The Ohio State women’s golf team, playing in the cold of central Michigan, won everything there was to win this weekend at the Big Ten Championship. The Buckeyes, playing in windchills hovering around 30 degrees all weekend, took home the team and individual titles, as well as collecting Player of the Year, Coach of the Year and Freshman of the Year honors.”It was a Cinderella day,” coach Therese Hession said. “I told them the first day this year that I thought this could happen.”Amy Langhals was the individual winner of the tournament, which helped her to become the Big Ten Player of the Year, an award voted on by the coaches after the championship.”At first, (I dreamed of) winning the Big Ten, the year after, getting on the (All-) Big Ten (Team), and then eventually I wanted to win the Big Ten (Championship) and Player of the Year,” Langhals said.Freshman of the Year Amber Amstutz finished 12th in the championship. She was an all-state selection last year in her senior year at Leo High School. Hession won Big Ten Coach of the Year in her first ever coaching job, and gave all the credit for the latest victory, and the season in general, to the team. The Buckeyes were miles ahead of most of the Big Ten this season, and finished with all six players in the top 18 at the championship.Jessica Luciuk finished fourth, Marisa Wilhelm finished 11th, and Summerset Lovett and Natalie Mosher finished in a tie for 18th.Indiana was the only team that was able to compete with OSU this year. They had a one-stroke lead going into the final day Sunday, but eventually lost to the Bucks by 11 strokes.”We could’ve won by 20 strokes,” Hession said. “I think we were up by that much at one time.”How do you go from being in second place after the second round to running away with the tournament the next day?Hit the range.”We were the only team on the driving range after the round,” Hession said. “We were there for an hour and a half. We were late to the awards banquet. That’s the kind of thing they’ve been doing all year.”Everyone worked on what they thought was holding them back the first two days, even the Big Ten Player of the Year.”I didn’t hit the ball so good that day,” Langhals said. “I just tried to figure out one key thing.”Hession helped Langhals get back on track, and was a source of confidence for an already very confident team.”I know she’ll straighten me out,” Langhals said.Confidence is something Hession encourages and it showed in a team that said they expected to win the Big Ten title.”I talk to them all the time (about confidence),” Hession said.She compares it to studying for a final exam and knowing you’re ready.Penn State, Michigan and Minnesota rounded out the top five, and finished 37, 39, and 51 strokes behind OSU.Michelle Hatfield of Indiana was the runner-up to Langhals for the individual title.The Buckeyes leave Tuesday for Praire Vista Country Club in Bloomington, Illinois for the NCAA East regional, the next step on the way to the NCAA Championships May 22-25 on OSU’s Scarlet Course.