Lilia Vu thought about quitting pro golf; now she’s on a short list of potential 2023 Solheim Cup rookies

This year, Vu has eight top-20 finishes in 17 starts and sits 37th on the money list.

Lilia Vu got so nervous teeing it up alongside Stacy Lewis at the CP Women’s Open that she blocked her opening tee shot 40 yards. Vu pulled herself together, but the nerves only reiterated how badly she wants it. Lewis is the 2023 U.S. Solheim Cup captain, and Vu wanted to make a strong impression.

“I love team events,” said Vu, who teamed up with Jennifer Kupcho and Kristen Gillman in 2018 to win the World Amateur Team Championship, Curtis Cup and Palmer Cup.

After Lewis lost her own match, she went out to watch Vu play in the Bank of Hope LPGA Match Play event last May in Vegas, where Vu advanced to the semifinals. Later in the summer, Lewis invited Vu to a Solheim Cup dinner during the KPMG Women’s PGA.

“I don’t know that she’s going to need a pick, to be honest,” said Lewis after playing a practice round with Vu last month at the Dana Open in Ohio.

Lewis, who calls Vu “super solid” and “sneaky long,” wouldn’t be surprised to see Vu play her way onto the 2023 team that will take on Europe next September in Spain. She’s now on a short list of potential rookies that includes Andrea Lee, Allisen Corpuz and Lucy Li.

USA players, from left, Lilia Vu, team captain Stacey Collins, Jennifer Kupcho and Kristen Gillman with the Espirito Santo Trophy after the 2018 World Amateur Team Golf Championships at Carton House in Maynooth, Co Kildare. (Photo By Matt Browne/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Vu, 24, currently sits in a share of eighth on the Solheim Cup points list with fellow UCLA player Alison Lee. The top seven qualify for the team of 12 off the points list. Points will be doubled in 2023. Two more come off the Rolex Rankings, and Lewis has three captain’s picks.

“She was the No. 1-ranked amateur in the world for two years,” said Lewis. “Not really a surprise in my book.”

It wasn’t all that long ago that Vu thought about quitting the game. During her first year on the LPGA in 2019, she made one cut in nine starts and earned $3,830. The winningest player in UCLA history, with eight titles, then thought about going to law school.

Vu’s mom, however, convinced her to stay the course.

“Every shot was life or death,” explained Vu.

In 2021, she turned a corner on the Epson Tour, winning three times to clinch her LPGA card.

Lilia Vu of the United States and Andrea Lee of the United States share a laugh at the second tee during the Bank of Hope LPGA Match-Play Hosted by Shadow Creek at Shadow Creek Golf Course on May 29, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

This year, Vu has eight top-20 finishes in 17 starts. She’s 37th on the money list with $573,580 and 32nd in CME points. She even has two aces on the season.

“I think I love golf more every day, honestly,” she said.

When asked what she attributed that to, Vu said, “Just thinking about how people would really kill to be in this position and get the privilege to play golf … and travel.”

Vu, of Fountain Valley, California, will compete in the next four domestic events on the LPGA, beginning this week at the AmazingCre Portland Classic and winding up close to home at the LPGA Mediheal Championship at the Saticoy Club in Somis, California.

Vu has played out of Shady Canyon Golf Club in Irvine, California, since she turned professional along with fellow touring pros So Yeon Ryu, Patrick Cantlay and Brendan Steele.

“I’ve played with Steele before,” said Vu. “He shot 60.”

Lilia Vu of the United States hits out of a sand trap on the first hole during the Bank of Hope LPGA Match-Play Hosted by Shadow Creek at Shadow Creek Golf Course on May 29, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Vu counts several members of Shady Canyon as mentors. They have their own success stories in areas outside of golf and share bits of wisdom, encouragement and book recommendations.

As she tries to wait patiently for that first LPGA victory, Vu counts her mental game as her biggest strength.

“I think I’m very resilient,” she said.

A trait captain Lewis knows the value of better than most.

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Lydia Ko takes two-shot lead at Women’s Scottish Open after second straight 65 at Dundonald Links

Ko is searching for her first win since March.

Lydia Ko said she felt her second round Friday wasn’t as strong as her opening round on Thursday. Her score indicates otherwise.

Ko fired her second straight 7-under 65, taking a two-shot lead at 14 under following the second round of the Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open. She leads Lilia Vu by two shots and Eun-Hee Ji by three heading to the weekend.

For Ko, who posted her tour-leading 12th bogey-free round of the season, she’s getting closer to conquering links golf. Last year, she finished tied for second at this event.

With 36 holes to play, Ko is in the driver’s seat and looking for another victory.

“I had a few more birdie opportunities today that I missed,” Ko said. “When I made the turn, I made a really good par actually on the 18th hole, which was my ninth. Then hit a good drive down the first, and I got really good momentum.”

After going out in 1-under 35, Ko fired a 6-under 30 on her back nine, which was highlighted by a near hole-in-one on the par-3 fourth and an eagle on the par-5 fifth.

Ko hasn’t won a major on the LPGA since 2019 and hasn’t won a tournament since March.

The round of the day belonged to Ji, who shot an 8-under 64 to climb 15 spots on the leaderboard. Hye-Jin Choi, who led following the first round, is tied for sixth after a 1-under 71 performance.

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Aces wild! Jeongeun Lee6 one of three players to make a hole-in-one at the same hole during third round of JTBC Classic

“It was my third hole-in-one, but first hole-in-one during (a) tournament,” Lee6 said.

If there’s no video evidence, was it really an ace?

Well, we’re just going to have to trust the scorecards this time around. Three players made aces during the third round of the LPGA’s JTBC Classic Saturday, including major champion Jeongeun Lee6.

The par-3 third at Aviara Golf Club was set up for action, measuring in at a mere 97 yards. And boy, oh boy, did the field take advantage.

Lee6 was part of the first group off this morning and, like the other two players to make aces there, used a 50-degree wedge.

“It was my third hole-in-one, but first hole-in-one during (a) tournament,” she said.

Lee6 went on to shoot a 6-under 66.

Lilia Vu made the next one. On top of the ace, Vu made six birdies and signed for a third-round 7-under 65.

Then, last but not least, Kelly Tan cashed in. She had a wild day in Carlsbad, California on Saturday. She made an ace, an eagle, five birdies, five bogeys, and a double. All-in-all, Tan signed for a 2-under 70.

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It’s Lilia Vu all over again: Former UCLA star captures Four Winds Invitational for third Symetra victory

Vu used a 60-yard chip-in for eagle 3 on the 495-yard, par-5 12th hole to pull away to victory No. 3.

SOUTH BEND, Indiana —To paraphrase the late sports philosopher, Lawrence Peter “Yogi” Berra, it was Lilia Vu all over again in Sunday’s final round of the Symetra Tour’s $200,000 Four Winds Invitational at South Bend Country Club.

Vu, a former UCLA All-American and 2018 U.S. Curtis Cup team member and the tour’s leading money winner with two victories coming into this week, used a 60-yard chip-in for eagle 3 on the 495-yard, par-5 12th hole by railroad tracks to pull away to victory No. 3.

“I know it’s really important to hit the fairway on that hole so I have a good angle to the green,” Vu said. “I had 230 (yards) to the pin. The hole does play longer (into the wind) so I ended up just short on the fringe. My caddie (Don Bavaro) and I were thinking (the chip) was going to be left to right, but for some reason I wanted to hit it straight. Deep down, I wanted to make this chip because I was hearing the cheers (from the other holes). I hit the chip and it went in.”

Bavaro, a long-time professional caddie from Chicago who has been carrying Vu’s clubs the last two years, said the chip was hit hard and fortunately hit the flagstick and dropped for the eagle which gave Vu the lead for good.

“It was pretty assertive,” Vu quipped.

Vu then added a 33-foot birdie putt on the 388-yard, par-4 16th hole which plays over South Chain Lake and parred Nos. 17 and 18 to finish off her five-under 67 – her 11th straight sub-par round in Symetra Tour events – and a 12-under winning total of 204.

“I’ve just been trying to have fun; Don and I are a good team,” Vu said after finishing two strokes ahead of China’s 22-year-old Ruixin Liu, who closed with a 67 which included eight birdies, four on each nine, to offset three bogeys. Liu, who started the season with a pair of victories, earned $19.363 for second place and moved into second place with $95,281.

Third place at nine-under 207 went to Australia’s 23-year-old Robyn Choi, who closed with a round of 68 that included seven birdies and three bogeys. Choi earned $14,102 for her first Top 10 finish of the year. Last season, she finished three times in the Top 10, including a runner-up to Kim Kaufman at the Four Winds Invitational last September when it was held at Blackthorn.

Neither Liu nor Choi were made available to the local television and print media by tournament officials following their rounds.

Vu began the round in third place at seven-under 137 behind 29-year-old Demi Runas of Torrance, California, a Symetra journeywoman looking for her first-ever tour victory, and France’s 21-year-old Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, who was playing in her first tournament as a professional after giving up her amateur eligibility at the University of South Carolina. Runas started at nine-under and Roussin-Bouchard was one stroke back.

But both Runas and Roussin-Bouchard struggled from the start, opening the door for Choi, Liu and Vu to make up ground. Runas bogeyed four of her first six holes before righting herself with birdies at Nos. 7 and 8. She finished with a closing 75 that left her tied for eighth.

Roussin-Bouchard bogeyed three of her first five holes but countered with three birdies on the back nine to close with an even-par 72 and eight-under 208 total which left her tied for fourth with Sweden’s Elin Arvidsson, earning $9,906 for her first professional check.

Meanwhile, Vu began making her move after starting with four straight pars. She then birdied the par-5, 513-yard fifth that doglegs right around South Chain Lake, the first of three birdies on the front that helped her offset a bogey at No. 6.

“The course was super difficult today,” Vu said of South Bend Country Club, which got firmer each day of the tournament after Mother Nature dumped more than eight inches of rain on its turf. “The greens dried out pretty well. We had to really focus on hitting to the front yardage or short of the pins.”

Vu was tied at 9-under with Choi when she came to the 12th hole and made the shot of the day.

“I hit the chip, it went in, and the rest is history,” said Vu, who was as calm in the post-tournament interview as she seems to be on the golf course this year. “I think I keep telling myself there’s nothing you haven’t done already, and I just move forward.”

Vu has now won $140,607 in 14 events on the Symetra Tour this year thanks to the three victories and eight Top 10s. In her last five tournaments, she has finished tied for fourth at the Donald Ross Classic at downstate French Lick July 8; was third at the Danielle Downey Credit Union Classic outside Rochester, New York, July 15; won the Twin Bridges Classic in Albany, New York July 23; and finished tied for second at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship in Battle Creek Aug. 6. Her other victory this season came at the Garden City Charity Classic in Kansas back on April 30.

In addition to Sunday’s victory, Vu also pocketed $8,000 in bonuses from the Pokagon Band of the Potawatomi, the event sponsor. That included a check for $5,000 for winning the Potawatomi Cup for accumulating the most points in the three tournaments sponsored by the Potawatomi Nation – the Island Resort Casino Championship in Harris, Michigan, last week’s FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship and the Four Winds Invitational.

Proceeds from the tournament benefit the Beacon Children’s Hospital.

FOUR WINDS INVITATIONAL RESULTS

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Results and money earnings after Sunday’s final round of the Symetra Tour’s $200,000 Four Winds Invitational played at the par-72, 6,430-yard South Bend Country Club.

204 (-12) $30,000 — Lilia Vu, Fountain Valley, Calif., 68-69-67.

206 (-10) $19.363 — Ruixin Liu, China, 71-68-67

207 (-9) $14,102 — Robyn Choi, Australia, 69-70-68

208 (-8) $9,906 — Elin Arvidsson, Sweden, 73-68-67; Pauline Roussin-Bouchard, France, 67-69-72

209 (-7) $6,707 — Savannah Vilaubi, Downey, Calif., 70-68-71; Kum-Kang Park, South Korea, 69-69-71

210 (-6) $4,546 — Haylee Rae Harford, Leavittsburg, Ohio, 70-72-68; Katelyn Dambaugh, Charleston, S.C., 69-72-69; Min-G Kim, South Korea, 71-68-71; Sophia Schubert, Oak Ridge, Tenn., 67-71-72; Demi Runas, Torrance, Calif., 67-68-75

211 (-5) $3,644 — Fatima Fernandez Cano, Spain, 70-68-73

212 (-4) $3,172 — Yaeeun Hong, South Korea, 72-72-68; Dorsey Addicks, Big Sky, Montana, 72-70-70; Soo Jin Lee, Australia, 72-69-71; Lauren Coughlin, Charlottesville, Va., 67-71-74

213 (-3) $2,707 — Karen Chung, Livingston, N.J., 71-74-68; Taylor Totland, Tinton Falls, N.J., 74-71-68; Amy Lee, Brea, Calif., 68-71-74

214 (-2) $2,366 — Hexi Yuan, China, 75-70-69; Sophie Hausmann, Germany, 72-73-69; Julie Aime, France, 71-71-72; Kendra Dalton, Poughquag, N.Y., 67-75-72; Lucy Li, Redwood Shores, Calif., 71-68-75

215 (-1) $2,060 — Linnea Johansson, Sweden, 73-71-71; Rachel Rohanna, Marianna, Pa., 72-72-71; Allie White, Lancaster, Ohio, 71-71-73

216 (E) $1,756 — Gabby Lemieux, Caldwell, Idaho, 72-73-71; Isi Gabsa, Germany, 68-74-74; Laura Restrepo, Panama, 73-68-75; Gigi Stoll, Beaverton, Ore., 66-75-75; Tess Hackworthy, Madison, Wis., 70-70-76; Fernanda Lira, Mexico, 69-73-74