Duke women’s golfer Katie Li set to compete in U.S. Women’s Open on Thursday

Duke’s Katie Li, who made the All-ACC team as a freshman last year, will aim to make the cut at one of the biggest tournaments in women’s golf this weekend.

The U.S. Women’s Open, one of five major championships in women’s professional golf, gets underway at Lancaster Country Club in Pennsylvania on Thursday.

Considering the Blue Devils have seven national championships on their resume, there are usually Duke alums aplenty at the biggest fields of the year. This time around, however, a player currently on Duke’s roster will try to take down the 156-woman field.

Katie Li, who just finished her freshman season with the Blue Devils, will tee it up for Thursday’s opening round, kicking off the four-day event. Li made the All-ACC team in her debut Duke season after she finished the year with a scoring average of 72.67. She also won the Florida State Match Up after back-to-back rounds of 6-under 66 to open the tournament, becoming the 16th Blue Devil to win a tournament as a freshman.

Li tees off on the 10th hole at 7:07 a.m. on Thursday morning playing alongside Elizabeth Szokol and Yuka Nii.

Duke fans can follow her on the leaderboard here with coverage scheduled to begin on Peacock at noon Eastern time before transferring to the USA Network at 2 p.m.

Check the yardage book: Pebble Beach Golf Links for the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open

StrackaLine’s course guide offers the details of Pebble Beach Golf Links for the U.S. Women’s Open.

Pebble Beach Golf Links in California – site of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open this week – originally was designed by amateur architects Douglas Grant and Jack Neville and opened in 1919. The famed layout on cliffs above Stillwater Cove and the Pacific Ocean has seen many renovations over the decades, including work done by William Herbert Fowler, Alister MacKenzie, H. Chandler Egan, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and others.

Pebble Beach Golf Links – the namesake of Pebble Beach Resorts –  ranks No. 10 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses in the U.S., the highest public-access course in that ranking. It’s also No. 1 in California on the list for best public-access courses in each state and No. 1 again on the list for top resort courses in the U.S.

Pebble Beach will be set up at 6,505 yards with a par of 72 for the Women’s Open, the first time the event has been played at the famed course on the Monterey Peninsula.

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Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week at Pebble Beach.

Best 2022 U.S. Women’s Open apparel and accessories

U.S. Women’s Open apparel and accessories.

The 77th U.S. Women’s Open is underway and we have rounded up the best apparel to help you celebrate and follow the action in style.

If you like pine cones, you’re in the right place. This list will be full of the pine cone logo of the tournament’s host course, Pine Needles Lodge and Golf Club in Southern Pines, North Carolina.

Whether you’re in it for Lexi Thompson’s old irons, Michelle Wie West’s goodbye, or just want to look great in a new polo, we have the U.S. Women’s Open apparel and accessories for all types of golf fans.

Fanatics is running a free shipping deal all weekend for any order more than $24. Just use the code “24SHIP” and enjoy free shipping on your 2022 U.S. Women’s Open apparel and accessories.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Paula Reto, Bianca Pagdanganan among five from U.S. Women’s Open qualifier in Florida

Reto had 5-under 31s on the front nine in both rounds, and made four straight on Nos. 3-6 in the first round.

FORT MYERS, Florida — Darkness started to creep in at The Forest Country Club as three golfers tried to grab a spot in the U.S. Women’s Open on Wednesday.

An hour earlier, Paula Reto, a South African on the LPGA Tour, had shined brightly, firing a pair of 6-under 66s in the 36-hole sectional qualifier to earn medalist honors.

“A little bit of a pressure to start the day, and it was kind of nice making putts early in the round, kind of kept me going, got me some confidence and I just kept on thinking ‘One more hole, one more hole,'” said Reto, who had her father as her caddie.

Reto had 5-under 31s on the front nine in both rounds, and made four straight on Nos. 3-6 in the first round.

Melanie Green, a sophomore on the USF women’s team, grabbed the second spot by shooting 6 under. She had teammate Leonor Medeiros as her caddie. Green earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament last week.

“It hasn’t quite hit me yet, but it’ll probably hit me in the next few days,” Green said of making the Women’s Open. “It’s super exciting. I’m super glad that I had my best friend on the bag today.”

Green had six top-10 finishes this season for the Bulls, and was sixth in the American Athletic Conference tournament.

“This is probably one of my best golf days in a very long time,” said Green, who drained a 20-foot par putt early in the round.

Five others played off for the final three qualifying spots and two alternate positions, and just beat the darkness and get in at Pine Needles in Southern Pines, North Carolina, where the Open will be played June 2-5.

Dottie Ardina and Bianca Pagdanganan of The Philippines, American Jaye Marie Green, Morgane Metraux of Switzerland, and Muni He of China began what ended up a three-hole playoff an hour before dark.

Ardina, 28, survived with a 15-foot par putt on No. 1 after her approach went into standing water well left of the green, and she made a remarkable chip after taking a drop. Pagdanganan two-putted from 40 feet, draining a 10-footer, and Green just missed her birdie putt.

Metraux, 25, nearly holed out her chip shot from just off the green, but missed the 5-footer coming back to bogey and fall into second alternate.

Pagdanganan, 24, grabbed the first spot out of the playoff with a 6-foot birdie putt on No. 2, leaving Ardina, Green and He with probably one final hole before it became too dark.

Pagdanganan had 102 yards in and stuck a 56-degree wedge.

“I’ve been having those shots all day so I felt very comfortable, so I just did what I did for the past … I don’t know even know how many holes,” said Pagdanganan, who qualified for the Women’s Open in 2020 based on her finish in a major since qualifying itself was canceled that year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Ardina also gutted out another tough par from the waste area on the par-5 No. 3, but couldn’t get that 15-footer to fall. Green, 28, and He, 22, both two-putted for par and were the last two qualifiers.

Naples High graduate Kris Tamulis led a handful of local players, tying for 20th after shooting 72-74/146. Gulf Coast High boys golf coach Kimberly Benedict, North Fort Myers’ Jordan Fischer, and Naples’ Addison Klonowski, all amateurs, tied for 23rd at 147.

U.S. Women’s Open sectional qualifier
at The Forest Country Club, Fort Myers

Par-72

Qualifiers

1. Paula Reto, South Africa, 66-66/132; 2. Melanie Green (a), Medina, N.Y., 68-70/138; *3. Bianca Pagdanganan, Philippines, 70-70/140; *3. Jaye Marie Green, Jupiter, 72-68/140; *3. Muni He, China, 70-70/140

Alternates

First — Dottie Ardina, Philippines, 69-71/140; Second — Morgane Metraux, Switzerland, 69-71/140

Other scores

141 — Maria Fernanda Torres Martinez, Puerto Rico, 70-71; Jennifer Song, Ann Arbor, Mich., 73-68; Ruoning Yin, China, 69-72

142 — Jodi Ewart Shadoff, England, 72-70; Lauren Coughlin, Charlottesville, Va., 70-72; Yana Wilson (a), Henderson, Nev., 71-71

144 — Kelly Whaley, Palm Beach Gardens, 71-73; Kristy McPherson, Murrells Inlet, S.C., 72-72

145 — Caiyi Zhang (a), China, 78-67; Rachel Stous, Topeka, Kan., 71-74; Sydnee Michaels, Murrieta, Calif., 74-71; Hailey Davidson, Scotland, 72-73

146 — Kiira Riihijarvi, Finland, 72-74; Kris Tamulis, Naples, 72-74; Aditi Ashok, India, 75-71

147 — Kimberly Benedict (a), Bonita Springs, 71-76; Addison Klonowski (a), Naples, 70-77; Albane Valenzuela, Dallas, 73-74; Jacqueline Putrino (a), Lakewood Ranch, 72-75; Jordan Fischer (a), North Fort Myers, 77-70

148 — Elizabeth Nagel, Dewitt, Mich., 75-73; Josee Doyon, Canada, 74-74; Stephanie Na, Australia, 72-76; Haeji Kang, South Korea, 73-75

149 — Laura Restropo, Panama, 74-75; Nataliya Guseva (a), Russia, 73-76; Panitta Yusabai, Thailand, 75-74; Wichanee Meechai, Thailand, 72-77

150 — Elayna Bowser, Dearborn, Mich., 75-75; Marie Parra, Spain, 77-73

151 — Morgan Baxendale (a), Lakewood Ranch, 75-76; Sophie Madden, England, 74-77; Juliana Carmago (a), Colombia, 75-76; Valentina Haupt, Weston, 78-73

152 — Letizia Bagnoli (a), Boca Raton, 75-77; Emma Bradley, Naples, 73-79

153 — Erika Smith, Orlando, 81-72; Sandra Angulo Minarro, Mexico, 76-77

154 — Kaitlyn Papp, Austin, Texas, 79-75; Aneta Abrahamova, Slovakia, 76-78; Rachel Carlson (a), Bradenton, 76-78; Samantha Vodry, Little Elm, Texas, 74-80

158 — Haley Yerxa (a), Canada, 79-79

159 — Emilyee McGiles, Champaign, Ill., 84-75

160 — Chaewon Jeong (a), South Korea, 78-82; Louise Olsson, Sweden, 80-80

161 — Ellinor Haag, Sweden, 81-80; Jordyn Hodgson (a), Orlando, 78-83

166 — Ailsa Clark (a), Bradenton, 80-86; Christine Meier, Naples, 84-82

167 — Jordan Knox (a), Fort Myers, 87-80; Sophia Warren, Lakewood Ranch, 82-85

180 — Carson Racich (a), Rockford, Ill., 86-94

WD — Amelia Lewis, Jacksonville, 78

WD — Brooke Matthews, Rogers, Ark.

NC — Gabriella Degasperis (a), Palm Beach Gardens, Florida

DNF — Dana Finkelstein, Chandler, Ariz., 72

(a) — amateur

* — won playoff

Greg Hardwig is a sports reporter for the Naples Daily News and The News-Press. Follow him on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter: @NDN_Ghardwig, email him at ghardwig@naplesnews.com. Support local journalism with this special subscription offer at https://cm.naplesnews.com/specialoffer/