By DARREN MILLER
hawkeyesports.com
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Through many years of struggling and succeeding with golf, University of Iowa freshman Lea Zeitler has come to realize it is one of the most frustrating yet satisfying sports to play.
With its range of eagles, bogeys and everything in between, golf has come to represent life in general for Zeitler. Her life specifically.
It didn’t take long for Zeitler to emerge as one of the top junior golfers in Austria. Then she endured a prolonged slump. Her swing — and consequently, her low scores — vanished.
“I was struggling with life and golf,” Zeitler said. “I did a lot of thinking and asked myself if I wanted to continue to play golf or do something else.”
A member of the Austrian National Team since 2010, Zeitler stuck to the (golf) course, but switched to a coach in Spain. Then she thought back to a prophetic conversation she had with her mother and father on a trip to Florida when she was 10 years old.
“I told my parents I wanted to live in the United States one day,” Zeitler said.
The thought of Zeitler playing golf and earning a college degree in the United States gained momentum. In 2014, Iowa assistant coach Michael Roters, then coaching at Idaho, watched Zeitler card a career-best round of 65 to win the European Girls Team Championship in Slovakia.
Firing a 65 for a 9-under par 135 in 2014 was a highlight for Zeitler. What transpired over the next four-plus years was not.
“My parents saw me suffering,” Zeitler said. “Turning pro was not an option because I was not good enough. I wasn’t happy with how my life was going. My parents felt I should have a change because if I continued on that path, it wouldn’t end well.
“It was a hard process getting out of the dark side. It took a lot of processing and practice.”