Photos: 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club

Here’s a look at some of the best photos from the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club. 

LOS ANGELES — The best women’s amateur golfers in the world are in California for the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Play began Monday at Bel-Air Country Club, which is near UCLA’s campus in Los Angeles. The field of 156 players will compete in two rounds of stroke play before a cut is made for the top 64 players. Any ties will be resolved, and match play begins Wednesday.

The championship final is set for Sunday and will be contested over 36 holes.

Jensen Castle, the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, is the lone winner in the field. Last year’s winner, Saki Baba, isn’t teeing it up.

Here’s a look at some of the best photos from the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club.

Check out photos of every hole at Bel-Air for the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur

See the challenges the best women amateurs in the world will face at Bel-Air.

Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles is a longtime host to Hollywood A-listers. This week, they will stand aside for the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

The elite private club has served as the main course for USGA events before: the 1976 U.S. Amateur won by Bill Sander and the 2004 U.S. Senior Amateur won by Mark Bemowski. But this will be the first chance for a top event at the course for women, some of whom likely will return for the 2026 Curtis Cup. Bel-Air also will be the site for the 2030 U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship for men.

Bel-Air ranks No. 10 in an incredibly stacked California on Golfweek’s Best ranking of top private courses in each state, and it ties for No. 56 in Golfweek’s Best ranking of top classic courses built before 1960 in the U.S.

This Women’s Am is a continuation of a big year for the architecture of George Thomas, who also laid out Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, site of the 2023 U.S. Open won by Wyndham Clark. Thomas also designed Riviera, site of the PGA Tour’s Genesis Invitational.

Thomas’ design – actually a co-design alongside William P. Bell – at Bel-Air opened in 1926, playing through canyons on a small parcel of land adjacent to UCLA. The course required the use of a famed swinging bridge and even an elevator as players traverse the sometimes extreme terrain.

Architect Tom Doak restored much of Thomas’ design in 2018, removing extraneous bunkers that had been added over the decades and angling to have the course play much more as it did when it opened. The restoration has drawn rave reviews and led to the USGA planning more events at the club.

The course is slated to play to 6,187 yards with a par of 70 for the Women’s Am.

Photographer Bill Hornstein captured beautiful shots of each hole at Bel-Air for the USGA.

Players to watch at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club

It’s bound to be an exciting week at Bel-Air.

It’s time for one of the premier women’s amateur championships.

The 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur begins Monday at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, as the field of 156 players will vie for their chance to capture the oldest trophy in women’s amateur golf, the Robert Cox Trophy.

This will be the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur, which began in 1895. There were a record 1,679 entries accepted for the championship.

Although the top three players in the World Amateur Golf Ranking aren’t in the field, including defending champion Saki Baba, there’s no shortage of star power who will be teeing it up near Beverly Hills.

Here’s a look at 10 players to watch at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club.

Everything to know about the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club

The first U.S. Women’s Amateur was in 1895.

It’s time for the best women amateurs in the world to battle it out for one the oldest trophies in golf.

The 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur tees off Monday at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles. The field of 156 will play 36 holes of stroke play before the top 64 make match play, which begins Wednesday.

This will be the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur, which began in 1895. There were a record 1,679 entries accepted for the championship.

The final is set for Sunday, Aug. 13.

Saki Baba won in dominant fashion last year at Chambers Bay in University Place, Washington. She beat Monet Chun, 11 and 9.

Here’s everything you need to know for the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

U.S. Women’s Amateur helped shape the future of golf for women

The United States Golf Association had a big hand in the growth of women’s golf in the U.S.

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The United States Golf Association had a big hand in the growth of women’s golf in the U.S.

In 1894, then called the Amateur Golf Association, the USGA was formed. A year later, it hosted the first U.S. Women’s Amateur. It was first conducted in 1895, shortly after the inaugural U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open. The Women’s Amateur has been conducted every year since, except 1917-18, when it was suspended due to World War I, and 1942-45, when it was suspended due to World War II.

That means the U.S. Women’s Amateur is one of the oldest USGA championships and first major golf tournament for women in the country.

The U.S. Women’s Amateur will contest its 123rd championship beginning Monday at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles. A field of 156 golfers will vie to take home the Robert Cox Trophy, which has its own unique history.

The Robert Cox Trophy remains the oldest surviving trophy awarded for a USGA championship. It’s also the only USGA trophy donated by someone from another country, coming from Scotland’s, you guess it, Robert Cox.

The first U.S. Women’s Amateur tournament attracted a field of 13 and was played over 18 holes. As in the case of the men’s U.S. Amateur, entry was originally restricted to members of USGA-affiliated private clubs (and, presumably, international players who were members of clubs affiliated with their nations’ golf governing bodies); this policy remained in place until the 1979 tournament.

The most decorated U.S. Women’s Open champion is Glenna Collett Vare, a lifelong amateur who won the Cox Trophy a record six times. Second to Vare is JoAnne Gunderson Carner, who won five U.S. Women’s Amateurs. Combined with her two wins in the U.S. Women’s Open and one victory in the U.S. Girls’ Junior, Carner’s eight USGA titles are tied with Jack Nicklaus and eclipsed only by Bob Jones and Tiger Woods, who have each won nine.

There have been no shortage of repeat winners at the U.S. Women’s Amateur, either. Beatrix Hoyt, Alexa Stirling, Vare, Virginia Van Wie and Juli Inkster have all won the U.S. Women’s Amateur three straight times. Another seven – Genevieve Hecker, Dorothy Campbell, Margaret Curtis, Betty Jameson, Kay Cockerill, Kelli Kuehne and Danielle Kang – have gone back-to-back.

The U.S. Women’s Amateur has long identified some of golf’s greatest female players, many of whom have gone on to successful professional careers. Along with the champions listed above, Patty Berg (who won the first U.S. Women’s Open in 1946), Babe Didrikson Zaharias, Louise Suggs, Marlene Stewart Streit, Anne Quast Sander, Barbara McIntire, Catherine Lacoste, Carol Semple Thompson, Beth Daniel, Morgan Pressel and Lydia Ko have secured a place in golf history, and plenty of them started their rise at the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

In the history of women’s golf in the United States, no tournament has been more important for amateurs than the U.S. Women’s Amateur. Come next week in Los Angeles, it will add another historic chapter to its books, and there’s a chance the next star will begin to shine after hoisting the Robert Cox Trophy.

Rachel Heck is going from ROTC field training to the U.S. Women’s Amateur

“I have a great perspective on the game and on life after everything that has happened this past two years.”

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Rachel Heck doesn’t have any expectations before her final U.S. Women’s Amateur. And she has good reason.

Last week, Heck earned her Prop and Wings after graduating from the Air Force’s grueling ROTC field training at Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama. Heck spent 17 days going through rigorous training, drills and more, all a part of her journey to becoming a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force once she graduates from Stanford.

“I didn’t have my phone, and there was no golf,” Heck said. “We woke up at 4 a.m. every day, and they even took our watches so we didn’t know what time it was.”

Come Monday, she’ll tee it up alongside 155 of the world best women’s amateur golfers at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles. It will be her seventh appearance in the oldest women’s amateur championship in the world.

And it was those 17 days in Alabama that will help prepare her for the Women’s Amateur as well as the rest of her life, whether that’s on the golf course or serving her country.

“It was definitely the biggest mental and physical challenge I’ve ever faced,” Heck said. “It was also by far the most rewarding and transformational. I learned so much. I left with new family.”

Heck has long been known as one of the greatest amateur golfers in the United States. She reached the semifinals of the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur and won medalist honors after stroke play in 2020. In her freshman year at Stanford, Heck swept championship season, winning the Pac-12 title, the NCAA Regional and NCAA Championship en route to earning the 2021 ANNIKA Award for women’s college golfer of the year.

In the midst of all of that, she was a student at one of the most academically prestigious universities in the country while participating in the Air Force ROTC program.

Rachel Heck recently received her Prop and Wings after graduating from the Air Force’s ROTC field training. (Photo provided)

She joined the ROTC program her freshman year, deciding to give it a try. The original plan was to do it for a year and feel it out. She fell in love.

“I realized very quickly I needed something else in my life besides golf,” Heck said. “I didn’t feel like I was going to live a fulfilling life by putting all of my eggs into one basket.”

Heck had plenty of people tell her she couldn’t handle the duties of being a Division-I athlete, let alone at Stanford, and be in an ROTC program.

That made the feeling even sweeter when she earned her Prop and Wings last week. She described the feeling to what she felt riding from the 17th green to the clubhouse at Grayhawk Golf Club after winning the team national title in 2022.

“It was really special because there were so many times where I’ve doubted myself and I’ve gotten overwhelmed and everything piles up and I’m just drowning in work and can’t handle it all,” Heck said, “but every time I managed to push through and was able to do it on my own.”

Heck credits the support system around her, especially her family, teammates and coaches, for supporting her in her journey, which hasn’t been easy this year.

In March, Heck had surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome, which involved removing her first rib. She didn’t play a round of competitive golf because of the injury from October until the first round of the NCAA Championship. Heck shot an 82 and was emotional in the moment after her round.

The rest of the championships, however, she embraced her role as a leader and helped Stanford capture the stroke-play title, even if she wasn’t playing.

Now, Heck is back healthy and heads to Los Angeles to end her summer trying to capture the Robert Cox Trophy for the first time. She knows that may be difficult, considering she has likely had the least amount of practice as anyone in the field thanks to her field training. However, Heck said the benefits of being in the Air Force ROTC have outweighed the sacrifices she has made in her golf game.

“I feel super blessed. I feel so much gratitude to be playing golf,” Heck said. “But it has been a very, very rewarding few years culminating in a very, very rewarding 17 days.”

Heck has one more year in ROTC, this one being a freshman squadron commander, where she’ll get to showcase her leadership.

She hasn’t played Bel-Air before but gets practice rounds Saturday and Sunday before her afternoon tee time come Monday. She said her final amateur USGA event has given her a chance to reflect on her incredible amateur career.

“They do such an incredible job with this event,” Heck said. “I’m just excited. I’m full of gratitude. I have a great perspective on the game and on life after everything that has happened this past two years.”