Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson misses qualifying for U.S. Women’s Open by one spot

Only the top two players advanced out of Bradenton Country Club on Monday.

Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson came within one spot of qualifying for the 79th U.S. Women’s Open, the biggest championship in women’s golf.

Davidson posted rounds of 70-73 in the 36-hole qualifier at Bradenton (Florida) Country Club to finish at 1-over 143. Amateur Amelie Zalsman of St. Petersburg, Florida, medaled at the site after rounds of 66-73, finishing at 1-under 141. Another amateur, Pimpisa Sisutham of Thailand, shot 142 to qualify for the championship, held May 30-June 2 at Lancaster (Pennsylvania) Country Club.

Only the top two players advanced. Davidson, who finished third, will be the site’s first alternate.

Davidson primarily competed on NXXT Golf until the Florida-based mini tour announced in March – on International Women’s Day – that competitors must be a biological female at birth to participate.

A three-time winner on the tour, Davidson ranked second on the mini tour’s season standings at the time of the ban. She had played nine times this season on the NXXT.

Hailey Davidson poses with a trophy after winning on the NXXT in 2024. (courtesy Hailey Davidson)

The NXXT was the second U.S. mini-tour to make such a change. Last month, the Arizona-based Cactus Tour announced on National Girls and Women in Sports Day that it had reinstated a female-at-birth requirement.

Three years ago, Davidson became the second transgender player to compete in LPGA Q-School, where she did not advance past the first stage. She tried again in 2022, missing the 54-hole cut by a single stroke.

Davidson earned a scholarship to play on the men’s team at Wilmington, an NCAA Division II school in Delaware, before transferring to the men’s team at Christopher Newport, an D-III school in Virginia.

On Sept. 24, 2015 – a date that’s tattooed on her right forearm – Davidson began undergoing hormone treatments, and in January 2021 underwent gender reassignment surgery, a six-hour procedure that’s required under the LPGA’s Gender Policy as well as the USGA’s.

Bailey Davis, Lucy Li, Alexa Pano and Gabriela Ruffels among notables who advanced through U.S. Women’s Open qualifying

Take a look at some notables qualifiers who played their way to the U.S. Women’s Open.

England’s Buckinghamshire Golf Club hosted the final qualifier for the 77th U.S. Women’s Open Championship on Monday and it featured a 5-for-1 playoff in which Welsh pro Lydia Hall won on the fifth extra hole.

The USGA offered 26 qualifying sites for players to claw their way through for a chance to compete at Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club, June 2-5 in Southern Pines, North Carolina.

The rest of the 156-player field is made up of exemptions, and after the Cognizant Founders Cup, Sayaka Takahashi (No. 57), Ga Young Lee (No. 74) and Maja Stark (No. 75) played their way in via the Rolex Rankings.

Only one exempt spot remains for next week’s Bank of Hope LPGA Match Play.

Here are 10 noteworthy players who advanced through qualifying for the chance to compete for the biggest purse in women’s golf history:

USGA reacts to coronavirus: Four-balls off; changes to U.S. Open, Women’s Open qualifying

The USGA has taken its first two events off the competition calendar in wake of the coronavirus.

The start of the USGA’s competition calendar is still more than a month away. But as the first scheduled event, the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball, draws closer, the organization has joined nearly every other major golf association in reacting to the coronavirus threat.

On Tuesday, the USGA announced it would cancel the Women’s Amateur Four-Ball, scheduled for April 25-29 at Quail Creek Country Club in Naples, Florida, in addition to the U.S. Amateur Four-Ball, scheduled for May 23-27 at Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) Cricket Club.

Neither event will be rescheduled in 2020.

In addition to those events coming off the calendar, the USGA also announced changes to its qualifying structure for the U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open. Local (or first stage) qualifying in its current form has been canceled. The USGA has said it will now look to redesign the qualifying process going forward as events unfold.

“We will continue to hold the dates for the 2020 U.S. Women’s Open at Champions Golf Club and the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club,” the USGA said in its announcement.

The USGA acknowledged that it was too early to speculate what might happen regarding the remaining championships on the schedule, but that it is working with the CDC, WHO and other federal, state and local authorities to be prepared.

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