Lauren Stephenson, 27, returns to the LPGA with a renewed mind after one-year stint on the Epson Tour

On the Epson Tour, she was reminded that she plays golf because she loves the game, at any level.

Lauren Stephenson tied for eighth at the inaugural LPGA Q-Series in 2018 and began her professional career alongside the best in the world. That’s what made going down to the Epson Tour for the first time in 2024 a “terrifying” prospect.

“Almost makes you feel like a failure when you’ve started at the top,” she said.

What Stephenson found on the developmental circuit, however, was refreshing. She knew a lot of people but met new faces as well and found the tour quite welcoming.

“Epson is kind of more of a family environment,” said Stephenson. “Everyone knows they need each other to get through the season.

“The people are what make it fun.”

Lauren Stephenson celebrates earning her 2025 LPGA card. (Epson Tour photo)

Success is also fun, and Stephenson enjoyed a lot of that on Epson, clinching her first professional title at the Twin Bridges Championship along with eight additional top-10 finishes to win Epson Tour Player of the Year honors.

On the Epson Tour, Stephenson, who played college golf at both Clemson and Alabama, was reminded that she plays golf because she loves the game, at any level.

“It was a good lesson for me,” said Golfweek’s 2018 College Player of the Year.

Stephenson, 27, met husband Kyle Morris when his parents hosted her at the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open in Houston. Morris was working on a master’s degree at the time in Atlanta and was home for Christmas. The couple wed in October 2023 and honeymooned in Cabo after Q-Series, where Stephenson tied for 27th. She had status for 2024, but not enough to put together much of a schedule.

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Early on in 2024, she chased Monday qualifiers before deciding midway through the year that she needed to invest fully in Epson and it paid off.

Now, with her card secured for 2025, Stephenson can enjoy the longest offseason of her professional career before starting her sixth year on the LPGA. In addition to her victory at the Twin Bridges, she finished runner-up twice and led the tour with $136,025 on the season. She also led the tour in putts per green in regulation and rounds in the 60s. She finished third in scoring with a 69.73 average.

“I think when you’re struggling and watching your friends succeed, or people you grew up playing with – like Lilia (Vu) winning all the time – you just want so badly to be in that position,” said Stephenson, who at one time owned the NCAA scoring record for Division I.

“When you are kind of in that position of finishing No. 1 or winning on Epson, none of it changes your life. My Monday is still the same. It’s great because I’m proud of myself … but I’m still the same person.

“I think realizing that was a good mindset shift for me.”

Five storylines to watch at the Epson Tour opener, including a mother of two and some new faces

The Epson Tour played for a total of $1.6 million in 2023. This year’s schedule features $5 million in total prize money.

The LPGA battle in Singapore on Sunday featured a couple of Epson Tour graduates. In fact, HSBC Women’s World Championship winner Hannah Green and runner-up Celine Boutier were part of the same graduating class in 2017.

The 2024 Epson Tour season kicks off this week in Florida, and a total of 192 players have “graduated” to the LPGA over the past 25 years. Many of them, like Green and Boutier, have gone on to win major championships.

This year’s schedule includes 20 events with a record $5 million in total prize money. The average purse size has increased $20,000 since last season.

Consider that in 2013, the tour played for a total of $1.6 million.

Hannah Green celebrates victory on the 18th green following a birdie putt during Day Four of the HSBC Women’s World Championship at Sentosa Golf Club on March 03, 2024 in Singapore. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Another noteworthy change: the season-ending Epson Tour Championship is moving from LPGA International in Daytona Beach, Florida, to Indian Wells (California) Golf Resort next October.

Here are five things to know about the 2024 Epson Tour season:

LPGA: How a host family cured Lauren Stephenson’s putting woes

During Thursday’s opening round of the Meijer LPGA Classic, Stephenson said it felt like the ball had a magnet to the hole.

Lauren Stephenson called her coach, Tim Cooke, after a missed cut in Hawaii last April and explained that she’d been struggling on the greens. When asked what side she’d been missing it on, Stephenson said everywhere – short, long, left, right.

Her coach’s advice: Go buy a new putter. It’s time to look at something different.

As luck would have it, there was big supply of putters to choose from at the home of her host family for the week at the HUGEL-AIR PREMIA LA Open. Scotty Leonard, a caddie at Wilshire, connected Stephenson with Peter Mack, who happened to have 20 putters sitting around his putting mat.

Stephenson, a former Alabama standout who set an NCAA scoring record in 2018 (69.76) that was eclipsed by Rachel Heck last month, fell hard for the Scotty Cameron Phantom X Putter and asked Mack if she could cut it down and put it in the bag. He gifted it to her.

Stephenson tied for 12th that week and took a share of seventh the next.

During Thursday’s opening round of the Meijer LPGA Classic, Stephenson said it felt like the ball had a magnet to the hole.

Lauren Stephenson putts on the ninth green during the first round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament at The Olympic Club. Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports

“It was like I couldn’t miss,” said Stephenson, who opened with a 30 on the back side (her front) and had 27 putts en route to an opening 65.

“I felt like before that was the only piece missing,” she continued. “I just couldn’t get the ball in the hole fast enough. With this new putter I found a new confidence, I guess. Super comfortable on the greens, had no three-putts today, so felt like I was rolling it good.”

Stephenson shares the early lead at the Meijer with Charley Hull, Leona Maguire and Nasa Hataoka. Hull eagled two holes coming in to finish her round, draining a 40-footer on the 14th and a 15-footer on the 18th.

“It’s nice to be in some warm weather in shorts and T-shirt,” said Hull. “I get a bit stiff when it’s cold, especially with the fog the last two weeks. It’s nice to be out and playing especially with fans. It feels a bit more like normal life now.”

Min Lee, who finished runner-up to Matilda Castren last week at the Mediheal, sits one back at 6 under.

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Lauren Stephenson, Mi Hyang Lee shoot 63 to take early lead at ShopRite LPGA Classic

Lauren Stephenson’s best round on the LPGA was buoyed by a hole-out for eagle on the 14th hole from the rough.

A record day for Lauren Stephenson put the former Alabama standout atop the board at the ShopRite LPGA Classic at 8-under 63 alongside South Korea’s Mi Hyang Lee. Stephenson’s best round on the LPGA was buoyed by a hole-out for eagle on the 14th hole from the rough.

“We had no idea,” said Stephenson, who couldn’t see the ball go in after she hit wedge from 137 yards. “I didn’t want to get excited and then it be over the green.”

Lee’s previous best was a 62 in the first round of the 2016 Founders Cup.

“I don’t want to change anything,” said Lee, a two-time winner on the LPGA, “and I don’t want to think about anymore bigger than just right now.”

The ShopRite was extended to 72 holes this year for only the second time in tournament history. Nasa Hataoka and Ryann O’Toole are one shot back in a tie for third while Jennifer Song is alone at 6 under.

Brittany Altomare got off to a rip-roaring start, carding a 28 on the front nine. She dunked her tee shot on the par-3 17th for an ace, hitting a wedge from 108 yards.

“It made a loud noise,” she said. “It hit the pin, and usually when it does that I feel like it could go anywhere, but then it disappeared, so I guess that was good.”


ShopRite LPGA Classic: Leaderboard


Momentum stalled on the back nine, however, as she carded eight pars and one bogey to finish at 5 under for the day.

Lexi Thompson, the 2019 champion, shot 4 under. Sisters Nelly and Jessica Korda shot matching 68s and are five back.

While the rest of the LPGA took last week off, Stephenson teed it up on the Symetra Tour finishing tied for 17th. On her way to the event in Longwood, Florida, she stopped by to see her coach.

“We just worked on tempo and just honing my swing in a little bit,” she said. “It wasn’t too far off. Lucky since I hadn’t been hitting it as well, that kind of upped my short game. It was a blessing in disguise, because now I feel like I’ve gained a lot of confidence putting. Now my ball-striking is really good. Helped me today.”

Stephenson, 23, now in her second year on the LPGA tied for eighth in her first tournament as an LPGA pro, the ISPS Handa Vic Open, in February 2019.

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