Photos: Steph Curry welcomes Michelle Wie West, Collin Morikawa to Underrated Golf finale at TPC Harding Park

The event included 13 top boys and girls athletes from across the country competing at the San Francisco muni.

While Steph Curry has maintained his place at the top of the pro basketball hierarchy, he continues to forge a larger footprint on the game of golf as well.

Curry’s Underrated Golf concluded its first season this week, with the Curry Cup held at pristine TPC Harding Park, site of the 2020 PGA Championship.

The event included 13 top boys and girls athletes from across the country competing at the San Francisco municipal course, with Ashley Shaw and Roman Solomon crowned as the Underrated Tour champions. According to a release from the circuit — which had events in Chicago, Houston, Phoenix and Tampa before the final — the series is part of an “inspiring lifestyle program with a mission to empower underrated and underrepresented individuals all over the world.”

Curry, who was on hand with his father, Dell, and his brother, Seth, as well as Golden State Warriors teammate Andre Iguodala, has also brought to life the golf programs at Howard University, an NCAA Division I school in Washington, D.C.

“I’m so proud of all the players who competed in Underrated Golf’s first annual Curry Cup,” said Stephen Curry. “These boys and girls represent a new era in golf and the beginning of change on the course and across the sport. Experiencing it firsthand and meeting these talented athletes at a time when doors are opening for them in the industry was truly inspiring. I’m grateful to be part of that journey alongside everyone else who made the first iteration of this special program possible.”

Among the guests in attendance were Michelle Wie West and Collin Morikawa, who captured his first major at Harding Park and played collegiately at the nearby University of California-Berkeley.

Here’s a look at some images from the event:

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The Golfweek 2022 International Junior Invitational

The Golfweek Junior Tournament Series is now in its 23nd year. All events in the Series are nationally ranked by Golfweek/Sagarin and the Junior Golf Scoreboard. The Golfweek International Junior Invitational is the flagship event of the Series and …

The Golfweek Junior Tournament Series is now in its 23nd year. All events in the Series are nationally ranked by Golfweek/Sagarin and the Junior Golf Scoreboard. The Golfweek International Junior Invitational is the flagship event of the Series and annually attracts one of the top fields in junior golf. Entry is based solely on (1) invitation, (2) submitted and approved application, (3) finishing top 10 in qualifying Golfweek Junior Series tournament, (4) finishing in the top 5 in a state junior championship. Other potential entrants are encouraged to submit a playing resume for consideration by the tournament committee. 

Tiger Woods announces new TGR JR Invitational presented by TaylorMade, which will debut in October

The new event will debut in October and include qualifying rounds at The Hay, a TGR Design short course.

A new event is bound for the junior golf schedule this fall, and it’s one that players will have circled.

Tiger Woods announced the inaugural TGR JR Invitational presented by TaylorMade will debut October 8-10 at The Hay and The Links at Spanish Bay in Pebble Beach, California.

Sixty boy and girl junior golfers will compete over two days, with qualifying rounds on The Hay, a TGR Design short course. Championship matches will take place at The Links at Spanish Bay.

“I am excited to welcome a diverse field of young golfers to the TGR JR Invitational presented by TaylorMade,” Woods said via a release. “Hosting this event at The Hay at Pebble Beach is a perfect venue to showcase a fun and competitive atmosphere for a talented group of young golfers.”

You can apply now through August 21, 2022, at TGRJRInvitational.com.

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2022 Golfweek New England Junior Open – July 13-14

The 2022 Golfweek New England Junior Open returns to Ledgemont Country Club in Seekonk, Mass. July 13-14, 2022. Now in its 22st year the New England Junior Open draws one of the premier fields in junior amateur golf. Ledgemont Country Club is rated …

The 2022 Golfweek New England Junior Open returns to Ledgemont Country Club in Seekonk, Mass. July 13-14, 2022. Now in its 22st year the New England Junior Open draws one of the premier fields in junior amateur golf. Ledgemont Country Club is rated as one of the top-12 private courses in New England and is a favorite stop for elite junior amateurs from across the nation.

College golf signing day: Class of 2022 men’s and women’s signees

Check out the Class of 2022.

While the college golf season is winding down with fall fading to winter, the future of college golf takes center stage this week as the next wave of college golfers began signing their National Letters of Intent on Wednesday.

As junior golfers around the country put their commitments onto paper, Golfweek will be here to record all the signings as they come in.

To share a signing or a signing day photo with us, please email Adam Woodard at adwoodard@golfweek.com. To be listed below, it is important to include the player’s full name, hometown and state, college and photo credit (if applicable).

Men’s signings

Bryant

Aiden Azevedo, Haverhill, Massachusetts

Florida

Parker Bell
Toby Bishop
Will McGriff
Luke Poulter

Illinois State

Pietro Pontiggia, Bologna, Italy

Northwestern

Akshay Anand
Daniel Svard
Ethan Tseng

Oregon

Daniel Bullen, Auchterarder, Scotland

Texas Tech

Matthew Comegys, Van Alstyne, Texas

UNC-Greensboro

Branden “BJ” Boyce, Spring Lake, North Carolina

BJ Boyce
BJ Boyce. (Photo: Submitted)

Women’s signings

Arizona

Pimmada “Nena” Wongthanavimok, Thailand

Arizona State

Patience Rhodes
Grace Summerhays

Arkansas

Meghan Royal, Carlsbad, California
Reagan Zibilski, Springfield, Missouri

Auburn

Sophie Anand, Bahamas
Katie Cranston, Canada
Rachel Gourley, England

Florida State

Katherine Cook, Thomasville, Georgia
Lottie Woad, Surrey, England

Michigan State

Caroline McConnell, Bridgeville, Pennsylvania
Paula Balanzategui, San Sebastian, Spain

Omaha

Emily Karmazin, Omaha, Nebraksa

Stanford

Megha Ganne, Holmdel, New Jersey
Kelly Xu, Claremont, California

TCU

USC

Amari Avery
Catherine Park

Virginia

Ally Black, Austin, Texas

Wake Forest

Anne-Sterre den Dunnen, Netherlands

Washington

Carmen Lim, Auckland, New Zealand

Riley Lewis, Po En Huang take victories at rain-shortened Golfweek International Junior Invitational

Riley Lewis and Po En Huang took home medalist honors after a rain-shortened 18-hole shootout.

The 20th annual Golfweek International Junior Invitational was still able to crown two new champions, despite being shortened to just 18 holes thanks to a rained-out first round on Saturday.

There were 21 countries represented, and in the end, it was Riley Lewis of the United States and Po En Huang of Taiwan who took home medalist honors after the 18-hole shootout at Eagle Landing Golf Club in Orange Park, Florida.

Huang was paired with Maximillian Jelinek of the Czech Republic, who led the event for the majority of the day thanks in part to a trio of birdies to take a 2-under score to the halfway house. Huang bided his time and was just one shot back of Jelinek as the pair made the turn, alongside a handful of other competitors.

Po En Huang
Po En Huang poses with the trophy following his win at the Golfweek International Junior Invitational at Eagle Landing Golf Club. Photo by of Ron Gaines/Golfweek

It wasn’t until the duo got to the par-3 13th where the tide turned. Huang birdied while Jelinek bogeyed, forcing a two-shot swing.

With the roles reversed, Huang was able to hold off any further advances from the field with five pars to close out his round for a 2-under 70 and a one-shot victory.

On the girls’ side, Lewis was able to use her back-nine birdie barrage to finish with a 4-under 68 and a two-shot victory over McKenzie Mages.

One over through nine holes, Lewis turned on the afterburners with birdies on Nos. 10, 11, 12, 14, and 15 to gain the difference over the field.

“I played alright on the front side,” Lewis told Golfweek. “[I] knew I needed some more birdies for a top finish. Once I made birdies on [Nos.] 10, 11, and 12, I thought to myself ‘time for a comeback’.”

Pulling off just that, the 2022 Iowa commit found herself in the winner’s circle after an extended break from tournament golf.

With their wins, Lewis and Huang join a list of champions that include Nick Gabrelcik, Morgan Hoffmann, Stephanie Meadow, Annie Park, Bailey Tardy and Peter Uihlein.

Riley Lewis
Riley Lewis poses with the trophy after winning the 2021 Golfweek International Junior Invitational. Photo by of Ron Gaines/Golfweek

Past champions of the Golfweek International Junior Invitational

2001

Chanin Puntawong and Nicole Perrott

(Champions Gate, Orlando)

2003

Jon McLean and Tiffany Chuda

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2004

Peter Uihlein and Jenny Arseneault

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2005

Rafael Lee and Isabel Lendl

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2006

Morgan Hoffmann and Elisa Aoki

(Ocean Plantation, Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina)

2007

Julian Suri and Stephanie Kim

(Grand Cypress, Orlando)

2008

Josh Eure and Stephanie Meadow

(Longleaf, Pinehurst, North Carolina)

2009

Mike Miller and Stephanie Meadow

(Reunion Legacy, Orlando)

2010

Sam Chun and Doris Chen

(Reunion Independence, Orlando)

2011

James Yoon and Annie Park

(Shingle Creek, Orlando)

2012

Zachary Healy and Yueer Cindy Feng

(Celebration, Orlando)

2013

Luis Garza and Bailey Tardy

(Shingle Creek, Orlando)

2014

Marcos Montenegro and Ana Paula Valdes

(Champions Gate, Orlando)

2015

Robin Wang and Ya Chun Chang

(Lake Buena Vista and Tranquilo, Orlando)

2016

Jan Schneider and Chin Tzu Chen

(Disney Magnolia and Palm, Orlando)

2017

Jeremy Sisson and Chin Tzu Chen

(Innisbrook, Palm Harbor, Florida)

2018

Nick Gabrelcik and Meiyi Yan

(Mission Inn, Howey-in-the-Hills, Florida)

2019

Tony Chen and Jenny Kwok

(Champions Gate, Orlando)

2020

Alejandro Fierro and Toa Yokoyama

(Hammock Beach Conservatory and Ocean Courses, Palm Coast, Florida)

2021

Po En Huang and Riley Lewis

(Eagle Landing Golf Club, Orange Park, Florida)

AJGA Rolex Junior Players of the Year Megha Ganne, Nicholas Dunlap have wise words from the top level of junior golf

A couple of the nation’s top juniors have wise words about setting goals and cherishing the moment.

For the past few years, there’s been one particular end-of-season memory that has stuck with Megha Ganne. It’s the exclamation point on the AJGA competition calendar: the Rolex Tournament of Champions. The co-ed season ender includes a rite of passage for the top male and female junior players in the country. Each gets the floor at the season-ending banquet to give the player-of-the-year speech.

Ganne listened to Yealimi Noh, the now 20-year-old LPGA player with a Solheim Cup appearance under her belt, give it in 2018. Future Stanford teammates Rachel Heck (2017) and Rose Zhang did it (2019, 2020), too. Now the torch is passed to Ganne, who will duck stand-and-deliver duties this year because of lingering COVID-19 regulations forcing the banquet to remain virtual, but the point is the same.

“Honestly they’re all really moving to show how hard they worked over the years,” Ganne said of listening to those speeches.

The Rolex Player of the Year Award has a long, distinguished history of past champions, including Ariya Jutanugarn, Paula Creamer and Inbee Park on the women’s side and Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson on the men’s side.

“It’s the biggest honor you can get playing junior golf events and AJGAs,” Ganne said. “It’s a great goal to keep in mind through those winters and practice sessions and to be considered for the award and receive it, it’s the best feeling.”

Megha Ganne
Megha Ganne reacts to a putt on the sixth hole with her caddie Michael Finn during the third round at the 2021 U.S. Women’s Open at The Olympic Club in San Francisco, California, on Saturday, June 5, 2021. (Photo by Kathryn Riley/USGA)

Ganne, of Holmdel, New Jersey, ended 2021 with appearances on four national teams (the Met Golf Association’s Carey Cup, the Junior Ryder Cup, the Junior Solheim Cup, and as a non-playing alternate on the Curtis Cup), a feat unheard of for a 17-year-old. Then again, Ganne did a lot of things unheard of for a player her age over the past year. Contending at the U.S. Women’s Open in June, where she ultimately finished T-14 (and as the low amateur) is at the top of that list.

One thing still on the bucket list? Win an AJGA invitational – the series of tournaments that feature the organizations’ deepest fields.

“I’m very good at coming in top 3 but not quite winning them,” Ganne joked, referencing top-3 finishes at the AJGA Girls Championship, Rolex Tournament of Champions, and twice at the ANNIKA Invitational, “so I’d like to do that. Hopefully at (the Rolex Tournament of Champions) or maybe I’ll play another one early next year.”

For all Ganne accomplished in 2021, two learning curves stood out specifically. One was to cherish the parts of amateur and junior golf – like the team competitions – where she was able to cultivate friendships. It has her looking forward to a college career at Stanford that will begin in 2022.

The other? Don’t expect to play as well as you can every time you tee it up.

“It’s just really hard to play your best in every single event, even if you feel like you have to because it’s this event or that event,” she said. “You can’t expect yourself to bring your absolute A-game each time and that’s completely normal and something I have to get used to.  Because it can be really hard when you want to play well in a certain event and you don’t.”

Nicholas Dunlap knows that battle, too – though he came out on the right side of many of his big goals in 2021. Dunlap set out to win both the U.S. Junior Amateur and the Rolex Player of the Year Award, and he checked both boxes.

“It’s unreal to have my name on a trophy like that, on an award like that,” he said. “It never goes away and that feeling is never going to go away.”

Dunlap, of Huntsville, Alabama, spent a brief amount of time early in the year deciding whether he wanted to begin transitioning to more amateur events or continue to compete in junior events. Setting those specific goals helped convince him to keep teeing it up in junior ones. He felt he needed to learn to win at the first level before moving on to the next.

“I didn’t really feel like I accomplished what I wanted to in junior golf,” he said.

Each tournament week was preparation for winning the U.S. Junior, a grueling week of two rounds of stroke play followed by six rounds of match play if you’re going to cart off a trophy, as Dunlap did. Leading up to that event, he won the Dustin Johnson World Junior and the Polo Golf Association Junior Classic.

2021 U.S. Junior
Nicholas Dunlap and the trophy after winning during the final match at the 2021 U.S. Junior at The Country Club of North in Village of Pinehurst, N.C. on Saturday, July 24, 2021. (Chris Keane/USGA)

“Every time you win, it doesn’t matter if it’s the club championship or if it’s your little local tournament or if it’s one of the biggest tournaments in the world,” he said. “It helps your confidence because tournament golf is hard. It’s hard to compete and it’s hard to win. So any time something like that happens, it makes you feel good about yourself and gives you a little bit of confidence.”

It would be the ultimate boost of confidence to have his name on both the U.S. Junior and U.S. Amateur trophy at once. He’s already checked the first box, so why not check the second in 2022?

“I think it’s something that not many people can say they’ve done, I, fortunately, have the chance to do that.”

Wise words from the nation’s top juniors.

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Preview: Golfweek International Junior Invitational

The Golfweek International Junior Invitational is celebrating its 20th playing this week, and the history is piling up.

The Golfweek International Junior Invitational is celebrating its 20th playing this week, and the history is piling up.

Past champions have begun to chart college and professional careers – in fact, many are deep into those careers. Perhaps most notable are Peter Uihlein, Morgan Hoffman, Annie Park, Bailey Tardy and Stephanie Meadow.

Among the more recent champions of the event, typically played in the late fall near Orlando, Florida, is 2018 champion Nicholas Gabrelcik, who had a stellar breakout college season at the University of North Florida last year and won the Phil Mickelson Award as the top freshman in college golf.

This year’s Golfweek International Junior will be played at a new venue, Eagle Landing Golf Club in Orange Park, Florida. With neither Alejandro Fierro nor Toa Yokoyama, last year’s winners, in the field at Eagle Landing, a new winner is guaranteed.

Pairings and full field list can be found here.

Past champions of the Golfweek International Junior Invitational

2001 — Chanin Puntawong and Nicole Perrott

(Champions Gate, Orlando, Florida)

2003 — Jon McLean and Tiffany Chuda

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2004 — Peter Uihlein and Jenny Arseneault

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2005 — Rafael Lee and Isabel Lendl

(Sea Trail, Sunset Beach, North Carolina)

2006 — Morgan Hoffmann and Elisa Aoki

(Ocean Plantation, Ocean Isle Beach, North Carolina)

2007 — Julian Suri and Stephanie Kim

(Grand Cypress, Orlando, Florida)

2008 — Josh Eure and Stephanie Meadow

(Longleaf, Pinehurst, North Carolina)

2009 — Mike Miller and Stephanie Meadow

(Reunion Legacy, Orlando, Florida)

2010 — Sam Chun and Doris Chen

(Reunion Independence, Orlando, Florida)

2011 — James Yoon and Annie Park

(Shingle Creek, Orlando, Florida)

2012 — Zachary Healy and Yueer Cindy Feng

(Celebration, Orlando, Florida)

2013 — Luis Garza and Bailey Tardy

(Shingle Creek, Orlando, Florida)

2014 — Marcos Montenegro and Ana Paula Valdes

(Champions Gate, Orlando, Florida)

2015 — Robin Wang and Ya Chun Chang

(Lake Buena Vista and Tranquilo, Orlando, Florida)

2016 — Jan Schneider and Chin Tzu Chen

(Disney Magnolia and Palm, Orlando, Florida)

2017 — Jeremy Sisson and Chin Tzu Chen

(Innisbrook, Palm Harbor, Florida)

2018 — Nick Gabrelcik and Meiyi Yan

(Mission Inn, Howey-in-the-Hills, Florida)

2019 — Tony Chen and Jenny Kwok

(Champions Gate, Orlando, Florida)

2020 —Alejandro Fierro and Toa Yokoyama

(Hammock Beach Conservatory and Ocean Courses, Palm Coast, Florida)

 

Nicholas Dunlap, reigning U.S. Junior Amateur champion, collects AJGA Rolex Player of the Year honors

At the biggest junior events in 2021, Nicholas Dunlap was always a factor.

At the biggest junior events in 2021, Nicholas Dunlap was always a factor. Perhaps nothing demonstrates that better than the U.S. Junior Amateur trophy Dunlap carted off from the Country Club of North Carolina in July.

Now, Dunlap, who is verbally committed to play for Alabama, has been named the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year, which is the organization’s highest honor for a player.

While the U.S. Junior trophy might have scored him the biggest headlines – and also earned him a spot in the 2022 U.S. Open – the rest of Dunlap’s season was equally impressive. Early in the year, he won the Dustin Johnson World Junior and early in the summer, he won the Polo Golf Junior Classic at Liberty National. The latter, like the U.S. Junior, was a match-play event.

In AJGA competition, the high school senior played in 11 events recognized by the Rolex AJGA Rankings and finished outside the top five just twice. Even when Dunlap wasn’t winning, he was in the mix. He tied for second at the Wyndham Invitational, tied for fifth at the Western Junior and was runner-up in both the Boys Junior PGA Championship and Junior Players Championship late in the summer.

Dunlap, No. 1 in Golfweek’s Junior Rankings, and the rest of the 2021 Rolex Junior All-America Teams listed below will be honored virtually through a Rolex Junior All-America Awards celebration on Friday, Dec. 3 dubbed “The Greatest Night in Junior Golf.”

First Team

Luke Clanton of Miami Lakes, Florida
Nicholas Dunlap of Huntsville, Alabama
Maxwell Ford of Peachtree Corners, Georgia
Zach Heffernan of Boerne, Texas
J. Holland Humphries of Austin, Texas
Benjamin James of Milford, Connecticut
Jackson Koivun of San Jose, California
Eric Lee of Fullerton, California
Bryan Lee of Fairfax, Virginia
Jacob Sosa of Austin, Texas
Jase Summy of Keller, Texas
Caleb Surratt of Indian Trail, North Carolina

Second Team

Sihao Cong of Irvine, California
John Daly II of Dardanelle, Arkansas
Ethan Gao of Alpharetta, Georgia
Jonathan Griz of Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
Bryan Kim of Brookeville, Maryland
Bruce Murphy of Johns Creek, Georgia
Anawin Pikulthong of Gilbert, Arizona
Aaron Pounds of The Woodlands, Texas
Nicholas Prieto of Miami, Florida
Mason Snyder of Las Vegas, Nevada
Matthew Troutman of Louisville, Kentucky
Wells Williams of West Point, Mississippi

Honorable Mention

Kyle An of Aliso Viejo, California
Jonas Appel of Encinitas, California
Gavin Aurilia of Phoenix, Arizona
Carson Brewer of Jacksonville, Florida
Ryder Cowan of Edmond, Oklahoma
Matthew Doyle of Madison, Connecticut
Nicholas Gross of Downingtown, Pennsylvania
Will Hartman of Marvin, North Carolina
Scotty Kennon of Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida
Shawn Lalmoni of Orlando, Florida
Carter Loflin of Duluth, Georgia
Kyo Morishita of (Japan) Bradenton, Florida
Will Morlan of Alpharetta, Georgia
Sebastian Moss of Houston, Texas
Chase Nevins of Great Falls, Virginia
Calder Overfelt of Newport Beach, California
Alex Papayoanou of The Woodlands, Texas
Deven Patel of Johns Creek, Georgia
Solomon Petrie of Akron, Ohio
Sihan Sandhu of Pinehurst, North Carolina
William Sides of Tulsa, Oklahoma
Brendan Valdes of Orlando, Florida
Keaton Vo of Austin, Texas
Rylan Wotherspoon of Florence, Kentucky

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From contending at U.S. Women’s Open to top junior honors: Megha Ganne named AJGA Rolex Player of the Year

Every time Ganne teed it up in an American Junior Golf Association event in 2021, she contended. Now she’s the AJGA’s top player.

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Every time Megha Ganne teed it up in an American Junior Golf Association event in 2021, she contended. For those in the know, it came as no surprise that she also contended in one of women’s golf biggest events – the U.S. Women’s Open.

Ganne was hardly an unknown entering the year, having qualified for the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals four times and advanced to the semifinals at the 2018 U.S. Women’s Amateur. But she took her game to a new level this season, especially on the junior circuit. She played in five events recognized by the Rolex AJGA Rankings without ever finishing outside the top four and has been named the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year. It’s the junior golf association’s highest honor for players.

Ganne finished T3 at the Rolex Tournament of Champions and T3 at the ANNIKA Invitational early in the AJGA season. She won the Scott Robertson Memorial, a long-running junior golf event in Virginia, before making big headlines as the 17-year-old contending at the U.S. Women’s Open at Olympic Club.

Ultimately, Ganne finished T14 that week for low-amateur honors.

The back half of her year was a whirlwind of team events. She represented the U.S. as an alternate on the victorious Curtis Cup team and was a playing member of the Ping Junior Solheim Cup team and Junior Ryder Cup team.

Ganne, who is verbally committed to Stanford, ended the year ranked No. 1 in the Golfweek Junior Rankings and No. 22 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Ganne and the rest of the 2021 Rolex Junior All-America Teams listed below will be honored virtually through a Rolex Junior All-America Awards celebration on Friday, Dec. 3 dubbed “The Greatest Night in Junior Golf.”

First Team

Brooke Biermann of Wildwood, Missouri
Gianna Clemente of Warren, Ohio 
Anna Davis of Spring Valley, California
Megha Ganne of Holmdel, New Jersey 
Mackenzie Lee of North Little Rock, Arkansas
Michelle Liu of Vancouver, British Columbia
Alexa Pano of Lake Worth, Florida
Bailey Shoemaker of Dade City, Florida
Kendall Todd of Goodyear, Arizona 
Karen Tsuru of Carlsbad, California
Yana Wilson of Henderson, Nevada
Avery Zweig of McKinney, Texas

Second Team

Sara Im of Duluth, Georgia
Xin (Cindy) Kou of (China) Valencia, California
Jaclyn LaHa of Pleasanton, California
Erica Lee of Arcadia, California
Katie Li of Basking Ridge, New Jersey
Gloria Nip of (Hong Kong) Port St Lucie, Florida
Jacqueline Putrino of Lakewood Ranch, Florida
Kiara Romero of San Jose, California
Kaitlyn Schroeder of Jacksonville, Florida
Kelly Xu of Claremont, California
Lucy Yuan of San Diego, California
Yunxuan (Michelle) Zhang of (China) Plano, Texas

Honorable Mention

Kynadie Adams of Nashville, Tennessee
Vanessa Borovilos of Toronto, Ontario
Leigh Chien of Irvine, California
Kylee Choi of Murrieta, California
Kylie Chong of Torrance, California
Kary Hollenbaugh of New Albany, Ohio
Thienna Huynh of Lilburn, Georgia
Grace Kilcrease of Springdale, Arkansas
Lauren Kim of Surrey, British Columbia
Sophie Linder of Carthage, Tennessee
Angela (Yilin) Liu of Irvine, California
Bridget Ma of Orlando, Florida
McKenzie Mages of Marietta, Georgia
Ava Merrill of Johns Creek, Georgia
Julia Misemer of Overland Park, Kansan
Catherine Park of Irvine, California
Catherine Rao of Camarillo, California
Brooke Rivers of Brampton, Ontario
Alexia Siehl of Fort Mill, South Carolina
Suzie Tran of Poulsbo, Washington
Lily Zhang of Buffalo, New York
Angela Zhang of Bellevue, Washington
Sophie Zhang-Murphy of Saratoga, California
Alice Ziyi Zhao of (China) Irvine, California