six for a 67th place finish.
While the team finished in eighth place, the consistency and efforts of the individual players, showcased the potential and talent of the Southern Virginia University men's golf team. They will look to build on this performance in their upcoming events.
For all the most up-to-date information regarding Southern Virginia University golf, please visit knightathletics.com and follow @knightmgolf on Instagram.
We used the World Wide Lightning Location Network and cyclones tracks from the International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship to study properties of lightning strokes occurring in tropical cyclones. We studied 429 cyclones occurring from 2012 to 2017 in both hemispheres with more than 11 million lightning strokes found within a distance of 600 km from the cyclone eye. For purposes of our study, we divided the cyclones into 6 basins: Indian Ocean, North Atlantic, Northeast Pacific and Northwest Pacific in the northern hemisphere and Indian Ocean and Southern Pacific in the southern hemisphere. We found differences in the numbers, energies and multiplicities of lightning strokes occurring in the cyclones in the northern and southern hemispheres. We calculated the median stroke energy for each cyclone. We used Saffir-Simpson scale for classifying the intensity of tropical cyclones and found a tendency of decreasing median stroke energies with an increasing cyclone intensity. We compared the evolution of lightning activity accompanying the cyclones with the evolution of their central pressure and wind speed to examine the possibility of using the lightning activity for prediction of cyclone intensity changes. In the northern hemisphere, there was on average about 28 thousands of strokes per cyclone with a median energy of 1.7 kJ, while in the southern hemisphere, there was on average 24 thousands of strokes per cyclone with a median energy of 2.7 kJ. The difference in multiplicity is not really noticeable with an average of 1.39 strokes per flash in the northern hemisphere and 1.34 strokes per flash in the southern hemisphere. In our dataset, we found 28 strokes with an energy over 1 MJ (superbolts), which occurred in a short period during the winter 2013-14, which was the winter exhibiting the largest SOI (Southern oscillation index).
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Tuesday Recap: The Wichita State men's golf team put the finishing touches on a dominant performance at the 2008 State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Championship, which concluded Tuesday at the Davenport Country Club in Pleasant Valley, Iowa. The Shockers won the tournament by 24 strokes over second-place Southern Illinois, while Connor McHenry claimed individual medalist honors by finishing four strokes better than teammate Dustin Garza, who finished in second. All five Shockers earned all-conference honors as the Shockers enjoyed the largest margin of victory at the MVC championship since Tulsa won by 26 strokes in a rain-shortened 36-hole tournament in 1995.
With a 15-stroke lead after the tournament's opening rounds, the Shockers shifted into overdrive in Tuesday's action. McHenry eagled the 480-yard, par-5 No. 12 hole on his way to a 70 (-2) in the final round, finishing with a tournament-best 208 (72-66-70). Garza also posted a 70 in the final round to move into second place with a final count of 212 (70-72-70). Illinois State's Tommy Bliefnick was third with a three-round 213, and MVC Golfer of the Year Ryan Spears finished tied for fourth with a 214 (73-69-72). Southern Illinois enjoyed its best finish at the MVC men's golf championship since 1990, as the Salukis finished runner-up, 10 strokes better than third-place Illinois State. It marked the seventh title for Wichita State since 1999, while the Shockers have finished first or second at the league championship for 12-straight years.
2007 Review -- Illinois State's Ben Murphy shot a tournament low 66 on Tuesday's final round to help Illinois State to a 13-stroke victory over second-place Wichita State at the 2007 State Farm MVC Men's Golf Championship. John Sutko of Creighton fired a 68 on Tuesday to win medalist honors by four strokes over Murphy.
Format: Individual stroke play ? team competition. Players will play 54 holes for the medalist competition. The team score for the 54-hole competition will be comprised of the best four of five scores for each 18-hole round from each team. The final score is determined by totaling each daily round.
Consortium scientists are asking similar questions about marine mammals, and are using devices with similar sensors to find the answers. For example, it is now possible to track the detailed movements of fur seals at sea, and calculate how much energy they expend while diving and swimming using tri-dimensional accelerometers. This information helps to understand how much energy they spend during their daily lives and consequently how much food they need to meet their energetic needs.
Without such devices, it would be impossible to obtain important biometric information about these marine mammals, who range freely over hundreds of kilometers in some of the most remote parts of the oceans. Some of these populations have declined suddenly, and research on energetics helps to understand why.
In a new Consortium study, researchers tracked the movements at sea of two species of fur seals: northern fur seals living in the northern hemisphere, and Antarctic fur seals living in the southern hemisphere. They analyzed flipper strokes to estimate the amount of energy expended during various activities. The study, led by Dr Tiphaine Jeanniard-du-Dot, was published in Nature Scientific Reports.
The scientists were surprised to find some consistency between flipper strokes among the northern fur seals in the Alaskan Bering Sea, and the Antarctic fur seals in the Southern Ocean and Antarctic peninsula. Each species used a similar number of flipper strokes to travel the same distance, had the same swimming rhythm, and expended the same amount of energy. However, while diving the smaller Antarctic fur seals expended slightly more energy to accelerate, likely due to their smaller flipper size.
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