2023 Chevron Championship: Amari Avery helped USC win Pac-12s earlier this week, and now she’s tearing it up at a major – without any practice rounds

This marks Avery’s third start on the LPGA and her first time making the cut.

THE WOODLANDS, Texas — By the time Amari Avery got to her hotel room in The Woodlands, Texas, Wednesday night, it was close to midnight. Fresh off a team victory at the Pac-12 Championships, the USC sophomore felt her eyes start to shut around 1 a.m. Later that afternoon, she teed off in the first round of the Chevron Championship without having ever seen the golf course.

“To be honest,” said Avery, “I didn’t really have that much nerves coming in just because I came straight off the plane from playing the final round at Pac-12s. I was kind of like, ‘Oh, just more golf.’ Hopefully four more rounds, and I think we’ve secured it.”

Avery has done more than secure a spot on the weekend. A second-round 69 puts her at 2 under for the tournament and in a share of 26th at the water-logged Nicklaus Course at the Club at Carlton Woods.

It didn’t always look this rosy, however, for the California teen who burst onto the scene in the Netflix documentary, “The Short Game.” Avery found herself four over through five holes on Thursday when the horn blew to suspend play. She returned to action just over an hour later and drained a birdie putt on the sixth hole. Since that first delay, Avery has played her last 31 holes in 6 under par. She trails leader Lilia Vu by five strokes.

Former LPGA player and USC assistant coach Tiffany Joh said while most attention is paid to Avery’s ball-striking – marked by power and a high ball-flight – not enough people talk about her touch around the greens.

While Avery played the Nicklaus Course blind on Thursday, she did have quite a few pointers from younger sister Alona, 16, who competed on the same course last Saturday at the Mack Champ Invitational. Alona has committed to UC Irvine for collegiate golf. Their father, Andre, is on the bag this week for Avery and scouted the course much as he could in the days leading up to Amari’s arrival.

“Got a lot of help from friends of mine who are caddies are out here,” he said.

Avery, one of seven amateurs in the field, isn’t just balancing two big events in the course of one week. The communications major is also doing about an hour’s worth of homework every day.

“Unfortunately, my adviser and my coaches have been kind of staying on me a little bit,” said Avery with a smile. “I’ve been falling behind in school. I’m trying to do something every day just to make sure I stay on track.”

This marks Avery’s third start on the LPGA and her first time making the cut.

It’s already a week she’ll never forget.

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Oregon Ducks’ golf team uses strong final round for third-place finish at Pac-12 championship

The Oregon Ducks had three players place in the top-10 of the Pac-12 Championships, helping them to a 3rd place finish.

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The Oregon Ducks men’s golf team shot the low round of the day in the third round of the Pac-12 championship on Wednesday at Aldarra Golf Club. They moved up a single spot in the standings and finished in 3rd place at the tournament.

A total of three Ducks finished inside the top-10 on the individual leaderboard, with Yuki Moriyama taking 3rd overall with a 1-under final round of 70, putting him at 6-under for the tournament.

Owen Avrit and Nate Stember finished in a tie for 10th.

As a team, the Ducks shot a low-round 2-under 354 on Wednesday that helped them jump up a spot on the team leaderboard. No. 8 Washington won the title at 2-over 1,422. No. 17 Stanford was second at plus-5, followed by No. 4 Arizona State at plus-10. The Ducks were two strokes back of the Sun Devils, with California (plus-26) and UCLA (plus-34) rounding out the top half of the field.

“Awesome for Yuki,” said head coach Casey Martin. “He had been struggling a bit early in the year but has worked his tail off to get back on track.”

Greyson Leach led Oregon with a 3-under 68 on Wednesday. The freshman had four birdies in the final round and tied for 28th at 8-over 292.

“The guys played great today and shot the low round of the day. I was really pleased with how they competed.”

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No. 2 Oregon women’s golf hold strong through tough first day of Pac-12 Championships

Despite holding a home-course advantage, the Oregon Ducks sit in 5th place at the Pac-12 Championships after the first round.

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The Oregon Ducks women’s golf team was supposed to have a nice home-course advantage this year at the Pac-12 Championships, which are being held at the Eugene Country Club. The forecast called for cloudy skies and showers throughout the week, which head coach Derek Radley correctly described over the weekend as “Duck weather.”

Some high winds throughout Eugene mitigated that advantage, though. The No. 2 Ducks stayed afloat, but struggled to perform as they had expected coming into the day.

Following the first round, Oregon sits at No. 5 in the standings after carding a 295 (+7).

The top-ranked Stanford Cardinal led after 18 holes, carding a 290 (+2). The rest of the top-5 is rounded out with USC (292, +4), Washington (294, +6), and Arizona State (294, +6).

“Today was tough when that wind picked up; normally if it gets a little wet out here it’s never really windy,” UO coach Derek Radley said, via Rob Moseley. “So I was seeing some balls out there kind of in some spots that I don’t normally see. The next two days though, the wind is supposed to die down even if it’s supposed to rain, and that’ll be our comfort zone.”

Hsin-Yu (Cynthia) Lu led the Ducks with an even-par round of 72, and she currently sits at No. 5 on the individual leaderboard. Tze-Han (Heather) Lin and Ching-Tzu Chen shot 2-over 74 and Briana Chacon finished at 3-over 75.

Team Leaderboard

1. Stanford — 290 (+2)
2. Southern California — 292 (+4)
T3. Washington —­ 294 (+6)
T3. Arizona State —­ 294 (+6)
5. Oregon — 295 (+7)
T6. Oregon State — 296 (+8)
T6. UCLA — 296 (+8)
8. Colorado — 302 (+14)
T9. Washington State — 305 (+17)
T9. Arizona — 305 (+17)
11. California — 313 (+25)

Going into the second round, there are six teams within 6-strokes of Stanford’s lead, so the leaderboard should see a lot of movement before all is said and done after the 54-hole tournament is concluded on Thursday.

“It’s pretty remarkable how many teams are bunched up right now,” Radley said. “We’re really all together. Obviously not the start we wanted; however, I kind of love where we’re at with two days to go. Excited just to recap together, figure out what’s wrong in some spots and figure out how to capitalize the next two days.”

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