Skip To Main Content
Skip To Main Content

Schedule

Siena University Athletics

Dave Wronowski

Entering his 18th season as Siena Women's Golf Head Coach in 2022-23, Dave Wronowski has led the program to eight MAAC Championships, headlined by the Saints' first two NCAA Tournament Appearances in 2012 and 2014.

The Siena Women's Golf program won an unprecedented 12 consecutive MAAC Championships from 2001-13 and most recently in 2014, with Wronowski guiding the Saints to the eight titles during his first nine seasons leading the program. For his efforts, he has been named the MAAC Coach of the Year four times (2010, 2011, 2012, 2014).

The Saints flirted with program history during their abbreviated 2019-20 campaign, recording the third lowest team 18-hole round during the Dartmouth Invitational (304). Additionally, junior Grace Cuttone shot -6, 66 during the same round to tie the program record for low-18 hole score and low round under par. Siena also shined in the classroom, placing three Saints on the MAAC All-Academic Team and earning an NCAA APR Team Recognition Award for the second straight year. 

Capping off a year that featured five top-5 team finishes, the Saints took home fourth place at the 2019 MAAC Championships, their best finish in three seasons. Senior Sara Riso and sophomore Abigail Chai-Onn were each named to the MAAC All-Championship Team with individual top-10 finishes, with Riso capping off one of the most distinguished careers in program history under the council of Wronowski. 

2018 saw the Saints fifth at the MAAC Championships for the second straight season, with Riso earning a spot on the All-MAAC Team after finishing T-4 individually. Riso and Marisa Fiorina were named to the MAAC All-Academic Team, while four Saints were honored on the MAAC Academic Honor Roll. 

In 2017, Wronowski led Siena to a fifth place finish at the MAAC Championship. Kristen Bromley and Riso both carded top-five finishes at the league tournament. Bromley capped off her career finishing in the top-10 during all four MAAC Championship appearances, including three consecutive third-place finishes.

The Saints were guided by Wronowski to a third place finish in the MAAC Championships in 2016, where Siena placed two golfers in the top five. Kristen Bromley finished third followed by Divya Manthena coming in fourth. In 2015 the Saints were led by Wronowski to a second place finish in the MAAC Championships. Siena landed three golfers in the top seven, the only team to do so. Victoria Nguyen finished second, Kristen Bromley finished third and Mary Fletcher finished seventh to round out the top-three. In 2014 Wronowski guided the Saints to the program's 13th straight MAAC Championship and second NCAA Tournament Appearance.

Named the 2014 MAAC Coach of the Year, Wronowski and the Saints advanced to the NCAA Central Regional in Stillwater, Okla. where they finished 24th overall. The 2011-12 season was a memorable one for the program. The Saints closed out the regular season by winning the Hartford Invitational before capturing the conference title. In the first season in which the MAAC Champion received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, the Saints captured the conference championship by a whopping 53-stroke margin. As a result, Siena participated in the NCAA Central Regional in Columbus, Ohio where they finished 24th overall. The golf team has excelled both on and off the golf course since Wronowski took over the program.

With Wronowski at the helm, the team has had 46 selections to the WGCA Scholar All-American team. Additionally, the program has earned Public Recognition Awards from the NCAA each of the last two eligible seasons and 10 times overall during his tenure for posting Academic Progress Rates (APR) in the top-10 percent of all women's golf programs across the membership.

Wronowski came to Siena after a stellar playing career at Skidmore College where he was named to the Golf Coaches Association of America All-American Honorable Mention list and earned Academic All-American honors. As part of the nationally ranked Skidmore team, he won two events and was named to his alma mater's Hall of Fame in 2005. He is the son of former men's golf head coach Tom Wronowski, who led the Saints from 1997-2014.Â