Rose Zhang breaks her own record, runs away with five-shot lead at 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur

The world’s top-ranked amateur has shot rounds of 65-66 and set multiple tournament records so far this week.

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EVANS, Ga. — Rose Zhang has a knack for making golf look incredibly easy, and the Stanford star is up to her usual antics once again this week.

Over the first two rounds of the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, the 19-year-old phenom has made just one bogey at Champions Retreat — host course for the opening two rounds of the 54-hole event — and will enter Saturday’s final round at Augusta National Golf Club with a five shot lead at 13 under.

The world’s top-ranked amateur shot the low round of the day on Thursday, a blistering 7-under 65 to follow her 6-under 66 in Wednesday’s opening round. Zhang set the 18-hole tournament record for low score in the first round then beat her own mark in the second.

An equipment representative said it best: “There’s a lot of really good players here, but there’s one great one.”

Those numbers and praise shouldn’t come as much of a surprise given Zhang’s status in the game, form this season (five wins in six college starts) and past history at the event. Zhang has finished T-17 (2019), T-3 (2021) and T-12 (2022) in three previous ANWA appearances, and is one of three members of the exclusive club of players to play all four editions of the event.

2023 ANWA: Scores | Photos | Five things from second round

“I just feel very grateful to have this kind of platform, and playing well these first two rounds is certainly something that I’m super proud of,” said Zhang after her record round. “It’s not just me that kind of did this. I feel like everyone who supports me out there, I really felt the support. I really felt the love.

“I had a whole entourage in the back of my head.”

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.

“The job’s not done yet,” said the always humble Zhang. “We still have to go out there and play a good round.”

Those of you who watched the ANWA last year saw Latanna Stone give away the tournament over the last few holes, and if any course can shake up a leaderboard, it’s the one down Magnolia Lane.

Ole Miss senior Andrea Lignell and Georgia fifth year Jenny Bae have done well to keep Zhang within sight this week and should be in the mix come Saturday. Lignell, a two-time winner this season, sits solo second at 8 under after opening rounds of 67-69. Constantly in the mix for the Bulldogs with a win and five top-5 finishes this year, Bae is a shot back in third at 7 under after a 4-under 68 in the second round.

“Last year I really learned key lessons, and I took home a little bit of the things that I needed to work on,” said Bae, who missed the cut in 2022. “It kind of proved to me that I can also compete at this level, but at the same time I also need to work on the smaller things that I normally choose not to do. Yeah, the past year I’ve grinded really hard, and I think it proved.

“I’m really proud of myself,” she continued. “I don’t really say that about myself, and I really should start to.”

Wednesday’s weather conditions made for a difficult day to score, but players found their groove under Thursday’s sunny skies after a morning fog delay. Of the 72 players in the field, 27 were under par in the second round compared to just 12 in the first round.

All 72 players in the field will play a practice round at Augusta National on Friday, and the top-30 players and ties who made the cut will compete in the final round on Saturday.

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Bohyun Park makes first hole-in-one in Augusta National Women’s Amateur history

Bohyun Park will be tied to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur forever.

Bohyun Park made history Thursday. Her name will forever be tied to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur thanks to her tee shot on the par-3 eighth hole.

Park, the 20-year-old from Farmers Branch, Texas, stepped to the tee at Champions Retreat Golf Club in Evans, Georgia, at 1 over par for the tournament. The 142-yard hole goes over a creek and had a front pin location. The sophomore at Texas hit her tee shot, and the ball landed short of the hole and bounced a couple times before rolling into the left side of a cup.

Boom, an ace. A historic hole-in-one, as Park hit the first ace in the history of the ANWA.

It moved her to 1 under for the tournament and into the top 10 on the leaderboard.

The top 30 players and ties make the 36-hole cut and will play at Augusta National Golf Club in the final round on Saturday. All 72 players in the field will play in a practice round Friday at Augusta National.

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Rose Zhang races out to lead at Augusta National Women’s Amateur after record 66; Anna Davis hit with four-stroke penalty

Zhang, 19, has won everything that matters in the amateur game except the ANWA.

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EVANS, Ga. — Rose Zhang said her father, Haibin, feverishly swept away the pine needles that were in the line of her 50-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole Wednesday at Champions Retreat.

“He was doing it like a maniac,” said Zhang, “and I was low-key kind of telling him to calm down in terms of trying to help me get the little stuff out of the way.”

Top-ranked Zhang drained the putt and later thanked dad for the assist. It was one of six birdies on the day for Zhang, who posted a record 6-under 66 at Champions Retreat, besting the previous record of 68 carded by 2019 champion Jennifer Kupcho and Zoe Campos in the opening round in the inaugural event. Zhang birdied all four par 5s and leads Ole Miss senior Andrea Lignell by one stroke.

“With the round being so soft and being muddy,” said Zhang, “I can’t really expect anything more out of my game today.”

ANWA: Photos

A dozen players broke par on a sun-splashed day in Evans, Georgia, where more than five inches of rain fell earlier in the week, forcing officials to put preferred lies into play. Unfortunately for 2022 champion Anna Davis, she was issued a four-stroke penalty after the round for twice picking up her ball in the rough on the first hole. The Model Local Rule stipulated that the ball could only be picked up in areas cut to fairway height or less.

Davis, who was informed of the potential penalty on the fourth tee, proceeded to double that hole and then made bogey on the fifth. She made four birdies coming in, however, to still give herself a shot at making the cut. The top 30 players and ties after 36 holes advance to the final round at Augusta National. Davis sits at 4-over 76, with her five on the opening hole changing to a nine after the round.

“I had a good round if you don’t count the first hole,” said Davis, who seemed to be in fine spirits after the round when talking to the media, all things considered.

The cut line right now falls at 2 over.

Sweden’s Lignell rode a hot putter to 67, crediting her fine play this college season to a “putting project” she put into place, concentrating on the greens for an hour or so each practice. She won her first two college titles last fall. Three weeks ago, she put a new putter in the bag, too.

“I expected to score maybe around par,” said Lignell, a biomedical engineering major. “It’s so much fun. It’s unbelievable.”

Zhang, 19, has won everything that matters in the amateur game except the ANWA. She joins Pat Hurst and Tiger Woods as the only players to win the U.S. Amateur, U.S. Junior and NCAA Championship.

Zhang, a winner of nine college events in two years at Stanford, said her father will be on the bag Thursday but that she might switch to an Augusta National caddie for the final round. When asked how dad has improved as a caddie over the years, Zhang said he’s definitely mellowed out and that she doesn’t have to guide him around like she once did.

“He’s still very much a very energy high kind of person,” she said, “and I think that matches really well with my nonchalant self when I’m on the golf course.”

Kentucky’s Jensen Castle in contention at 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur despite injury flare up

Castle battled the world’s best amateurs once with a rib injury, so why not do it again at Augusta National?

Contending at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur is challenging enough, let alone doing so with an injury.

That is, unless you’re Jensen Castle.

The Kentucky senior was forced to withdraw from last week’s Clemson Invitational – the final event of the regular season for the Wildcats – with a rib injury, but finds herself T-4 at the 2023 ANWA after a 2-under 70 in the first round of play at Champions Retreat in Evans, Georgia.

“Right now, we’re not really sure what it is,” explained Castle, who noted the injury started as a stress fracture in 2021. “It’s flared up this past week. I don’t know if it was just a lot of golf or tightness, maybe I didn’t stretch well enough, I don’t know. Unfortunate timing for sure, especially with Augusta this week.”

Stanford’s star sophomore and the world’s No. 1 amateur Rose Zhang leads at 6 under, with Ole Miss senior Andrea Lignell in second at 5 under. Georgia fifth year Jenny Bae is solo third at 3 under.

“I was supposed to play on Friday and I took Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday off,” she continued, “so it sounds pretty familiar to the Women’s Am.”

Meet the ANWA fieldAmericans | Internationals

Two years ago, Castle survived a 12-for-2 playoff just to advance from stroke play to match play at the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Westchester Country Club in New York. She then went on to come back in three of six matches to eventually claim the trophy over Arizona’s Yu-Chiang (Vivian) Hou.

Castle battled the world’s best amateurs once with a rib injury, so why not do it again at one of the game’s most demanding courses?

The first two rounds of the tournament are played at Champions Retreat on Wednesday and Thursday, which is no easy test. Every golfer in the field then makes the 15-mile trip to play a practice round on Friday at Augusta National, before the top-30 and ties compete in the final round at Augusta National on Saturday.

Castle, who grew up two hours north in Columbia, South Carolina, finished T-12 last year in her first appearance at Augusta National and thinks the event is already one of, if not the, biggest in women’s amateur golf.

“This is gonna be as big as the USGA, if not bigger,” said Castle, referencing the U.S Women’s Amateur. “It’s only year four I think, and it is extremely well known. I mean, this is everyone’s dream to get to this tournament, and once you’re here, you cherish every little thing. Everyone looks at you as such a hero and such a role model for the younger generation, which I think is really cool. So this is going to be one of the biggest amateur golf events if not already.”

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Past champion Anna Davis receives four-stroke penalty at Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Davis recorded a bogey on the hole, but she wound up with a nine.

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EVANS, Ga. — Augusta National Women’s Amateur defending champion Anna Davis will face a severe uphill climb in her title defense after a four-shot penalty. Davis picked up her ball twice from the rough on the first hole at Champions Retreat to lift, clean and place, she explained after the round.

Davis thought she recorded a bogey on the hole but wound up with a nine, as two penalty strokes are applied to each infraction. Davis said she was informed of the potential violation on the fourth tee, which she proceeded to double.

The tournament released the following statement after her round: “During play of her first hole, Anna Davis lifted her ball and failed to replace it on its original spot on two separate occurrences. Under Rule 9.4, Ms. Davis has been penalized two strokes for each occurrence of playing from a wrong place. Her score on hole 1 will be increased from 5 to 9.”

“Little rough start to the day,” said Davis, “but that’s alright, it happens. It’s a learning experience.”

Augusta National sent out a memo to players on March 28 noting that due to heavy rains earlier in the week, the committee opted to adopt Model Local Rule E-3 “preferred lies” for the first two rounds of the tournament.

The rule restricts the use of preferred lies to “areas cut to fairway height or less.” Davis mistakenly thought the rule was for the entire course, which is why she did it twice on the first hole. She didn’t find out until after her round that she would take the penalty.

“I asked my scorer if we were doing it like everywhere,” said Davis, “but I guess he didn’t know. But he said, ‘Yeah, we were.’ So whatever, it happens.”

Davis has Ryan Bisharat, a family friend and former University of San Diego college player who plays out of the same club in California, on the bag this week. Davis said Bisharat tried to take the blame, and she assured him that everything was OK.

The top-30 players and ties advance to the final round, held at Augusta National. Davis won the third edition of the tournament last spring at age 16 and came into this week’s tournament fresh off a victory at the nearby Junior Invitational at Sage Valley.

Davis sits at 4 over for the tournament and T-43.

Kaitlyn Schroeder, who learned the ropes as the daughter of a men’s college golf coach, gets first crack at Augusta National

Kaitlyn Schroeder started re-watching “The Last Dance” in recent months because she finds inspiration in Michael Jordan’s extreme competitiveness.

EVANS, Ga. — Kaitlyn Schroeder started re-watching “The Last Dance” in recent months because she finds inspiration in Michael Jordan’s extreme competitiveness. Her father, Scott, thinks some of Kaitlyn’s competitive fire came from the summer camps he ran at the University of North Florida. Kaitlyn, who didn’t attend just one week of camp but all the weeks, didn’t like golf at the time, but she hated losing more, and Scott often split up the groups for mini competitions.

Now an 18-year-old, Kaitlyn, last year’s AJGA Player of the Year, loves every part of the grind this game demands and wants nothing less than to be the best player in the world. As the daughter of a men’s Division I college golf, she’s had the rare opportunity to watch PGA Tour player Philip Knowles and current UNF star Nick Gabrelcik go to work daily at the UNF practice facility, which essentially doubled as her second backyard.

Meet the ANWA field: Americans | Internationals

“It’s just seeing how hard they work,” said Kaitlyn. “Not hearing about it, but like literally seeing it.”

Kaitlyn Schroeder poses with the AJGA Rolex Player of the Year trophy alongside her parents, Scott and Wendy. (courtesy photo)

Kaitlyn is one of 37 players in the field this week making their debut at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, where just over half the participants are teenagers. She’ll have her father, Scott, on the bag, noting that she sometimes trusts him more than herself. Scott, a seven-time ASUN Conference Coach of the Year, played collegiate golf at UNF and his wife, Wendy, is a UNF Hall of Fame tennis player.

Scott notes that when Kaitlyn was growing up, former UNF All-Americans Travis Trace and Knowles didn’t let her win in friendly competitions. And none of them made excuses.

“In today’s society right now, everybody finds an excuse,” said Scott. “And for the most part, she’s really good about not making excuses: ‘I just played bad.’ If you’re going to be good, you’ve got to be willing to admit when you play bad and not blame somebody else.”

Kaitlyn, who was homeschooled long before she got serious about golf, graduated from high school last December and enrolled at Alabama as a redshirt freshman this spring. She’s currently taking 13 credit hours and transferred in with 12.

Knowing firsthand how difficult the transition can be jumping into the fall golf season while adjusting to college classes away from home, Kaitlyn thought she’d get her feet wet this spring, even though she can’t compete.

ANWA: Photos | How to watch

“She brings a competitiveness and a leadership that’s going to be really valuable to us and our culture,” said Alabama coach Mic Potter of what’s to come. He also said that recruiting conversations with Kaitlyn were exceptionally easy given her passion for college football.

Looking back, Scott said Kaitlyn’s trip to the 2018 NCAA Championships in Stillwater, Oklahoma, made a big impact because tournament rules allowed spectators to walk on the fairways, up to close to the action.

“I think that was probably when she decided, ‘I want to go do this,’ ” said Scott, “not just be good at golf, but be involved on a team and have a chance to do some of this stuff.

When asked how he knew when to pull back to allow Kaitlyn to grow in recent years, Schroeder said his coaching philosophy is to occasionally allow kids to fail.

“You don’t want them to fall off a large cliff, but you can let them fall off a short cliff,” he said. “Because sometimes they have to fail to be willing to listen more. If you’re only always telling them what to do, at some point, they’ll stop listening.”

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With so many potential ANWA competitions still on the horizon, Scott said they’re not putting too much pressure on this week. As Kaitlyn continues to improve, Scott finds himself saying less of the things he used to preach on a consistent basis.

He now coaches Kaitlyn similar to the way he coaches Gabrelcik, who is currently No. 12 in the men’s World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Kaitlyn played her first AJGA event in the ninth grade and last year won both the AJGA Rolex Girls Junior and Junior PGA titles. While some of her junior friends have previous experience at the ANWA and Drive, Chip and Putt competition, Kaitlyn will see Augusta National for the first time this week.

The past two winners of the ANWA have been junior golfers, with then 16-year-old Anna Davis winning last year and Japan’s Tsubasa Kajitani triumphing in 2021 at age 17.

Bailey Shoemaker, 18, teamed with Schroeder to reach the finals of the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball last year. Shoemaker went on to reach the semifinals of the U.S. Women’s Amateur and made the cut in three LPGA starts, including the U.S. Women’s Open.

“I think we’re a little bit like Jordan (Spieth) and J.T. (Justin Thomas),” said Schroeder. “We love each other off the golf course, but every time we play, like whether it’s just playing for fun or playing, you know, in a tournament, we want to beat the crap out of each other.”

M.J. would be proud.

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It’s (potentially) back! Augusta National’s Peach Ice Cream sandwich spotted on menus at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Patrons (and media members) headed to next week’s Masters are going to like this.

The Masters is widely considered the best golf tournament in the world for many reasons. All the greatest golfers on the planet at one event, battling for one of the most coveted prizes in the sport — the Green Jacket — on one of the best golf courses on Earth.

For patrons lucky enough to get their hands on tickets, they get to experience all of that and more at Augusta National Golf Club.

ANGC is famous for many things, but the prices of their concessions are right near the top of that list. A bottle of water? Two dollars. A soda? Another two dollars. A Masters club sandwich? Just three dollars.

For a little perspective, a beer at the 2022 PGA Championship was $18.

Well, an old friend of not only patrons but media members looks to be back on the menu.

After being unavailable during the 2022 Masters, Augusta National’s Peach Ice Cream sandwich was seen on menus at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, which gets underway Wednesday at Champions Retreat Golf Club.

A welcome sight for everyone headed to Augusta, Georgia, over the next week.

Photos: 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Take a look at some of the best photos from the Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

It’s time for one of the premier women’s amateur events of the year at one of the greatest golf courses in the world.

The Augusta National Women’s Amateur teed off Wednesday. The first two rounds will be contested at Champions Retreat Golf Club on Wednesday and Thursday. Then, 31 players made the cut and are playing the final round at Augusta National on Saturday.

The field consisted of 46 of the top 50 players in the world.

Rose Zhang entered the final round with a five-shot lead, but thunderstorms suspended play at 10:30 a.m. EDT. Her lead was down to three when the horn sounded.

Here’s a look at the best photos from the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Meet the ANWA field: Americans | Internationals

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2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur schedule, how to watch on TV and stream online

All three rounds of the event will be televised.

It’s officially Augusta National Women’s Amateur week, which means the best amateur women’s golfers from around the world are in Augusta, Georgia.

The field is comprised of 72 golfers. There will be 54 holes of stroke play, with the first two rounds being Wednesday and Thursday from Champions Retreat Golf Club. The top 30 will make the cut and advance to Saturday’s final round at Augusta National. Every player will get to go down Magnolia Lane on Friday, however, for a practice round.

There are 37 players making their ANWA debut while 35 are returning.

Here’s how you can keep up with the ANWA this week. All times Eastern.

Meet the ANWA field: Americans | Internationals

TV coverage

The first and second rounds from Champions Retreat Golf Club will be live on Golf Channel from 1:30-3:30 p.m. ET. The final round will be broadcast from 12-3 p.m. ET on NBC. Golf Channel’s “Live from the Masters” will also be live on Friday during the practice round and wrap ANWA coverage on Saturday.

Streaming

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

Social media

Fans can also follow @anwagolf on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and TikTok to view highlights, interviews and more.

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Meet the ANWA player nicknamed ‘Pocket Dynamite’ who plays with two gloves, looks at the hole when she putts and knows how to win

Wong finished third and fourth in her last two collegiate starts.

Jeneath Wong first started playing golf with two gloves around age 7 for one simple reason: Her right hand hurt. The extra glove took away the pain, and the petite player known as “Pocket Dynamite” has been doubling up on gloves ever since.

“I see my friends, and their left hand is pale,” said Wong with a laugh, when asked about the added benefits of playing with two gloves.

A two-time Australian Girls Amateur champion, 18-year-old Wong is one of 37 first-time participants in the field at this week’s Augusta National Women’s Amateur.  The tournament gets underway at Champions Retreat Golf Club on March 29, where the first two rounds will be played on the Island and Bluff nines. The top 30 players and ties will advance to Saturday’s final round, held over Augusta National. A practice round for all 72 participants is held on Friday at Augusta National after the cut is made.

Wong, currently No. 47 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, represents Malaysia but attended high school in Melbourne, Australia, where she’s been a prolific winner, twice claiming the Victorian Junior Masters and three-peating as the Victoria Junior Amateur champion from 2020-2022.

With graduation wrapping up in November, Wong decided to begin her freshman year at Pepperdine this spring. The transition from high school to college didn’t go as smoothly as she would’ve liked, however, as she tripped during rehearsal for an awards night at Glen Waverley Secondary College and tore two ligaments in her ankle. She was still on crutches a week before coming over to Pepperdine in January.

Wong said she chose the Malibu school for its close-knit community and her connection to longtime head coach Laurie Gibbs, whose former All-Americans include Danielle Kang, Katherine Kirk and Lindsey Wright.

A fast player who often skips practice swings when the pace allows during casual rounds, Wong learned the game from her father, Kenneth, who she estimates at about a 12 handicap when he played in Malaysia.

It was Kenneth who taught her to look at the hole rather than the ball for longer putts to better gauge the distance. She also noted, with a good-natured laugh, that her father tends to hit the ground or miss the ball when he tries the technique.

Gibbs said Wong adapted quickly to college life, calling her a natural player whose excellent hand-eye coordination allows her to be consistent in every part of her game. As for some of Wong’s unique approaches, Gibbs notes that the results speak loudly.

“She doesn’t make excuses,” said Gibbs, “and has a personality that is perfect to compete against the best golfers at every level and win.”

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While the rest of her team is in Hawaii this week for the Avenue Spring Break Classic, Wong gears up for what will surely be the first of several showings at Augusta National. She plans to major in psychology and is on pace to graduate in three-and-a-half years. She’ll no doubt be a favorite at this year’s U.S. Girls’ Junior as she’ll still be 18.

The 5-foot-1-inch Wong was fitted for a new set of Callaway Paradym irons in Carlsbad, California, shortly after arriving at Pepperdine and reports a higher ball flight and added distance. Wong finished third and fourth in her last two collegiate starts.

“My Australian idol is Hannah Green,” said Wong of the KPMG Women’s PGA winner. “Apparently, she knows of me.”

After this week at Augusta, chances are many more can say the same.

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