See which four alternates were added to the U.S. Women’s Open field Monday

With four players having earned late exemptions, four spots opened for alternates at Lancaster Country Club.

The field of 156 is set for the 79th U.S. Women’s Open at Lancaster (Pa.) Country Club after four additional players earned full exemptions into the championship. As a result, four alternates were added to the field.

Gabriela Ruffels, Lauren Coughlin, Esther Henseleit and Rio Takeda earned exemptions based on the updated Rolex Rankings as of May 27. The USGA held eight spots in the field for those players who could potentially qualify by moving into the top 75.

Both Coughlin and Takeda will make their championship debuts May 30 to June 2. In April, Coughlin tied for third at the Chevron Championship, the season’s first major.

The four alternates added to the field include: Sarah Kemp, Agathe Laisne, Amelia Lewis and Stephanie Meadow.

Last week, No. 2-ranked Lilia Vu withdrew from the Women’s Open field. The two-time major winner has dealt with a back injury for most of the season and hasn’t competed since she withdrew from the Chevron before the first round.

Vu was replaced by Yealimi Noh, who shot 69-73 at Rainier Golf and Country Club in Seattle, Washington.

Gabriela Ruffels and Asterisk Talley, 15, qualify for 79th U.S. Women’s Open

This year’s championship will be held May 30-June 2 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Gabriela Ruffels and Asterisk Talley have qualified for the 79th U.S. Women’s Open at Lancaster Country Club. Ruffels, No. 83 in the Rolex Rankings, medaled with rounds of 70-66 to finish at 6 under at San Joaquin Country Club in Fresno, California.

This year’s championship will be held May 30-June 2 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Talley, one of America’s brightest up-and-coming junior stars, finished second with rounds of 68-69 to qualify for her first U.S. Women’s Open. The 15-year-old Talley recently won the Sage Valley Invitational and finished eighth at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Talley’s unique first name means “little star” in Greek.

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Ruffels, a rookie on the LPGA, will make her fifth Women’s Open appearance. The former U.S. Women’s Amateur champ tied for 13th at the 2020 USWO in Houston. Like World No. 1 Nelly Korda, Ruffels’ parents were elite professional tennis players. In fact, Ruffels was a prodigious tennis star in Australia until she abruptly quit the game and took up golf at age 14.

Former Fresno State player Harriet Lynch of England is the site’s first alternate.

Photos: LPGA’s Gabi Ruffels through the years

Gabi Ruffels played her first 18 holes in December of 2014. By April, she was down to a five handicap.

Gabi Ruffels played her first 18 holes with her dad’s clubs in December of 2014 after a career as a tennis phenom. By April, she was down to a five handicap. The Aussie native landed a scholarship to USC, her mother’s alma mater, won the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur and notched a pair of top-15 finishes in LPGA majors before turning pro in 2021.

Coming to the game so late means golf still feels fresh to Ruffels, who loves to play more than practice. All signs pointed to her being on the LPGA earlier than this, but on her way to play a practice round for 2022 LPGA Q-School, it dawned on Ruffels that she never signed up.

A paperwork error sent her back to the Epson Tour for the 2023 season, where she won three times and topped the money list. Ruffels handled the mistake with great grace and called it a big year of learning.

Ruffels relies heavily on her brother and pro golfer Ryan, often sending him questions about how to play certain shots or advice on course management. While mom caddied for her on the Epson Tour, she’s had veteran LPGA caddie John Killeen on the bag to start the 2024 season.

Here’s a look at the phenom through the years:

Former tennis phenom Gabriela Ruffels set to begin LPGA rookie season at Drive On

In golf, she found some peace.

BRADENTON, Florida – Gabriela Ruffels still has a player profile up on tennis.com.au. The daughter of two tennis pros, Ruffels was a top-three player in her age group, a national champion for 12 and under and a member of the national squad. Her heroes, according to the profile, were Kim Clijsters and Roger Federer.

To the shock of everyone, a burned-out Ruffels gave up tennis entirely at age 14.

“The national academy gave me a couple weeks to think about it,” said Ruffels, one of 15 LPGA rookies to begin their season at this week’s Drive On Championship in Bradenton, Florida.

“Everyone thought I would come back.”

That first day away from tennis, a bored Ruffels headed to the driving range to hit golf balls. Older brother Ryan had already left tennis for golf. The next day, Ruffels returned to the range and thought she’d play a few holes. If you’re going to do that, mother AnnaMaria told her, take a few lessons to enjoy it more. She’d taken 15-minute lessons growing up (splitting a session with Ryan), but never wanted to play.

Soon, AnnaMaria had her signed up for a nine-hole tournament.

“We got to the first tee and everybody was talking to each other,” AnnaMaria recalled. “She said, ‘Mom, this must be a really rinky dink tournament because everyone is socializing and talking on the tee.’ I said ‘No, that’s golf, Gabi.’ ”

She loved it.

Golf, it turns out, wasn’t as cutthroat as the tennis ranks. Ruffels, who homeschooled at the academy and mostly practiced with the same girl every day, was happy to escape the tennis bubble and enjoy a calmer sport. In golf, she found some peace.

In December of 2014, Ruffels played her first 18 holes with her dad’s clubs. By April, she was down to a five handicap. She landed a scholarship to USC, her mother’s alma mater, won the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur and notched a pair of top-15 finishes in LPGA majors before turning pro in 2021.

AnnaMaria (nee Fernandez), the National Collegiate Player of the Year in 1981, rose as high as 19th in the world during her professional tennis career. Husband, Ray, a three-time semifinalist at the Australian Open, partnered with Billie Jean King in mixed doubles in 1978, reaching the final at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.

They offer advice, but also appreciate their daughter’s natural instincts. A lot of people, AnnaMaria says, wouldn’t be brave enough to walk away from a sport after so much early success, noting that Andre Agassi wrote a book about it.

“We go back and discuss some of the tournaments we went to early on,” said AnnaMaria. “She’ll say ‘I remember as we were driving in, I just hated having to be there.’ ”

Mom and dad had no idea.

Coming to the game so late means golf still feels fresh to 23-year-old Ruffels, who loves to play more than practice. All signs pointed to her being on the LPGA earlier than this, but on her way to play a practice round for 2022 LPGA Q-School, it dawned on Ruffels that she never signed up. A paperwork error sent her back to the Epson Tour for the 2023 season, where she won three times and topped the money list. Ruffels handled the mistake with great grace and called it a big year of learning.

“I’m super proud I was able to have that year on the Epson Tour, to prove to myself that I can do it,” she said. “To be able to win on the LPGA, you kind of have to be able to climb the ladder a little bit.”

AnnaMaria believes her daughter needed that extra year because she started so much later than everybody else.

“So many little things you learn as juniors, even in tennis, your development as a junior really sets you up,” said AnnaMaria. “Well, she didn’t really have that.”

When Ruffels first turned professional, she says she tried to embody what she felt it meant to be a professional, and in doing so, listened to a lot of different people.

This past year, however, she focused on keeping things simple, returning to Craig Chapman, the swing coach she worked with in college. Chapman reminded Ruffels that she’s a feel player. They spent a lot of time focusing on shots from 100 yards and in to prepare for the next level.

Ruffels relies heavily on her brother Ryan, often sending him questions about how to play certain shots or advice on course management. While mom caddied for her on the Epson Tour, she’ll have veteran LPGA caddie John Killeen on the bag to start the season in Florida.

Grace Kim, a fellow Aussie who won last year as an LPGA rookie, reconnected with Ruffels on the Epson Tour and practiced with her at Isleworth Golf and Country Club in Windermere, Florida, during the off weeks. While Ruffels plays under the Australian flag, she was born in Orlando, Florida, and spends much of her time now with her parents in the California desert.

“I don’t think she has weakness,” said Kim. “She hits the ball straight and long and putts well. When she’s on fire, no one is stopping her.”

A dozen LPGA rookies to watch in 2024, including Gabriela Ruffels, a 13-time winner from Japan and the first Russian member

A U.S. player hasn’t won the Rookie of the Year Award since Paula Creamer in 2005.

This year’s rookie class of 26 players represents 12 countries, highlighting the global nature of the LPGA.

One of the most well-known rookies of the 2024 class is former U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Gabriela Ruffels, who many thought would be a veteran by now were it not for a paperwork error. The Aussie topped the Epson Tour’s money list to earn her card.

There are plenty of players who have won multiple titles on their home tours in this year’s class, including a teen from China.

The Class of 2024 includes only five Americans: Gurleen Kaur, Auston Kim, Kaitlin Milligan, Malia Nam and Gigi Still. A U.S. player hasn’t won the Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year Award since Paula Creamer in 2005.

Here are a dozen LPGA rookies to keep an eye on in 2023:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Gabriela Ruffels earns LPGA membership via Epson Tour’s Race for the Card

Ruffels has won three times this season and earned her card with seven events still to play.

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The path from the amateur ranks to professional golf can be a long, winding path filled with bumps and potholes to maneuver.

After switching from tennis to golf in 2015, Gabriela Ruffels had a stellar amateur career at the University of Southern California that included a win at the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur and runner-up showing the following year. As a rookie on the Epson Tour in 2022, the Aussie earned five top-10 finishes and ultimately finished five spots shy of an LPGA card. The 23-year-old then missed the deadline to register for LPGA Q-Series and returned to the Epson Tour for the 2023 season.

Nine months later and with seven tournaments to go on the season, Ruffels can officially call herself an LPGA member after earning the first of 10 available tour cards via the Epson Tour’s Race for the Card.

“I’m so excited to officially say that I will be on the LPGA Tour next year. It has been my goal since I turned pro at the start of 2021, and I’m so proud to have earned it through the Epson Tour,” said Ruffels via a release. “It means the world and is something that every little girl playing golf strives to do, so to be able to have status for next year and play in the tournaments that I grew up watching on TV is such a great feeling. I’m super excited for 2024.”

Ruffels earned her first professional win at the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Championship in March and then won the Garden City Charity Classic in May after tying the Epson Tour’s all-time 54-hole scoring record (-19). Her third win at last week’s Four Winds Invitational sealed the deal. She’s also made the cut in three LPGA events this season, including two majors at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship and U.S. Women’s Open.

“Gabi’s success this year is a testament to not only her world-class talent but also to her resilience, positive attitude and hard work.” said LPGA Commissioner Mollie Marcoux Samaan. “Gabi is ready to compete at the very highest level of the game and we look to seeing her shine on the LPGA next year.”

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Gabriela Ruffels, Jenny Shin, Annie Park and two Alabama teammates among those who qualified on Monday for historic U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach

“I love Pebble, it’s one of my favorite places, so being able to go this year is just amazing.”

Former U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Gabriela Ruffels will make her third U.S. Women’s Open appearance this summer at Pebble Beach Golf Links. Ruffels, 23, currently leads the Epson Tour money list after winning her second event of the season earlier this month in record fashion.

The former USC star finished at 7 under over 36 holes to top the qualifying field on Monday at The Vancouver Golf Club in Coquitlam, British Columbia. Ruffels tied for 13th at the 2020 USWO.

“I love USGA events, especially at Pebble it’s going to be really historic and unique,” Ruffels told Golf Canada. “I love Pebble, it’s one of my favorite places, so being able to go this year is just amazing.”

Lauren Kim, 17, of Surrey, British Columbia, finished at 5 under to take the second spot. Both Kim and Ruffels competed at the Women’s Open at Pine Needles last year. Kim heads to the University of Texas in the fall.

A number of LPGA players teed it up at the Echo Lake qualifier in Westfield, New Jersey. LPGA winners Jenny Shin and Annie Park qualified, as did Haeji Kang and rookie Natthakritta Vongtaveelap.

In Georgia, it was an Alabama sweep at Druid Hills Golf Club as amateurs Sarah Edwards and Benedetta Moresco qualified. Edwards, a senior from Jay, Florida, won the qualifier with rounds of 69-68. Italy’s Moresco finished one shot back.

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Gabriela Ruffels, now a two-time winner on the Epson Tour, never let failing to sign up for LPGA Q-Series keep her down

Now a two-time winner in six starts on the Epson Tour, Ruffels said: “I feel the job is not done.”

Gabriela Ruffels didn’t do much to celebrate her record-setting victory last week at the Garden City Charity Classic at Buffalo Dunes. The 23-year-old simply headed to Denver with her mom for an early flight back home to Palm Springs, California.

Now a two-time winner in six starts on the Epson Tour, Ruffels said it’s too early to celebrate: “I feel the job is not done.”

The job, of course, is securing an LPGA card, a goal that was deterred when the former U.S. Women’s Amateur champion forgot to sign up for Q-Series last year. Such a costly mistake could’ve led to a mental break, but Ruffels gave herself a couple of days to feel disappointed and then accepted that she’d be spending another full season on the qualifying tour and “used it as motivation.”

She also had a frank conversation with her team.

“Last year I came 15th on the Epson tour money list,” said Ruffels. “I didn’t kill it out there. … I need to get better.”

The top 10 players on the Epson Tour money list earn LPGA cards for the following season. Ruffels holds a sizable lead in the money race with $89,262. Natasha Andrea Oon sits in second at $54,627.

Ruffels said her game has improved this season but not by a wide margin. Good play, she notes, is a culmination of solid work, and she feels as though she’s building on that foundation every week.

Not to mention getting comfortable being in contention and learning how to win at the professional level.

“One of the most important things in golf and in sport,” she said.

Ruffels, a former elite tennis player turned hungry pro golfer, didn’t start playing golf seriously until age 15 and rocketed up the world amateur rankings while playing for USC. In her first Q-School appearance in 2021, she missed out on advancing to Q-Series by a single stroke.

Last week in Garden City, Kansas, Ruffels opened with a bogey-free 10-under 62 and set a new 36-hole tour record at 18-under 126, breaking the old mark by three shots.

Ruffels, who said she plays best when she’s aggressive, wound up tying the tour’s 54-hole record by week’s end at 19-under 197. She pulled from the experience she had winning the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic in March.

“Since I’ve played professional golf, I haven’t really been in that situation that much,” said Ruffels. “I never really had a lead. Being able to close it out with at two-shot lead in Phoenix, that gave me a huge confidence boost.”

Ruffels’ parents, Anna-Maria Fernandez and Ray Ruffels, were professional tennis players while older brother Ryan plays professional golf. Mom has been on Ruffels’ bag most weeks since last spring, and her presence on tour has especially helped outside the ropes. Professional life, Ruffels noted, can be a lonely road.

“This year I felt like I’ve listened to them more,” said Ruffels of her parents’ advice. “I’ve kind of matured in the sense that I guess I’m listening to them more and knowing they’ve been professionals and their experiences correlate with the sport I’m in.”

Several years ago, the Epson Tour got rid of the “battlefield promotion” route to the LPGA, which gave players a card midseason after earning three victories on the developmental tour. Because players weren’t getting many starts through the promotion, the tour felt it was somewhat of a false promise.

The only way Ruffels could play her way onto the tour in 2023 would be to win an LPGA event. She’ll tee it up in a U.S. Women’s Open qualifier in Vancouver next Monday, hoping to earn a spot at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

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Gabriela Ruffels sets new 36-hole Epson Tour scoring record at Garden City Charity Classic

Ruffels’ mark of 18 under is three shots better than any other golfer in Epson Tour history after the first two rounds.

No golfer in Epson Tour history has started a tournament better through 36 holes than Gabriela Ruffels.

The 23-year-old Australian sits at 18-under 126 after the second round of the Garden City Charity Classic at Buffalo Dunes in Garden City, Kansas. Ruffels’ mark of 18 under is three shots better than any other golfer in Epson Tour history after the first two rounds, and it’s the lowest gross score by one shot.

Five golfers in Epson Tour history have shot 15 under after 36 holes, the latest being Daniela Iacobelli in the 2021 Symetra Tour Championship at LPGA International. Sue Ginter-Brooker in 2002 shot 127 after two rounds at the 2002 Hewlett Packard Garden State Futures Summer Classic at Knob Hill Golf Club in Manalapan, New Jersey.

With the final round coming Sunday, Ruffels has a chance to top the 54-hole scoring record of 19 under, which Fernanda Lira accomplished at the 2021 FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship at Battle Creek Country Club in Battle Creek, Michigan.

Ruffels shot 10-under 62 in the opening round, and she followed that up with an 8-under 64 on Saturday. Her second round even included a bogey, but she also had seven birdies and an eagle.

This is Ruffels’ sixth Epson Tour start this season, which includes a victory at the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic.

After the early wave in Kansas, Ruffels held a 10-shot lead over a bevy of chasers sitting at 8 under.

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