How elite amateurs Emilia Migliaccio and Rachel Heck are making their peers think twice about the future

“It’s crazy how much pressure people feel at this level to go pro.”

EVANS, Ga. — Emilia Migliaccio was a teenager when she first came to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Now, she’s a 24-year-old married woman with several jobs in television broadcasting and a part-time amateur player who just remarkably beat a bunch of full-time players to snag another tee time at Augusta National on Saturday.

Migliaccio’s road to becoming the only player to tee it up on all five editions of the ANWA was, as she says, not a straight line. After thinking in a straight line for so long – the steps of her golf career ascending naturally, almost inevitably, to the LPGA – life took a drastic turn.

Migliaccio decided not to pursue professional golf, just as 2017 NCAA champion Monica Vaughn had done a few years prior. Rachel Heck, the 2022 NCAA champion, recently announced her plans to forgo a professional career in a poignant essay.

“It’s crazy how much pressure people feel at this level to go pro,” said 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Jensen Castle.

When Castle won the Women’s Amateur, she had no thoughts of turning pro. But suddenly people were asking if she planned to finish the year.

“What do you mean am I going to finish the year?” Castle would say. “I’m going to finish the next three.”

While Castle, a fifth-year senior at Kentucky, does now plan to turn professional in May, she understands and respects why her Curtis Cup teammates have made other plans.

In fact, Castle believes that Heck’s essay detailing her decision will change lives.

“She’s inspiring a lot of other people to do other things,” said Castle.

Monica Vaughn and Janet Mao NCAA Golf
Monica Vaughn and Janet Mao

When Monica Vaughn Fisher withdrew from LPGA Q-School seven years ago, she became the first NCAA champion to forgo a professional career before it even started since the NCAA started crowning them in 1982.

Fisher worked as a college coach at Oregon before taking a job in fundraising and becoming a mom to son Cosmos. Growing up playing volleyball and basketball in high school, Vaughn loved being part of a team. Professional golf was never really the goal.

Heck, however, wanted to be the best in the world. That was the goal from an early age. But as the injuries piled on and she found other interests, Heck began to realize that she didn’t want the lifestyle of a professional golfer. She didn’t want to live on the road and in the public eye. She no longer dreamed of winning a U.S. Women’s Open and getting into the LPGA Hall of Fame. What’s more, she realized that those dreams were never what her dad had intended when he first put a club in her hand.

On Thursday at Champions Retreat, the tears flowed as a crushing finish down the stretch cost Heck one more Saturday round with dad at Augusta National. She took a few extra minutes to compose herself before meeting with the press.

“I mean, it’s not the way you want to see it end,” she said.

The golf isn’t over, of course. Heck still plans to compete in amateur golf and, as she does, she’ll be a reminder of another path.

“I think we always tried to be balanced,” said Heck’s father, Robert. “Sports in general and golf, in particular, are very fickle. Even when she was on top, we knew it could end at any point.”

The Hecks wanted to make sure that Rachel had other interests, and she found plenty. When she graduates from Stanford this spring, she’ll also be pinned as a Lieutenant of the United States Air Force.

In recent days, Heck’s peers have approached to say thank you for being a voice that says golf isn’t everything. Parents have reached out to say how helpful they found her words.

“All that has meant the world,” she said.

Emilia Migliaccio of the United States talks with her caddie on the second hole during the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National Golf Club on April 03, 2021 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

When Migliaccio’s not calling golf, she often finds herself talking to young players who want advice on weighing their options. Professional golf is a lonely road, and as Castle points out, a difficult one for those wanting to start a family.

Tour veteran Amy Olson once said she believed more people struggle on tour because of a lack of community and loneliness than a technical problem in their swing or putting stroke.

For many, there’s no doubt that money plays a big role. The majority of college players who decide to turn pro will spend their first few years on the Epson Tour spending more money than they make.

“They don’t want to put their parents in debt,” said FSU coach Amy Bond, “and they don’t want to be in debt.”

To see decorated players like Heck, Migliaccio and Vaughn walk away from the grind of professional golf gives players of all levels permission to ask tough questions of themselves and have perhaps even tougher conversations with family.

With so many of today’s young players specializing in the game so early, Bond also notes that it’s easy to see how their hearts and their bodies simply get tired.

“People are falling out of love with the game as they keep going,” she said.

2024 Augusta National Women's Amateur
Amanda Sambach of the United States prior to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Champions Retreat Golf Club, Monday, April 1, 2024. (Photo: Shanna Lockwood/Augusta National)

Virginia’s Amanda Sambach enters the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur three back of Lottie Woad. The former ACC champion said she can relate to Heck’s words.

“Obviously golf has brought me so far,” said Sambach in the lead-up to the ANWA.

“I mean, I love golf … but the thought of trying and traveling by myself for years and years and years without having your whole heart in the sport – the thought of it is scary to me.”

The 21-year-old junior isn’t sure how long she’ll give golf a try after she graduates, but she already knows that her family will support whatever decision she makes. If golf isn’t the future, she’d like to go into the medical field.

One thing is certain: There are options.

“You can still compete,”  said Migliaccio, “but it doesn’t have to be your whole life.”

Emilia Migliaccio to compete – and be a TV reporter – at U.S. Women’s Open

Migliaccio will work as an on-course reporter when she’s not competing at Pebble Beach.

The U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach is going to be historic.

It’s the first time the best women in the world will tackle the famed links on the Monterey Peninsula. It’s one of the most anticipated U.S. Women’s Opens in ever.

For Emilia Migliaccio, it will be extra busy.

The recent national champion at Wake Forest is teeing it up at Pebble Beach Golf Links, but she will also sport a headset when she’s not battling the course. Migliaccio will work as an on-course reporter covering featured groups during the streaming window when she’s not playing.

Featured groups will be shown live from 11:50 a.m. ET and 5:35 p.m. ET on Peacock, uswomensopen.com, the USGA mobile app, the USGA streaming app for smart TVs as well as DirecTV. Peacock will also have coverage 4-6 p.m. ET on Thursday and Friday.

Migliaccio is one of 28 amateurs teeing it up at Pebble Beach. This will be her third start at the U.S. Women’s Open. She missed the cut in her previous two attempts.

Wake Forest changed its practice, preparation and play style, and in return it won the first NCAA Women’s Golf Championship in school history

It’s the first title for the Wake Forest women’s golf team in program history. 

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Emilia Migliaccio thought her college golf playing days were over.

She played four years for the Wake Forest women’s team but earned her bachelor’s and had entered a two-year graduate program. She remained around the team and coach Kim Lewellen often.

One day, Migliaccio went to her coach and told her about a dream she had. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Migliaccio still had a year of eligibility she could use. 

That dream? To play college golf again. 

She told Lewellen, who remembers a different version of the story. Migliaccio was a teacher’s assistant, but Lewellen said she knew Migliaccio didn’t love it. She saw a moment of weakness in her player.

“I’ve got a spot for you if you want it.”

Migliaccio accepted. And now, she’s a national champion.

Wake Forest captured its first women’s golf national title in school history Wednesday at Grayhawk Golf Club, and Migliaccio put the first point on the board against USC. The Demon Deacons won 3-1 and dominated from the first hole. 

“I was craving the feeling to be nervous again on the first tee,” Migliaccio said. “That’s why I play college golf. That’s why I love it. That’s why I’m not turning professional because I realized this is what I love to do.”

Migliaccio, who get married in a month, has a centerpiece for her wedding table, something teammate Rachel Kuehn has planned for some time.

Migliaccio was in the first match off Wednesday afternoon, and she took a 1 up lead after the first hole and never turned back, beating Cindy Kou 4 and 2. 

During Wake Forest’s first tournament this season at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate, Lewellen said Migliaccio was like an extra coach on the course. However, she wasn’t the only experienced Demon Deacon on the roster.

There were also seniors Lauren Walsh and Kuehn, who earned the other two points to clinch the championship. Kuehn, in a star-powered matchup against USC’s Amari Avery, won 6 and 4. Walsh captured the title on the 16th green, beating Brianna Navarrosa with a 3-and-2 victory. 

“These three have played at extremely high levels,” Lewellen said. “They’ve played on Curtis Cups, they’ve played on Palmer Cups, they’ve played in (U.S. Women’s) Opens, they’ve played in U.S. Ams. 

“They’ve played at extremely high levels and extreme pressure and turned it into a positive. That’s what made this team so special.”

There was also maturity in the team. Wake Forest has had disappointing finishes the last couple years at Grayhawk. Last year, it didn’t make the 15-team cut after Sunday’s third round of stroke play. In 2019 at Blessings Golf Club, Lewellen and Migliaccio came up short in the championship match.

The Demon Deacons overhauled their schedule. They made an effort to get more familiar with playing desert golf. The elevation and temperature and conditions. They changed how they practiced. They changed their mindset. 

“We tailored our practices not to the next tournament but tailored them to what do we need to do to win the national championship,” Kuehn said. “To come back and get some revenge on this golf course and on the field was really nice.”

USC freshman Catherine Park, who finished runner-up in the individual competition, earned the Trojans’ lone point, a 3 and 1 win against Carolina Lopez-Chacarra.

However, that was the lone shining moment for USC. 

Not only did Migliaccio win her first hole, so did Walsh and Kuehn. By the seventh hole, Walsh was 5 up. At the turn, Kuehn was 3 up. Migliaccio birdied the 14th and 15th holes to take a commanding 3 up lead with three to play.

Migliaccio gave credit after the match to Mimi Rhodes, a junior who was pivotal to Wake forest’s success during the grueling six days in the desert. Rhodes was 2 up with two to play and a birdie putt on the 17th green when Walsh clinched the title on the 16th green. 

“I’m just so proud of her,” Migliaccio said of Rhodes. 

Wake Forest changed its mindset coming into the season. It was championship or bust. The Demon Deacons changed how they prepared, practiced and played. And it paid off. 

“The past two years, everything happens for a reason,” Kuehn said. “And if it took the last two years to get us where we are today, it was all worth it.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=]

2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur: Meet the three women who played their way into one of golf’s most-exclusive clubs

ANWA four-timers Rose Zhang, Emilia Migiliaccio and Erica Shepherd are ready to put on a Saturday show.

This year at the 2023 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, there’s a unique group that’s just as exclusive as the event’s namesake.

Meet the ANWA four-timers club.

Of the 72 players in the field for the biggest women’s amateur event on the golf schedule, three have competed in the three previous events: Emilia Migliaccio, Erica Shepherd and Rose Zhang.

“I didn’t really think about it until at the Founders Dinner, they announced it,” said Shepherd, a senior at Duke who is playing her final ANWA this week. “Me, Rose and Emilia, and putting my name up with those two incredible amateurs made me realize that that’s pretty dang good, so it means the world, and just to make the cut and be here and to have been a part of the first one and see how it’s evolved over the past few years has been awesome.”

ANWA: Q&A with Morgan Pressel | Saturday tee times

Shepherd is the only other two-time USGA champion in the field this week alongside Zhang and will have a special pairing for Saturday’s final round at Augusta National.

ANWA four-timers club results

Player 2022 2021 2019
Emilia Migliaccio MC 2 MC
Erica Shepherd MC T-16 T-23
Rose Zhang T-12 T-3 T-17

“I got paired from Emilia for tomorrow, and ever since junior golf she’s always — she’s two years older than me, so I always called her my mom in junior golf,” said Shepherd with a laugh. “So just to have someone like that that I’m super close to and get to play Augusta National with competitively, that’s just going to be — I can’t imagine how special it’s going to be.”

“I’m so excited to play tomorrow. Words can’t describe it,” added Migliaccio, a fifth year at Wake Forest who will continue her work for Golf Channel by helping to announce the Drive, Chip and Putt event on Sunday at Augusta National. “I’m just going to really try to — I hope it’s the longest round of my life so I can just treasure it as much as possible.”

Despite the highlight All-ACC pairing, all eyes on Saturday will be fixated on Zhang, the world No. 1 who enters the final round with a commanding five-shot lead.

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.

“That would be incredible. I still haven’t thought about that yet, despite everything that’s going on right now,” said Zhang of what the win would mean to her as one of the trio of four-timers. “But I’m super thankful for this opportunity. I’ll take whatever opportunity I can get to be able to have a chance and look at that trophy tomorrow.

“I’m really humbled to be at this level with so many great players, but the job is not done yet.”

Humble as always, which can’t be easy when you’ve won as much as Zhang has over the years. The star sophomore tied the program mark for wins in a career earlier this year and has five victories in six college starts for the Cardinal. This week, she set and then broke her own record for 18-hole tournament scores with a 6-under 66 on Wednesday and a 7-under 65 on Thursday at Champions Retreat, the host course for the first two rounds of the 54-hole event.

All three players take immense pride in their status at Augusta National and have seen how the annual spring event has grown year-to-year.

“Going forward I would just hope that everyone understands how awesome of an opportunity it is for us just to be able to have the chance to grow the game the way that we have been and just be able to give back to the game,” explained Shepherd. “It’s awesome, and just seeing all the little girls out here and inspiring them, I think it’s just going to go such a long way.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 category=451191880]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01f5k5vfbhv59szck1 image=]

Stanford women’s team wins battle of titans at Jackson T. Stephens Cup, easily topping Wake Forest

Stanford sent a strong message to the team that figures to be its biggest challenger for national supremacy.

In a much-anticipated showdown between the country’s top two women’s teams, Stanford sent a strong message to the team that figures to be its biggest challenger for national supremacy by soundly defeating Wake Forest, 4-1, at the second annual Jackson T. Stephens Cup.

Stanford freshman Megha Ganne fired a loud opening salvo at Seminole Golf Club with a 1-up victory over Wake Forest senior Rachel Kuehn, who claimed medalist honors in the stroke play competition with a 10-under score. Ganne was 3 up through 13 holes, but Kuehn flashed her All-America form by winning the next three holes to tie the match. Ganne made par to win No. 17 and both golfers birdied No. 18 to clinch Stanford’s first point of the day.

After dropping the first two holes of the day, junior Rachel Heck rallied for a 3 and 1 win over Wake Forest sophomore Carolina Lopez-Chacarra with wins on holes No. 12, No. 14 and No. 17.

In a battle of Curtis Cup teammates, Rose Zhang defeated Emilia Migliaccio, 3 and 2 to put the second point on the board for the Cardinal. After Migliaccio won the first hole, Zhang tied the match on No. 2 and never trailed again. The match was tied through eight, before Zhang’s win at No. 9 sent her to the back nine, 1 up. Zhang went 2 up at No. 10 and 3 up at No. 13, winning 3 and 2.

Brooke Seay never trailed in her match against Lauren Walsh. Seay took a 1 up lead at No. 9, went 2 up with a win at No. 10 and held on for the 1 up victory.

Mimi Rhodes defeated Sadie Englemann, 2 and 1 for Wake Forest’s lone point of the match.

The Cardinal returns to action next weekend (Oct. 21-23) for the Stanford Intercollegiate, hosted by Dr. Condoleezza Rice, at Stanford Golf Course.

For the full leaderboard from the Jackson T. Stephens Cup, click here to see the post from our partners at AmateurGolf.com.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

‘I feel more like a kid again’: Wake Forest’s Emilia Migliaccio enjoying last go-around at ANNIKA Intercollegiate

Emilia Migliaccio is back for her fifth year at Wake Forest.

LAKE ELMO, Minn. – Emilia Migliaccio didn’t go far when her round ended.

Her eyes peered behind her at the green and down the fairway, closely watching her teammates Carolina Lopez-Chacarra and Rachel Kuehn. Migliaccio was the first person to greet both as they walked off the par-5 18th green after wrapping up their first round at the 2022 ANNIKA Intercollegiate at Royal Golf Club outside of Minneapolis.

Last year at this time, Migliaccio wasn’t playing competitive golf. In the four years prior, she became a standout for the Wake Forest women’s golf team, claiming five individual titles and looking as if she was bound for a wonderful professional career. But last year, she stepped away from the game. She was in grad school at Wake Forest. But Migliaccio quickly realized she missed competitive golf.

So, using her fifth year because of COVID, she’s back with the Demon Deacons, and Monday was her first round back in team competition, firing a 2-over 74 that included a birdie on her final hole but also plenty of missed putts, leading her to the practice green near the clubhouse for a while as the sun set.

ANNIKA IntercollegiateScores

“I’ve been telling people going from the professional side, where you’re working, to going to be the athlete again where you can hang around and focus on golf and be all over the place, I feel more like a kid again,” Migliaccio said. “It’s kind of fun to feel that.

“Now, I just have to make some putts tomorrow.”

Migliaccio didn’t have first-tee jitters, saying it hasn’t felt like she took a year off. And she has played competitive golf in recent months, playing in the Curtis Cup in June and winning the North & South Women’s Amateur at Pinehurst No. 2 in July.

Yet the college team aspect is something she missed, and that’s why she wanted to be a part of the action well after her final putt dropped Monday.

“During the practice round, we felt like she hadn’t missed a beat,” Wake Forest coach Kim Lewellen said. “We didn’t even remember that she wasn’t involved last year. The maturity that she has and the maturity that she has gained being a year older and with her commentating, writing and all of that, she has even learned more about the game.

“Everything that she has experienced is like having a third coach. It’s something that you can’t replace.”

Migliaccio’s return comes at a good time for the Demon Deacons, who are one of the preseason favorites to win the NCAA title. They check in at No. 3 on the Golfweek preseason women’s golf rankings. Along with Migliaccio, who is on the ANNIKA Award preseason watch list for women’s college golf Player of the Year, teammates Kuehn and Lopez-Chacarra also share that honor. The trio are also preseason All-Americans. Lauren Walsh is also expected to make a big impact.

Wake Forest sits tied for sixth after the opening round, but there’s no worry from Migliaccio or her teammates. She knows the season is a long process, but she’s looking forward to everything that’s to come.

“It’s playing for something more than yourself,” Migliaccio said. “It’s not just about myself and my shot. If I’m sacrificing a shot, I’m sacrificing one for the whole team. I’m playing smarter because I’m thinking about my coaches and other players. I don’t feel like a coach or anything. Obviously, I want to win and I want our team to win, but it’s all about how can we keep getting better so when postseason comes, we’re at the peak of our game.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Emilia Migliaccio has been a ‘NARP’ for 12 months but ready to enjoy the best of both worlds in life

“I can’t wait to be a student-athlete again. I’m ready to do school and golf and not have to be grading papers too.”

ARDMORE, PA – Emilia Migliaccio has enjoyed being a NARP.

For those not in the know, that acronym stands for non-athletic regular person and for the past 12 months now, the winner of five collegiate golf titles has been doing yoga, re-reading the Harry Potter series and traveling with her fiancé in her spare time and grinding on her master’s thesis on the impact of self-talk on player performance and grading papers as a teacher’s assistant. In other words, being a 23-year-old Wake Forest University graduate student.

What she isn’t doing is what everyone expected from her – namely chasing trophies and riches as a professional golfer. But during this past year of exploration and self-discovery, she also came to an important realization – she still loved competitive golf and in June she’ll scratch that itch by competing in her second straight Curtis Cup when Team USA attempts to retain the trophy on home soil at Merion Golf Club.

“I love being part of a team, love college golf, love team events, so have a new appreciation of amateur golf on a whole new level,” she said during Curtis Cup media day. “I also learned that being part of the Curtis Cup exempts you into the U.S. Amateur for four years. I’m super-excited about that.”

Emilia Migliaccio talks with her mom/caddie on the second hole during the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur at Augusta National Golf Club on April 03, 2021 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Migliaccio, who lost in a playoff at the 2021 Augusta National Women’s Amateur and played in the event for a third straight time in April, has once again been designated the U.S. side’s “Team Mom,” a role she relishes. “It’s so sweet that they all call me that,” she said. “I do try to make sure everyone is included and cared for, and I’m really committed to making everyone feel welcome.”

That welcome extends to a return to the Wake Forest University women’s golf team for the 2022-23 season to take advantage of a fifth year of eligibility under the NCAA’s Covid waiver. (She has signed NIL deals with Bridgestone and Stitch Golf.) It’s further proof that Migliaccio, who is ranked No. 18 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, has found a way to enjoy the best of both worlds.

During her senior year, she experienced performance anxiety and did some soul-searching and decided that the dream of being a pro golfer that had consumed her since she was 13 wasn’t really the lifestyle for her. But while learning a new craft as a reporter and on-air talent for Golf Channel, working on her master’s in communications and spending time with family and recently becoming engaged, she rekindled her love for the game.

“I really love competing and those nervous jitters on the first tee. That was masked when I was stressed from playing all the time,” she explained. “By staying amateur I can still play in some tournaments and get the competitive feeling that I love. I don’t get that stimulation from anything else. Live TV is as close as it gets.”

She’ll get to do her fair share of that. She’ll cover the NCAAs and U.S. Women’s Open for Golf Channel, play in the North-South Women’s Amateur, the Curtis Cup and U.S. Women’s Amateur (and shift to a TV role if she doesn’t advance to match play). It’s her version of the best of both worlds – a normal life while still competing in elite-level amateur competitions.

Asked if she has any regrets about missing out on another ACC women’s title this season – she was part of a conference championship in 2019 for Wake – she smiled and shook her head from side to side.

“Now if they win Nationals this year, I’ll be like we have to win next year,” she said. “I can’t wait to be a student-athlete again. I’m ready to do school and golf and not have to be grading papers too.”

Those days of being a NARP were fun while they lasted.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Augusta National Women’s Amateur: Nine women comprise one of the most-exclusive clubs in Augusta

Experience goes a long way, especially at the ANWA.

Statistical milestones are common across sports and entertainment. Major League Baseball has its 3,000-hit club. The National Football League has the 500 club for passing yards in a game. Saturday Night Live has the five-timers club for hosts.

This year at the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur, there’s a unique group that’s just as exclusive as the event’s namesake. Meet the ANWA three-timers club.

Of the 72 players in the field for the biggest women’s amateur event on the golf schedule, nine have competed in the two previous events: Florida junior Annabell Fuller, last year’s runner-up Emilia Migliaccio, 17-year-old Alexa Pano, Duke junior Erica Shepherd, Oregon State senior Ellie Slama, UCLA junior Emma Spitz, Florida State senior Beatrice Wallin, as well as Stanford junior Angelina Ye and freshman Rose Zhang.

Shepherd, Spitz, Wallin and Zhang are the only players to make the cut in each of the previous two events.

Meet the field: Americans | Internationals
ANWA: Breaking down the new greens at Champions Retreat

“I guess I haven’t looked at it that way before, but it’s awesome, and any course knowledge you can bring into this place, it’s a really tough track, I think it will benefit me,” said Shepherd of her advantage as an ANWA three-timer. “This course, Champions Retreat, is a gem in itself. I think that with the new greens and everything, there’s a lot to account for. I’m just trying to still be a learner out here.”

At last year’s event, Shepherd was flirting with the cut line and thought to herself that she wasn’t going to advance to the weekend. But the Indiana native dug deep and fought back to qualify for the final round, where she improved on her T-23 finish in 2019 with a T-16 in 2021 after COVID-19 cancelled the tournament in 2020.

“It’s such a special event, don’t stress out too much about the golf and needing to make the cut because we all want to do that, I want to do that,” advised Migliaccio, who lost in a playoff to 2021 champion Tsubasa Kajitani. “But you’ll really play well if you just cherish everything about the tournament.”

Easier said than done.

“It is really hard. I think the key is to stay in the moment and not get too high or too low,” said Shepherd of the challenges to not look ahead to the potential trip down Magnolia Lane on Saturday, which could require a playoff to break any ties to determine the 30 who will play the final round at Augusta National. “Obviously, everyone is just grinding to get into the low 30. It’s a hard low 30, and 30 only. So it’s definitely a big goal for this week and for everyone here.”

“I really want to be in the same position I was last year, but if I want to be in that position, I can’t focus on that,” echoed the always-bubbly Migliaccio, who played with Shepherd and her fellow Blue Devil, Phoebe Brinker, during Tuesday’s practice round. “So just really trying to focus on each hole. I mean, Nelly Korda always says, ‘one shot at a time,’ and it’s so key because if you just get too ahead of yourself, even on one hole, like already thinking about where you want to be on the green, well, if you haven’t hit your tee shot, that’s going to determine how you’re going to play the next one.”

“But I think anyone who’s played the course before is going to have an advantage,” continued Migliaccio, “and I think that’s a pretty equal advantage. Like if you’ve played it before, played it two times, like it’s going to help.”

[vertical-gallery id=778258197]

Golf Channel to air first all-women’s regular-season college event with 2022 Darius Rucker Intercollegiate

Golf Channel is set to make some personal history with its coverage of women’s college golf in 2022.

Golf Channel is set to make some personal history with its coverage of women’s college golf in 2022.

The network will air its first all-women’s regular-season college tournament when the 2022 Darius Rucker Intercollegiate presented by PXG tees it up Feb. 28-March 2 at Long Cove Club in Hilton Head Island. South Carolina will host a handful of national-title contenders as a loaded field descends on the island: Alabama, Arizona State, Arkansas, Auburn, Baylor, Duke, Furman, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Louisville, North Carolina, Northwestern, Texas, Vanderbilt and Wake Forest.

Past individual champions of the event include Maria Fassi (2018, Arkansas), Emilia Migliaccio (2020, Wake Forest), and Cheyenne Knight (2016 and 2017, Alabama).

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Women’s team | Women’s individual

[listicle id=778073458]

Golf Channel’s men’s college coverage for the spring begins next week with the Southwestern Invitational at North Ranch Country Club in Westlake Village, California, Jan. 24-26. Defending men’s national champions Pepperdine play host to a loaded field that includes five top-25 teams: ASU, Georgia, San Diego State, San José State, SMU, Texas, UCLA, UNLV, USC, Wake Forest and Washington.

Migliaccio, who both played and broadcasted during last summer’s U.S. Women’s Amateur, will join Billy Ray Brown as an on-course reporter.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Recent Wake Forest grad Emilia Migliaccio takes next step with on-air debut at U.S. Girls’ Junior

In four years at Wake Forest, Emilia Migliaccio was a two-time All-American and won five tournaments.

CHEVY CHASE, Md. – Two months ago Emilia Migliaccio was competing for a national championship alongside her Wake Forest teammates at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona.

On Friday, she’ll make her on-course reporting debut for Golf Channel during the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds of the U.S. Girls’ Junior at Columbia Country Club in Maryland.

“I’m most excited for how everything’s live,” Migliaccio said while walking the hilly course just outside the nation’s capital during the Round of 64 on Wednesday. “I’m excited to challenge myself to commentate right away. You can’t really do much preparing so I’m excited to take my skills to the next level.

“I feel like I’m good at answering interview questions, but when it comes to commentating on a shot, I’ve done a lot of listening. I’ve watched a lot of golf, but it’ll be really interesting to just see how I do and I’m really excited for it.”

It came as a surprise to most who follow college golf when the Cary, North Carolina, native announced she wouldn’t be pursuing a professional career. Migliaccio was a two-time All-American and won five events in her four years at Wake Forest, including the 2019 ACC Championship. She was a gold medalist both as an individual and in the team event at the 2019 Pan American Games. This year Migliaccio became the only American to be selected to four Arnold Palmer Cup teams.

Instead of chasing the LPGA, she’s been covering the tour as an intern for Golf Channel.

“When I’m writing I feel a really strong connection to the players,” said Migliaccio, “even though they don’t necessarily know me.”

The 22-year-old is living out her dream, and working hard to do so. She’s going to grad school at Wake Forest and will be a teacher’s assistant, working 20 hours per week. On top of that, she’s going to intern in the athletic department, all while still writing for Golf Channel.

This time last year Migliaccio made a run to the quarterfinals of the U.S. Women’s Amateur, just up the road at Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Maryland. When the pressure was on, she delivered. With an infectious personality and impressive work ethic riding shotgun, expect that game to travel to the broadcast.

[vertical-gallery id=778115840]