Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley announces Masters, ANWA invitations for future NCAA champions

Last year’s NCAA men’s champion, Gordon Sargent, is playing this week on a special invitation.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — More amateurs will be making their way down Magnolia Lane next year.

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Fred Ridley, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament, announced Wednesday that the winners of the individual men’s and women’s NCAA Championships will earn exemptions into the Masters and Augusta National Women’s Amateur beginning in 2024.

“These additions to our qualifications are in recognition of the impressive quality of today’s collegiate game, and in continued respect to Bobby Jones who believed in the importance of the best amateurs in the world competing at Augusta National,” said Ridley during his annual press conference.

Vanderbilt sophomore Gordon Sargent, the winner of the 2022 NCAA individual title, is playing this week’s 2023 Masters via a rare special invitation, the first in more than 20 years. The last player to earn a special invitation as an amateur was Aaron Baddeley in 2000.

Stanford sophomore Rose Zhang, winner of the 2022 NCAA individual, won the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Saturday to complete her amateur grand slam.

Masters 2023 leaderboard: Get the latest news from Augusta

The inclusion of the college champions adds further legitimacy to the NCAA Championship, a tournament which has grown over the last few years thanks to its stroke play individual and match play team formats, as well as Golf Channel’s television broadcast.

“And as it relates to the NCAA champion, as I stated, that is a major amateur championship, and I thought it was time that we acknowledged it,” said Ridley. “And we couldn’t be happier to have Gordon here this week. He’s a fine young man and a heck of a player.”

The news also furthers Augusta National’s commitment to shine a brighter light on the amateur game. The ANWA, just four years old, continues to grow in popularity each and every year. Now in its 87th year, the Masters has a history of inviting amateurs and has taken further strides in recent years with inclusion of both the Asia-Pacific and Latin American amateurs. The Masters also invites the following amateurs: U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up, British Amateur champion and the U.S. Mid-Amateur champion.

Ridley acknowledged that amateur sports as a whole are evolving, and that “amateur golf is no exception.” The chairman believes the amateur game vital, seeing as most players are amateurs and don’t “have the ability nor the desire to make golf their profession.”

If anyone knows the importance of amateurs at the Masters, it’s Ridley. The chairman was a member of the University of Florida men’s golf team, won the 1975 U.S. Amateur at Country Club of Virginia in Richmond and went on to play the Masters in 1976, 1977 and 1978.

“It really goes back to our roots, and that is that Bobby Jones was the greatest amateur of all time,” he continued. “He believed in the importance of amateurs in the Masters. I had the personal experience of enjoying that on three different occasions, and I can tell you that it changed my life.”

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Rose Zhang gets locked inside gates at Augusta National after historic win

“It’s such a story to tell,” she said.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Rose Zhang might be the first Augusta National champion to get locked inside the gates. Zhang said she and good friend Rachel Heck took pictures next to Gate 5 while they waited roughly half an hour to get out.

“It’s such a story to tell,” she said, laughing. Nothing could’ve spoiled the evening for the Stanford sophomore, who clawed her way to victory at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Saturday in the most pressure-packed round of her life.

After Zhang met with the media Saturday, she and her team were taken down to the 12th hole for a sunset photo session.

“It was perfect,” said Zhang. “Kind of the calm after the storm environment.”

Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion Rose Zhang of the United States, left, and LPGA legend Nancy Lopez, right, pose with Anna Midyett of the Girls 7-9 division while holding her third place overall trophy during the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals at Augusta National Golf Club, Sunday, April 2, 2023.

She then called her mom for the first time en route to an AirBnB to celebrate with family and friends who had flown in from as far away as Paris.

“She’s the rock of the family,” said Zhang of her mom, Li Cai.

Of the roughly 150 text messages on her phone, Zhang said she’d gotten to about 10 of them. She returned to her hotel around 10:30 p.m. and drifted off to sleep around midnight.

“A sense of relief, disbelief, everything,” said Zhang of what she felt when she laid her head down that night.

Sunday morning marked the first time she’d ever stepped foot on Augusta National without feeling a mountain of pressure. After making another appearance on Golf Channel, Zhang headed over to the Masters Main Golf Shop with her team. She bought a Masters crew neck sweatshirt and quarter zip along with a coffee mug for her matcha lattes.

“Matcha is one of my most favorite things in the world,” she said of her prized purchase.

Zhang stopped to sign autographs on her way to greet champions from the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals alongside Nancy Lopez. She then met current World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler for the first time.

“He is such a role model,” Zhang gushed. “He’s a man with so many values and I respect every single part of him as a player and as a person. He’s so nice.”

Zhang heads back to Stanford on Monday morning with Heck, who walked every step of the way on Saturday as well as a victory lap the next day.

“I was supposed to fly out this morning,” said Zhang, “but for me to just enjoy the moment and see Augusta National in a different light … that’s something so crazy. I’m super lucky to be here.”

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Nichols: Rose Zhang’s dominant amateur career may change the way American prodigies view college golf

“I’ve never been around anybody like her,” instructor George Pinnell said of Zhang.

AUGUSTA, Georgia ­– People told Rose Zhang that college golf would ruin her. She hated that.

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“I wanted to push myself to the limit,” she said on the eve of the final round of the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Those limits were laid out for the world to see on Saturday at the Augusta National Golf Club, where Zhang clawed her way to victory in a two-hole playoff over Georgia’s own Jenny Bae, clinching the only big title that had eluded her in amateur golf. Zhang has dominated at every level, and her decision to spend the past two years at Stanford might change the way the next great American prodigy views college golf during a time of unprecedented exposure and NIL cash.

For the past 20 years, phenoms in the women’s game have skipped the books and gone straight to the LPGA. Before Zhang set off to beat the world, however, she wanted to find herself, something that’s incredibly hard to do when cocooned by family on a professional stage.

“The big reason to go to college,” said Zhang’s longtime instructor George Pinnell, “it’s not for the education. It’s to get away from the family and grow yourself – do all the little things that mom and dad have always done.”

Stanford head coach Anne Walker told Zhang when recruiting her that there likely weren’t any nuggets she was going to teach her to make her a better player. What she was already doing was clearly enough. Where Walker felt like Stanford could help Zhang was in her aspirations to be a professional, all the elements that come into play beyond the technical prowess.

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For example, at the end of Zhang’s first semester at Stanford, Walker told her players to put their clubs away during the offseason. Zhang returned to practice in January banged up and battling a horrific flu. Walker later learned that Zhang had been hitting 200 balls a day during what was supposed to be a down period.

“You have to learn that rest and recovery takes as much discipline as hitting 200 balls or 200 chips,” Walker told her.

A disciplined Zhang took the lesson to heart.

In two years at Stanford, Zhang has a winning percentage of 56.25 through 16 career starts. Her nine victories are two shy of tying the all-time Cardinal record, held by Tiger Woods (26 starts), Patrick Rodgers (35 starts) and Maverick McNealy (45 starts). She has four starts left in what could be her final semester of college.

Zhang’s peers are awed by mostly everything Zhang does, from her work ethic to her keen understanding of the golf swing to her ability to make everything look so effortless. Nary a bad word is ever spoken about the world No. 1. She’s as beloved for her character as she is her vast potential.

There’s a deep sense that greatness is brewing.

After building a five-stroke lead heading into the final round at Augusta National, Zhang got off to shaky start with an opening double bogey, calling her swing uncomfortable.

“Your game can humiliate you to the point that you can’t get out of that hole,” said Nancy Lopez as she stood behind the 18th green on Saturday.

Nearly everyone seems to think that an extended weather break midway through the final round would do Zhang a world of good as her lead dwindled.

Pinnell started working with Zhang eight years ago, and for a long time, never could figure out why she never texted him during a tournament. Every other student would check in from time to time with questions. Does she have another coach, he wondered.

No, Rose wouldn’t do that.

Then one year at the AJGA Ping Invitational in Stillwater, Oklahoma, Zhang texted after a second-round 75 and said, “It was brutal out there today,” noting the bad weather and a swing flaw. Pinnell didn’t asked about the flaw, and Zhang didn’t offer. The next day she shot 67 and won the tournament.

The following week during their lesson, Zhang sat down on a bucket as Pinnell inquired about the turnaround in Stillwater.

Zhang explained that she went to the range after that 75 and pulled out her 9-iron. She didn’t hit any balls, just started making slow-motion swings, scanning through all the fundamentals they’d talked about in her mind. In less than 10 minutes she’d figured it out – without hitting a golf ball – and headed off to dinner with friends.

“I damn near fell off the chair,” said Pinnell. “That was the answer to why she never contacted me.”

A similar scenario played out mid-round at Augusta National, as Zhang once again found herself scrolling through her mind what everything felt like out there – from setup to ball position to grip.

The grip!

The “aha” moment flashed through her mind as she was approached her third shot into the par-5 13th. Zhang adjusted her right hand and hit one of the best wedge shots of the week.

“I think that everyone should realize that I’m very much human, and that I do have my fair share of dumb mistakes out on the golf course,” she said.

“But I’m just really proud of myself in terms of how I was able to overcome so much media, so much expectations.”

Where Zhang’s amateur career thus far ranks all-time is debatable. She’s the only player to win the U.S. Women’s Amateur, U.S. Girls’ Junior, NCAA Championship and Augusta National Women’s Amateur. She’s on another level than her peers in the collegiate game.

JoAnne Carner, winner of five U.S. Women’s Amateurs and a Girls’ Junior turned pro at age 30, giving her an enormous window of opportunity. Juli Inkster, a three-time U.S. Women’s Amateur champion who won 17 times in college, didn’t take the game seriously until age 15, while Lydia Ko, a U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, won twice on the LPGA as an amateur and topped the World Amateur Golf Ranking for 130 consecutive weeks.

Zhang’s humble and gracious approach to life reminds many of Lorena Ochoa, who dominated college golf for two seasons but never won the big amateur titles like Zhang.

“I’ve never been around anybody like her,” said Pinnell.

The golf world can hardly wait for what comes next.

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Rose Zhang completes amateur grand slam with playoff win at 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Zhang has won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, two USGA championships and the individual NCAA title.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Rose Zhang has completed the amateur grand slam.

The world’s No. 1 amateur didn’t have her best stuff on Saturday at Augusta National Golf Club but somehow found a way to hold on for the win at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur despite a serious challenge from Jenny Bae.

Zhang entered the final round with a commanding five-shot lead but struggled early and often during the final round. Stanford’s star sophomore made double bogey on the first hole and sprayed her way around the course before signing for a 4-over 76.

“Being able to play competitively at Augusta National is certainly different from any other venue that I’ve played in. It’s funny because the last four times that I played here, I remember my scores being nowhere near under par,” said Zhang, one of three ANWA four-timers and the only one to make the cut in all four starts. “I really, really do love this golf course. Sometimes it’s just interesting that I never really get my A game when I’m out here. When I was out at (Champions Retreat) it felt so easy to me. Everything just came to me. I was making putts. I was hitting greens. But when you’re out here, one mistake, like I said before, is magnified.”

Those internal struggles opened the door for Bae, who was six shots behind Zhang at the start of the day. The Georgia fifth year was feeling the love from the patrons, and after a three-hour weather delay came out swinging. She made birdies on Nos. 9, 13 and 17 and avoided a bogey down the stretch to force a playoff with Zhang at 9 under.

“I don’t think I’ve ever felt happier on a golf course that much in my life,” Bae said of her clutch birdie on the 17th. “I saw it and I marked it and I hit it. I mean, I’ve never heard such big like yelling on a golf course. It just felt amazing.”

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On the first playoff hole, both players found the fairway off the 18th tee, but Bae had the distinct advantage on the green after Zhang’s approach shot caught a slope and failed to reach the back pin. Bae’s birdie came up short and Zhang was able to lag putt her first and save par to extend the playoff to its second hole, No. 10.

Both players once again found the fairway off the tee, but this time it was Zhang with the advantage on the green after Bae blew her approach way to the left underneath a tree in the pine straw. It took two shots for Bae to find the green, and when it was Zhang’s turn to play, she hit the pin with her putt and tapped in for par and the win.

“I felt confident. But I think I just tugged it a little bit, and it went past the green into the bushes in the back,” said Bae of her approach. “I mean, I tried, but Rose, she had a fantastic day. Hat’s off to her.”

Zhang previously won the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur, 2021 U.S. Girls’ Junior and 2022 NCAA individual national championship, and her win down Magnolia Lane will cement her legacy as one of, if not the, best amateur golfers of all time.

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The line for the Masters Main Golf Shop stretched beyond the range Saturday morning as patrons rush for a few (or several) keepsakes

“It might take an hour for me to get inside, but I don’t care.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — By 7:30 a.m. ET Saturday, the line to the Masters Main Golf Shop stretched beyond the practice range.

All Katie Hershey wanted was a gnome.

“I keep seeing them on social media, so I have to get one,” said Hershey, of Lexington, Kentucky, who was visiting Augusta National for the first time. “I’m so excited. I can’t wait to show everybody back home.”

The craze for the bearded wonder began in 2016 when the Masters Tournament introduced a gnome wearing an argyle cardigan. In 2023, the latest rendition resembles a Masters patron donning a blue shirt. He’s carrying a stack of green and white cups.

“The first time I saw him, I was like, ‘Is that it?’” Hershey admitted. “But he’s growing on me. I think they’re amazing.”

Masters 2023 leaderboard: Get the latest news from Augusta

The gnome was one of many popular items in the shop, which included new designs of Peter Millar shirts. The brand introduced a floral pattern this year which displays pink azaleas. Another Peter Millar design displays a blue background with Masters cups on the shirt.

“It might take an hour for me to get inside, but I don’t care,” said Trena Stuart, of Fort Worth, Texas. “I have a Christmas list and I have to make it happen.”

Other novelty selections include a beige Smathers & Branson belt with various badges from the Masters Tournament. Included are 1934, 1976, 1978, 1980 and 2016.

Of the new items, a popular selection on Saturday was a Masters sweatshirt in yellow and green.

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2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur: Meet the three women who played their way into one of golf’s most-exclusive clubs

ANWA four-timers Rose Zhang, Emilia Migiliaccio and Erica Shepherd are ready to put on a Saturday show.

This year at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, there’s a unique group that’s just as exclusive as the event’s namesake.

Meet the ANWA four-timers club.

Of the 72 players in the field for the biggest women’s amateur event on the golf schedule, three have competed in the three previous events: Emilia Migliaccio, Erica Shepherd and Rose Zhang.

“I didn’t really think about it until at the Founders Dinner, they announced it,” said Shepherd, a senior at Duke who is playing her final ANWA this week. “Me, Rose and Emilia, and putting my name up with those two incredible amateurs made me realize that that’s pretty dang good, so it means the world, and just to make the cut and be here and to have been a part of the first one and see how it’s evolved over the past few years has been awesome.”

ANWA: Q&A with Morgan Pressel | Saturday tee times

Shepherd is the only other two-time USGA champion in the field this week alongside Zhang and will have a special pairing for Saturday’s final round at Augusta National.

ANWA four-timers club results

Player 2022 2021 2019
Emilia Migliaccio MC 2 MC
Erica Shepherd MC T-16 T-23
Rose Zhang T-12 T-3 T-17

“I got paired from Emilia for tomorrow, and ever since junior golf she’s always — she’s two years older than me, so I always called her my mom in junior golf,” said Shepherd with a laugh. “So just to have someone like that that I’m super close to and get to play Augusta National with competitively, that’s just going to be — I can’t imagine how special it’s going to be.”

“I’m so excited to play tomorrow. Words can’t describe it,” added Migliaccio, a fifth year at Wake Forest who will continue her work for Golf Channel by helping to announce the Drive, Chip and Putt event on Sunday at Augusta National. “I’m just going to really try to — I hope it’s the longest round of my life so I can just treasure it as much as possible.”

Despite the highlight All-ACC pairing, all eyes on Saturday will be fixated on Zhang, the world No. 1 who enters the final round with a commanding five-shot lead.

After winning the U.S. Girls’ Junior, U.S. Women’s Amateur and NCAA individual national championship, the ANWA is the final event left for Zhang to conquer in her accolade-laden amateur career.

“That would be incredible. I still haven’t thought about that yet, despite everything that’s going on right now,” said Zhang of what the win would mean to her as one of the trio of four-timers. “But I’m super thankful for this opportunity. I’ll take whatever opportunity I can get to be able to have a chance and look at that trophy tomorrow.

“I’m really humbled to be at this level with so many great players, but the job is not done yet.”

Humble as always, which can’t be easy when you’ve won as much as Zhang has over the years. The star sophomore tied the program mark for wins in a career earlier this year and has five victories in six college starts for the Cardinal. This week, she set and then broke her own record for 18-hole tournament scores with a 6-under 66 on Wednesday and a 7-under 65 on Thursday at Champions Retreat, the host course for the first two rounds of the 54-hole event.

All three players take immense pride in their status at Augusta National and have seen how the annual spring event has grown year-to-year.

“Going forward I would just hope that everyone understands how awesome of an opportunity it is for us just to be able to have the chance to grow the game the way that we have been and just be able to give back to the game,” explained Shepherd. “It’s awesome, and just seeing all the little girls out here and inspiring them, I think it’s just going to go such a long way.”

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Rose Zhang plays practice round at Augusta National with Jennifer Kupcho’s old caddie but opts to keep dad on the bag for final round

“Ultimately I feel like what we have is going pretty well thus far.”

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Rose Zhang had the same caddie on her bag Friday at Augusta National Golf Club who Jennifer Kupcho used in 2019 when she won the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Kupcho, of course, made a game-time decision to swap our her dad for Brian McKinley for that historic final round, which proved especially clutch when a migraine impaired her vision at the midway point.

While Zhang, 19, soaked up every word that McKinley told her, not only about the course but Kupcho’s closing 67, she ultimately decided to keep her father, Haibin, on the bag for a second consecutive year. The Stanford sophomore had indicated on Thursday afternoon that she intended to use an Augusta caddie for the final round but changed her mind later that evening.

Zhang had her trainer on the bag in 2021 when the title slipped out of her hands around Amen Corner.

ANWA: Q&A with Morgan Pressel

“Ultimately I feel like what we have is going pretty well thus far,” said Zhang, “and I feel very comfortable with him on the bag. He’s very predictable. We know our games in and out.

“I think especially when you’re at the biggest stage at Augusta, it’s pretty necessary to have that comfort to be able to be yourself and do what you need to do.”

2023 Augusta National Women's Amateur
Rose Zhang plays her stroke to the No. 13 green during a practice round for the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National Golf Club, Friday, March 31, 2023. (Photo: Augusta National Women’s Amateur)

Zhang’s record start at Champions Retreat included rounds of 66-65 to open up a five-stroke lead over Ole Miss senior Andrea Lignell. With thunderstorms forecasted mid-morning and wind gusts up to 35 mph, officials opted to use a two-tee start for the final round with the final pairing going off at 8:50 a.m. E.T.

Zhang, the No. 1 player in the world for more than 130 weeks, headed to the range after Friday’s practice round, noting she was spraying the ball roughly 30 yards right of her target off the tee – on one hole. Several others headed left. She wanted to find a feeling she could trust before Saturday.

Zhang’s final round sat Augusta National have been less than desirable the past three rounds: 75-75-74.

A record-tying nine-time winner at Stanford, Zhang led by seven going into the final round of the NCAA Championship last spring and said she’d never felt more nervous as it shrunk to three strokes after 10 holes.

Zhang closed with a 75 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, but still managed to win by three.

“I’ve kind of learned that it’s essential to always realize that you’re playing the same fields as you were on Day 1,” said Zhang, “so there’s going to be a lot of people trying to climb up, and you have to be prepared for that.”

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Tee times, how to watch final round of 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know about the final round of the ANWA.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — After 36 holes at nearby Champions Retreat, it’s time for some of the world’s best amateurs to make the trip down Magnolia Lane.

Famed Augusta National Golf Club plays host to the final round of the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Saturday, where 30 players will be chasing runaway leader Rose Zhang. Stanford’s star sophomore holds a five-shot lead at 13 under and will be paired with Ole Miss senior Andrea Lignell, who sits second at 8 under.

For the first time in the event’s four-year history, the final round will be played using split tees due to isolated thunderstorms in the Saturday forecast.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the final round of the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Meet the ANWA fieldAmericans | Internationals

1st tee

Time Players
7:40 a.m. Latanna Stone, Hinano Muguruma
7:50 a.m. Maria Jose Marin, Crystal Wang
8 a.m. Bohyun Park, Megha Ganne
8:10 a.m. Gianna Clemente, Antonia Malate
8:20 a.m. Jiyoo Lim, Monet Chun
8:30 a.m. Hsin-Yu Lu, Cayetana Fernandez Garcia-Poggio
8:40 a.m. Jenny Bae, Caitlyn Macnab
8:50 a.m. Rose Zhang, Andrea Lignell

10th tee

Time Players
7:40 a.m. Charlotte Heath, Saki Baba
7:50 a.m. Yuna Araki, Jennie Park
8 a.m. Erica Shepherd, Emilia Migliaccio
8:10 a.m. Briana Chacon, Amanda Sambach
8:20 a.m. Caley McGinty, Ting-Hsuan Huang
8:30 a.m. Yana Wilson, Jensen Castle
8:40 a.m. Amari Avery, Megan Schofill
8:50 a.m. Lottie Woad

TV coverage

The final round will be broadcast from 12-3 p.m. ET on NBC. Golf Channel’s “Live from the Masters” will air from 10 a.m.-12 p.m.

Streaming

The final round will also be live on anwagolf.com. The presentation ceremony will also be streamed on anwagolf.com.

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Major champion TV analyst Morgan Pressel dishes on her first time playing Augusta National, competing under the weight of expectation and when to go pro

Here are excerpts from Golfweek’s conversation with Pressel about Augusta and the amateur game.

Morgan Pressel recently teed it up at Augusta National for the first time ahead of her broadcast work for the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. The former major champion and top-ranked amateur will be in the booth for NBC’s final-round coverage on Saturday from Noon to 3 p.m. E.T.

Pressel caught up with Golfweek earlier in the week to talk about her round at Augusta National, noting that course management here may be more important than other course she’s ever seen.

Rose Zhang, the top-ranked amateur in the world, carries a five-stroke lead into the final round. While only the top 30 players and ties advanced to Sunday, all 72 players had a chance to tee it up at Augusta National on Friday for a practice round.

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Here are excerpts from Golfweek’s conversation with Pressel about Augusta and the amateur game:

Five things to know from the second round of 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur beyond World No. 1 Rose Zhang’s brilliance

There were plenty of highlights on a day when red numbers peppered the leaderboard.

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EVANS, Ga. — The Rose Zhang Show broke out early at Champions Retreat and picked up steam as the World No. 1 put together another record day at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. The Stanford sophomore broke her own course record with a second-round 65 and now leads Andrea Lignell by five strokes heading into Saturday’s final round at Augusta National.

Zhang’s 13-under 131 total also set a record.

While it almost feels like all that’s left is a celebration of Zhang, there were plenty of other highlights on a day when red numbers peppered the board for one of the most pressure-packed days in golf. A total of 31 players made the cut. Every player in the field, however, will tee it up on Friday for a practice round at Augusta National.

Here are five things to know beyond the Zhang headlines from Day 2 at ANWA: