Amateur Yana Wilson wins Cactus Tour event, beats former Women’s British Open champion

Not bad for an amateur.

Yana Wilson’s resume is one of the best in amateur golf. She added another spectacular achievement to it Thursday.

The Oregon signee won a Cactus Tour event at Sun City Country Club in Sun City, Arizona. Wilson shot 3-under 69 in the final round to take the top prize in the professional arena, beating former San Jose State golfer Antonia Malate by two shots.

More impressive was Wilson’s finish, where she birdied her final three holes and went 5-under 31 coming home to claim the trophy. She had 14 birdies in the 54-hole event.

Wilson also beat 2020 AIG Women’s Open champion Sophia Popov, who finished fourth six shots behind the amateur.

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Two summers ago, Wilson won the 2022 U.S. Girls’ Junior. Last year, she claimed medalist honors at the same tournament. Now, she has won a professional tournament before starting her college career.

Arizona-based mini tour reinstates female-at-birth policy in wake of recent transgender controversy

The gender policy change was announced on National Girls and Women in Sports Day.

The Arizona-based Cactus Tour announced on National Girls and Women in Sports Day that its gender policy has changed, effective immediately. The women’s mini tour has reinstated a female-at-birth requirement.

The Cactus Tour kicks off its 2024 season Feb. 13 at Sun City Country Club. A number of LPGA players have used the mini tour over the years to kick off rust and develop their games as amateurs and young pros. Past winners include three-time major winner Anna Nordqvist, 2023 U.S. Women’s Open champ Allisen Corpuz, Grace Kim, Mina Harigae, Gabriela Ruffels and Cheyenne Woods.

Sophia Popov famously won the 2020 AIG Women’s British Open the same year she won three times on the Cactus Tour, when the mini tour carried on during the Covid-19 pandemic while other tours shut down.

Bobbi Lancaster, a retired physician who became the first transgender player to compete in LPGA Q-School, once spent time competing on the Cactus Tour. Lancaster recently told Golfweek that her views on allowing trans women to compete in elite women’s sports have changed.

Now the former honors biology student can’t ignore what she believes the science proves: Transgender women who experienced male puberty have legacy advantages that no amount of hormones or surgeries can erase.

“I don’t think it’s fair to have transgender women like me competing against cisgender women in women’s sports,” she said. “Period, end of story.”

Lancaster’s belief that integrity must trump inclusivity comes at a time when another transgender athlete, Hailey Davidson, drew national attention for her recent victory on a Florida mini-tour.

While it wasn’t Davidson’s first professional victory, the fact that the NXXT Tour has a new partnership this season with the Epson Tour prompted backlash as many believed Davidson was on the doorstep of the LPGA.

In the wake of the victory, NXXT CEO Stuart McKinnon came out with a statement addressing Davidson’s participation. The tour initiated an anonymous poll among its players to gather their opinions on the NXXT’s gender policy. The tour also requested that Davidson undergo additional testosterone testing to ensure compliance.

In 2010, the LPGA eliminated its requirement that players be “female at birth” not long after a transgender woman filed a lawsuit against the tour.

Davidson has twice participated in Stage I of LPGA Q-School.

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Solheim Cup: Mina Harigae’s rapid rise from Cactus Tour to captain’s pick shows thin line between financial success and panic

A year ago, Harigae was fighting for birdies on the Cactus Tour just to pay rent. Now she’s the fourth-oldest U.S. Solheim Cup rookie in history.

TOLEDO, OHIO – As Mina Harigae signed autographs at the Meijer LPGA Classic in Grand Rapids, Michigan, one fan pointed to the Rolex ad in her program and said, “You can just sign it there. I’m sure you have five Rolexes at home.”

“I was like what?” said Harigae. “What makes you think that?”

It was just last year that Harigae, a 31-year-old rookie on the U.S. Solheim Cup team, was fighting for birdies on the Cactus Tour just to pay rent.

Rock bottom, she said, came when she missed seven cuts in a row to end her season in 2019 and went back to LPGA Q-School. Then the pandemic hit after she’d played in one event and missed the cut. The generosity of friends and family helped in the dark days, but Harigae hadn’t had a sponsor in years, and the bills kept coming.

“I felt very helpless,” she told Golfweek by phone the weekend before the Solheim Cup. “It felt like I was racing against time … the walls were closing in on me.”

As glamorous as the Solheim Cup stage appears – and it is the crown jewel of the LPGA – getting there doesn’t necessarily translate to five Rolex watches and private jets. There’s often a thin line between financial security on the LPGA and sheer panic.

This isn’t the kind of story that will play out at the Ryder Cup next month.

There isn’t one moment that Harigae, one of three captain’s picks made by Pat Hurst, can point to that turned things around. Her fiancé and caddie, Travis Kreiter, suggested late in 2019 that she use the claw grip while putting, a change that immediately felt more natural. She’s currently ninth in putts per greens in regulation on tour.

Last winter, Harigae spent hours grinding on swing changes at Superstition Mountain Golf and Country Club in Gold Canyon, Arizona, texting videos to Kreiter, who was working in the shop.

She won four times on the Cactus Tour during the tour’s 166-day pandemic break, earning checks of around $2,500 with exceptionally low scores. Harigae won one event by 16 strokes with a closing 61.

It was actually after the LPGA Drive On event here at Inverness, where Harigae tied for sixth, that she received word that PXG planned to sign her to a contract. The financial security of a sponsor immediately freed her up.

“I was able to just go play golf,” said Harigae, who posted three additional top 10s last season.

It was at the Drive On event in October of last year at Reynolds Lake Oconee that Harigae first noticed U.S. captain Pat Hurst following her group.

For many LPGA fans, Harigae first came on the radar last month at the AIG Women’s British Open, where she shared the 36-hole lead with Georgia Hall at Carnoustie.

After a disappointing 76 on Saturday, Kreiter talked her into going to the range after the round. They were alone there, and Harigae took the time to vent.

On the way back to the hotel, Kreiter talked about how cool it was to walk out of the tunnel on Saturday at a place like Carnoustie with the grandstands full. Said he had goosebumps.

Harigae began to wonder why she hadn’t felt any goosebumps.

“That made me realize that I was so wrapped up in myself that it really didn’t affect me,” she said, “and it should have.”

After Saturday’s round, Kreiter suggested to Harigae that she should share what she’s feeling on social media. Maybe it will make her feel lighter.

“I was like, why would that do that? How would that make me feel better?” she said.

“And you know, the weirdest thing is, it totally made me feel better. I immediately felt better, as soon as I hit post.”

She was also incredibly surprised by how well her honest thread was received, learning from someone back in the U.S. that it had been read on Golf Channel.

Harigae, who is the fourth-oldest American rookie in Solheim Cup history, aims to relish the moment she arrives at the first tee Saturday at Inverness. She’s eager to soak in a milestone that she’s been working toward her entire life. A more appreciative approach, she figures, will keep her from being so tight.

Assistant captain Michelle Wie West, who heads up Harigae’s pod, told her she needed to be 100 percent honest about everything right away. Don’t just go with the flow about, say, hitting the first tee shot, because it’s not going to help you or the team.

Lexi Thompson chimed in to say there have been times when she didn’t want to hit first. If Thompson can say that, Harigae thought, then she can, too.

Harigae was a prodigious California teen, winning the California Women’s Amateur for four consecutive years starting at age 12. She’s a USGA champion, the kind of player whose amateur record pointed toward a sparkling professional career.

Even now, Harigae has yet to win on the LPGA. Her best major finish – T-13 – came two weeks ago at Carnoustie. At this time last year, Harigae was ranked 241st in the world. She’s now 62nd.

“I really do hope it does inspire some players,” said Harigae of her recent surge.

“I also hope this story shows the non-golfers that LPGA golfers are way different than the PGA Tour. We don’t have the big endorsements.”

And while there are a select few who do have lucrative watch contracts, the vast majority are like Harigae: grinding and hustling in the hope that soon, it will be their time to shine.

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Watch: Crazy storm blows through Cactus Tour event in Arizona

Watch as a crazy storm blows through a Cactus Tour event in Arizona.

As if life on the mini tours wasn’t difficult enough for aspiring professional golfers, imagine a tornado blowing through the first round of your fourth event of the new year.

The Cactus Tour, a mini tour branded as “The tour for women golf professionals in the Western United States,” was hosting an event at the Wigwam Golf Resort and Spa’s Blue Course in Litchfield Park, Arizona, on Monday when a wild storm blew through the area.

According to Hannah Gregg, who played collegiately at at Sonoma State and Nevada, the storm “blew the clubhouse door open” and moved patio furniture over to the putting green.

While those on the ground reported a tornado, a severe thunderstorm warning went into effect for the Phoenix area at 2 p.m. local time.

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Cheyenne Woods, fresh off a mini-tour win, is on the bag for Yankees outfielder Aaron Hicks at Diamo

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols interviews Cheyenne Woods at the Diamond Resorts TOC, where she is caddying this week for her boyfriend and Yankees outfielder, Aaron Hicks.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols interviews Cheyenne Woods at the Diamond Resorts TOC, where she is caddying this week for her boyfriend and Yankees outfielder, Aaron Hicks.

Haley Moore drains birdie putt in playoff for $10,000 in winner-take-all event

Haley Moore equaled half her 2020 earnings in one day on Sunday after claiming a winner-take-all exhibition in Arizona good for $10,000.

Haley Moore made $20,774 on the Cactus Tour in 2020.

On Sunday, she banked a cool $10,000 in the winner-take-all inaugural Longbow Cactus Cup Championship.

The 18-hole exhibition was staged at Longbow Golf Club in Mesa, Arizona. The four participants were the top four money winners in 2020 from the Cactus Tour, an Arizona-based mini-tour for up-and-coming women’s professionals.

Moore faced off against Brittany Yada, the 2020 Cactus Tour money winner. Mina Harigae and Savannah Vilaubi rounded out the foursome.

Yada and Vilaubi shot 3-over 75s. Harigae shot a 74 and watched as Moore had a par putt on the par-5 18th for a 73 that would have won it. But she missed and so they went over to the 1st tee for the playoff.

On that hole, Moore, who was a standout at the University of Arizona, knocked her approach to two feet and she made the short birdie putt to claim the prize.

The Cactus Tour held 38 events in four states this past summer, giving pros multiple playing opportunities during the pandemic shutdowns on the LPGA and Symetra Tours.

The $10,000 prize is big money for Cactus Tour players. Yada won five times to earn $25,400 in 2020. Moore was the 2019 Cactus Tour money winner and finished second in 2020. Harigae won four times to pocket $12,250, while Vilaubi made $10,900 in prize money.

Harigae holds the Cactus Tour 54-hole record of 24 under after shooting shores of 62-63-64 at Longbow earlier this year.

Longbow will again host a Symetra Tour event in 2021 but a date has not yet been finalized.

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$10,000 up for grabs in winner-take-all for top Cactus Tour players

Talk about a belated Christmas gift. Longbow Golf Club in Mesa, Arizona, is putting up $10,000 in a winner-take-all exhibition on Sunday.

Talk about a belated Christmas gift.

Longbow Golf Club in Mesa, Arizona, is putting up $10,000 in a winner-take-all, 18-hole, four-player stroke play exhibition on Sunday.

The four golfers are the top four money winners in 2020 from the Cactus Tour, an Arizona-based mini-tour for up-and-coming women’s professionals.

Brittany Yada won the Cactus Tour money title in 2020. She will face off against Haley Moore, Mina Harigae and Savannah Vilaubi. They will play as a foursome.

Fans are invited to attend. There will be no admission charge and everyone will be required to wear masks and observe social distancing.

The Cactus Tour held 38 events in four states this past summer, giving women pros multiple playing opportunities during the pandemic shutdown for the LPGA and Symetra Tours.

Longbow Golf Club
The Symetra Tour’s 2020 Founders Tribute at Longbow Golf Club in Mesa, Arizona.

“We are excited to team up with the Cactus Tour for a fourth time in 2020, and welcome four of the top women professional golfers in the region for a season-ending exhibition,” said Bob McNichols, Longbow Golf Club General Manager, said in a statement. “The Cactus Tour made national news for offering professional golfers an opportunity to safely compete during the early days of the pandemic. This is a great opportunity to celebrate what was surely the most successful season in The Cactus Tour history.”

Longbow hosted the Symetra Tour’s Founders Tribute in August. Sarah White birdied the 18th hole to edge Casey Danielson and Sophia Popov by a shot. Popov went on to win the AIG Women’s British Open six days later.

“The Cactus Tour is really looking forward to this day of fun-filled championship golf at one of Arizona’s best courses for competitive golf,” said Mike Brown, Cactus Tour Director. “The Cactus Tour has awarded over $2.5 million to professional women playing in regional competition over the past nine years alone.”

The $10,000 prize would be a big boost for the winner. Yada won five times on the Cactus Tour to earn $25,400. Moore was the 2019 Cactus Tour money winner and finished second in 2020 after making $20,774. Harigae won four times to pocket $12,250, while Vilaubi made $10,900 in prize money.

Harigae holds the Cactus Tour 54-hole record score of -24 after shooting shot 62-63-64 at Longbow Golf Club earlier this year.

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Nurse Sarah Hoffman returns to pro golf for Symetra Tour restart

Sarah Hoffman, a Symetra Tour player, returned to her job on the course after working as a nurse during the coronavirus pandemic.

Sarah Hoffman has traded her scrubs for clubs as the Symetra Tour restarts its season this week in her native Michigan. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit and golf stopped, Hoffman returned to her career as a nurse at Michigan Medicine.

Now, the 30-year-old Grand Valley State grad is one of 144 players teeing it up this week at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship in Battle Creek, Michigan.

“Sometimes it felt like higher praise than what I necessarily deserved,” said Hoffman of the attention she received for going back to work in the medical field, “but I felt like I was just doing what I could do.”

The Symetra Tour hosted one event in March before the season was shut down due to the spread of coronavirus. There are eight events remaining on the schedule. The top five money leaders at the end of the season, down from 10 due to COVID-19, will earn an LPGA card for 2021. This week’s 54-hole event has a purse of $175,000 and a winner’s check of $26,250.

There are 30 Symetra Tour rookies in the field including former Florida standout Sierra Brooks. Several LPGA players are gearing up for next week’s event in Toledo by playing in Michigan.

Hoffman tees off at the Symetra Tour’s season-opening event in Winter Haven, Florida (courtesy Symetra)

Former Michigan State player Sarah Burnham has won four times during the COVID-19 break, with her first coming in late March on the Cactus Tour in Arizona, where tour owner Mike Brown presented her with a roll of toilet tissue in addition to her trophy and check. Burnham won again on that tour in April and then picked up another title on the Eggland’s Best Tour in Florida with a career-low round of 63.

Burnham, 24, then matched that 63 at the Michigan PGA Women’s Open in early July, ultimately lapping the field by 10 shots.

“It was great to boost my confidence a little bit,” said Burnham, who is still looking for her first win on the Symetra and LPGA.

Other notables in the field include former Alabama player Janie Jackson, who won the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic by eight strokes in March. Alexa Pano, a 15-year-old amateur, played in last year’s Firekeepers event on a sponsor exemption and qualified for this week via a runner-up finish on the Women’s All Pro Tour.

Alexa Pano watches her tee shot at the 11th hole during the third round of the 44th Girls Junior PGA Championship at Keney Park Golf Course in Hartford, Connecticut. (Darren Carroll/PGA of America)

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Haley Moore’s scorching 62 laps the field for a third Cactus Tour title

After the LPGA paused its season due to the coronavirus pandemic, Haley Moore kept competing. She’s won three events since March.

Haley Moore was enjoying a post-round pomegranate cosmopolitan when she answered the phone. She deserved to celebrate after scorching the field with a 10-under 62 in the desert.

The 21-year-old entered the final round trailing LPGA veteran Alena Sharp by one stroke at Troon North. Moore wound up winning this week’s Cactus Tour event by nine. No other player in the field broke 70 in the final round.

Two-time major champion Anna Nordqvist finished fourth. Karen Kim played alongside Moore on Friday and aced the 13th hole en route to a 70 and a third-place finish. Kim bought Moore and any other takers a beer after the round.

 

Moore won last week’s Cactus Tour event at Stallion Mountain by three strokes after a final-round 64. She has now won three times on the Cactus Tour since the LPGA stopped staging tournaments due to COVID-19. (The superstitious Moore also wore the same outfits for all three rounds this week as she did last week.)

“It’s definitely going to be pretty high,” said Moore of her confidence level when the LPGA restarts on July 31 in Toledo, Ohio.

The 62 included two eagles in the span of three holes on Nos. 9 and 11. Moore hit both par 5s in two and drained a 20-foot putt on the ninth and a 4-footer on the 11th. It tied her personal low, set when she was in middle school.

Moore is in the field for the first two events in Toledo, Ohio: LPGA Drive On Championship and Marathon Classic. She’ll have to qualify out of those to earn a spot in either of the fields in Scotland. The former Arizona standout is ready to make whatever last-minute arrangements are necessary to make that trip should she punch her ticket.

John Chance, the caddie she met at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, will be back to work for her in Toledo and will remain on the bag for the rest of the year. Chance lives in Georgia and caddies at Augusta National.

Moore played in a dozen tournaments during the LPGA’s coronavirus break, including 11 on the Cactus Tour.

“I’m just happy that Mike (Brown) was able to keep this tour going,” said Moore of the Cactus Tour owner who barreled on in the Arizona desert despite early criticism. “This tour helped me get ready for Q-School before I became a pro.”

And now it has given her a bona fide hot streak heading into Phase II of her rookie year.

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Playing through a pandemic: Some pros like Haley Moore barely slowed down

Never has a rookie year on the LPGA looked stranger, with lifelong dreams being halted almost as soon as they’d begun.

When the LPGA restarts the 2020 season in Toledo, Ohio, it will be a reunion of sorts for Haley Moore.

Her parents met as freshmen at Ohio State. Mom played tennis and dad was recruited as the short and long snapper for the football team. Moore’s father, Tom, grew up in Orrville, Ohio, which is situated about 2 ½ hours east of Toledo. She has family on both sides in the area and several planned to make the trip to the Marathon Classic in early August to watch her compete.

With the PGA Tour’s Memorial Tournament deciding to close next week’s event to spectators, however, it’s unclear whether or not the Marathon will carry on as ticket sales and pro-ams are vital to the event’s bottom line.

Never has a rookie year on the LPGA looked stranger, with lifelong dreams being halted almost as soon as they’d begun. Everyone has handled the prolonged break and barrage of bad news differently.

Moore, one of the bright lights in this year’s rookie class, might be the most tournament-ready player at the new LPGA Drive On Championship later this month at Inverness. While some players have gone five months without competing, Moore has teed it up in 11 tournaments since mid-March.

(Courtesy Haley Moore)

At her latest, the Cactus Tour event at Stallion Mountain in Las Vegas, Moore carded a final-round, course-record 64 to win by three strokes. It marked her fourth title at Stallion Mountain and second Cactus Tour title since the LPGA shut down in mid-February. How many course records does that give Moore?

“I don’t know,” she said, with a laugh, “there are so many.”

Gemma Dryburgh knows how important it is to feel a scorecard in hand – not to mention a trophy. The latest winner on the Rose Ladies Series said it’s impossible to know exactly where one’s game stands without competition.

The Scot was prepared to fly out next Monday for the U.S., in time for a two-week quarantine in Texas, before the two-tournament swing in Toledo. Even with the next two LPGA events in Scotland, Dryburgh considered it worth the effort to come to the U.S. given that there were two tournaments.

Now with Marathon back in question, however, she’s not so sure.

The Old American Golf Club, host of the Volunteers of America LPGA event, in The Colony, Texas, offered LPGA players an honorary membership last year. Dryburgh took them up on the offer and it’s coming in handy as she and her caddie plan to stay there during quarantine with her host family from the last two years.

“I’ll keep to myself as much as possible,” she said of going back and forth from the house to the club.

Everything is back up in the air though after the Memorial’s news.

Career breakthroughs have come in surprising places for many players. Both Jennifer Kupcho and Maria Fassi, the two stars of last year’s inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur, won their first professional titles during the COVID-19 break along with two-time U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Kristen Gillman. Kupcho, a Colorado native, broke through at the CoBank Colorado Women’s Open at Green Valley Ranch for a $50,000 prize, which is mammoth in today’s mini-tour landscape.

Fassi won her first professional title on a tour many had never even heard of until this break – the Women’s All Pro Tour. The former Arkansas standout went wire-to-wire at the Cooper Communities NWA Classic, winning about 30 minutes from the site of her NCAA triumph on the Razorbacks’ home course. Fassi won $7,500.

Gillman also won her first pro title on the WAPT in her home state of Texas.

Patty Tavatanakit, another promising rookie on the LPGA, won an Eggland’s Best event in central Florida last month and pocketed $1,500.

Several players have taken to playing in men’s mini-tour events, with Symetra Tour player Emily Pedersen beating a field full of men on the Ecco Tour last month in Denmark.

LPGA veteran Mina Harigae hasn’t competed in as many Cactus Tour events as Moore, but she has won four of them, rediscovering the joy of competing in the process.

This week Dryburgh will join several other LPGA pros and a host of LET players and up-and-comers for the first women’s professional event ever held at Royal St. George’s. The links course was set to host the men’s British Open next week before it was canceled.

“They’ve got the rough set up like they would’ve for the Open,” said Dryburgh. “It will be a good challenge.”

These days challenges are the only thing that’s not in short supply.

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