Augusta National Women’s Amateur field features 39 of world’s top-40 amateur golfers

The world No. 1 and 2021 runner-up highlight the loaded field bound for Augusta.

Seventy-one of the world’s top women amateurs have accepted invitations for the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, March 30-April 2.

The loaded field of 71 features 39 of the top-40 amateurs in the world, including Stanford freshman and world No. 1 Rose Zhang and last year’s ANWA runner-up Emilia Migliaccio. The format is 54 holes of stroke play with a cut to the top 30 players after 36 holes. The first two rounds will take place at Champions Retreat Golf Club on Wednesday, March 30 and Thursday, March 31. The full field will play a practice round on Friday, April 1 at Augusta National, with the final round on Saturday, April 2, with just the players who made the cut. NBC will air the final round from 12-3 p.m. ET.

Tickets are sold out following an online ticket application process, and tickets will not be available at the gates.

Augusta National Women’s Amateur field

Alphabetical, as of February 2, 2022

Amari Avery, Riverside, Calif.

Jenny Bae, Suwanee, Ga.

Shinsil Bang, Anseong, Republic of Korea

Carla Bernat Escuder, Castellon, Spain

Hailey Borja, Lake Forest, Calif.

Phoebe Brinker, Wilmington, Del.

Jensen Castle, West Columbia, S.C.

Briana Chacon, Whittier, Calif.

Hannah Darling, Midlothian, Scotland

Anna Davis, Spring Valley, Calif.

Louise Duncan, West Kilbride, Scotland

Isabella Fierro, Merida, Mexico

Alexandra Forsterling, Berlin, Germany

Annabell Fuller, London, England

Megha Ganne, Holmdel, N.J.

Savannah Grewal, Ontario, Canada

Mizuki Hashimoto, Hyogo, Japan

Rachel Heck, Memphis, Tenn.

Youmin Hwang, Gyeonggi Province, Korea

Julia Johnson, St. Gabriel, La.

Gurleen Kaur, Houston, Texas

Auston Kim, St. Augustine, Fla.

Irene Kim, La Palma, Calif.

Sara Kouskova, Prague, Czech Republic

Aline Krauter, Stuttgart, Germany

Rachel Kuehn, Asheville, N.C.

Jeong Hyun Lee, Seoul, Korea

Amalie Leth-Nissen, Herlev, Denmark

Beth Lillie, Fullerton, Calif.

Jiyoo Lim, Hwaseong, Korea

Ingrid Lindblad, Halmstad, Sweden

Carolina Lopez-Chacarra, Madrid, Spain

Antonia Malate, Seaside, Calif.

Caley McGinty, Bristol, England

Carolina Melgrati, Milan, Italy

Ashley Menne, Surprise, Ariz.

Emilia Migliaccio, Cary, N.C.

Benedetta Moresco, Vicenza, Italy

Anna Morgan, Spartanburg, S.C.

Hinano Muguruma, Yokohama, Japan

Katherine Muzi, Newport Beach, Calif.

Mychael O’Berry, Hoover, Ala.

Natasha Andrea Oon, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Meja Ortengren, Linkoping, Sweden

Alexa Pano, Lake Worth, Fla.

Valery Plata, Bucaramanga, Colombia

Avani Prashanth, Bengaluru, India

Kirsten Rudgeley, Carramar, Australia

Amanda Sambach, Davidson, N.C.

Brooke Seay, San Diego, Calif.

Aneka Seumanutafa, Emmitsburg, Md.

Megan Schofill, Monticello, Fla.

Paula Schulz-Hanssen, St. Leon-Rot, Germany

Erica Shepherd, Greenwood, Ind.

Ivy Shepherd, Peachtree City, Ga.

Ellie Slama, Salem, Ore.

Emma Spitz, Vienna, Austria

Latanna Stone, Riverview, Fla.

Caroline Sturdza, Geneva, Switzerland

Shannon Tan, Singapore

Ayaka Tezuka, Yamanashi, Japan

Beatrice Wallin, Olofstrop, Sweden

Lauren Walsh, Kildare, Ireland

Crystal Wang, Diamond Bar, Calif.

Yana Wilson, Henderson, Nev.

Lei Ye, Shanghai, China

Xiaowen Yin, Tianjin, China

Rin Yoshida, Chiba, Japan

Liqi Zeng, Jiangxi, China

Rose Zhang, Irvine, Calif.

Avery Zweig, McKinney, Texas

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Early eagle lifts Mizuki Hashimoto to victory in the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific Championship

Hashimoto erased a three-stroke deficit entering the final round with an early eagle en route to shooting 68.

Japan’s memorable year in golf continued.

First, Japanese teen Tsubasa Kajitani won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur in a playoff after a tense final round. Then Hideki Matsuyama slipped into a Green Jacket, the first Asian to do so. Later, he won on home soil at the Zozo Championship. And who could forget golf’s appearance for just the second time in more than 100 years in the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

Japanese golfers aren’t done yet. Last week, World No. 1 Keita Nakajima booked his ticket to Augusta National for the Masters with victory at the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship and on Saturday fellow countrywoman Mizuki Hashimoto shot four successive rounds of 4-under 68 to win the third edition of the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific championship by one stroke.

At Abu Dhabi Golf Club, Hashimoto finished with a 16-under total of 272 and became the second successive Japanese champion after Yuka Yasuda lifted the trophy when it was last played in 2019. The Thai duo of Kan Bunnabodee (66) and overnight leader Natthakritta Vongtaveelap (72), along with Australia’s Kelsey Bennett (68), were tied second at 15 under.

Nagano Inagaki (68), also of Japan finished fifth at 13-under, with Malaysia’s Ashley Lau (70) a shot further back in sixth.

In April this year, Japan’s Kajitani and Matsuyama were winners in back-to-back weeks at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and the Masters and a similar pattern unfolded in the UAE with Nakajima winning in Dubai last week.

In addition to the beautiful trophy, the 19-year-old Hashimoto secured berths in the 2022 AIG Women’s British Open and the 2022 Amundi Evian Championship as well as the Hana Financial Group Championship and an invitation to play in the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

“I have always seen these tournaments on the television. To be able to play in them is like a dream-come-true for me,” said Hashimoto, ranked 121st in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. “This championship means a lot to me because the winner gets to go to the major events and I am really excited as I really want to play in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National. I was just trying my best.”

Mizuki Hashimoto of Japan celebrates with her fellow Japanese competitors as she wins the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific championship. (Photo by Graham Uden/R&A via Getty Images)

Hashimoto started the day three shots behind Vongtaveelap, a 19-year-old from Bangkok. With the long-hitting Thai showing great consistency – she was bogey-free for 52 holes coming into the final round – it needed something spectacular from the chasing pack to catch her.

The lead was increased to four when Vongtaveelap made a birdie on the second hole but Hashimoto holed her second shot from 135 yards for a spectacular eagle two on the 3rd to ignite her round and she followed it up with a birdie at the next after hitting her tee shot a foot from the flag.

“The eagle on the third hole was a big surprise for me. I kept fighting hard after that until I made the winning putt,” Hashimoto said.

Vongtaveelap’s resolve finally cracked on the par-4 sixth hole when she made a bogey after a poor bunker shot and that was followed by a double bogey on the par-3 seventh when she pushed her tee shot into the water.

Vongtaveelap bounced back immediately, however, with a stunning eagle on the eighth when she hit her trusted 18-degree hybrid second shot to four feet.

A Hashimoto bogey on the ninth seemed to tilt the scale in Vongtaveelap’s favor again but the Japanese player bounced back with a second shot to tap-in distance on the 11th before closing with seven pars.

Vongtaveelap still had a chance to force the issue with an eagle on the 18th but she pushed her tee shot into the water and could only make a par. Bennett, who jumped into contention with a chip-in birdie at the 13th could not pick up one last shot that could have forced the playoff.

“I’m a little disappointed but I did my best. I am so pleased that I was invited to play in this tournament. This has been a new experience and I won’t forget it,” said Vongtaveelap.

“I have learned a lot. I have never played in a championship of this stature before and I have never been this nervous. I will keep improving my mindset and my skills.”

Bunnabodee, who started the championship with a 3-over 75 and played with an ankle injury, shot the day’s best round of 66. She had matched the low round in the history of the championship – an 8-under 64 – on the second day.

Japan’s Ayaka Tezuka made the only hole-in-one of the championship and the first of her life when she hit a perfect 8-iron shot from 133 yards on the fourth hole.

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