New twist for this year’s ANA Inspiration – no amateurs

In a new twist to this year’s ANA Inspiration, the first major championship of the year, no amateurs will be playing.

The field at the 50th anniversary of the ANA Inspiration certainly won’t feel like old times with one key component missing – the amateurs.

Last year, two amateurs finished in the top 15 at the Dinah Shore Tournament Course: Rose Zhang (T-11) and Gabriela Ruffels (T-15). Three more – Lei Ye, Emilia Migliaccio and Olivia Mehaffey – made the cut.

This year, only Zhang, the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, and Aline Krauter, who won the British Women’s Amateur, were invited to the year’s first major.

Both instead are confirmed to compete in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, held the same week as the ANA from March 31-April 3.

Zhang, 17, tied for 17th at the ANWA in 2019. The Stanford signee is currently No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Krauter, 21, a junior at Stanford, will make her debut at the ANWA this spring.

ANWA: Meet the field bound for Augusta
RUFFELS: USC star leaving school to turn pro

“The ANA Inspiration has a long history of celebrating the world’s top amateur competitors and providing them with the opportunity to compete in a major championship,” LPGA Chief Tour Operations Officer Heather Daly-Donofrio said in a statement provided to Golfweek.

“To broaden competition opportunities for LPGA Tour members as we continue to deal with COVID-19 and to ensure a manageable field size, the 2021 tournament has limited invitations to the reigning U.S. Women’s Amateur and British Women’s Amateur champions.”

When asked if the tournament would return to its tradition of inviting up to seven amateurs in the future, a tour official said they would continue to adjust moving forward as the pandemic requires.

Since the ANWA was first announced in 2018, there have been calls for the LPGA to move the ANA Inspiration’s dates to avoid having two heavy-hitting women’s events compete for coverage as well as forcing top-ranked amateurs to make a difficult decision.

Gabriela Ruffels plays a tee shot on the 18th hole during the second round of the ANA Inspiration on the Dinah Shore course at Mission Hills Country Club on September 11, 2020 in Rancho Mirage, California. On Wednesday, Ruffels announced that she’s turning pro. (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

The 2020 ANWA was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic and last year’s ANA, won by Mirim Lee, was held in September.

Zhang’s final score of 280 in blistering desert heat set a record for amateurs at the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills. Ruffels’ 281 matched the previous mark set by Caroline Keggi (1988) and Michelle Wie (2004).

Both Wie and Keggi hold the record for lowest finish by an amateur at the ANA, a tie for fourth.

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USC’s Gabriela Ruffels to turn pro; will make debut later this month on the LPGA

Ruffels’ lightning-fast ascension in the women’s game culminated in a 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur title and two top-15 finishes at LPGA majors.

Gabriela Ruffels announced on Instagram Feb. 10 that she will forgo her final semester at USC and make her pro debut at the Gainbridge LPGA event later this month. She has also signed a contract with Nike.

Ruffels’ lightning-fast ascension in the women’s game – the former tennis player didn’t take up golf until age 15 – culminated in a 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur title and two top-15 finishes at LPGA majors last season. She leaves the amateur game ranked fifth in the world.

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“USC has meant the world to me and has been the best decision I’ve ever made,” Ruffels said in a release. “The past three years at USC have helped me improve not only as a golfer, but as a person and I am forever grateful to my coaches, teammates, support staff and the whole Trojan family for all their support.

“As far as my decision to turn professional, it was a super difficult decision to make but I feel as though I am ready and I’m excited to take my game to the professional level. I have been presented with some opportunities and I’m looking forward to seeing how I far I can go with them. I will be rooting on the USC Women’s Golf team from wherever I am in the world. We have an awesome team filled with great players and I wish them the best of luck to go all the way this year.”

Earlier this week the Trojans competed for the first time in 11 months, crushing the field at the Lamkin San Diego Invitational by 24 strokes. Ruffels was not in the lineup.

“During Gabi’s time here she was able to improve over 700 spots in the WAGR (World Amateur Golf Rankings), which is an amazing accomplishment,” said third-year USC Head Coach Justin Silverstein, who caddied for Ruffels during both of her deep runs at the U.S. Amateur Championships as well as at this year’s U.S. Open. “We are incredibly pleased with the development she has made in our system and can’t wait to see how good she can get.”

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Ruffels won two tournaments in her three seasons at USC and helped the Trojans to 11 tournament wins, including the 2019 Pac-12 Championship, and helped lead USC to the 2018 NCAA Championships match play semifinals and the 2019 NCAA quarterfinals.

She lost to Rose Zhang in the final of the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur and competed in a second straight Palmer Cup last winter.

Ruffels’ T-15 at the ANA Inspiration last year earned her a spot in this year’s field. She lives 20 minutes away from Missions Hills in Indian Wells, California.

Even without Ruffels, the Trojan lineup still features four All-Americans in seniors Allisen Corpuz, Amelia Garvey and Alyaa Abdulghany and junior Malia Nam. Corpuz, Garvey and Abdulghany are all ranked among the top 35 amateurs in the world.

There are six Trojans in the field for the upcoming Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

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USC, Allisen Corpuz roll to victory in first event back without Gabi Ruffels

USC women’s golf and fifth-year senior Allisen Corpuz swept the Lamkin San Diego Invitational in their first event of the season.

What time off? USC returned from an 11-month break in competition and promptly walloped the field at the Lamkin San Diego Invitational by 24 strokes. Fifth-year senior Allisen Corpuz birdied the last two holes at The Farms Golf Club in Rancho Santa Fe, California, to take medalist honors.

“Allisen is the best iron player we’ve ever had statistically,” said head coach Justin Silverstein. “And she’s made a putting turnaround that we’ve never seen.”

USC finished at 16-over 880 and the Trojans’ wire-to-wire victory on Tuesday marks their third consecutive victory dating back to last season. UCLA and TCU tied for second at 40-over 904.

Lamkin San Diego Invitational: Leaderboard

All five Trojans finished inside the top 16, led by Corpuz’s 2-under 214 (71-69-74), marking her first 54-hole win. Junior Katherine Muzi, making her first career start, finished seventh while freshman Brianna Navarrosa tied for eighth and senior Alyaa Abdulghany tied for 10th. Senior Amelia Garvey rounded out the lineup with a tie for 16th.

Trojans’ winning lineup (courtesy USC)

It’s worth noting that the Trojans cruised to their first title of the season without Gabi Ruffels, the team’s most decorated player.

“Gabi is currently spending time at home in the desert with her family going over some opportunities that have recently presented themselves,” said Silverstein. “She has the full support of our team and our athletic department with whatever decision she makes about her future.”

The Augusta National Women’s Amateur released the field for the 2021 competition and Ruffels, the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, was the only top-20 player not in the field.

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Gabriela Ruffels on her late switch from tennis to golf, playing against the men and settling into LPGA majors

Golfweek caught up with USC senior Gabriela Ruffels to chat about her late switch from tennis to golf, playing against the men and more.

Gabriela Ruffels won’t be playing any college golf this fall in the Pac-12, but she is teeing it up in her second major in four weeks at the ANA Inspiration. The 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion and USC senior lives 20 minutes away from Missions Hills in Indian Wells, California, and is one of six amateurs in the field.

Ruffels, who lost a heart-breaking final match of this year’s Women’s Amateur to Rose Zhang in 38 holes, didn’t take up golf until age 15. Her parents, Ray Ruffels and Anna-Maria Fernandez, played tennis professionally, and Gabi was a top-ranked tennis player in Australia before switching to golf. Her older brother Ryan competes on the Korn Ferry Tour.

Golfweek recently caught up with the rising star to talk about her first time playing golf in the U.K. at the AIG Women’s British Open, teeing it up against the men and expectations heading into her local major. The following are excerpts from that conversation.

You shot 79-73 in tough conditions at Royal Troon playing alongside Catriona Matthew. Did you approach anything differently in that second round?

On the first day my caddie told me to knock down a 6-iron from 100 yards. I was like, wait, what? I’ve never had to hit this shot before. As I kept getting more used to it, and how the wind would affect the shot, I feel like the second day I was more prepared and more aware of what I had to do. I was just thinking if only I could make the cut, I feel like I had a grasp of what I had to do. But unfortunately, I missed it by one.

You made history playing against the men in the Jacksonville Amateur. What was that like?

I was just trying to play a tournament in preparation for the U.S. Am. My brother has a house in Orlando, so I thought that would be a really good event to test myself against the men. I kind of wanted to put myself in a pressure situation, like what I’d be feeling mentally at the U.S. Am the next week. It had a lot of media attention around it and I just wanted to see how I handled it. I thought I did pretty well, honestly. It was one of the toughest tournaments, besides the British Open that I’ve ever played in. It was so long and it was windy and the men were bombing it past me. I think it really primed my long iron shots and made me hit it a bit farther at the U.S. Am.

How does your approach to the game differ from your brother?

We’re very different people. Anyone who knows us knows that. When he practices, he’s a more technical player. He loves spending time on the range. It’s typical for him to spend maybe two to three hours on the range and then go play. I’m a very feel-based player. I don’t spend much time on the range. I’m not very technical whatsoever. I’m more reactionary than technical. I’d rather play 36 holes in a day.

Rose Zhang watching her tee shot at the 18th as Gabriela Ruffels walks behind her during the final round at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Md. on Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020. (Photo: Chris Keane/USGA)

Your college coach, Justin Silverstein, said that you use tennis lingo to break down your golf swing. How does that help you feel what you’re trying to do?

When I‘m trying to draw the ball around a tree, I‘m just thinking forehand in tennis and that really, really helps me. If I’m trying to fade it, I’m thinking about a slice forehand. I’m pretty reactionary because in tennis I like to see the shape of the shot and everything. I definitely speak in tennis terms a lot.

What ultimately made you stop playing tennis?

I’d been playing for about six to eight years before I stopped. I started homeschooling when I was 13 or 14 and everything was about tennis. We’d get there in the morning around 8 a.m., spend two hours in the gym, play two or three hours, have lunch, go back and play, go back to the gym. The whole day was just tennis, tennis, tennis. I got burnt out from the sport for sure.

I didn’t like the competitive aspect of it, how you’re always playing one-on-one. It’s almost like they’re your rival out there. You’re playing directly against them. What I found in golf was that you can be friends with your playing competitor, even if it’s match play. At the U.S. Am, Rose and I were talking. Last year against Albane (Valenzuela) in the final we were talking and became good friends after. That’s what I like.

How will you then safeguard from being burnt out in this game?

From the very start my mom says I enjoy this game so much more. Even in tennis I didn’t want to go practice, now I’m going on my own. I just love it. I love going to play in tournaments. I always tell Justin I want to sign up for any tournament can. I don’t care what it is, I love playing tournaments, and that wasn’t the case in tennis.

What is that you’ve learned about the game in the past two years that has taken you to the next level?

When I first came to college I was ranked like No. 800 in the world or something. Being at USC has helped me so much, especially with the caliber of players I’ve been able to play with. When I got there, I was playing with Allisen Corpuz and Jennifer Chang. All these people that really made me have to elevate my game just to qualify for the team. And when I did qualify, I was playing against Andrea (Lee) and Albane (Valenzuela) and Patty (Tavatanakit) week in and week out. These are the best in the world, and I get to compete alongside of them each week. I feel like that really motivated me to work harder.

How tough was it to battle the expectations after winning the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur?

It was pretty hard at the start. Going back to college and seeing the preseason rankings and apparently, I was like 1 or 2 – woah! I’d had a pretty good summer because I’d won the North and South too. I kind of thought I was different because I had won these, but I’m not. It was a great lesson learned in how to deal with the pressure and expectation of having good results.

What are your goals at the ANA?

I feel like each professional tournament I play I get a little bit better. I played the U.S. Open last year and I was kind of starstruck. At the British, I felt more comfortable in that field and around those players. … Seeing Ariya Jutanugarn (at the U.S. Women’s Open), I just watch these people on TV all the time. I thought I had to change my game almost to fit in with them. Like I had to play out of my skin to be able to compete with them. I learned I don’t really have to. I earned my spot there; I’m there for a reason.

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U.S. Women’s Amateur: Defending champ Gabriela Ruffels to face junior star Rose Zhang in 36-hole final

Defending champion Gabriela Ruffels to face one of the nation’s best juniors Rose Zhang in 36-hole U.S. Women’s Amateur final.

ROCKVILLE, Md. – In the world of amateur golf, Gabriela Ruffels is in a class of her own, and she proved it once again on Saturday afternoon.

Ruffels advanced to the finals of the 120th U.S. Women’s Amateur, defeating the championship’s most-consistent player of the week, Michigan State’s rising star Valery Plata, 2 and 1. Entering their semifinal match, Plata, last season’s Big Ten golfer of the year, had led for 51 holes and trailed for just four.

“Every player at this point is going to be good. I knew that coming into the match and expected it, and she played great today,” said Ruffels of Plata, who was 1 over through 17 holes with the usual match-play concessions. “It was a great match again. Nothing is easy out here.”

Plata held a brief 1 up lead on the front nine, but like the rest of the week, the back nine was all Ruffels at Woodmont Country Club just outside the nation’s capital.


U.S. Women’s Amateur: Scores | Gallery


The Australia native took a 1 up lead on the 8th hole and never looked back, shooting 1 under over 17 holes. Her game wasn’t nearly as good in the semifinal match as it has been all week, but it was still good enough to avoid the 18th green.

“To win these long tournaments, you’re not going to have your best all the time,” said Ruffels. “I think my irons held up, and my putting definitely at the start was pretty good. I think we both shot about even or 1-under, and on this course it’s so tough out there. Such a tough course.”

The USC senior has a chance to be the fifth player since World War II to defend at the U.S. Women’s Amateur, where she would join the likes of Danielle Kang (2010-11), Kelli Kuehne (1995-96), Kay Cockerill (1986-87) and Juli Inkster (1980, 1981, 1982).

Much like last year at Old Waverly Golf Club, a Stanford Cardinal is standing in her way. Sort of.

Ruffels defeated Albane Valenzuela 1 up in last year’s final and will take on 2021 Stanford commit Rose Zhang in Sunday’s 36-hole final. Zhang, one of the world’s top junior golfers, defeated Ruffels’ USC teammate Alyaa Abdulghany, 2 and 1, shutting down the possibility of an all-Trojan final match.

“Kind of reminiscing from last year’s final, playing another Stanford girl,” said Ruffels of Sunday’s final. “Obviously she’s playing really good, and my teammate told me today how good she played. I think it’s going to be a great match. Can’t wait to get out there.”

The always-smiling Abdulghany was 2 under over 17 holes, a great score at Woodmont, not to mention this late in the week. But early mistakes had the Newport Beach, California, native playing from behind on the first green. Zhang was impressive yet again, shooting 4 under over 17 holes. The two together would have been 8 under in a better-ball match (once again, with normal match-play concessions).

“To be honest I feel like it’s less pressure because I’m super satisfied with how far I’ve come since U.S. Women’s Amateur is such a prestigious event,” said Zhang. “Making it this far makes me feel accomplished as a golfer, so it made me feel assured that I can just keep playing my game and just keep striving to try to make birdies against my opponent.”

And why should she feel pressure? Zhang’s amateur career has featured appearances in a couple LPGA events, as well as a T-55 finish at last year’s U.S. Women’s Open. The 17-year-old now has the chance to put her name on the Robert Cox Trophy alongside some of women’s golf’s best, including Ruffels.

“Yeah, it’s honestly surreal because I actually watched her last year win this Women’s Amateur, and it just makes me feel so honored to play with her since she’s such an amazing player and an amazing person,” said Zhang. “I’m just going to go out there and have fun tomorrow and try my best.

Like Ruffels, Zhang was a tennis player early in her life. Her foray into golf was an unusual one.

“I was a very athletic kid where I liked to play a lot of sports, so my dad’s friend actually forced my dad to play golf by buying him shoes, golf balls on the range, clubs, etc., and my dad is like, ‘okay, fine, I’ll play with you,’” explained Zhang.

So, she picked up a club and started to swing. After making contact on her second try, she thought, “great, maybe I should try it out … So right off the bat I started practicing extremely hard, working on my game, and that’s how I got to today.”

She knew she had a future in the game when after a month or so, she went to a course and played with three boys who had been playing for a few years.

“So my coach decided to take me with them, and I beat them by like four strokes, and I shot 7 over,” said Zhang. “That was when I was like, ‘oh, this is fun, maybe try again.’”

She then won the first tournament she ever played. On Sunday, she’ll have the chance to win the biggest tournament of her life.

How to watch

Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m. ET

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Gabriela Ruffels-Emilia Migliaccio quarterfinal match lives up to billing

The star-studded quarterfinal match of Gabriela Ruffels-Emilia Migliaccio lived up to its billing on Saturday at the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

ROCKVILLE, Md. — In every match play event there’s always one match on the bracket that arrives too soon in the competition.

At this year’s U.S. Women’s Amateur, it was the quarterfinal match between defending champion Gabriela Ruffels and Wake Forest’s Emilia Migliaccio.

The match had the feel and intensity of a final. Migliaccio, known for her match play prowess in the amateur golf world, was the better player on the front nine, holding a 2-up lead through the 8th hole.

Walking to the 9th tee, a testy 396-yard par-4, Migliaccio was entering Ruffel’s world. Woodmont Country Club should name the hole “Gabi” after what the USC senior has been able to accomplish this week. In all four matches, she’s won the 9th with a par (and made par in both stroke-play rounds, as well). Ruffels has trailed in all four match play rounds standing on the 9th tee and has gone on to win every match by cruising through the more-difficult back nine.


U.S. Women’s Amateur: Scores | Gallery


On Saturday morning Ruffels also won the 10th to tie the match, then went 1 down again on No. 15 after a clutch birdie from Migliaccio. Ruffels flagged her tee shot on the par-3 16th, making birdie to tie the match once again.

On the 18th green, Migliaccio almost produced some late heroics for the second day in a row. In Friday’s Round of 16 match, she made a 15-plus footer for birdie to force a playoff. On Saturday morning, from around 35 feet, her putt caught the lip and just missed.

Ruffels flagged her approach to around 10 feet, and in true champion fashion put the match to bed with a birdie. She now faces Michigan State’s Valery Plata in this afternoon’s semifinals, last season’s B1G Ten golfer of the year and this week’s most consistent player. In match play, Plata has led for 51 holes. She’s trailed for just four holes, all on the front nine of her quarterfinal win Saturday morning.

There’s a potential all-Trojan final on hand with Alyaa Abdulghany on the other side of the bracket squaring off against 2021 Stanford commit and the world’s No. 9-ranked amateur Rose Zhang.

The semifinals begin at 12:45 p.m. ET, with live coverage on Golf Channel from 1-4 p.m. ET.

Gabi Ruffels, reigning U.S. Women’s Am champ, relishes the challenge of playing the Jacksonville Amateur

Gabi Ruffels became the first female to enter the Jacksonville Amateur in its 59-year history.

Katie Mitchell tried to talk Gabi Ruffels out of it.

Ruffels, a University of Southern California sophomore, stood on the 18th tee of the Spanish Trail Country Club in Las Vegas last February during the final round of the Rebel Beach Showdown. Ruffels had a one-shot lead and faced a closing par 5 with water on the left and a huge fairway bunker on the right.

“She had a chance to win her first college event and I tried to get her to back off, to lay up,” said Mitchell, a USC assistant coach and a Fernandina Beach High School graduate. “But she wanted to hit driver off the tee and give herself the best chance to get there in two [shots]. She wanted to go for the kill shot.”

Ruffels birdied the hole and won by two.

“She was fully confident in hitting that shot,” Mitchell said. “She is never scared on the golf course. She takes dead aim.”

It’s that kind of confidence that has been behind Ruffels’ meteoric rise up the women’s college and amateur ranks in the five years since she took up golf at the age of 14, after admittedly getting burned out in junior tennis in her hometown of Sandringham, in Victoria, Australia.

In the past 14 months, Ruffels has earned second-team All-American and first-team All-Pac 12 honors, won the women’s U.S. Amateur and the North and South, climbing to 11th on the World Amateur Rankings.

And it’s the kind of confidence that led her to enter the Jacksonville Amateur July 23-25 at the Jacksonville Beach Golf Club. Ruffels became the first female to enter the tournament in its 59-year history (two area players, Hannah Stevens and Tori Mouton, have since entered) but she doesn’t view it as any kind of symbolism or herself as any kind of a pioneer.

After all, it’s been 12 years since Michelle Wie last played in a PGA Tour event and 17 years since Annika Sorenstam became the first woman to play on the PGA Tour, at the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth.

“In this day and age, with so much changing, maybe it should be more normal for women to play in tournaments that were all men,” Ruffels said. “Girls are hitting the ball farther and I think we’re under-estimated sometimes, especially in golf. We’ll see. I’m excited to go play there.”

Jacksonville fit her schedule

The main reason Ruffels is playing in Jacksonville next week is simple: many women’s amateur tournaments leading up to the U.S. Amateur Aug. 3-9 at the Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Maryland, have either been canceled or moved to later in the year because of the coronavirus pandemic.

When Ruffels and her mother were looking for possibilities in Florida (her brother Ryan, a member of the Korn Ferry Tour, lives in Orlando), they came across the Jacksonville Amateur.

They inquired about playing and Jacksonville Area Golf Association officials were only too happy to have a defending U.S. Amateur champion in the field.

“It is clearly an honor to have the reigning U.S. Women’s Amateur titleholder come to Jacksonville and compete in one of North Florida’s oldest and most valued championships,” JAGA said in a statement after her entry was accepted.

Ruffels, a plus-2.5 handicap, already has extensive and recreational experience in playing with men. She frequently tees it up with her brother and his friends, and with members of the USC men’s team.

Ruffels, Stevens and Mouton will play the same tees as the men at Jacksonville Beach (the back tees can stretch up to 6,700 yards) and Mitchell said she likes Ruffels’ chances of being competitive.

“She plays a ton of golf with our men’s team and her brother and she’s very comfortable playing side-by-side with men,” said Mitchell, a two-time winner of the First Coast Women’s Amateur. “She hits it a long way, hits her irons well and loves firm and fast courses. She won’t be intimidated at all.”

Ruffels family had a tennis background

Just a few years ago, golf wasn’t even on Ruffels’ radar.

She seemed headed for a tennis career, which would certainly have kept it all in the family. Her mother is Anna Maria Fernandez, who led USC to two women’s national championships and won the AIAW individual title in 1981 before going on to win five WTA doubles titles; and her father is Ray Ruffels, who reached the semifinals three times in the Australian Open in the 1960s and 1970s, won the 1977 Australian Open in doubles.

He later became a prominent coach and helped the doubles team of Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde — “The Woodies” — win the gold medal in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Gabi Ruffels showed promise in tennis, until at the age of 14 she abruptly quit, saying simply that she got “burned out.”

“I had enough,” she said. “It’s not that I switched tennis for golf. I gave up tennis and then didn’t do much for awhile.”

Her mother said she and her husband never forced tennis on their children and understood Gabi’s feelings.

“It wasn’t difficult at all for us when she made that decision,” Anna Maria Ruffels said. “There was never a doubt. Ray and I never wanted them to do anything that they didn’t get up in the morning and go out and enjoy.”

But a few months later, Ruffels was restless for something to do – and something where she could be competitive. She asked her mother one day if they could go hit some golf balls, the first time she had ever made that request.

“The next day, she asked if we could go hit some more balls,” Anna Maria Ruffels said. “The next day, she wanted to play a few holes. At that point, I told her if she wanted to pursue it, she might want to take some lessons.”

Gabi Ruffels began working with former Australian Tour member Andrew Pitt at the Yarra Bend Golf Course outside Melbourne, Australia. She then played in her first junior tournament and turned to her mother and said, “Wow … that was fun.”

Anna Maria Ruffels quickly realized one of the reasons why her daughter turned to golf.

“She was amazed about how social the players were,” she said. “She told me, ‘everyone talks to each other … they’re so social.’ I told her, ‘well, that’s golf.’ She enjoyed the competition in golf. I don’t know how much she enjoyed the competition in tennis.”

USC coach takes ‘big risk’

Within 18 months Gabi had a scratch handicap and was playing as many tournaments as she could.

“I love playing,” she said. “I’d much rather play 36 holes than practice for two or three hours.”

By the time Ruffels reached college age, she had represented Australia at the 2017 World Junior Girls Championships, was third at the 2017 FGC Junior International, qualified for the Australian Amateur Match Play and the Australian Amateur and was on the Victoria women’s and junior state teams.

That attracted the attention of former USC women’s coach Andrea Gaston, who was friends with Anna Maria Ruffels. USC lost three players to the LPGA after the 2017 season and even though Gabi Ruffels had done well in Australia, she still had not climbed out of the top-800 on the world amateur rankings.

Gaston offered her a partial scholarship. In two years with the Trojans, she has 10 top-20 and seven top-10 finishes.

“I had always wanted to go to USC and coach Gaston took a risk on me,” she said. “I was still ranked somewhere lower than No. 800 when I started college and that’s where I’ve really progressed. I owe her a lot for her belief in me.”

Ruffels takes off in the summer of ’19

Last summer, Ruffels dominated women’s amateur golf with her victories in the U.S. Amateur at Old Waverly in West Point, Mississippi, and the North and South. She went a combined 11-0 in match play in those tournaments, and defeated Stanford’s Albane Valenzuela 1-up in the U.S. Amateur championship match with three birdies in her last four holes to become the first Australian to win the title.

Ruffels made a 10-footer for birdie on the 36th hole to clinch the title in her first trip to the U.S. Amateur.

“I was just excited to be there,” she said. “I was a qualifier, not an exempt player but I did have some confidence by winning the North and South. I knew I could compete against the best in the world.”

Now she will compete against the best men on the First Coast, a list headed by defending champion and former University of North Florida star Jordan Batchelor, other UNF players Michael Mattiace, Jack Comstock and Cody Carroll, past Jacksonville Amateur champions David Anthony and Duke Butler IV, and past Underwood Cup team members Jeff Golden, Chris Henderson, Devon Hopkins, Matt Kleinrock, John Lobb, Toby Ragland and Michael Smith.

Ruffels will be ready, Mitchell said.

“It’s so refreshing to watch her play sometimes because she hasn’t played golf that long and she still goes at it like a little kid, in a childish frame of mind … but in a good way,” Mitchell said. “She doesn’t think about the pressure because she’s having too much fun.”

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