Meet three former tour pros tackling medical school, including the 2020 college player of the year

“I wasn’t driven in the same way some of the other ladies are on tour.”

Natalie Srinivasan’s greatest strength as a golfer was her mind. She had an uncanny ability to block things out, to the point that Furman coach Jeff Hull would come up and ask, “Are you alive? Can I check your pulse?”

Srinivasan, a former college golf player of the year, had a gut check about her future last year on the Epson Tour in French Lick, Indiana.

“When I started to lose that mind control,” she said, “that’s when I knew I couldn’t do this. The passion wasn’t there.”

Srinivasan finished out the 2022 season on the Epson Tour in October and began studying for the Medical College Admission Test in November. Her clubs still haven’t made it out of the travel case, but she was recently accepted into the Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine, where she will start school next fall.

Srinivasan follows the footsteps of not only her father, but of two other former Epson Tour players who are already in medical school: August Kim and Janet Mao.

“I think the three of us will always have a special bond,” said Srinivasan.

The pipeline continues on with Dylan Kim (no relation), a former standout at Baylor and Arkansas, who is currently in the process of studying for the MCAT, and Jaclyn Lee, an Ohio State grad and LPGA player who is in the process of making the switch to med school.

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Kim, a former Big Ten conference champion who played for Purdue, has already been president of her class at Vanderbilt School of Medicine. The 28-year-old wants to study orthopedic surgery so that she can work with athletes. Kim’s younger sister, Auston, recently graduated from the Epson Tour and earned an LPGA card. The pair spent five months together as touring pros before August shifted gears to medicine, which has always been her long-term goal.

Mao, a neuroscience major at Northwestern who won NCAA regionals in 2016, quit playing golf competitively in 2021 so that she could begin the 18-month process of getting into medical school. The average applicant applies to 20 schools, Mao said, and Northwestern graduates average around 25 applications. That’s about where Mao landed, who pumped out essays for two months straight.

Mao was accepted to Emory, where her father is a research scientist, last fall and began an intense week of shadowing, “Week on the Wards,” in mid-July. Mao isn’t quite sure what kind of medicine she wants to specialize in, but she does plan to graduate in 2028 with an M.D. and a master’s degree in public health.

Mao said of the 141 people in her class, 90 percent are non-traditional students, or people like her who have taken time to do different things after undergrad. Mao hopes that young golfers with a dream of studying medicine will see that it’s possible to keep that dream alive – and study in the sciences – while playing Division I college golf.

“Don’t shy away from it,” Mao said.

Janet Mao poses with her family at Emory’s White Coat Ceremony. (courtesy photo)

All three of these elite college players had med school in mind when they were recruited to play college golf. Kim knew she’d found a good fit when she walked into the science wing at Purdue and saw the copper bust of a Nobel Prize winner in chemistry.

“It was the perfect mix,” said Kim, who studied biochemistry.

Mao went to Northwestern as a premed major and developed a desire to play golf professionally while in college. As a child, her father would fuel her curiosity in the sciences with questions like “Why do you think the leaves are changing colors?” He’d also take her to work.

“He’d put me in the MRI scanner,” said Mao of her early interest in medicine.

While Mao was competing on the Epson Tour, she took advantage of a service that was offered called Next Play Coaching. The one-hour sessions were designed to help players reassess their values and goals and release anxiety about the future.

Mao found a deeper passion for the game in college than she’d felt in junior golf and thought she should give the professional ranks a try. While she did enjoy aspects of tour life, Mao realized that she was playing to prove something to herself and to others, and that pressure was weighing her down.

“I wasn’t playing to become the best in the world one day,” she said. “I wasn’t driven in the same way some of the other ladies are on tour.”

Srinivasan’s father, Ajai, graduated from MUSC in 1996, and Natalie is proud to follow his lead. Ajai, a general surgeon in Spartanburg, South Carolina, played high-level tennis in India before moving to the U.S. for college.

Juli Inkster, Taylor Totland, Natalie Srinivasan and Pat Hurst during the Inkster Senior Award retreat. (Photo: Natalie Srinivasan)

Natalie was the kid in the seventh grade who enjoyed dissecting the frog while many of her friends were grossed out. Like Mao, it wasn’t until college that Srinivasan decided to give professional golf a shot, especially after a senior year that, while cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic, saw her win the 2020 ANNIKA Award, PING WGCA National Player of the Year and the inaugural Juli Inkster Senior Award, which comes with a two-day retreat with the Hall of Famer player.

“Juli has taken me in like one of her own,” said Srinivasan of the down-to-earth legend who helped with caddies, courses and her transition to life after golf.

“She just wanted me to be happy.”

It took Srinivasan some time before she could admit out loud that she didn’t want to play golf anymore. The solitary life of professional golf, which demands the athlete put herself first to succeed, didn’t mesh with Srinivasan’s personality. She missed her Furman teammates and the idea of playing for something bigger than herself.

“I lost my why,” she said.

Consider it found.

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Natalie Srinivasan’s retreat with Juli Inkster included rounds at Pasatiempo, Cypress Point

Natalie Srinivasan spent two days with Juli Inkster in California as part of a retreat that went along with winning the award in her name.

When you’re playing with Juli Inkster, you get cookie service on the 14th hole at Pasatiempo, an Alister MacKenzie-designed gem in Santa Cruz, California, where Inkster grew up.

Pasatiempo was the first course on which Inkster hosted Natalie Srinivasan, winner of the inaugural Juli Inkster Senior Award presented by WorkDay this past week. For the occasion, Inkster’s mom brought out the baked goods.

Srinivasan, a recent Furman graduate who also won the ANNIKA Award and the WGCA National Player of the Year this spring, spent two days with Inkster in Northern California as part of a mentorship retreat that went along with winning the award. Since May, Inkster has helped guide Srinivasan through several elements of being a professional, among them writing letters to sponsors.

“I’ve been talking to her a lot,” Srinivasan said. “After I won the award, between that time and the time I went on the trip, I’ve texted her very frequently, almost every day.”

But being with Inkster in person presented new opportunities. In California, Inkster hosted dinner at her house one night. On the golf course, Srinivasan was able to ask questions about specific shots – if Inkster hit it out of position, how did she plan to get it back in play? How did she approach the shot? Where do you want to be on this hole or that one?

“We were on the second hole at Pasatiempo,” Srinivasan remembered, “she hit it in the bunker. It was kind of a long, awkward bunker shot. I asked how she would hit it and she went through how she thought of it in her head.”

Related: Natalie Srinivasan brings Furman to the forefront as ANNIKA Award winner

Both women invited friends along to the retreat. Inkster brought Pat Hurst, a good friend to whom she recently passed over the reins to the Solheim Cup captaincy. Srinivasan chose former Furman teammate Taylor Totland, a 2017 graduate now playing professionally on the Symetra Tour.

“We’re really good friends and she was a senior my freshman year so she kind of taught me how to do things at Furman. She really did a lot for me,” Srinivasan said of Totland.

Cypress Point presented a more-than-worthy follow-up to the round at Pasatiempo. The four walked, with only a forecaddie joining the group, shared stories and spent the day taking photos. Srinivasan said the best part was playing No. 16, where she hit the green with driver.

“Pictures don’t do it justice,” she said.

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“We just kind of talked the whole day and shared stories and experiences,” Srinivasan said of the time spent with Inkster and Hurst on the golf course. “It was cool just to see their perspective and the things they’ve been through together and just kind of hear stories from the other side, on that LPGA Hall of Famer side, I guess is the best way to put it.”

Srinivasan quietly opened doors for herself with a steady, committed performance over the past four years at Furman. She brought new recognition to a program that has developed some of the best in women’s golf – from Dottie Pepper to Betsy King to Beth Daniel.

Srinivasan earned Symetra Tour status through Q-School in 2019 and will tee it up at the next event in Battle Creek, Michigan, on July 24-26. The Inkster Senior Award also comes with an exemption into the Cambia Portland Classic, an LPGA event that has been rescheduled for Sept. 17-20 in light of the pandemic.

“If the tournament is played,” Srinivasan said, “I’ll be there.”

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Natalie Srinivasan named inaugural Juli Inkster Senior Award winner

Natalie Srinivasan keeps adding to her postseason awards tally, most recently with the Julie Inkster Award.

The last leg of Natalie Srinivasan’s postseason awards sweep is perhaps the most telling of all. The Spartanburg, South Carolina, player found a perfect fit at Furman four years ago and has helped to bring the Paladins back to the top of college golf. For that commitment, Srinivasan has been named the first recipient of the Juli Inkster Award Presented by WorkDay.

The award, created this year, recognizes the highest ranked women’s collegiate golfer in her final year of NCAA eligibility. It rewards a college golfer who honors her commitment to her college team, as Srinivasan has.

Srinivasan already has Symetra Tour status lined up for the rest of the year. The Inkster Award comes with an exemption into the next Cambia Portland Classic (currently scheduled for Sept. 17-20). She will also have the opportunity to spend time with Inkster during a two-day mentorship retreat.

With so much up in the air thanks to COVID-19, tournament exemptions are particularly important as Srinivasan launches her pro career. For winning the ANNIKA Award, she receiving an exemption into the Evian Championship, an LPGA major.

Related: Natalie Srinivasan brings Furman to the forefront as ANNIKA Award winner

Five players (three of whom were seniors) turned professional at the halfway point of the season after securing either LPGA status or Symetra Tour status at the LPGA Q-Series in November. Srinivasan stayed in Greenville. She won three times in the six starts she made during this pandemic-shortened season.

Srinivasan’s name continues to go down with some of the game’s greats, from Sorenstam and now to Inkster. Her game grew exponentially at Furman, a place that also churned out players like Betsy King, Beth Daniel and Dottie Pepper.

Head coach Jeff Hull said Srinivasan wasn’t the kind of outgoing player who would loudly rally the troops, but her example was invaluable for her teammates.

“She works on the parts of her game that she needs to work on,” Hull said. “She always has a plan for practice and for tournaments. She plays like a professional.”

Hull said her interaction with teammates was often one-on-one. Srinivasan made it clear she wanted to help and be a resource.

Srinivasan was the top player in Golfstat’s rankings when the season ended and ranked No. 4 by Golfweek.

The Juli Inkster Senior Award was also presented at the NCAA Division II and III levels. Tampa’s Kiira Riihijarvi was the Division II recipient while Alyssa Akiyama of Carleton won the Division III award.

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Natalie Srinivasan brings Furman to the forefront as ANNIKA Award winner

A three-win senior season boosted Natalie Srinivasan to the top of college golf. College players, coaches voted her the ANNIKA Award winner.

Natalie Srinivasan has a tendency to let phone calls go unanswered if she doesn’t recognize the number. Knowing this, Furman coach Jeff Hull told his senior a few weeks ago to make sure she answered one that would be coming in the next morning.

“I think somebody wants to interview you,” he told her nonchalantly a few minutes later. She still didn’t think much of it.

Srinivasan had just pulled up to the golf course the next day when “No Caller ID” flashed on her phone screen. She dutifully answered and would have recognized the voice right away even if, “Hello, this is Annika,” weren’t the caller’s first words.

It felt like minutes passed before Srinivasan could make a sound. On the other end of the line, Annika Sorenstam was explaining that Srinivasan had won her namesake ANNIKA Award as the best player in women’s college golf.

Srinivasan already was named the Women’s Golf Coaches Association player of the year last month. The ANNIKA Award, however, is based on a vote by her peers, plus coaches, golf media and SIDs.

“Annika’s name, it’s her award and she’s the greatest player in women’s golf, ever,” Srinivasan, said. “It’s just an honor to be associated with that. All the other girls who have won have gone on to become awesome leaders and role models in this game.”

Srinivasan grew up 45 minutes from the Furman campus in Spartanburg, South Carolina. She won three times in an abbreviated senior season that included only six starts. Playing in the Southern Conference, Srinivasan flew under the radar despite winning the league title as a freshman and earning All-America honors as a sophomore.

Sometimes it’s hard to put yourself in the category of best players in college golf. That may be easier for Srinivasan to do now. It’s different when you see it in print, whether that’s at the top of the Golfstat rankings (Srinivasan is No. 4 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings) or etched onto the base of the ANNIKA Award.

The ANNIKA Award

The awards are piling up, and it’s hard to say what else Srinivasan might have accomplished, particularly in the postseason. She’d have every reason to be bitter about the abrupt end to her senior year caused by the coronavirus.

“Things happen and I think that’s what’s so good about playing college golf and being a student athlete, it teaches you to deal with the unexpected,” she said. “There have been so many tournaments that have gone not as I thought, professors throwing things your way, having that mindset of not being able to control it.”

A global pandemic is just the ultimate example of that. Srinivasan had attended a U.S. Curtis Cup practice session in December. She likes to think she’d have made that team – the June event was postponed a year to 2021 –but she’ll never know.

The Furman campus was on spring break when the women’s golf team returned from the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate in Hilton Head, where Srinivasan was runner-up individually, and Hull dispatched his players for a few days of rest. The next meeting they had was about the season being called off. Hull told his players to keep it sharp – the Southern Conference Championship was still a distant possibility – but eventually that fell off the table, too. Everything did.

A conversation about returning for a fifth year in Greenville was brief, Hull said. Srinivasan’s path is forward. She has Symetra Tour status and says LPGA Q-School is on the horizon. The ANNIKA Award comes with an exemption into the Evian Championship, an LPGA major.

A natural fit

Srinivasan landed at Furman as a consistent, if not all-world, junior player. Hull was the Furman assistant coach then. Srinivasan thinks he and then-head coach Kelley Hester (the same woman who recruited Stacy Lewis to Arkansas in the early 2000s) saw a talent in her, and ultimately Hull would be the one to cultivate it. He took over as head coach the same year Srinivasan came in as a freshman.

When Srinivasan climbed out of the van in Minneapolis for that first college start in the fall of 2016, she didn’t know much about how this whole thing worked.

“Nobody told me it was 36-18 until two days before we left,” she said, “so they literally threw me into the fire. Thirty-six your first college round.”

But that tournament week also included a trip to the Mall of America. Srinivasan was instantly enamored with her teammates. College golf has suited her.

The conference title at the end of her freshman season was the first of four career wins, but Hull sometimes boils her career down to just one shot: a pure 5-iron into the 18th green in the final round of the 2017 NCAA Lubbock Regional – all the postseason pressure on her shoulders.

“She hit the prettiest 5-iron I’ve ever seen anybody hit,” he said. “It just literally came off the club, climbed up in the sky, fell right on the flag. We still talk about that shot.”

When he brings it up, Srinivasan smiles, maybe gives him a nod, but generally plays it cool.

Natalie Srinivasan with Furman coach Jeff Hull. (Photo: Furman Athletics)

By the numbers

Srinivasan admits she wasn’t always sure where the ball was going when she arrived at Furman. She and Hull doubled down on her wedges, her in-between shots and go-to shots. She learned how to play much smarter, learned where to “miss it” and that you don’t always have to take less club and swing harder.

“Even when I’m not hitting it well now, I can kind of manage that with that type of shot,” she said. “Even in qualifying, Jeff will give me some ideas and a game to play with myself where I play with more club or less club depending on the hole.”

They spent hours at Furman’s golf facility, particularly on the putting green. It was an investment of time that went both ways.

“We tried to work on a couple extra shots she would need to get to that next level,” Hull said. “When she had to hit a shot, she knew she could.”

On the greens, Srinivasan spent much of the past year working on “makeable” putts, those in the five to 15-foot range. Hull says Srinivasan’s growth in mental game has been huge.

Furman has produced some of women’s golf’s greatest over the years, from Betsy King to Beth Daniel to Dottie Pepper. No Furman player has won the ANNIKA Award, first awarded in 2014. Brad Faxon, Furman alum, won the Fred Haskins Award (the men’s equivalent) in 1983.

That’s not lost on Srinivasan. If there’s any way to return the investment Hull & Co., have made in her, then this is it.

“It’s just awesome to put Furman back on the map,” she said. “It’s been a little while since we had this recognition.”

List of ANNIKA Award winners

2020 – Natalie Srinivasan, Furman

2019 – Maria Fassi, Arkansas

2018 – Maria Fassi, Arkansas

2017 – Leona Maguire, Duke

2016 – Bronte Law, UCLA

2015 – Leona Maguire, Duke

2014 – Alison Lee, UCLA

RELATED: Pepperdine’s Sahith Theegala wins 2020 Haskins Award

Three finalists remain for Haskins and ANNIKA Awards

After a shortened college golf season, both the Haskins and ANNIKA Awards will still be presented to the top men’s and women’s college players. Players, coaches, sports information directors and golf media were eligible to vote for the awards. After the voting period, three finalists remain on each side. Haskins finalists include Vanderbilt senior John Augenstein, Pepperdine senior Sahith Theegala and Georgia junior Davis Thompson. Augenstein notched a victory at the Desert Mountain Intercollegiate and had two other top-five finishes, including a runner-up showing at the Nike Golf Collegiate. Theegala finished an abbreviated season as the top-ranked college player in both the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings and the Golfstat individual rankings. Thompson won the Jim Rivers Invitational in the fall for one of four top-10 finishes on the season. ANNIKA finalists are Arizona freshman Vivian Hou, LSU freshman Ingrid Lindblad and Furman senior Natalie Srinivasan. Hou was a collective 17 under in 16 competitive rounds during her freshman year at Arizona. Lindblad won two times in an abbreviated season at LSU. Srinivasan’s season included three individual titles and ended with a runner-up at the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate. Award winners for both the Haskins and ANNIKA will be announced May 8.

After a shortened college golf season, both the Haskins and ANNIKA Awards will still be presented to the top men’s and women’s college players. Players, coaches, sports information directors and golf media were eligible to vote for the awards. After the voting period, three finalists remain on each side. Haskins finalists include Vanderbilt senior John Augenstein, Pepperdine senior Sahith Theegala and Georgia junior Davis Thompson. Augenstein notched a victory at the Desert Mountain Intercollegiate and had two other top-five finishes, including a runner-up showing at the Nike Golf Collegiate. Theegala finished an abbreviated season as the top-ranked college player in both the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings and the Golfstat individual rankings. Thompson won the Jim Rivers Invitational in the fall for one of four top-10 finishes on the season. ANNIKA finalists are Arizona freshman Vivian Hou, LSU freshman Ingrid Lindblad and Furman senior Natalie Srinivasan. Hou was a collective 17 under in 16 competitive rounds during her freshman year at Arizona. Lindblad won two times in an abbreviated season at LSU. Srinivasan’s season included three individual titles and ended with a runner-up at the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate. Award winners for both the Haskins and ANNIKA will be announced May 8.