Meet the graduates: These 10 Epson Tour players earned LPGA cards for 2024

Auston Kim vaults into top 10 to earn 2024 LPGA card after winning 2023 Epson Tour Championship.

Auston Kim needed some fireworks at the Epson Tour Championship to secure an LPGA card for 2024. She shot 7-under 29 on the front nine to get the sparks flying, and then made birdie on the final hole to win by two and vault into the top 10 on the money list.

“We talked all year about if we do the right things, if I create good habits, it’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when,” said Kim, who entered the week No. 15 on the money list and ended it No. 3.

When the Tour Championship kicked off Thursday, three players had already clinched their LPGA cards for 2024: Gabriela Ruffels, Natasha Andrea Oon and Jiwon Jeon.

When the dust settled in Daytona Beach, Florida, eight of the 10 players who entered the week in the top 10 maintained their spots. Becca Huffer (No. 9) and Jenny Bae (No. 10) were the two who dropped out.

Huffer ultimately finished 11th on the money list, with $1,700 less than Kristen Gillman. The 33-year-old Huffer tied for 12th at the Tour Championship and closed with a 65.

A total of nine players broke the $100,000 mark in season earnings, five more than any other year in the developmental tour’s history.

Find out more about the card winners for the 2023 Epson Tour season:

Rose Zhang, Rachel Heck and Augusta National Women’s Amateur winner Anna Davis among six wild cards for next LPGA major

Future stars of the women’s game are bound for the LPGA’s fourth major of the season in France.

The Amundi Evian Championship has announced six wild card selections for this year’s event, slated for July 21-24. The season’s fourth major will be held at the Evian Resort Golf Club in Évian-les-Bains, France, with an increased purse of $6.5 million and $1 million to the winner.

World No. 1 Jin Young Ko headlines the field along with No. 2 Nelly Korda and last year’s winner Minjee Lee, who won the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles in June and finished runner-up at the KPMG Women’s PGA.

Five amateurs and one professional have been award exemptions this year, including top-ranked amateur Rose Zhang.

A look at the wild cards for 2022:

U.S. Women’s Open is a home game and a reunion for Longhorns Kaitlyn Papp, Agathe Laisne

Kaitlyn Papp and Agathe Laisne, teammates at the University of Texas, are among 24 amateurs in the U.S. Women’s Open field.

Like every other part of 2020, Kaitlyn Papp’s preparation for the U.S. Women’s Open included something non-traditional: a graduation ceremony. Not surprisingly, she didn’t walk. Instead, the Texan pulled up a Zoom link and watched the ceremony from home. She already received a cap and gown from the university and everything.

Papp finished off her degree in physical culture and sports from the University of Texas in three and a half years, a notable feat for the two-time First-Team All-American who owns two individual titles as a Longhorn.

This week, Papp is making the second U.S. Women’s Open start of her career, after playing the 2019 USWO at the Country Club of Charleston. She played her way into that event, but this year, her selection was at the mercy of the World Amateur Golf Rankings.

USWO: Photos | Tee times | TV info | First-timers | Memories

The rankings, she knows, are updated every Wednesday morning. On Nov. 4, she woke up and checked them first thing. She needed to be inside the top 20, and she was No. 19 – safely in.

“I was definitely eye-balling it most of the summer and the fall because you can’t really control the rankings,” she said. “You just try to play as well as you and play in the tournaments. It was definitely a little nerve-wracking the last couple weeks because at the time I was kind of on the bubble for making it.”

It has been difficult to find events to compete in this year. Papp, who plans to return for another semester of college golf in the spring, finished in the top 25 at the Texas Women’s Open and made match play at the U.S. Women’s Amateur. She also competed in the ANA Inspiration, teed it up twice with her Texas team and, on a lark, took a road trip to Louisiana with her dad to play the Atchafalaya Challenge, a Women’s All-Pro Tour event in Louisiana.

“It was probably like a seven-hour drive from Austin to there,” she said. “…Just decided to play and not have expectations and just use it as a warm-up for the U.S. Open. I played really well out there so it was a good confidence booster.”

Papp played a U.S. Women’s Amateur qualifier at Champions before she ever arrived in college. She hasn’t seen much of the place otherwise.

There are other Texas connections, though, in the form of people. Papp will have Texas assistant coach Kate Golden on the bag in Houston. Golden, a former Longhorn, played 18 years on the LPGA and competed in more than 30 major championships.

Papp was a high school teammate of LPGA sophomore Kristen Gillman. The Austin natives still play together when they’re at home – often competing in friendly matches with just pride on the line (no trash talking) or maybe lunch. Gillman was exempt in the field as a top-75 player in the Rolex Rankings.

Papp is one of 24 amateurs in the field, 20 of whom were selected based on their World Ranking. Teammate Agathe Laisne made that list as the No. 12-ranked amateur in the world.

The USWO was a bit of a reunion for Papp and Laisne, who has a third teammate, Hailee Cooper (with whom Papp teamed to win the 2016 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball) on the bag.

Laisne went home to France in March when COVID lockdowns began, and this is her first time back.

“I went home, I was quarantined for two months,” she said. “Didn’t do golf, just studying and being with my family. It was hard because I live in a small apartment. It was different, no golf for two months.”

Since late July however, however, Laisne has made several competitive starts around Europe. It hasn’t been all that warm lately where Laisne is competing, and if temperatures dip in Texas – or if the wind kicks up – Laisne figures she might be at an advantage.

“I guess I always kind of knew I was good in the wind, but I realized more when I was in Texas because it’s always windy, and I would always play a little bit better with the field when it was windier and rainy,” she said.

Laisne was ranked around No. 50 in the WAGR mid-summer when Texas head coach Ryan Murphy put the U.S. Women’s Open idea in her head. She hadn’t been thinking about it much, but Murphy thought if Laisne could get a win in Europe, it might boost her high enough to get the exemption.

It worked. Laisne won two Ladies European Tour Access Events – the Lavaux Ladies Open and the Santander Golf Tour Lauro – and was third at the European Ladies’ Amateur. She was even penalized at the latter for pulling a yardage marker out of the ground – a violation under COVID rules.

Laisne reports her wedge game is strong and that she got on a run of good putting back home. Good timing for this big finale to a stop-and-start year.

“I just will play my best,” she said, “and try to have fun.”

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Texas to golf without all-conference honorees Agathe Laisne and Sára Kousková this fall

Agathe Laisne was the Big 12’s player of the year in 2019 but she and teammate Sára Kousková won’t be playing for Texas this fall.

When it returns to the course this weekend, the University of Texas women’s golf team will be without two of its top talents.

Texas coach Ryan Murphy announced on Thursday that senior Agathe Laisne and junior Sára Kousková won’t be available this fall. Murphy said the initial uncertainty over whether the Longhorns would compete this semester led to Laisne and Kousková remaining overseas. Laisne is a native of France. Kousková hails from the Czech Republic.

Laisne and Kousková are both taking online classes. The all-Big 12 golfers are expected back in the spring.

Laisne was named a WGCA All-American and the Big 12’s player of the year in 2019. Due to a knee injury, she was limited to three tournaments during this past school year. Agathe was among those placed on the preseason watch list for the ANNIKA Award, which is college golf’s top honor, on Thursday.

Kousková’s average round of 72.17 over her six tournaments during the 2019-20 school year is the fifth-best score in school history. Only two UT golfers have posted a better career average than Kousková’s current mark of 72.49.

“We’re a lot better when they’re here, obviously. They’re great players and bring great chemistry to our team,” Murphy said. “For us, that was not a bad thing totally because in Europe, for women’s golf, there’s some major women’s championships that take place over there in August, September, October. They get to play in those, which is nice. We’ll have them back in the spring.”

Texas will tee off at four events this fall. Starting on Sunday, the Longhorns will be hosted by rival Oklahoma at the two-day Schooner Fall Classic.