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Minium: From 42nd Place in 2022 to a Championship in 2023, This was Truly a Fairy Tale Season for Leah Onosato

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Romeo T Guzman/Sun Belt Conferen

Head coach Mallory Kane leads Leah Onosato off the course after the final round of Sun Belt Tournament.

NORFOLK, Va. – Fairy tales don't often happen in college athletics. The kindest person, the best student, the hardest worker, those who appear most deserving of success, they don't always win.
 
But Old Dominion women's golf coach Mallory Kane says she saw a fairy tale play out earlier this week at the Sun Belt Conference Championship in Florida, where ODU's Leah Onosato led from start to finish and became ODU's first female golfer to win a conference championship.
 
"Leah has always been somebody who was really close to the top, but didn't quite get there," Kane said.
 
"Being the first to win a conference title guarantees her place in ODU golf history.
 
"For her to accomplish this, it's totally a fairy tale. And the reason it's so special is because it doesn't normally happen. Sports can be cruel and especially golf, where you lose much more than you win.
 
"There's no one I could think of who's more deserving."
 
A fifth-year graduate student, Onosato had a perfect 4.0 grade point average in her undergraduate degree in English and has maintained the same while working on her Master's in applied linguistics. She's been active in student activities, including ODU's Student-Athlete Advisory committee.


Leah Onosato was all smiles as she heads to the scorer's table with a two-stroke lead.  

She was nearly as impressive on the golf course her first three years at ODU. She qualified for the NCAA Tournament and was a second-team All-Conference USA pick in 2021.
 
But last season her game suddenly went into the tank. Why is a complicated issue. She began having depression issues during the pandemic and being an athlete, she was too proud to ask for help.
 
"Athletes are supposed to be tough," she said.
 
Losing almost a year of competition to the pandemic also set her game back, and as she continued to fare poorly last spring, her confidence broke.
 
"She completely lost her game," Kane said.
 
The low point came in last spring's Conference USA Tournament, where she had a three-day average of 83, and shot a 90 on what was a nightmarish second round for her. She finished in a three-way tie for 42nd place.
 
And yes, going from 42nd to a conference title in one year qualifies as a fairy tale.
 
"It was hard to go out there and feel beaten after every tournament," she said. "I kept asking myself, 'Why am I playing this way? Why am I going out here if it hurts so much?'"
 
Kane notes that Onosato didn't have to return this season. "But there was no way I was going to quit," Onosato said,


Leah Onosato on the final day of the Sun Belt Tournament.  

Kane played a huge role in helping her regain her form. She had her sized for a new set of irons and urged her to reset her mindset. They spoke for hours in Kane's office at the Lamberts Point Golf Course and she urged her to work hard over the summer.
 
Onosato returned to Japan and worked with her golf swing coach and had some long talks with her parents.
 
"I tried to let go of a lot of expectations," she said. "I pretty much went back to the basics.
 
"I knew this was going to be my last year, my last shot, but I couldn't think of it that way. I was putting so much pressure on myself and I had to stop. It was hard, very hard to do."
 
She also spent long days on the driving range and putting green.
 
"The saying in golf is the secret's in the dirt, meaning you've got to go dig it out on the range," Kane said. "And she did that totally on her own."
 
Onosato knew the work had all paid off on Sept. 25, 2022, when she shot 210 over three rounds with an average score of 70 and finished fourth in the Paladin Invitational at Furman University.
 
In all, she trimmed four strokes off her 18-hole average this season over last season.  


Onosato with Sun Belt Commissioner Keith Gill.  

She led in the Sun Belt Championship by four strokes entering the last three holes, but bogied two holes before finishing off the final hole with a 15-foot par putt.
 
Because ODU teed off first, it was 90 minutes before she knew she was the champion. She was nervous while she waited, but said her father, Tomio Onosato, was far more nervous.
 
Although it was 4 a.m. in Japan when she finished, her dad was following the tournament online and texted her afterwards that she should be ready for a playoff.
 
She finished with a three-day total of 212, two strokes ahead of Louisiana-Monroe's Chantal Duerlinger.
 
"I was finally able to call my dad and he woke my mom up to tell her that I'd won," she said.
 
"It was very, very nice having that moment. My teammates were rushing at me and congratulating me and it was a hectic frenzy. Some people were crying and I was almost crying,
 
"My dad was just super happy for me. He congratulated me, and said he's always believed in me. And he always has."
 
Onosato began playing golf at the behest of her father and by the time she was eight years old, she was hooked.
 
Her mother, Laura, is an American who moved to Japan with her parents when she was nine. Laura is the daughter of Russell and Sandra Board, who are Christian missionaries stationed in Japan but who travel all over Asia.
 
Laura's future husband was being taught English by her grandmother. One day, Laura accompanied her mom to school, met Tomio and basically, it was love at first site.


Leah Onosato was all business during the final round of the Sun Belt Tournament.  

"They fell in love right away," Onosato said. "They were young, so they dated for quite a while. He proposed when she was in college and they've been together ever since."
 
Laura home-schooled her four children – son Rhys, who is out of school. She still home schools daughter Emma and son Levi.
 
Onosato hadn't really considered playing golf in America until she was 17 when she played at a tournament in San Diego and fared well.
 
"One of the people who took us there asked me if I was considering it and up to that point, I hadn't," she said.
 
She quickly found someone with connections in America who made inquiries to golf coaches and wound up visiting several Power 5 schools and ODU. She says she chose ODU because of its golf prowess and Kane.
 
Onosato was fluent in English when she arrived at ODU and quickly gravitated toward English as a major. "I really love languages," she said. And writing – penning poetry helped her when her game fell apart and she fell into a depression – is also a passion.
 
"She's never gotten anything lower than an A," Kane said. "Just imagine the perseverance it takes to do that.
 
"If she stays at ODU, she'll eventually own the English department."
 
Onosato has at least one more tournament to play, in the NCAA regionals in early May. Once her postseason is done, she said she'll likely eschew a career in pro golf and move on with life.
 
"I love playing golf," she said. "But there are so many other things I can do and want to do.
 
"I will always have golf, but it may be time for me to try something new."
 
Onosato has dual American and Japanese citizenship, but it's clear from the Rising Sun Japanese flag on her golf bag that she feels more Japanese than American. For now, her plan is to stay in the United States.
 
She finally sought mental health counseling earlier this semester at ODU's athletic counseling center and said it helped her regain her confidence.


Onosato at the scorer's table after Sun Belt final round. She would not learn she won a title until 90 minutes later. 

"I wish I'd done it sooner," she said. "One of my teammates helped me bring it up to coach (Kane) and that was a huge thing, being able to talk about it.
 
"Coach has supported me the whole time and that meant a lot."
 
After she posed with her championship and all-tournament trophies for a couple of TV reporters Thursday afternoon, she acknowledged she has yet to fully absorb the fact that she's a conference champion.
 
"It hasn't fully hit me yet," she said. "The last few days have been such a blur. I've had so many people congratulate me.
 
"It feels great, but it also feels a little unreal.
 
"It was such a long journey to get here, and it wasn't just me who got me here. There have been all of these people who supported me the whole way, who believed in me more than I believed in myself a lot of the time.
 
"It especially meant a lot to be able to call home right after the tournament and tell my dad, 'Yes, dad, it really did happen. I really did win."
 
Contact Minium at hminium@odu.edu or follow him  on TwitterFacebook or Instagram