Rachel Kuehn, mom Brenda will both not only play but also trash talk at 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur

It’ll be a family affair, with a healthy dose of trash talk, next summer at Southern Hills.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — It’ll be a family affair next summer at Southern Hills. There will also be plenty of good-natured ribbing going on.

Rachel Kuehn, one of the top women’s college golfers and a member of the defending NCAA champions Wake Forest, is set to tee it up with her mom Brenda Corrie Kuehn in the 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

It’ll mark just the second time the prestigious U.S. Golf Association event will feature a mother-daughter combo. In 1962 Jean Trainor and her daughter Anne Trainor made the field and the two actually squared off in match play, with mom winning 4 and 3 in the second round at the Country Club of Rochester in New York.

In 2024, Rachel will be coming off her fifth and final season at Wake Forest. She plans to keep her amateur status through the Women’s Am. Brenda, meanwhile, qualified for next year’s Am after reaching the final of the 2023 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur, which was contested Thursday at Troon Country Club.

“I wish more than anything that I could have been there for her this week. But I got to refresh from afar and be some moral support from a distance,” said Rachel, who joked there’s a worn part of her phone screen from constantly refreshing the leaderboard.

As she looked ahead to the Women’s Am next summer, Brenda knows it’ll be a challenge keeping up with the youngsters.

“That’s a whole other league,” Brenda said after falling short in the final against Sarah Gallagher, who won the Senior Am title 1 up.

Rachel helped Wake Forest capture the 2023 NCAA Championship at Grayhawk Golf Club, just five miles down the road from Troon CC last May.

“Incredibly excited for her,” said Rachel. “We did make the joke at the start of the week that Arizona was good for the Kuehn family.”

But what if the two were to meet in match play next summer at the Women’s Am?

“I’d love to take her down,” Brenda quipped. “The problem is there is so much trash talking in our house that if one person wins, I mean, it would go on forever.”

“And I have a feeling it’s not going to be me,” she continued to joke. “It’d be her. So, I don’t really want to give her that opportunity to trash talk me for the rest of my life.”

“There will be a whole lot of trash talk,” Rachel concurred. “She was right, we would never let the other live it down. I hope we get that chance, that would be cool.”

By making the 2023 final, both Kuehn and Gallagher earn that U.S. Women’s Am spot (Aug. 5-11) as well as entry into the 2024 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur at Brae Burn Country Club in West Newton, Massachusetts, and the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur at Broadmoor Golf Club in Seattle, Washington.

Golfweek’s Adam Woodard contributed to this article.

Sarah Gallagher defeats Brenda Kuehn to win 2023 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur

The Women’s Senior Am was 36 holes of stroke play followed by six rounds of match play.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — After 36 holes of stroke play over two days followed by six rounds of match play spread out over four days, Sarah Gallagher came out on top at Troon Country Club to win the 61st U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur Championship.

Gallagher, 50, faced off against Brenda Corrie Kuehn, mother of college all-star Rachel Kuehn, in the final. Kuehn, 58, has competed in more than 45 USGA championships, including nine U.S. Women’s Opens. Gallagher is a former sixth-grade social studies teacher who now does financial planning. This was her first Senior Am.

They tied the first hole but then Gallagher birdied the next four holes to take a 4-up lead. A crowd of about 70 people was following the duo when Kuehn birdied the ninth to cut it to 3 up but the lead went right back to 4 up for Gallagher after she birdied the 12th.

That’s when things got interesting:

  • Kuehn birdied the par-3 13th to make it a 3-up lead
  • Kuehn then won the 14th hole with a par to make it 2 up
  • Gallagher birdied the 113-yard par-3 15th to 3 up with three to go
  • Kuehn fought back to win the 16th with a par
  • Kuehn then won the par-5 17th with a birdie

Gallagher’s lead was now 1 up with one to go. Game on.

On the 18th hole, Gallagher hit an 8-iron for her second shot to the elevated back pin over the green then stubbed her chip. Kuehn landed her second shot in the front of the green and had to putt all the way across the green. She ended up three-putting for a bogey. Gallagher, a former Florida Gator living in Georgia, then calmly poured in her bogey putt to seal the win.

She immediately embraced her good friend and caddie Erin Packer and the two soaked in the win.

“I’m probably going to hold it in my lap on the airplane,” she said of the trophy which doesn’t have an official name but was nicknamed Big Bertha. “I’m going to put it on the kitchen table. No, I’m going to put it on the island in the kitchen. Actually, no, I can’t do that.

“My kids will put stuff in it.”

Holding a shrinking lead ratcheted up the tension but Gallagher said she knew it wouldn’t ever be easy.

“Brenda is, she’s such an incredible competitor,” she said about her 4-up lead dwindling to 1 up. “I knew she was going to start making putts. She’s so good. I knew I had to stay patient.”

After 104 holes of match play, Gallagher was only down on three holes.

“I like if I just kept hitting it in play, I had to force her to keep playing the way she did the first 14 holes,” said Kuehn, who admitted she didn’t carry much confidence into the event and had a flight home scheduled for Tuesday, then re-booked it for Wednesday before changing it yet again.

By reaching the 2023 final, both Kuehn and Gallagher earn a U.S. Women’s Am spot as well as entry into the 2024 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur at Brae Burn Country Club in West Newton, Massachusetts, and the 2024 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur at Broadmoor Golf Club in Seattle, Washington.

Fun facts from the week at Troon CC

  • Sarah LeBrun Ingram, the 1993 U.S. Women’s Amateur runner-up and a three-time U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion, set a tournament record Tuesday by needing just 24 holes to win consecutive matches. First, dispatched Tara Joy-Connelly, 8 and 6 in the morning. In the afternoon, she knocked out England’s Jackie Foster, 7 and 6. The previous mark was 26 holes.
  • Linda Jeffery had a hole-in-one Wednesday. But it didn’t count as an ace. Troon Country Club’s second hole shares a large green with the seventh. Jeffery was playing the par-3 seventh but the ball rolled to the far side of the green and went into the cup on the second. As noted by the USGA, the rule in effect gave her relief and a free drop off the putting surface. She ended up making bogey.
  • In the Round of 64, Kathy Hartwiger of Pinehurst, North Carolina, drained a 39-foot putt to cap off an 8-and-7 win over Wendy Ohlmeyer of Ladera Ranch, California, tying the largest margin of victory in Senior Women’s Amateur championship history.
  • Defending champion Shelly Stouffer of Canada was eliminated in the Round of 32. Only nine times has a golfer defended her title in the 61 years of this event.
  • Lara Tennant, a three-time winner of the U.S Senior Women’s Am, took home solo medalist honors after 36 holes of stroke play. She finished 2-over 146 to win by three strokes.
  • Nicki Stricker was one of the pre-tournament headliners. The wife of Steve Stricker, Nicki made the field but did not advance out of the 36-hole stroke-play portion of the event.

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With husband Steve at the Ryder Cup, Nicki Stricker competes in first USGA event in 31 years

“The shots I hit good or bad, the scores I shoot good or bad, don’t define me.”

At first, Nicki Stricker didn’t tell anyone in the family that she’d signed up for U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur qualifying. She wanted the challenge to be hers for a little while.

Stricker, 54, and her mental coach, Kathy Hart Wood, sister of Dudley Hart, came up with trying to qualify for a USGA Championship as a way to give purpose to her practice.

“Just getting really frustrated because everyone was kicking my butt in my house,” said Stricker, wife to Steve and mom to Bobbi, 25, and 17-year-old Izzi, with a laugh. “I’m a fairly competitive person so was just like, what is happening?”

Caddie Nicki Stricker, caddie for Steve Stricker, of the United States looks on from the 11th hole during the second round of the 2021 PGA Championship at Kiawah Island Resort’s Ocean Course on May 21, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Needless to say, everyone in the Stricker house is competitive, and Nicki, a former collegiate player, wasn’t having too much fun on the golf course. She also wanted to set a good example for her girls. Nicki didn’t like how she treated herself on the golf course after a bad shot, and with one daughter playing the game professionally and another one playing high-level junior golf, she knew they were watching.

“The shots I hit good or bad, the scores I shoot good or bad, don’t define me,” said Nicki of what she’s learned.

Wood taught Sticker to hit shots from one of the three c’s – calm, confident, certain. Rather than put numbers down on a scorecard, she’d write which “c” she hit from.

Beginning on Saturday at the 61st U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur at Troon Country Club, there will be numbers on the card. It’s the first tournament Stricker has competed in in some 20 years, and the first USGA championship since the 1992 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Kemper Lakes.

With Steve working as a vice captain this week at the Ryder Cup in Rome with eldest daughter Bobbi by his side, and Izzi playing in the postseason for high school golf, Nicki won’t have any family by her side in Arizona, though she will have Wood, who will caddie.

Nicki, of course, has caddied for Steve throughout his career. Bobbi played tennis through high school and didn’t take up golf until college. Izzi, a high school senior, won a Wisconsin state golf title last year. It’s not uncommon for the two sisters to take on their parents in a match.

“The game keeps us together,” Bobbi told Golfweek last year. “We travel with (dad), we practice with him.”

Steve was getting a lesson from Nicki’s father Dennis Tiziani at Cherokee Country Club (now TPC Wisconsin) the day they met. Nicki, who was a lifeguard at the club, went over after her shift ended to see her dad and there was Steve.

“My dad had said something after,” she recalled. “ ‘You know the guy you met? He asked for your number.’ ”

After waiting for three days, Nicki finally decided to call Steve and ask him out. Nicki was going into her freshman year of college at Wisconsin and Steve was a junior at Illinois.

The couple married in 1993.

Stricker family: Nicki, Steve, Bobbi and Izzi (courtesy Bobbi Stricker)

Steve, now a 12-time winner on the PGA Tour and a 17-time winner on the PGA Tour Champions, including six titles this season, won the 2019 U.S. Senior Open with Nicki on the bag.

All that time caddying for Steve changed Nicki’s approach to a golf course, how she looks at green complexes and how she views the importance of short game. She shot 7-over 77 at Glenview Park Golf Club in Illinois to secure her spot in this week’s field of 132. She’d love to advance to match play and see what happens.

“They’re super proud of me,” said Nicki of what her kids think of mom back in a USGA Championship. “Which to have your child say that they’re proud of you for something obviously warms my heart … makes me choke up a little bit.”

As Tom Weiskopf’s last design opens in Utah, his first is hosting USGA event in Arizona

“It’s a real showcase for Tom and the club.”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — In a way, it’s all come full circle.

Tom Weiskopf’s final golf course design, Black Desert, just opened in May in St. George, Utah, a burgeoning golf community. This gem has already landed a PGA Tour stop, coming fall of 2024. The LPGA is also going to stage an event there, starting in 2025.

Black Desert, a venue he did with partner Phil Smith, is the 73rd golf course in Weiskopf’s portfolio, which features layouts located around the world. There are dozens of courses in the U.S., of course, but also Scotland, Italy and China.

His very first design, though, was built in Arizona in a then-remote part of north Scottsdale, at Troon Country Club, the name serving as a tip of the cap to Royal Troon in Scotland, where Weiskopf won his lone major, the 1973 Open Championship.

“It’s funny because we did count them up and it’s 73,” said Smith. “Can you believe that? Between design and renovation we came up with 73 and that just seems to be his lucky number.”

The private layout at Troon CC, which Weiskopf did with Jay Morrish, is set to host the 2023 U.S. Women’s Senior Amateur Championship, Sept. 30 to Oct. 5. It’ll be the second U.S. Golf Association event played there (1990 U.S. Mid-Amateur) and the 17th USGA tournament in all held in Arizona.

Troon Country Club
A mural at Troon Country Club includes a photo of golf course designers Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish. (Photo: Golfweek)

“The thing about Weiskopf courses is they can be played anybody or they can be set up to be played by the best in the world,” Smith said. “We based our design philosophy on that always. You think about TPC Scottsdale, where 95 percent of the time it has to be played by the municipal player and then one week out of the year you gotta be able to challenge the best players in the world [for the PGA Tour’s WM Phoenix Open] so that’s sort of been our philosophy and Tom’s philosophy from Day 1, so I think it’ll be great.”

Ranking 12th on Golfweek’s Best list of private golf courses in Arizona, Troon CC’s best stretch is on the back nine:

  • The par-4 14th, dubbed “The Cliff”, which features a dramatic, elevated second shot down over a desert transition to a large green
  • The par-3 15th, called “Troon Mountain”, which may be the most picturesque point on the property, with the iconic Pinnacle Peak seemingly towering over the green
  • The par-4 16th hole, known as “The Gunsight”, featuring a pair of large boudlers that you hit your tee shot through while aiming at what many say is a gunsight-shaped formation on the distance landscape.
Troon Country Club
The par-4 16th hole called “Gunsight” at Troon Country Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo: USGA)

Like many Weiskopf designs, Troon CC features a driveable par 4, and the fourth will play 244 yards for the senior amateurs.

The USGA first did a site visit for the Senior Women’s Am in 2019. Troon CC was officially awarded the event 2021 and Weiskopf, who passed away in August of 2022, was an active participant in the course’s tournament preparations.

“It’s ironic. Troon is where he started and it’s where he found out he was sick, that’s where we were the day he found out he had cancer,” said Smith.

The USGA received a record 594 applications for the tournament, which was first played in 1962. There are 132 golfers in the field, including defending champion Shelly Stouffer. Three-time tournament winner Laura Tennant is also playing. She won it in 2021, 2019 and 2018. There was no event in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The entire field will play two rounds of stroke play Sept. 39 and Oct. 1. The top 64 golfers will then play five rounds of match play, with the 18-hole championship set for Thursday, Oct. 5.

Troon Country Club
A mural at Troon Country Club includes a photo of golf course designers Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish. (Photo: Golfweek)

“The most important thing about Troon is it’s where Tom started and he won best new course right out of the gate. Who does that, right?,” marveled Smith. “I think that just shows the fact that even in the beginnings of Tom’s career he had the talent and the chops to produce a world-class golf course and that’s where it all began.

“I think it’s just great they’re hosting this event. It’s a real showcase for Tom and the club.”

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More Tom Weiskopf Q&A: Remembering his first design at Troon CC

Tom Weiskopf has experienced all corners of the game, from his time as a PGA Tour player to his work as a golf course designer.

Tom Weiskopf has experienced all corners of the game, from his time as a PGA Tour player – his 16 career titles included the 1973 British Open at Royal Troon – to his work as a golf course designer. Weiskopf, 78, recently talked with Golfweek about both sides of the game.

In Part I of this Q&A, which you can read here, Weiskopf discussed the recent Masters, Dustin Johnson and Rory McIlroy, playing with Ben Hogan and how he lost his gig broadcasting the Masters on CBS.

Now, in Part II, Weiskopf remembers his first design project, Troon Country Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. No architect forgets their first foray into the business and here Weiskopf delves into his design. philosophy, his entry into the business and his various partnerships and influences.

Golfweek: How did you become interested in pursuing a career in golf course architecture?

Tom Weiskopf: I got invited by Jack Nicklaus to go on some site visits with him. As architects, we’re not always sure of the strategy on a hole at the outset and I kept getting asked, “Tom, what do you think?” One or two my suggestions got used and it gave me confidence that an opportunity might happen for me someday, and it did.

GW: Had you been looking to enter the design field, or was your involvement at Troon Country Club, your debut project, a happy accident?

TW: Jerry Nelson, a developer in North Scottsdale, called me up and asked me to look at a piece of property. It was 1982 and he had already done a development around Pinnacle Peak Country Club and was quite successful. He wasn’t a golfer and admitted that rightfully so, and everyone told him he needed a name to design the course.

I was living in Scottsdale at the time. I told him, I wouldn’t look at it that way. I’m not qualified, but I’ve played a lot of the great golf courses in the world. He said, “But you’re local. Would you be interested?” I called up Jay Morrish, who had been Jack Nicklaus’s chief designer. I had heard he’d left Jack’s camp and asked him to look at the property with me. He came out and said, “I’d partner with you, Tom.” And that’s how it started – being at the right place at the right time and presented with an opportunity.

It became evident that I had the technical experience I needed in the form of Jay and off we went. Of course, it became a learning experience in regards to me in terms of the routing, how important that is and the construction and capability of the equipment and the communication aspect with the shapers and building and preparing a hole for a golf course. I made a decision. I had a pretty good career going and a handful of contracts but I thought why don’t I take a year off from playing and see if I like it. I never went back to playing.

It helped to have that golf course win the best new private golf course in the country from Golf Digest. It gave us instant credibility as a team.

Troon Country Club Scottsdale
Troon Country Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, a Jay Morrish and Tom Weiskopf-designed golf course. (Photo by Troon Country Club)

GW: What contributions did each of you make in the design?

TW: Jay allowed me to do the strategy, where the bunkering should be, the size and shape of the green, and he put that in a drawing form. I actually walked it one day when we had it staked and I called Jay up late in the afternoon before we started construction and I said, ‘We ought to reverse the routing of the front nine.’ He said, ‘Let me come out there and let’s walk it together and you tell me why.’ I explained it to him and he said, ‘I think you’re on to something.’ We spent two days throwing it back and forth and Jay finally said I think you’re right, and we agreed to go with my idea.

GW: Jack Nicklaus’s Desert Highlands had opened a few years earlier just down the street. It possessed some innovative features and a wild set of greens. Not far away was the original desert target layout, the low-profile Desert Forest, where you were a member and a big fan. How did each course influence the design of Troon Country Club?

TW: I think I have a much different philosophy in strategy than Jack does in regards to green layouts. Jack does a lot of lateral presentation. Take the 12th hole at Augusta. It’s a one-club situation. You have to go over a water hazard and it’s a very narrow target. I like the basic MacKenzie philosophy of having the green open in front with the penalty more on the sides. The greens would tilt slightly right to left or left to right. Instead of having to hit one club the right distance and control that distance, you have more versatility where you can run it up if you choose. You bring more of a two-club or three-club aspect for your second shot to a par 4 with a green by length and depth to it than perpendicular to the line of play.

Jack has a lot of that at Desert Highlands. Then you look at Red Lawrence who did Desert Forest. His were more traditional with round greens and longness to them, tilting one way with the penalties on the side. I always enjoyed playing it. That was the difference to the two. My philosophy was very different than Jack’s, thank goodness. Jack uses a lot more bunkers than I do, always has. MacKenzie’s famous quote is there should be one bunker in the tee shot landing area and one around the green that must be avoided at all cost. It’s a great quote. I liked strategically placed bunkers.

GW: Troon included a drivable par 4. Were you already thinking of emphasizing that design feature?

The 144th Open Championship-Practice Round
Tiger Woods with Tom Weiskopf in the background, during the Champions challenge at the 144th Open Championship at The Old Course at St Andrews. (Photo: Ian Rutherford-USA TODAY Sports)

TW: I told Jay the things that I thought were important for a golf course. When I said we needed a drivable, he said, ‘What are you talking about?’ I go back to the first time I played St. Andrews. I think it was 1970 and I drove the ball on the green at 9, 10, 12 and 18. I never did it on the same day because they were all at different directions. I think it should be no different than a reachable par 5. I told him I want to put a reachable par 4 on all of our golf courses. He said it was a great idea. Anyway, the fourth hole became our drivable. I’ve put at least one if not two at all of the 73 golf courses I’ve done. I think it works best at the 16th or 17th hole. You don’t always pull them off. I would say three-fourths of them are in the 300-330 yard range. It just hit me when I played St. Andrews. These days, it seems to be the flavor of the month. But it’s a hard hole to do right and to make it exciting.

GW: Two of the most memorable holes at Troon CC are the par 3s on the back nine. Did you just see them or did you have to move a lot of land?

TW: The one hole we contrived was 13. There was a lot of fill-in there. We filled a valley. It’s an homage to the Postage Stamp [at Troon in Scotland] but it plays a lot longer than the original. It plays 175-180. At 15, Jay found an area where we could fit a green in there. We had all the beautiful boulders around it. It’s a rendition of the 7th at Pebble. It’s a small green surrounded by bunkers.

GW: In between those two par 3s is a wonderful par 4 fittingly called “Cliff,” where the fairway abruptly ends at the edge of a veritable cliff, setting up a dramatic downhill shot to the green. What was your inspiration for that hole? 

TW: That’s a rendition in a way of the 8th at Pebble. You go downhill about 80-100 feet. You’re given things on a property that remind you of certain holes that you’ve played. I try to duplicate some of the qualities but never identically.

GW: What do you consider to be Troon CC’s signature hole?

TW: You’d have to say 15, the little 3 with the boulders and you’ve got the big mountain there and you can see Pinnacle Peak in the distance way to the left. It kind of defines the area. But I don’t like that term “signature hole” for one reason. If everybody is talking about only one hole, you didn’t do a very good job, did you?

GW: What happened to your partnership with Jay Morrish?

TW: He wanted to bring his son into the business and I didn’t feel comfortable with doing that and decided to go my own way. We got along great and did 25 wonderful courses together. I didn’t want to expand. Our basic philosophy was we were available for 2-3 projects per year. We were a hands-on boutique design company and he wanted to get bigger and I didn’t. He understood that when we parted. He was great. Everything that I learned about this business I give him credit for. He was very knowledgeable and good at what he did.

GW: What is it like to get a second bite at the apple so-to-speak all these years later at Troon?

TW: We didn’t change anything dramatically. We took a few bunkers out that were by request of the membership because they were too deep. There was no need to change anything other than the surface of the greens, level the tees, improve the drainage and improve the playability of the golf course as best you can.

We remodeled the entire bunker complex by flashing the sand up. Before we had a semi-Donald Ross look, where we had grass face coming down and you didn’t expose a lot of visibility of sand up on the slope faces. We got white sand, too, and it’s much more playable and dramatic looking. We went to a more MacKenzie style where it flashes all the way up to the top of the bunker next to the green like a wave breaking. I’m a big believer in the MacKenzie philosophy of bunkering – they are used for strategy and must be avoided; for direction, where you play over them like No. 10 at Augusta; or to be helpful, where they are used to keep you from going into a worse position.

Our philosophy from the beginning was if we gave 100 percent for the client we won’t have to change anything over time other than the additional tees for distance, add a bunker here or take one out. We never had to re-do a green because it was too severe and never had to change much of a hole over 34 years of time because we spent enough time during construction to do it right the first time.

GW: Golf course architects never retire, Robert Trent Jones II likes to say, they just stop flying places. How much longer do you plan to do this?

TW: I believe that you’ve got to be involved and you have to want to do it and have a passion for it. As long as I have that, I will stay involved. I like the restoration – it’s not a remodel, it’s a restoration – all we did was make Troon aesthetically different while maintaining the strategy. We didn’t make it easier or harder. It’s given a lot of enjoyment to people. They like it and we didn’t need to change it.

We have a job in St. George, Utah. It’s in a lava field. It’s a growing area and destination. We also have one in Boise, which is another hot spot in the west. There’s a couple other we’re talking about, including one in Scotland that we started long ago and we’re talking to the new owners. A contract hasn’t been signed yet, and we’re talking about some other work in Vietnam. We’re only going to do what Phil Smith and I can handle. He’s my replacement for Jay Morrish and he’s excellent. It’s all about attention to detail and being on the job and giving what they deserve. As long as I maintain that interest, I will stay involved.

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