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Top seeds shine in round of 64 of U.S. Women's Amateur
Melanie Green (USGA Photo)
Melanie Green (USGA Photo)

Two rounds of stroke play weren’t enough to decide the match-play bracket for the 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla.

The action on Wednesday teed off with a 20-for-10 playoff, the largest in U.S. Women’s Amateur history. The playoff lasted just two holes but was extended two hours. Only one of the playoff winners—University of Southern California’s rising sophomore Bailey Shoemaker—advanced from the opening Round of 64 to Thursday’s Round 32.

“It doesn't even feel like it was today. That was crazy,” said Shoemaker of the playoff after her 1-up win over No. 3 seed Zoe Antoinette Campos. “It was my first ever USGA playoff. Obviously I was disappointed to even be in it, but it was a grind. I knew that if I just make the par game like we do at school, just whoever makes the most pars will win.”

The players weren’t just battling a field full of the world’s best amateurs on a major-championship host course – Southern Hills has played host to eight majors, including three U.S. Opens (1958, 1977, 2001) – but also the elements. Winds were low, and temperatures were high as the heat hit triple digits for the third straight day, which made for the first of a few challenging days of match play.

“It was just really hot,” said Shoemaker, who had to wake up at 5 a.m. for the playoff and then wait until 1:20 p.m. for her Round of 64 match. “I think everybody knew we were going to be dead by the afternoon. It was so hot out there. It was tough. But it was just kind of survival of the fittest.”

While world rankings and seeds are usually discarded when the championship moves to match play, it was a good day to be a top seed. The first round was largely all chalk, and the higher seeds advanced in 24 of the 32 matches.

One of the higher seeds that didn’t advance, however, was defending champion Megan Schofill. A quarterfinalist the last two years, Catherine Rao came back from 2 down through 12 holes to defeat the Auburn graduate, 2 up. A rising junior at Princeton, Rao’s comeback was aided by an eagle on the par-5 13th, followed by three consecutive birdies on Nos. 14-16.

Schofill is ranked No. 4 in the Golfweek/AmateurGolf.com Women's Rankings.

“Since stroke play, I've been kind of struggling. I haven't been making many putts but been playing well, so it was just a matter of time until putts started dropping,” said Rao. I think honestly hole 11 was a bigger turnaround for me, just after the train wreck that happened on 10. It was nice to just stick one close and make a putt.”

“I was one of probably the lowest-ranked players in the field in my first U.S. Am,” she added. It's one of those things where I'm trying to focus on myself, focus on my own game, and I know if I play a good round of golf, I'm going to play well.”

One of the stories of the championship so far is Gabby Woods, who won the 2024 NCAA Division II Individual National Championship as a senior at the University of Findlay this spring. The Sabina, Ohio, native played a tightly contested match against Shoemaker’s USC teammate, Catherine Park, that never saw a player get further ahead than 1 up. Woods held the lead just twice: once when she birdied the par-4 12th hole and again when she made par on the difficult 18th to win.

“It was a great match, honestly. Normally when you're playing on a day like this you've got to win with birdies. I would give some, she would give some. We both drove it in a few places that were hard to get up-and-down for par,” said Woods. “But even at that time it was a great match. You still have to work for whatever you had. But [Park is] a very talented player. It was a great opportunity to play with her and see what other people play for and what they play with.”

Sabina, Ohio, is a village between Columbus and Cincinnati with a population of less than 3,000. While she has big-tournament experience with her national championship victory, Woods has enjoyed flying under the radar this week.

“Obviously being a national champion, that gives you a big confidence boost that you can do it. It especially helps with those little putts out there,” said Woods. “It's kind of good to be -- nobody really knows about you. Nobody is really expecting a whole lot except for me and my caddie, so it's kind of nice.”

The biggest wins of the day came from Florida grad Maisie Filler and Texas rising sophomore Farah O’Keefe, who both won their matches, 7 and 6. Former Wake Forest standout Rachel Kuehn had a 7-and-5 win of her own, while just 10 matches reached the 18th hole.

Other notable players to advance to the Round of 32 were Adela Cernousek (2024 NCAA D-I national champion), Gianna Clemente (2023 Girl’s Junior PGA winner), Anna Davis (2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion), Rianne Malixi (2024 U.S. Girls’ Junior champion), Kiara Romero (2023 U.S. Girls’ Junior champion) and Asterisk Talley (2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball champion).

WHAT’S NEXT

Match play continues on Thursday with the Round of 32 and Round of 16, beginning at 8:15 a.m. EDT. The Round-of-16 matches are scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. Peacock will air live coverage from 3-6 p.m. Admission is free, and the public is encouraged to attend.

NOTABLE

- For the 13th straight year, the U.S. Women’s Amateur will not see a back-to-back champion. Defending champion Megan Schofill, who shot rounds of 70-74 in stroke play to earn the No. 14 seed, was upset by Catherine Rao, 2 and 1
- Sixteen players reached match play for the second consecutive year: Gianna Clemente, Anna Davis, Laney Frye, Sara Im, Lauren Kim, Rachel Kuehn, Katie Li, Rianne Malixi, Julia Misemer, Catherine Rao, Kiara Romero, Amanda Sambach, Megan Schofill, Bailey Shoemaker, Latanna Stone and Kelly Xu. Ten of them advanced.
- Emilia Migliaccio was eliminated on the second hole of the 20-for-10 playoff Wednesday morning. In the afternoon, she joined the broadcast crew as a walking reporter for the Golf Channel coverage.
- With her 2 and 1 win over Amanda Sambach, Asterisk Talley’s 2024 USGA match play record moves to 11-1. She won the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship with partner Sarah Lim in April, before finishing as runner-up in the U.S. Girls’ Junior in July.
- The University of Texas is well-represented in the Round of 32, with Angela Heo, Huai-Chien Hsu, Lauren Kim and Farah O’Keefe all advancing to Thursday. Arkansas and USC are both sending two players into the Round of 32.
- It is the first time since 1994 that no Round of 64 matches went to extra holes. Ten matches reached the 18th hole.

Results: U.S. Women's Amateur
WinPhilippinesRianne Mikhaela MalixiPhilippines1800
Runner-upCAAsterisk TalleyChowchilla, CA1200
SemifinalsAZKendall ToddGoodyear, AZ900
SemifinalsColombiaMaria Jose MarinColombia900
QuarterfinalsCACatherine RaoCamarillo, CA700

View full results for U.S. Women's Amateur

ABOUT THE U.S. Women's Amateur

The U.S. Women's Amateur, the third oldest of the USGA championships, was first played in 1895 at Meadowbrook Club in Hempstead, N.Y. The event is open to any female amateur who has a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 2.4. The Women's Amateur is one of 15 national championships conducted annually by the USGA.

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