Amy Alcott to captain United States Junior Solheim Cup team in 2023 at La Zagaleta in Spain

Alcott won 29 times on the LPGA and five majors.

Amy Alcott, the World Golf Hall of Fame member who has won 29 times on the LPGA and five major championships, is taking on a new role next year: captain.

Alcott will lead the United States Junior Solheim Cup team in 2023 at La Zagaleta in Spain, the American Junior Golf Association announced Tuesday.

“This is a wonderful honor,” Alcott said. “When I got the call from John Solheim, I was very flattered. I have always believed that junior golf is the lifeblood of the game. I grew up chipping and putting into soup cans in my front yard in Southern California and competed in junior tournaments from the age of 9 to 17.”

Modeled after the Solheim Cup, the Ping Junior Solheim Cup biennially features the 12 best female junior golfers (ages 12-18) from the United States against their counterparts from Europe. The team match play event includes foursomes, four-ball and singles matches and rotates between U.S. and European host sites coinciding with the Solheim Cup, next year happening from Sept. 18-19. The event includes both teams watching the final days of the Solheim Cup matches at Finca Cortesin, September 18-24, 2023.

The United States leads the all-time Ping Junior Solheim Cup Series, 7-3-1, and had won six consecutive matches before its loss in 2021. The US last won, 13-11, when the event was hosted in Scotland in 2019.

“We are very excited to have Amy Alcott as the 2023 Junior Solheim Cup US Team Captain,” John Solheim, Ping’s Chairman and CEO said.  “With Amy turning pro at age 18 and eventually going on to be a LPGA Tour Hall of Famer, she knows what it takes to be an incredibly successful golfer.  With her 29 LPGA Tour wins and five major titles, she will be a fantastic mentor and coach for the US Junior Team.”

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Europeans win first Junior Solheim Cup on U.S. soil, a move Team Europe will try to repeat this weekend

Could it be an omen for the marquee matches to come over the weekend?

In Solheim Cup history, the European Team has only won on U.S. soil one time – at Colorado Golf Club outside Denver in 2012. Now, the European Junior Solheim Cup team has matched that feat. Could it be an omen for the marquee matches at Inverness Club in Toledo, Ohio, to come over the weekend?

Europe won the mini matches against the U.S., played at nearby Sylvania Country Club—just a short drive from Inverness, where the main event begins on Saturday—based on a Thursday singles rally. It’s the first time the Europeans, captained by Annika Sorenstam this year, have won this event since 2007 and only the third time in 11 events.

The two sides entered the day with the U.S. leading 8-4. In the lead-off match, Germany’s Paula Schulz-Hanssen, the 2020 European Ladies Amateur winner, defeated Catherine Rao to set the tone. Anna Davis, the reigning Girls Junior PGA champion, picked up the next point in a lopsided 5-and-4 defeat of Andrea Revuelta.

Scores: Junior Solheim Cup

After the third match was split, Europe went on a run, winning the next six matches out. That set the tone for a 9-3 singles rout that left Europe with the victory by a 13-11 margin.

Denmark’s Amalie Leth-Nissen was in the anchor match against Megha Ganne, formerly the top-ranked player in Golfweek’s Junior Rankings and an alternate at last week’s Curtis Cup. When teammate Denisa Vodickova rolled in the clinching putt against Sara Im, Leth-Nissen heard the roars of “Vamos!” and knew it was her team who had gotten it done.

“Then I saw them come running down the 17th fairway and I was pretty sure that we won,” she said. “So it was amazing to see the girls be so happy, and also a big relief for myself.”

Leth-Nissen also relived a scene early week during which the whole team met Sorenstam. The Hall of Famer commanded much respect among the group.

“I remember we were at the putting green or we were eating lunch and she came in, and the whole room went silent,” Leth-Nissen said. “We were just looking, and I think we were all kind of star struck. Then she started to come around and talk to us.

“I remember we were looking at each other because she’s a legend. But she’s really cool, calm person, really down to earth. She makes you feel really comfortable.”

Schulz-Hanssen noted that Sorenstam was so hands-on in her captaincy that she asked the young German on the range that first day whether she could clean her clubs.

In putting the first singles point on the board, Schulz-Hanssen certainly felt the visiting crowd bring the noise even if they were a long way from home. Noise and energy could be key for the Europeans when the matches proper begin.

“I just think that being so far away from home, I didn’t know many of the girls, but still, I felt like they were like my team and my family, even though I didn’t know them because we were so far away and we were so Europeans actually out on the course because there were many American fans, but still, to know that the other girls are just giving it their best shot and like doing everything they can, it just made me feel pretty good,” Schulz-Hanssen said.

The juniors plan to remain at Inverness to cheer for the remainder of the weekend.

Leth-Nissen hopes the early-week victory inspired another European triumph for later this weekend.

“I hope it’s really a motivation for them to see that we also could do it,” she said. “There are going to be a lot more fans when they’re playing, but I think just, yeah, keep believing in themselves. I think they will do great.”

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Renee Powell set to lead Team USA at Junior Solheim Cup; Annika Sorenstam will captain Europe

Renee Powell is set to lead Team USA at the Junior Solheim Cup against Annika Sorenstam and Team Europe.

Two legends of the game will square off against each other as captains of next year’s Ping Junior Solheim Cup. Renee Powell will captain the 12-player U.S. team at Sylvania Country Club in Toledo, Ohio, the AJGA announced on Monday. The LET previously announced that Annika Sorenstam will lead the Europeans.

“I can’t wait to see the growth from when I first meet each player to when the last ball is picked up from the last hole in the PING Junior Solheim Cup,” Powell said. “I’m excited to be able to see the excitement on [the girls’] faces when they are doing what the love and representing the United States. I am proud that my state of Ohio is the host state for both the PING Junior Solheim Cup and the Solheim Cup.”

Powell, 74, learned the game at Clearview Golf Club in East Canton, Ohio, a course her father built with his own hands after he returned from World War II and found it difficult to find a place that would allow him to play.

Powell forged her own trail as well, captaining both the Ohio and Ohio State University golf teams. She fought through racial prejudice, even death threats, as the second Black player to compete on the LPGA.

After retiring from the tour, Powell continued to grow the game as an ambassador, traveling to Africa more than two dozen times.

She returned to Clearview to continue her father’s legacy, running the only golf course in America that was designed, constructed and owned by a Black man. Her focus as head professional places an emphasis on growing the game among veterans, women and juniors. She was the first woman of color elected to membership in the PGA of America and was later named the first At-Large Director of its Board. In 2002, she was named the PGA’s First Lady of Golf.

Earlier this year, Powell was awarded the Golf Writers Association of America’s Charlie Bartlett Award, given to a playing professional for their unselfish contributions for the betterment of society. Last month she received the Donald Ross Award from the American Society of Golf Course Architects.

In 2015, Powell was one of two American women bestowed honorary membership into the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews.

“We’re honored Renee has accepted our offer to captain the U.S. PING Junior Solheim Cup team in 2021,” said John A. Solheim, PING Chairman & CEO. “She’s a true pioneer in the game of golf whose accomplishments speak for themselves and contributions to the sport around the world are long and ever-lasting. Her support of girl’s golf throughout her hall-of-fame career makes her the perfect choice for the captain’s role.”

Previous American Junior Solheim Cup players who have gone on to compete in the main event include Brittany Lang, Paula Creamer, Alison Lee, Brittany Lincicome, Morgan Pressel, Angel Yin and Lexi Thompson. Those from Team Europe include Carlota Ciganda, Georgia Hall, Caroline Hedwall, Charley Hull, Caroline Masson, Azahara Munoz, Anna Nordqvist, Florentyna Parker, Emily Kristine Pedersen, Beatriz Recari and Melissa Reid.

Former U.S. Junior Solheim Cup captains:

2019: Mary Bea Porter-King

2017: Alice Miller

2015: JoAnne Carner

2013: Kathy Whitworth

2011: Meg Mallon

2009: Nancy Lopez

2007: Donna Andrews

2005: Colleen Walker

2003: Val Skinner

2002: Sherri Steinhauer

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