Merion officially becomes another USGA anchor as it adds a third upcoming U.S. Open

The Hugh Wilson-designed track already had two future U.S. Opens on its calendar (2030, 2050).

Merion already holds the record for most USGA championships hosted by a club, with 2022’s Curtis Cup bringing the total for the famed Pennsylvania course to 19. The first was the U.S. Women’s Amateur in 1904.

Next up: the 2026 U.S. Amateur and 2030 U.S. Open. Future women’s championships include the 2034 and 2046 U.S. Women’s Opens.

And while the Hugh Wilson-designed track, which is No. 7 on the Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list, already had two future U.S. Opens on its calendar (2030, 2050), the USGA announced on Monday that it would be neatly adding in another, this time in 2040.

More: U.S. Open future sites through 2051

“For well over a century, Merion has served as the site of some of American golf’s most iconic moments,” said John Bodenhamer, the USGA chief championships officer. “Our relationship with the club and its membership continues to grow, and when we looked at our future lineup for the U.S. Open, we wanted to enhance our upcoming commitment with a more regular cadence. We are thrilled to be able to return to such an important club on a regular basis and look forward to watching the world’s best write new chapters in the history of this great game.”

“Starting with its formation, the desire to host significant championships has been at Merion’s core,” said Buddy Marucci, Merion championship committee chair. “It is no wonder Merion has hosted more USGA championships than any other club in America. Our partnership with the USGA dates to its first decade and has produced some of the most memorable moments in golf history. We are thrilled to celebrate those moments by announcing an additional U.S. Open Championship to be played in the year 2040. We look forward to all future generations of the world’s best players having the opportunity to compete on Hugh Wilson’s timeless masterpiece.”

Oakmont, the famed course near Pittsburgh on the other side of Pennsylvania, will also serve as an “anchor site” for future USGA championships and will host the U.S. Open in 2025, 2034, 2042 and 2049.

A view of the Curtis Cup trophy and the iconic clubhouse before the start of the Four-Ball Matches at the 2022 Curtis Cup at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. on Saturday, June 11, 2022. (Chris Keane/USGA)

Future USGA championships in Pennsylvania

Merion Golf Club

2026 U.S. Amateur*
2030 U.S. Open
2034 U.S. Women’s Open
2040 U.S. Open
2046 U.S. Women’s Open
2050 U.S. Open

Oakmont Country Club

2025 U.S. Open*
2028 U.S. Women’s Open
2033 Walker Cup Match
2034 U.S. Open
2038 U.S. Women’s Open
2042 U.S. Open
2046 U.S. Women’s Amateur
2049 U.S. Open

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Schupak: Remembering Eddie Merrins, The Little Pro

The Little Pro, by way of Merion, always had a cure for the common swing.

Word that Eddie Merrins had died on Thanksgiving Eve hit me like a cold bucket of water as I gathered in the kitchen with family and monitored the making of the next day’s feast.

Merrins, who died at 91 in Los Angeles, was one of golf’s most respected professionals, a championship-winning coach at UCLA, a beloved figure and an institution at Bel-Air Country Club. In recent years, as pro emeritus, he could still be found there impeccably dressed in a coat and tie and white-knit tam o’shanter, ready to impart his wisdom to another golfer desperate for help.

I had the privilege of writing a story for the 2013 U.S. Open preview issue on the 5-foot-7 Merrins, affectionately known as The Little Pro, and it was the start of a beautiful friendship. Without fail, he’d seek me out at every Masters, U.S. Open and PGA Championship he attended – add me to the list who received an impromptu lesson from Merrins, who advised me to start my swing in New York, flow through Chicago on the way to Los Angeles. I’d be called to the front desk of the media center at the Masters or come back to my desk and find a note that I could come to find him setting up shop on the range. One year, I dressed to the nines in a tuxedo for the Ben Hogan Award as his guest at the ceremony held annually on the Monday of the PGA Tour stop at Colonial. He’d often welcome me to Bel-Air for a get-together when I was in town for Riviera, including one time when he walked all 18 as I played.

We last spoke on June 9 and I could tell his health had deteriorated and his son, Michael, who was often by his side during his travels, complained that he wasn’t getting the care he needed. We made plans to meet up at the U.S. Open but it never came to be. Little Pro kept his word and made it to the course for the final round but I was out on the sixth tee watching Rory McIlroy play. Ten minutes later, I texted him and his son that I’d be back at the media center shortly but we never connected. Regrets, I have a few.

After getting home from the holidays, I dug up my copy from that Merion story and I’m borrowing liberally from it here because it tells the story about how for more than five decades, Merrins gave lessons to everyone from Bing Crosby to Arnold Palmer to Celine Dion and Rickie Fowler to a fellow groomsman at a wedding as the bride walked down the aisle.

“He said he was having a problem with his balance,” Merrins recalled. “What was I supposed to do?”

The man was born to teach, or so he discovered at Merion Golf Club, where he competed in the 1971 Open, and more importantly, the place his life as a teaching pro took shape.

“The discoveries I made there are still the bedrock of my teaching philosophy today,” he said in 2013.

How he arrived at Merion is a story in itself. At 24, Merrins turned pro on the eve of the Lake Charles (Louisiana) Invitational in April 1957, and cashed a check for $250. Next he qualified for the U.S. Open at Inverness Golf Club. Off Merrins went to Ohio to pursue the life of a touring pro. Or so he thought, until one night, prior to the U.S. Open, when he bellied up to the hotel bar and the direction of his life was altered.

Tommy Bolt and Walter Hagen delivered a rookie indoctrination he’d never forget, but it was another conversation with Ed Carter, who ran the PGA Tour at the time, that would shape his future. Carter informed the diminutive Merrins that Merion was seeking an assistant pro whose primary responsibility would be to play with the members. As Merrins put it, “I was looking for a job to support my habit, which was golf.”

Intrigued by the opportunity, Merrins dashed off to Philadelphia for an interview after missing the cut. There he met Francis Sullivan, the former state district attorney and personal attorney for Ben Hogan, who became a surrogate father to Merrins and later godfather to his son, Michael. Sullivan served on the board that hired Merrins on the spot.

So did Jacques Houdry, who coined Merrins’s nickname, “The Little Pro.” Houdry served as best man when Merrins wed Lisa, his bride of more than 50 years in a 1961 ceremony held in New York City. Need more evidence that the Merion members adopted him as one of their own? Consider this: “We had our wedding reception at the old Park Lane Hotel and a whole train carload of people from Merion came along,” Merrins remembered.

From 1957 until 1960, he played regularly with Guy Bates, the club champion, Andrew Davis, who once recorded 10 threes in a row at Merion, and A. Ross Crane, a Philadelphia dentist who told Merrins he might not be the best in town but he was the most expensive. He never charged Merrins a cent.

Architecturally, Merrins called Merion the finest golf course he’d ever seen.

“It’s a masterpiece,” he said. “I remember the two reigning architects of the day were Robert Trent Jones Sr. and Dick Wilson and both of them would walk around Merion all the time just to get ideas, to get visions to use in their design work.”

Merion shaped Merrins into the pro he would become. He had a passion for the game but not a love and respect for it until he spent time there, he said.

Merrins had turned pro to play the game. But at Merion, Merrins was required to teach and discovered he was a teacher at heart. His exploration of the swing happened on Merion’s lesson tee. It’s where he formed the basis for his instructional book and (later video) titled, “Swing the Handle.”

Merrins spent the winter of 1959 under the guidance of Claude Harmon at Thunderbird Golf Club, then left Merion in 1960 to become the head professional at Rockaway Hunt Club in Cedarhurst, New York, where he replaced Dave Marr.

Merrins was living the life of “an itinerant preacher.” He quit the Tour in 1962 to take the head pro job at Bel-Air, and so began a life of service.

“Being a pro golfer means caring about yourself,” Merrins said. “It seemed like a selfish existence to me. I wanted to do more.”

So Merrins spent a lifetime spreading the gospel of golf, even when it meant demonstrating the top of the backswing with an umbrella in an airport, adjusting a grip during an earthquake, or fixing a groomsman’s balance at the altar. The Little Pro, by way of Merion, always had a cure for the common swing.

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Former Division II standout Joanna Coe, director of instruction at storied Merion, still thrives while competing on a national stage

“Merion was always an unattainable dream place. The first time I played here, I couldn’t stop shaking.”

It snowed on the first day of the Women’s PGA Cup. The wind gusted over 30 mph at Twin Warriors Golf Club in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico, and the feels-like temperature was in the high 20s. Even the Swedes asked PGA officials, “Is this playable?”

The Americans trailed early but battled back over the weekend to win the second Women’s PGA Cup. Joanna Coe fielded quite a few questions from students when she returned to Merion Golf Club about battling the elements and coming through in the clutch.

As director of instruction at the storied club, Coe’s competitive drive and infectious personality fit in well at a place that’s synonymous with excellence.

“Everyone eats, sleeps and breathes golf here,” she said.

Coe has a poster of Nelly Korda in her teaching bay because she thinks there needs to be more of a focus on the best women in the world.

Suzy Whaley, the first female president of the PGA of America, describes Coe as a hard worker whose approachable and authentic demeanor makes people want to be around her.

“She loves the game and exudes joy when she’s around it,” Whaley said. “This hire was a very smart hire.”

Whaley applauds Merion for hiring a woman because of the message it sends to an industry in which it’s still a challenging climb for women and minorities, but she wants to make it clear, too, that Coe was the best fit for the job.

“In golf, we’ve made progress,” said Whaley, “but we have a long way to go to elevate women and minorities. Boards, employers and owners continue to be heavily skewed male, and human nature showcases that we hire people like ourselves.”

Even now when Whaley answers the phone at her facility, the person on the other end sometimes asks to speak to the golf professional.

Team USA poses for a photo with the Women’s PGA Cup during the final round of the 2nd Women’s PGA Cup at Twin Warriors Golf Club on Saturday, October 29, 2022, in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico. From left to right: Ashley Grier, Sherry Andonian, Jennifer Borocz, Stephanie Connelly-Eiswerth and Joanna Coe (Photo by Sam Greenwood/PGA of America)

The first time Rollins coach Julie Garner watched Coe compete was at a junior event at Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club. By the time Garner got to the course, Rollins alumna Peggy Kirk Bell, a World Golf Hall of Famer who happened to own the place, had already spotted Coe on the range and was blown away by her power.

“There’s just something special about Pine Needles, and of course Mrs. Bell,” said Garner. “It was just magical how it all came together.”

Coe, a four-time All-American, would go on to lead Rollins to the 2008 NCAA Division II title while winning individually. She also won the Ross Resorts Invitational at Mid Pines, an extra special victory as the Bell family owned Mid Pines, too.

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CfMOUmiJFVT/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

After competing for several years on what’s now the Epson Tour and missing out on her LPGA card one last time at Q-School, Coe came across a posting on LinkedIn for the assistant director of instruction at Baltimore Country Club.

She’d grown up “nerding out” over golf swings at the New Jersey Academy of Golf with her instructor Bruce Chelucci. As a teenager, she’d set up for his clinics, take his lessons on the course and absorb his teaching methods. Following in Chelucci’s footsteps felt like a natural next step.

“He didn’t charge me for lessons,” said Coe. “It was just this understanding that hey, we’re going to build something special together, so let’s just always help somebody out.”

After five years, Coe was promoted to director of instruction at Baltimore and then moved to Merion in March of 2022.

While she no longer plays professionally full time, Coe stays competitive in PGA events, noting that she’s played in more than 15 this year, though most are only one day. She was the Middle Atlantic Women’s PGA Player of the Year six times and was named the inaugural OMEGA Women’s PGA Professional Player of the Year in 2020.

Joanna Coe of Team USA hits her shot during a practice round for the 2nd PGA Women’s Cup at Twin Warriors Golf Club on Tuesday, October 25, 2022 in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/PGA of America)

In June, Coe won the 2022 Conestoga Classic on the second sudden-death playoff hole against Braden Shattuck of Rolling Green Golf Club in Springfield. She made nine birdies in that round. Most of the events she competes in are mixed, and Coe plays a reduced yardage.

“She’s meant to compete,” said Garner, noting the epic ping pong battles Coe used to engage in with former Rollins president Lewis Duncan.

Next year’s KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Baltustrol will be her fifth KPMG. There’s already talk of a party bus of supporters coming out to watch in 2023.

There’s a lot of passion around elite-level golf at Merion, host of 19 USGA championships and a slate of big events on the calendar, including the 2026 U.S. Amateur, 2030 U.S. Open and 2034 U.S. Women’s Open.

During the Curtis Cup last June at Merion, Coe hosted dozens of kids at a junior clinic that featured Swoop, the Philadelphia Eagles mascot. Coe never imagined while working those junior clinics with Chelucci that this is how she’d one day grow the game.

“Merion was always an unattainable dream place,” she said. “The first time I played here, I couldn’t stop shaking the entire day.”

Now it’s home.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Former Division II standout Joanna Coe, director of instruction at storied Merion, still thrives while competing on a national stage

“Merion was always an unattainable dream place. The first time I played here, I couldn’t stop shaking.”

It snowed on the first day of the Women’s PGA Cup. The wind gusted over 30 mph at Twin Warriors Golf Club in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico, and the feels-like temperature was in the high 20s. Even the Swedes asked PGA officials, “Is this playable?”

The Americans trailed early but battled back over the weekend to win the second Women’s PGA Cup. Joanna Coe fielded quite a few questions from students when she returned to Merion Golf Club about battling the elements and coming through in the clutch.

As director of instruction at the storied club, Coe’s competitive drive and infectious personality fit in well at a place that’s synonymous with excellence.

“Everyone eats, sleeps and breathes golf here,” she said.

Coe has a poster of Nelly Korda in her teaching bay because she thinks there needs to be more of a focus on the best women in the world.

Suzy Whaley, the first female president of the PGA of America, describes Coe as a hard worker whose approachable and authentic demeanor makes people want to be around her.

“She loves the game and exudes joy when she’s around it,” Whaley said. “This hire was a very smart hire.”

Whaley applauds Merion for hiring a woman because of the message it sends to an industry in which it’s still a challenging climb for women and minorities, but she wants to make it clear, too, that Coe was the best fit for the job.

“In golf, we’ve made progress,” said Whaley, “but we have a long way to go to elevate women and minorities. Boards, employers and owners continue to be heavily skewed male, and human nature showcases that we hire people like ourselves.”

Even now when Whaley answers the phone at her facility, the person on the other end sometimes asks to speak to the golf professional.

Team USA poses for a photo with the Women’s PGA Cup during the final round of the 2nd Women’s PGA Cup at Twin Warriors Golf Club on Saturday, October 29, 2022, in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico. From left to right: Ashley Grier, Sherry Andonian, Jennifer Borocz, Stephanie Connelly-Eiswerth and Joanna Coe (Photo by Sam Greenwood/PGA of America)

The first time Rollins coach Julie Garner watched Coe compete was at a junior event at Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club. By the time Garner got to the course, Rollins alumna Peggy Kirk Bell, a World Golf Hall of Famer who happened to own the place, had already spotted Coe on the range and was blown away by her power.

“There’s just something special about Pine Needles, and of course Mrs. Bell,” said Garner. “It was just magical how it all came together.”

Coe, a four-time All-American, would go on to lead Rollins to the 2008 NCAA Division II title while winning individually. She also won the Ross Resorts Invitational at Mid Pines, an extra special victory as the Bell family owned Mid Pines, too.

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CfMOUmiJFVT/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

After competing for several years on what’s now the Epson Tour and missing out on her LPGA card one last time at Q-School, Coe came across a posting on LinkedIn for the assistant director of instruction at Baltimore Country Club.

She’d grown up “nerding out” over golf swings at the New Jersey Academy of Golf with her instructor Bruce Chelucci. As a teenager, she’d set up for his clinics, take his lessons on the course and absorb his teaching methods. Following in Chelucci’s footsteps felt like a natural next step.

“He didn’t charge me for lessons,” said Coe. “It was just this understanding that hey, we’re going to build something special together, so let’s just always help somebody out.”

After five years, Coe was promoted to director of instruction at Baltimore and then moved to Merion in March of 2022.

While she no longer plays professionally full time, Coe stays competitive in PGA events, noting that she’s played in more than 15 this year, though most are only one day. She was the Middle Atlantic Women’s PGA Player of the Year six times and was named the inaugural OMEGA Women’s PGA Professional Player of the Year in 2020.

Joanna Coe of Team USA hits her shot during a practice round for the 2nd PGA Women’s Cup at Twin Warriors Golf Club on Tuesday, October 25, 2022 in Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/PGA of America)

In June, Coe won the 2022 Conestoga Classic on the second sudden-death playoff hole against Braden Shattuck of Rolling Green Golf Club in Springfield. She made nine birdies in that round. Most of the events she competes in are mixed, and Coe plays a reduced yardage.

“She’s meant to compete,” said Garner, noting the epic ping pong battles Coe used to engage in with former Rollins president Lewis Duncan.

Next year’s KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Baltustrol will be her fifth KPMG. There’s already talk of a party bus of supporters coming out to watch in 2023.

There’s a lot of passion around elite-level golf at Merion, host of 19 USGA championships and a slate of big events on the calendar, including the 2026 U.S. Amateur, 2030 U.S. Open and 2034 U.S. Women’s Open.

During the Curtis Cup last June at Merion, Coe hosted dozens of kids at a junior clinic that featured Swoop, the Philadelphia Eagles mascot. Coe never imagined while working those junior clinics with Chelucci that this is how she’d one day grow the game.

“Merion was always an unattainable dream place,” she said. “The first time I played here, I couldn’t stop shaking the entire day.”

Now it’s home.

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Five things to know from historic Merion, where Team USA dominated the 42nd Curtis Cup

The only drama on Sunday at the 42nd Curtis Cup centered around which player would clinch it for Team USA.

ARDMORE, Pennsylvania – It was never really close. The only drama on Sunday at the 42nd Curtis Cup centered around which player would clinch it for Team USA.

That turned out to be Rachel Kuehn, who enjoyed the same honor last year in Wales. The U.S. won every session of every day, trouncing Great Britain and Ireland, 15.5 to 4.5.

“It’s just an incredible moment,” said Kuehn, whose mom Brenda Corrie Kuehn was waiting off the side of the green with a hug.

Rookie Megha Ganne, who went 3-0, called the week the highlight of her amateur career. She’ll be a freshman at Stanford in the fall, joining stars Rachel Heck and Rose Zhang.

“This has been the greatest week of my life,” added another rookie Latanna Stone, who stuffed her approach on the iconic 18th to seal her singles victory against Charlotte Heath.

Emily Price was the only player on the GB&I team to win her singles match.

Curtis Cup: Great Britain and Ireland needs near singles sweep to upset U.S. at historic Merion

The Americans ended Saturday with a commanding 8½ to 3½ lead.

ARDMORE, PA. — It looked like Great Britain and Ireland might finally get the session they needed at the 42nd Curtis Cup. Captain Elaine Ratcliffe’s squad was 4 up in two matches and 2 up in a third in afternoon foursomes.

But it didn’t last.

The visiting team lost momentum down the stretch at Merion as the Americans ended Saturday with a commanding 8½ to 3½ lead. Team USA only needs 10 points to retain the Cup. GB&I hasn’t won on U.S. soil since 1994 at The Honors Course in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Curtis Cup rookie Amari Avery is now 4-0 for the week and has a chance to become only the third American to go 5-0, joining Stacy Lewis and Kristen Gillman.

Avery paired with Megha Ganne for both fourball victories and Rachel Kuehn in foursomes.

Team USA player Amari Avery reacts after putting on hole one during Four-Ball Matches at the 2022 Curtis Cup at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. on Saturday, June 11, 2022. (Chris Keane/USGA)

Hannah Darling and Annabell Fuller delivered the only full point for GB&I in the afternoon session, defeating Jensen Castle and Latanna Stone, 2 and 1. Darling picked up a slice of pepperoni and sausage pizza in the media room late in the round and said it gave her a boost.

“Down the stretch was tough,” said Darling. “I needed something to kind of lift me up a little bit. I went for the pepperoni and sausage. It was pretty good. It was actually a bigger slice than I wanted, but you know what, I ate it all.”

Darling said her partner was jealous and asked for a bite. Fuller noted that last year at Conwy Golf Club in Wales, there was an ice cream van near the 13th that they enjoyed visiting. Seeing Darling come out with a slice of pizza brought back good memories.

“I knew coming into that she was deemed to hole some putts,” said Fuller as Ratcliffe stood a few steps away eating her own piece of the pie.

Ratcliffe said her team set a pace on Saturday afternoon that put more pressure on the U.S. She’d like to see more of that in Sunday singles.

“We took it to them,” said Ratcliffe, “we executed shots. The result in the end perhaps does not show the golf that was played out there.”

Team GB&I player Caley McGinty chips to the green on hole 17 during Foursomes Matches at the 2022 Curtis Cup at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. on Saturday, June 11, 2022. (Chris Keane/USGA)

Darling noted that her team has gone over all the putts that came close at every meal so far this week. She’s looking forward to talking about the ones that dropped late in the fourth session and believes they’re due for more.

“I think we waited a little bit too long to get our first win on the board,” said Fuller, “but I mean, we’re all going into tomorrow with our head held strong and our whole team wants this more than anything, and especially after last year it being so tight. … I know we want it more than the Americans and we’re all going to play our hearts out.”

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Rachel Kuehn celebrates 21st birthday at Merion by going 2-0 with mom Brenda, a former Curtis Cup star, by her side

Rachel Kuehn celebrated her 21st birthday at Merion by going 2-0 with her mom Brenda, a former Curtis Cup star herself, by her side.

ARDMORE, Pennsylvania – Brenda Corrie Kuehn wears a gold scapular medal around her neck, and for years has told daughter Rachel about the time her heart was pounding so hard she could feel that necklace moving up and down as she faced a 4-foot downhill slider to clinch the 1998 Curtis Cup.

“I can’t even tell you the amount of times she’s told us about the 4-footer,” said Rachel, “downhill, left-to-right.”

There are pictures scattered around the family’s North Carolina home of Kuehn walking the fairways at the Curtis Cup with her oldest son, Corrie, who was a baby at the time. Rachel grew up familiar with her mother’s Curtis Cup pins, red blazer, and vintage footage of that putt, which gave Team USA its first victory over Great Britain and Ireland in eight years.

Now, it’s Rachel’s turn to make memories. There was a time when she longed to escape her mother’s shadow. Now, she basks in what they share.

Rachel Kuehn and her mother Brenda Corrie Kuehn pose for a photo after the team won the 2021 Curtis Cup at Conwy Golf Club in North Wales, United Kingdom on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2021. (Oisin Keniry/USGA)

On Friday at the 42nd Curtis Cup, Rachel’s team serenaded her on the first tee for her 21st birthday. One day, Rachel will likely tell her own kids about the time she had her own Cup-clinching moment in Wales, followed by a milestone birthday at Merion, one of the game’s most iconic courses. Her present: two full points and a commanding 5-1 lead for Team USA.

“I don’t know what she’d rate hers on a scale of 1 to 100,” said Rachel of mom’s Curtis Cup experience, “but mine is a 200.”

They are the second mother-daughter duo to compete in a Curtis Cup, joining Jane Bastanchury Booth and Kellee Booth. Brenda and Kelly happened to be foursomes partners in 1998.

The 1998 USA Curtis Cup Team as seen at the Minikahda Club in Minneapolis, Minn., Friday, August 31, 1998. Back Row (left to right): Jo Jo Roberts, Elizabeth Bauer, Kellee Booth and Wanalee Jenny Chausiriporn. Front Row (Left to right): Robin Burke, Virginia Derby Grimes, Captain Barbara McIntire, Carol Semple Thompson and Brenda Corrie Kuehn. (Copyright USGA/John Mummert)

After a sparkling career at Wake Forest in which she won five times as a senior, Brenda turned professional and competed on what’s now known as the Epson Tour, winning her first tournament in 1988, the Chattanooga Classic, with a final-round 66 that included two chip-ins.

But, after two years and no LPGA status, Brenda decided professional golf wasn’t for her and regained her amateur status. In addition to her two Curtis Cup appearances, she also represented the United State in the 1996 U.S. World Cup Team. Among her nine appearances in the U.S. Women’s Open, the one at Pine Needles in 2001 garnered the most attention after she qualified for the event when she was seven months pregnant.

Given that her first son was born three weeks early, Brenda’s doctor advised that she not play. Brenda wasn’t having it, however, and found a doctor in the Pinehurst area who could be on call. She was eight months pregnant when she teed it up.

“I was having Braxton Hicks contractions through the whole tournament,” she said, “and had her a week later.”

Previous Curtis Cup players were in attendance at the flag-raising ceremony to kick off the 2022 Curtis Cup at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. on Thursday, June 9, 2022. Left to right: Ellen Port, Brenda Kuehn and Marla Jemsek-Weeks (Chris Keane/USGA)

Twenty-one years later, Kuehn walked alongside her daughter at Merion, feeling a different kind of nerves as she caught up with players like Karen Stupples and Marla Jemsek-Weeks, who competed with her in the late 90s.

After Brenda had Rachel, it became too hard to keep up with golf with a baby and one child in school, so she wound down her competition schedule. Rachel grew up playing soccer, tennis, baseball and golf on Sundays with her family.

At age 13, she decided to pick golf as her main sport, but continued to compete in tennis throughout high school, earning all-state honors. The original intent was to use golf to attend an Ivy League School, but as her golf game progressed, the academic-minded student began to see other doors open.

She did not, however, want to follow in the footsteps of both her parents, who met at Wake Forest. Father Eric briefly played baseball for the Demon Deacons.

“I’m a Wake Forest fan,” Rachel told them, “but never in a million years am I going to Wake Forest.

“I wanted my own school, especially if I was going to be a golfer. I didn’t want to go and be known as her daughter.”

But, after Rachel went on a campus visit to Wake, there was no turning back. Now she’s happy with her name on the same walls of fame as mom and chasing her records. The rising senior even plans to stay on for a fifth season, using her extra year of eligibility from the COVID-19 pandemic to pursue a graduate degree in business analytics.

Mother and daughter are both bubbly and feisty and competitive. Rachel is more aggressive in her game, but strives to match her mother’s work ethic.

“First of all, she’s done a lot more than me,” said Brenda. “She’s leaping me, and it’s just fabulous to see.”

After she graduates, Rachel, who is currently No. 11 in the world, plans to turn professional, though she knows that she can always get her amateur status back, just like mom.

“I don’t want 10 to 15 years from now say, ‘Oh I wish I had tried,’ ” said Rachel.

One might say it’s her destiny.

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Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses 2022: From Pebble Beach to Pinehurst, the top 200 golf courses built before 1960

Golfweek’s raters have ranked the top 200 courses built in the United States before 1960, such as Augusta National, Pebble Beach and more

Welcome to the Golfweek’s Best 2022 list of the Top 200 Classic Courses before 1960 in the United States.

Each year we publish many lists, with this Top 200 Classic Courses list among the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the lists for Top 200 Modern Courses, the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce these rankings. The top handful of courses in the world have an average rating of above 9, while many excellent layouts fall into the high-6 to the 8 range.

To ensure these lists are up-to-date, Golfweek’s Best in recent years has altered how the individual ratings are compiled into the rankings. Only ratings from rounds played in the past 10 years are included in the compilations. This helps ensure that any course in the rankings still measures up.

Courses also must have a minimum of 25 votes to qualify for the Top 200 Modern or the Top 200 Classic. Other Golfweek’s Best lists, such as Best Courses You Can Play or Best Private, do not require as many votes. This makes it possible that a course can show up on other lists but not on the premium Top 200 lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. The list also notes in parenthesis next to the name of each course where that course ranked in 2021. Also included with many courses are links to recent stories about that layout.

After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is:

• p: private
• d: daily fee
• r: resort course
• t: tour course
• u: university
• m: municipal
• re: real estate
• c: casino

* Indicates new to or returning to this list.

Editor’s note: The 2022 Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for the top 200 layouts built after 1960 in the U.S. was published Monday, May 23. The Best Courses You Can Play lists and the Best Private Courses lists will follow over the next two weeks. 

USGA announces Rachel Heck, Rachel Kuehn to 2022 Curtis Cup squad bound for Merion

The United States team for the 2022 Curtis Cup is starting to take shape.

The United States team for the 2022 Curtis Cup is starting to take shape.

On Wednesday the USGA announced that Rachel Heck and Rachel Kuehn had earned spots on the squad that will take on the Great Britain & Ireland in the 42nd Curtis Cup, June 10-12 at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pennsylvania.

Heck and Kuehn earned their spots as the top-ranked Americans in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Rose Zhang, currently ranked No. 1 in WAGR, had already qualified after receiving the 2021 McCormack Medal as the world’s top-ranked amateur. Heck, a sophomore at Stanford with eight college wins, is ranked No. 3. The stroke-play medalist at the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur and a four-time collegiate winner over three years at Wake Forest, Kuehn is ranked No. 8.

“Rachel and Rachel are fantastic additions to the team,” said captain Sarah Ingram, a three-time Curtis Cup team member in 1992, 1994 and 1996. “Not only have they had unbelievably impressive collegiate seasons, resulting in these automatic selections, but both are experienced leaders who bring enthusiasm and camaraderie to the team. Having them included in the experience at Merion is something I am very much looking forward to both personally and as team captain.”

Ingram led the Americans to a 12½-7½ victory over GB&I at Conwy Golf Club in Wales last summer in the 2021 matches.

Kentucky senior Jensen Castle had previously earned her spot as the winner of the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur. With four places already secured for the summer matches, the USGA’s International Team Selection group will choose the other four players.

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USGA selects 12 players for 2022 Curtis Cup practice session in Florida

Five of the 12 players were members of the winning team in Wales in 2021.

12 players have accepted invitations for a United States Curtis Cup team practice session next month, January 15-16, at Mountain Lake in Lake Wales, Florida.

Five players who competed in the 2021 Curtis Cup, held just four months ago after the 2020 event was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, will be on hand: Jensen Castle, Rachel Heck, Rachel Kuehn, Emilia Migliaccio, and Rose Zhang. Castle and Zhang were previously named to the team as automatic selections due to winning the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur and 2021 Mark H. McCormack Medal, respectively.

“The amateur talent in the United States is so incredibly strong right now, and it’s an honor to gather with this group for a practice session next month,” said Sarah Lebrun Ingram, who returns as captain for 2022. “We have a great mix of young women, including many players who helped lead us to victory in Wales just a few months ago and some players who have played fantastic golf this fall on the collegiate level who I am excited to get to know. I’m very much looking forward to our time together and I know the players are as well.”

Ingram captained 2021’s winning team, was a member of the 1992, 1994, and 1996 Curtis Cup teams, and is a three-time U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion. Elaine Ratcliffe, who defeated Ingram and the U.S. as a player in the 1996 match, will again serve as GB&I captain.

Eight players will eventually represent Team USA, June 10-12, at Merion Golf Club outside of Philadelphia for the 42nd Curtis Cup. The USA leads the overall series, 30-8-3.

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Full list of practice participants

Jenny Bae, 20, of Suwanee, Georgia (Georgia)

Jensen Castle, 20, of West Columbia, South Carolina (Kentucky)

Megha Ganne, 17, of Holmdel, New Jersey (Signed with Stanford, Class of 2026)

Rachel Heck, 20, of Memphis, Tennessee (Stanford)

Julia Johnson, 22, of Saint Gabriel, Louisiana (Mississippi)

Gurleen Kaur, 22, of Houston, Texas (Baylor)

Rachel Kuehn, 20, of Asheville, North Carolina (Wake Forest)

Emilia Migliaccio, 22, of Cary, North Carolina (Wake Forest)

Brooke Seay, 21, of San Diego, California (Stanford)

Aneka Seumanutafa, 21, of Emmitsburg, Maryland (Ohio State)

Erica Shepherd, 20, of Greenwood, Indiana (Duke)

Rose Zhang, 18, of Irvine, California (Stanford)

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