Surviving the toughest cut in golf: Maja Stark’s playoff birdie sends her to Augusta National

Maja Stark was the last woman to earn a spot on Augusta National for the final round of the ANWA after a day of moving cut numbers.

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Kate Smith intended to go to bed at 9 p.m. on Wednesday night. It took much longer than that to drift off.

“I couldn’t sleep,” she said. “Normally you can look at the TV or phone as distraction; I just laid there. I just thought about my opportunities for the next day, those six holes a lot.”

Smith, a fifth-year senior at the University of Nebraska, was at 4 under and had a three-shot lead when the first round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur was suspended because of weather. She had only played 11 holes.

When Smith returned on Thursday morning to finish, the temperature had dipped below 50 degrees. She played her remaining seven holes in 4 over. Shortly after lunch, she was back on the first tee for her second round and slowly slipped down the leaderboard. When Smith three-putted the 17th green, it moved the 36-hole cut from 6 over to 7 over.

Smith landed in a playoff with four other women – Maja Stark, Lauren Hartlage, Amari Avery and Yu-Sang Hou – that ended quickly when Stark dropped an 18-footer for birdie on the No. 10, the first extra hole.

Augusta National Women’s AmateurLeaderboard

Like the rest of the 81-player field, Smith has a practice-round tee time at Augusta National on Friday even if she won’t be one of the 30 women competing on Saturday. Friday’s round might even be a little more enjoyable now.

“I was already trying to mentally prepare for that while being here,” Smith said of a wandering mind where the final round at Augusta National was concerned, “and I don’t think I was in the present all the time. It’s a long week and you’ve got to keep your head down and focus on what’s in front of you.”

Smith owned the start of the day, but Stark was squarely in the spotlight 12 hours later when she drained the birdie putt that sent her to Augusta National. It couldn’t have been better timed. The Oklahoma State sophomore only made three birdies in the past two days: One came on the 36th hole to help her get in the playoff and another was on the extra hole.

Interestingly, Stark had bogeyed No. 10 in regulation both days.

For a few short minutes—and with memories of an 11-for-10 playoff in the inaugural ANWA were still fresh—it looked like extra holes would be avoided on Thursday.

Kiira Riihijarvi is the only NCAA Division II player in the field this week. The fifth-year senior at the University of Tampa made tidy work of the cutline when she rolled in a birdie putt on No. 18 in the fifth-to-last group. That moved her from 7 over to 6 over and brought the cut with her.

Smith’s late bogey gave the other four players at 7 over second hope.

“I tried not to look at the leaderboard while I was playing,” Riihijarvi said of coming down the final holes. “They made it difficult because they’re really big.”

Regardless of what the leaderboard said, a number became more and more difficult to pin down as wind swirled all day and made the closing stretch particularly difficult.

Augusta National Women's Amateur
The second round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Thursday, April 1, 2021. (Photo: ANWA)

Ana Pelaez Trivino, a fifth-year senior at South Carolina, felt that as much as anyone. She fired a 1-under 71 and went to bed Wednesday with a share of second place. She played the front nine in 2 under on Thursday but was 5 over on the back. At 6 over, she snuck in to the third round on the number.

Pelaez Trivino said the big numbers on the back – three bogeys and a double – weren’t even a product of focusing too much on the cut because she wasn’t focusing there at all. Mental game is an advantage for the firey Spaniard.

“I can look at the scoreboard and not feel pressure at all, just know what I have to do,” she said. “It’s a fact that I’m going to have to accept that knowledge at the end of the day, so why not look at the scoreboard or whatever?”

Erica Shepherd played the last three holes in 2 over to land at 6 over, which eventually left her safely inside the cut. It was a similar scenario to the one that played out in 2019, when Shepherd also narrowly avoided the playoff.

“Kind of had the same feeling heading down the last hole,” she said. “I guess that experience from being there two years ago may have helped me a little bit.”

Shepherd, who finished T-23 after a final-round 75 at Augusta National in 2019, bogeyed No. 18 on Wednesday, and only after laying up on the par 5 realized she could have reached the green with her 3-wood. She missed a downhill slider for par but bogey was still enough.

Having made the cut here once, Shepherd was extra motivated to secure another Saturday tee time.

“Just to see in person how it’s actually better than it is on TV and just being part of that experience and to see how much that did for women’s golf and just to have been there,” she said, “just kind of that pressure that I put on myself to get back, it’s kind of a relief to know that that’s secured now.”

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Women’s college golf player of the week: Maja Stark, Oklahoma State

Maja Stark won the Hero Ladies Intercollegiate, and helped her Oklahoma State squad to the team title, to win Player of the Week honors.

Maja Stark has only teed it up in six college events with Oklahoma State, but already has won two titles. Her second came on Feb. 9 at the Hero Ladies Intercollegiate, a new event at Founders Club in Sarasota, Florida.

Stark, a sophomore from Sweden, led the field with 21 birdies and at 15 under (66-66-69), logged a six-shot victory over Ole Miss player Julia Johnson.

At Oklahoma State’s only other spring event, the SMU Trinity Forest Invitational, Stark finished second individually. She turned heads in December on a much bigger stage with her 13th-place finish at the U.S. Women’s Open. Two weeks later, she was part of the winning International team at the Palmer Cup.

Stark’s 15-under total ties teammate Isabella Fierro for the lowest 54-hole total in school history. Stark also becomes the 10th player in school history to own multiple individual titles as a Cowgirl.

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Women’s team | Women’s individual
College golf blog: The Road to Grayhawk

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With a top-10 finish, Kaitlyn Papp earns low-am honors and a U.S. Women’s Open return

Kaitlyn Papp finished inside the top 10 at the U.S. Women’s Open to wrap up low-amateur honors.

In the final hours of a Monday finish at the U.S. Women’s Open, it looked as if an amateur might take home the title. At one point, recent Texas graduate Kaitlyn Papp was staring down a birdie putt to get within a single shot of the lead at Champions Golf Club in Houston.

Papp’s perennial presence near the top of the leaderboard assured that amateurs were always in the conversation on a week when 24 of them were among the 156-woman field. She is one of just two amateurs in the past 10 years to have been in the top 10 after each of the last three rounds at the U.S. Women’s Open. Hye-Jin Choi accomplished that in 2017.

A double-bogey at No. 11, followed by bogeys at Nos. 13 and 14, may have ended Papp’s title pursuit, but her closing 74 still locked in low-amateur honors for the native Texan and landed her in a tie for ninth. That top-10 finish guarantees her a spot in next year’s championship, which will be in June at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

“I learned that I can pretty much handle whatever conditions come our way,” Papp said of contending at a major. “We experienced perfect weather, we experienced kind of difficult weather this week. I think I just learned that I’m pretty mentally tough out there.”

Papp, a 22-year-old Austin native who got her degree in physical culture and sports in three and a half years at the University of Texas, was one of seven Texans in the field. Even though that group owns a combined three major titles, Papp logged the only top-10 finish among them.

U.S. Women’s Open: Scores | Photos | Winner’s bag | Money

Like many players, she appeared in a stocking cap – burnt orange, her school colors – and layered clothing on Monday as a cold snap dropped the temperature into the 50s. She was prepared for the wind, though Monday produced little.

“I think it’s an advantage because year-round, it’s pretty much windy, the majority of the year,” Papp said before the championship when asked how local knowledge might come in to play. “I’m kind of used to playing in the wind. Whenever I see in the forecast it’s a north wind, I know it’s going to be cold.”

That was Monday.

Rounds of 71-68-74 were enough to get Papp into the second-to-last group for the final round, alongside world No. 1 Jin Young Ko. She was high enough on the leaderboard that she didn’t hit a shot in competition on Sunday, when most of the round was delayed because of thunderstorms.

“Initially my goal here was just to make the cut, and I ended up playing really great golf and found myself somewhat in contention this weekend,” Papp said. “I mean, I was just thrilled just to be in that group.”

Papp appeared to have low-amateur honors all but locked up until Gabi Ruffels, the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, got on a run with birdies at Nos. 11, 13 and 14. When Ruffels bogeyed the 17th hole, however, she dropped back to 5 over, two behind Papp and in a share of 13th.

Maja Stark, a Swede who plays for Oklahoma State, joined her there.

Among the three other amateurs who made the cut, Arizona State’s Linn Grant finished T-23 at 7 over, Ingrid Lindblad was T-30 at 8 over and Pauline Roussin-Bouchard was T-46 at 11 over.

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Watch: Amateur Maja Stark holes out from fairway at U.S. Women’s Open: ‘Well, that was easy.’

The Oklahoma State product moved to 1 under for the tournament by holing out from the middle of the fairway on the 406-yard sixth hole.

HOUSTON — Ah, the innocence of youth.

Just a few strokes off the lead in her first U.S. Open, Oklahoma State’s Maja Stark jumped up the leaderboard on Friday morning in incredible fashion.

While playing the Cypress Creek course at Champions Golf Club, Stark — who hails from Abbekas, Sweden — moved to 1 under for the tournament by holing out from the middle of the fairway on the 406-yard sixth hole.

Making the moment even better. Stark turned to the few folks on hand and thanked them for their applause and then looked at her caddie Emma Whitaker before saying, “Well, that was easy.”

Stark, who is currently No. 14 on the Official World Golf Ranking’s list of women’s amateurs, had a solid opening day on the Jackrabbit course, sandwiching birdies around a single bogey. She was just one of a number of amateurs to post impressive opening-day scores.

But Stark made things more interesting on the harder Cypress Creek course early Friday, going bogey-bogey-birdie-bogey-eagle on a five-hole stretch.

Winning is nothing new to Stark, who captured a title in just her second collegiate start at Oklahoma State, winning the Hurricane Invitational.

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