71st U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship – Notebook and Storylines

July 22-27, 2019 | SentryWorld | Stevens Point, Wis.
usgirlsjunior.org | #USGirlsJunior | mediacenter.usga.org/us-girls-junior 

The average age of the 156 U.S. Girls’ Junior competitors is 16.58.

Jasmine Koo, 13 years, 4 months, 29 days, of Cerritos, Calif., is
the championship’s youngest competitor. Angela Liu, 13, is the
second youngest player in the field. She will turn 14 during
the competition. 

The championship’s oldest competitor is 
Emma Zhao, of Windermere, Fla. She is 18 years, 11 months
and 17 days old as of July 22. There are 44 18-year-olds in the field. 

Field breakdown by age:
13: 2 players
14: 9 players
15: 17 players
16: 41 players
17: 44 players
18: 43 players

There are 14 countries represented in the championship: Argentina (1),
Australia (2), Canada (2), Chinese Taipei (2), Colombia (3), Denmark (1),
Hong Kong China (1), India (1), Mexico (5), the People’s Republic of China (9), the People’s Republic of Korea (3), Philippines (1), Peru (1), and
the United States (125). 

There are 31 states represented in the championship: Alabama (2),
Arizona (4), California (25), Colorado (2), Connecticut (1), Delaware (1),
Florida (16), Georgia (2), Hawaii (3), Illinois (8), Indiana (2), Kansas (2),
Kentucky (1), Maryland (2), Michigan (2), Minnesota (3), Missouri (2),
New Jersey (4), New York (1), North Carolina (6), North Dakota (1),
Ohio (3), Oregon (3), Pennsylvania (4), South Carolina (3), Tennessee (4),
Texas (12), Utah (1), Virginia (2), Washington (1) and Wisconsin (1). 

There are two USGA champions in the field: Megan Furtney, 18, of
South Elgin, Ill. (2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball with Erica
Shepherd), and Erica Shepherd, 18, of Greenwood, Ind., who won
the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball with Furtney as well as
the 2017 U.S. Girls’ Junior. 

There are three USGA runners-up in the field: Alexa Pano, 14, of
West Palm Beach, Fla., finished runner-up in the 2018 U.S. Girls’
Junior and Jillian Bourdage, 17, of Tamarac, Fla. was a runner-up
in the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball. Lei Ye, 18, of the
People’s Republic of China was the runner-up in the 2018 U.S.
Women’s Amateur Four-Ball with Ya-Chun Chang. 

Carissa Wu, 17, and Madison Wu, 16, of Dublin, Calif., represent
the lone pair of sisters in the field this year. 

Eight players are in the top 100 of the Women’s World Amateur
Golf Ranking™ as of July 17:

No. 17 – Rose Zhang, 16, of Irvine, Calif.
No. 24 – Yuka Saso, 17, of the Philippines
No. 34 – Rachel Heck, 16, of Memphis, Tenn.
No. 38 – Alexa Pano, 14, of Lake Worth, Fla.
No. 45 – Amanda Sambach, 16, of Davidson, N.C.
No. 66 – Lei Ye, 18, of the People’s Republic of China
No. 70 – Grace Kim, 18, of Australia
No. 77 – Erica Shepherd, 18, of Greenwood, Ind. 

Players in the field with the most U.S. Girls’ Junior appearances:
Brooke Seay – 6
Erica Shepherd – 5
Lauren Beaudreau – 4
Isabella Fierro – 4
Megan Furtney – 4
Julia Gregg – 4
Sophie (Yixian) Guo – 4
Yoona Kim – 4
Rachel Kuehn – 4
Ashley Menne – 4
Katherine Muzi – 4
Valery Plata – 4
Yuka Saso – 4 

There are nine current college players in the field:

Kamie Hamada, 18, of Aiea, Hawaii (New Mexico)
Caroline Hodge, 18, of Larchmont, N.Y. (Florida State)
Sabrina Iqbal, 18, of San Jose, Calif. (TCU)
Manuela Lizarazu, 18, of Columbia (Iowa)
Katherine Muzi, 18, of Walnut, Calif. (Southern California)
Pinya Pipatjarasgit, 18, of Sylvania, Ohio (Brown)
Valery Plata, 18, of Columbia (Michigan State)
Jennifer Wang, 18, of Solon, Ohio (Columbia)
Emma Zhao, 18, of Windermere, Fla. (Princeton) 

There are 32 players who have signed national letters of intent to
play college golf in fall 2019:

Sarah Arnold, 17, of St. Charles, Ill. (Western Kentucky)
Lauren Beaudreau, 18, of Lemont, Ill. (Notre Dame)
Tess Blair, 18, of South Jordan, Utah (Sacramento State)
Hailey Borja, 17, of Lake Forest, Calif. (Michigan)
Jillian Bourdage, 17, of Tamarac, Fla. (Ohio State)
Jensen Castle, 18, of West Columbia, S.C. (Kentucky)
Briana Chacon, 17, of Whitter, Calif. (Oregon)
Ainsley Cowart, 18, of Winston, Ga. (Troy)
Rebecca DiNunzio, 17, of Norfolk, Va. (Virginia Tech)
Isabella Fierro, 18, of Mexico (Oklahoma State)
Megan Furtney, 18, of South Elgin, Ill. (Duke)
Ashely Gilliam, 18, of Manchester, Tenn. (Mississippi State)
Chayse Gomez, 18, of Yorba Linda, Calif. (Oregon State)
Julia Gregg, 17, of Farmers Branch, Texas (Arkansas)
Sophie Guo, 18, of the People’s Republic of China (Texas)
Irene Kim, 18, of La Palma, Calif. (Northwestern)
Cassie Kim, 18, of Yakima, Wash. (Gonzaga)
Rachel Kuehn, 18, of Asheville, N.C. (Wake Forest)
Jasmine Ly, 18, of Canada (Northern Illinois)
Grace Ni, 18, of Cypress, Texas (Princeton)
Kaylee Sakoda, 18, of Cypress, Calif. (Quinnipiac)
Megan Schofill, 18, of Monticello, Fla. (Auburn)
Brooke Seay, 18, of Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. (Stanford)
Erica Shepherd, 18, of Greenwood, Ind. (Duke)
Amari Smith, 18, of McKinney, Texas (Dallas Baptist)
Erika Smith, 18, of Orlando, Fla. (South Florida)
Latanna Stone, 17, of Riverview, Fla. (LSU)
Alexis Sudjianto, 18, of Charlotte, N.C. (Carnegie Mellon)
Kendall Turner, 18, of Chesapeake, Va. (James Madison)
Nicole Whiston, 18, of San Diego, Calif. (Tennessee)
Carolina Wrigley, 18, of Wexford, Pa. (Furman)
Samantha Yao, 18, of Berwyn, Pa. (Dartmouth) 

There are 14 players in the field who have competed in the Drive,
Chip & Putt National Finals at Augusta (Ga.) National Golf Club:

Kynadie Adams, 15, of Nashville, Tenn. (2015, 2016)
Nicole Adam, 17, of Pinehurst, N.C. (2016)
Brooke Biermann, 16, of Wildwood, Mo. (2018)
Megha Ganne, 15, of Holmdel, N.J. (2015, 2017, 2018, 2019)
Ashley Gilliam, 18, of Manchester, Tenn. (2015)
Julia Gregg, 17, of Farmers Branch, Texas (2016)
Sophie “Yixian” Guo, 18, of the People’s Republic of China (2016)
Isabella McCauley, 15, of Inver Grove Heights, Minn. (2017, 2018)
Ashley Menne, 17, of Surprise, Ariz. (2014)
Julia Misemer, 15, of Overland Park, Kan. (2015, 2019)
Alexa Pano, 14, of West Palm Beach, Fla. (2014, won 10-11 Division in 2016, won 12-13 Division in 2017)
Carolina Smith, 16, of Inverness, Ill. (2015)
Allyn Stephens, 14, of Houston, Texas (2018)
Kelly Xu, 15, of Claremont, Calif. (2014, 2015) 

Six players in the field competed in the 2019 U.S. Women’s Open at
the Country Club of Charleston in Charleston, S.C.

Megan Furtney – MC
Megha Ganne – MC
Sabrina Iqbal – MC
Alexa Pano – MC
Yuka Saso – MC
Rose Zhang – T-55 (75-70-72-74—291) 

Twenty-two U.S. Girls’ Junior competitors played in the 2019 U.S.
Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship in May at Timuquana
Country Club in Jacksonville, Fla. Three of those two-player sides
made this field (second player in bold):

Kynadie Adams & Rachel Kuehn (Round of 32)
Melena Barrientos with partner Calynne Rosholt (Round of 16)
Lauren Beaudreau & Caroline Smith (MC)
Jillian Bourdage with partner Casey Weidenfeld (Runners-up)
Faith Choi with partner Aneka Seumanutafa (Round of 32)
Rebecca DiNunzio with partner Alyssa Montgomery (MC)
Megan Furtney & Erica Shepherd (Champions)
Madelyn Gamble with partner Kaleiya Romero (Round of 32)
Ashley Gilliam with partner Caroline Curtis (Quarterfinals)
Rachel Heck with partner Sadie Englemann (Semifinals)
Eunice Kim with partner Gio Kim (Round of 32)
Cory Lopez with partner Avery Zweig (Round of 16)
Elle Nachmann with partner Laura Edmonds (Round of 32)
Alexa Pano with partner Amari Avery (Semifinals)
Valery Plata with partner Haylin Harris (Round of 16)
Megan Propeck with partner Lacy Shelton (MC)
Allyn Stephens with partner Paris Hilinski (MC)
Kendall Todd with partner Abbey Schutte (Round of 32)
Caroline Wrigley with partner Lauren Freyvogel (Round of 32) 

GENERAL PLAYER NOTES

Kynadie Adams, 15, of Gallatin, Tenn. will be playing in her first
U.S. Girls’ Junior championship. Most recently, Adams partnered
with Rachel Kuehn in the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball
Championship where the duo advanced to the Round of 32 after
reaching the Round of 16 in 2018. Adams, a two-time Drive,
Chip & Putt national finalist, also played in the 2018 U.S. Women’s
Amateur. Her father, Adrian, played college golf at Tennessee
State University, where he was teammates with Sean Foley,
Adams’ swing coach and the instructor for 2013 U.S. Open
champion Justin Rose. 

Jo Baranczyk, 16, of Green Bay, Wis., is the only player in the field
hailing from Wisconsin. Baranczyk, a rising junior at Bay Port
High School, won the WIAA Division 1 state girls golf championship
last fall and will be playing in her first USGA championship. Her
brother, Jed, plays golf at North Dakota State and competed in
the 2017 U.S. Junior Amateur. Jed caddied for Jo during her
qualifying round at Mascoutin Golf Club in Berlin, Wis.

Melena Barrientos, 16, of Plano, Texas, reached the Round of 16
in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball championship earlier this
year after reaching the Round of 32 in 2018. Barrientos is playing
in her third USGA championship. She is active on the junior golf
circuit, participating in U.S. Kids Golf, Texas Legends Junior Tour
and American Junior Golf Association tournaments.

Lauren Beaudreau, 18, of Lemont, Ill., won the Illinois High School
state golf tournament last October as a senior at Benet Academy.
Beaudreau, who will play for Notre Dame this fall, is competing in
her fourth U.S. Girls’ Junior championship, with her best finish
coming in 2017 when she reached to the Round of 64. Earlier this
year, she played in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball and
recently qualified for her second U.S. Women’s Amateur, which
will take place Aug. 5-11 at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point,
Miss. The 2016 North & South Girls’ Junior champion also loves
to travel and has visited over 20 countries.

Jillian Bourdage, 17, of Tamarac, Fla. is playing in her fourth
USGA Championship. Earlier this year, Bourdage played in her
third U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship, losing 2
and 1 in the final match to Erica Shepherd and Megan Furtney.
Bourdage, who will play at Ohio State this fall, won the
Florida 2A individual state title in 2017.

Phoebe Brinker, 17, of Wilmington, Del., is the niece of PGA of
America President Suzy Whaley. Whaley, who also serves as
Brinker’s instructor, qualified for the 2003 Greater Hartford Open,
becoming the first woman in 58 years to qualify for a PGA Tour
event. Whaley, who qualified for the inaugural U.S. Senior
Women’s Open, is the first female president of The PGA of
America. Competing against boys, Brinker won the Delaware
state high school championship in 2016 and 2018, and finished
runner-up in 2017. Brinker also finished second individually in
the 2017 USGA Women’s State Team Championship at The Club
at Las Campanas in Santa Fe, N.M., and led Delaware to a
second-place team finish. Last year, she lost in the Round of 64
at the U.S. Girls’ Junior at Poppy Hills Golf Course in Pebble Beach,
Calif.

Nicole Cee, 17, of Port Saint Lucie, Fla., grew up set on following
her father Kristian’s path of becoming a professional tennis
player. When juvenile rheumatoid arthritis ended her tennis
career at age 12, she turned to golf at Club Med Academy in Port
Saint Lucie. Having played the sport only a few years, Cee won her
first junior event in 2017 which led to a victory in the 2017 South
Florida PGA Junior Tour Championship. She will be competing in
her first USGA championship.

Isabella Fierro, 18, of Mexico, was a quarterfinalist in the
2017 U.S. Women’s Amateur, losing to eventual champion
Sophia Schubert. In 2018, she advanced to the Round of 32 in
both the U.S. Women’s Amateur as well as the 70th U.S. Girls’
Junior at Poppy Hills. Fierro won the 2017 South American
Women’s Amateur Championship by 10 strokes and was
runner-up in the 2016 Mexican Women’s Amateur Championship
after finishing third in 2015. She also won the 2015 Mexican Girls’
Junior Championship. She will play for Oklahoma State this fall.

Megan Furtney, 18, of South Elgin, Ill., partnered with future
Duke teammate, Erica Shepherd, earlier this year to win the
2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball championship in
Jacksonville, Fla. Furtney has played in seven USGA
championships, advancing to the Round of 32 in the 2016 U.S.
Girls’ Junior. After missing the 2017 golf season due to a partial
finger amputation from a domestic accident, she won two
American Junior Golf Association tournaments in 2018. She
also qualified to play in the 2019 U.S. Women’s Open but failed
to make the cut.

Madelyn Gamble, 16, of Pleasant Hill, Calif., will be playing in
her third USGA championship. Gamble advanced to the Round
of 64 in the 2018 U.S. Girls’ Junior at Poppy Hills and played in
the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship earlier
this year where she advanced to the Round of 32. She is
teammates with Carissa and Madison Wu, two sisters in the
field, at Carondelet High School in Concord, Calif. It is the same
high school that 2018 U.S. Girls’ Junior champion Yealimi Noh
attended for two years. 

Megha Ganne, 15, of Holmdel, N.J., is a four-time Drive, Chip &
Putt national finalist and finished runner-up in the 14-15 age
group this spring. Ganne will play in her third straight U.S. Girls’
Junior championship and competed in her first U.S. Women’s
Open in May at the Country Club of Charleston. At 15 and only
a freshman at Holmdel High School in New Jersey, she finished
runner-up in the Shore Conference Tournament this April, helping
the Holmdel girls’ golf team win its third straight team title.
Ganne also won the 2017 New Jersey Junior PGA Championship. 

Ashley Gilliam, 18, of Manchester, Tenn., set to play for Mississippi
State this fall, has qualified for her seventh USGA championship.
She was a quarterfinalist in the 2018 U.S. Girls’ Junior and was
a member of the winning Tennessee team at the final USGA
Women’s State Team Championship in 2017. She is also a two-time
Drive, Chip & Putt National finalist. Most recently, Gilliam played
in the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship where
she advanced to the quarterfinals. 

Rachel Heck, 17, of Memphis, Tenn., qualified for the 2017 U.S.
Women’s Open, made the cut and played the final round with
2008 U.S. Girls’ Junior champion Lexi Thompson. She also earned
low-amateur honors in the 2018 Evian Championship. Heck, a
member of the 2018 USA Junior Ryder Cup team, was named
2017 Rolex Junior Player of the Year, 2017 USA Today Golfer
of the Year and 2017 Global Golf Post First-Team All-American.
She plans to attend Stanford University in the fall of 2020. 

Kary Hollenbaugh, 15, of New Albany, Ohio, has four wins on
the Golfweek Junior Tour and is competing in her first USGA
championship. Her father, Paul, is a PGA Professional and
Director of Golf at New Albany Country Club, where Kary
captured a wire-to-wire victory last year in the Girls 15-19
division, winning by eight strokes. As a freshman at New
Albany high school, Hollenbaugh earned All-State Team honors
and helped her team claim the Ohio Girls High School Golf
State Championship. 

Sabrina Iqbal, 18, of San Jose, Calif., is playing in her fifth
USGA championship after competing in the U.S. Women’s Open
earlier this year. Iqbal, a rising sophomore at Texas Christian
University, carded five top-10 finishes and one victory at the
Maryb S. Kauth Invitational during her first season. She won
the 2016 California Women’s Amateur and was named Northern
California Golf Association Women’s Player of the Year. 

Caris Kim, 16, of Los Altos, Calif., is the younger sister of LPGA
Tour player Lauren Kim. Lauren was a standout at Stanford
University who led the Cardinal to its first national championship
in 2015 and reached the Round of 16 in the 2014 U.S. Women’s
Amateur. She missed the cut in the 2018 U.S. Girls’ Junior
Championship. 

Grace Kim, 18 of Australia, won the 2017 Australian Girls
Amateur champion and finished runner-up in 2018. Kim,
competing in her first USGA championship, claimed a gold
medal at the 2018 Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires and won
the 2018 ANNIKA Invitational Australasia title after firing
a record-breaking 10-under-par 62 during the second round.
In 2019, she finished T-12 in the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific
Championship.

Rachel Kuehn, 18, of Asheville, N.C., who will play at Wake
Forest University this fall, is a 2017 Rolex All-American and
North Carolina Junior Player of the Year. She has played in
the last three U.S. Girls’ Junior Championships, advancing to
the Round of 32 in 2018. Most recently, Keuhn partnered with
Kynadie Adams, for the second year in a row, in the 2019 U.S.
Women’s Amateur Four-Ball championship where they advanced
to the Round of 32. Kuehn’s mother, Brenda, played in six
U.S. Girls’ Junior Championships, nine U.S. Women’s Opens,
13 U.S. Women’s Amateurs and competed on two USA Curtis
Cup Teams. Brenda competed in the 2001 U.S. Women’s Open
while eight months pregnant with Rachel. Rachel represented
the Dominican Republic in the 2018 Women’s World Amateur
Team Championship (her mom was born there before becoming
a U.S. citizen).

Cory Lopez, 17, of Mexico, is a member of Mexico’s National Team
and won the 2019 Mexico Women’s Amateur earlier this year.
She also played in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball where
she advanced to the Round of 16. Lopez, set to play collegiate
golf for the University of Arkansas, is playing in her third
USGA championship. 

Isabella McCauley, 15, of Inver Grove Heights, Minn., is a
two-time Drive, Chip & Putt national finalist. As a freshman
at Simley High School, she won the Minnesota Class 3A State
Championship this spring by a record-setting 10 strokes and
tied a state record for lowest score with of 9-under-par 135. 

Ashley Menne, 17, of Surprise, Ariz., attends Xavier College
Prep in Phoenix and will join the Arizona State women’s golf
team in the fall of 2020. Menne, born in Singapore, is a
two-time Junior Golf Association of Arizona Player of the
Year and is playing in her fourth U.S. Girls’ Junior championship. 

Michaela Morard, 17, of Huntsville, Ala., has won three
consecutive Alabama Girls’ Junior titles, as well as the 2016
and 2018 Alabama Women’s Amateur championships.
A three-time high school state individual champion, Morard
won the first of those titles playing as a 13-year-old
seventh-grader, becoming the youngest athlete and the
only seventh-grader to win an Alabama high school state
title in any sport. A standout softball player as well, Morard
is a three-time Junior Rolex All-American and the 2017
Alabama Junior of the Year. She competed for Alabama
in the 2015 and 2017 USGA Women’s State Team
Championships. She plans to play for the University
of Alabama in 2020. 

Katherine Muzi, 18, of Walnut, Calif., made her first collegiate
start for the University of Southern California in April at the
Silverado Showdown and fired a season-best 72 at the
UCI Invitational. Muzi has competed in five USGA
championships, including three U.S. Girls’ Juniors. A
three-time All-Hacienda League MVP in high school, she
was named 2018 Walnut High School Athlete of the Year
and led her team to the 2016 California Intercollegiate
Federation state title and a runner-up finish in 2015. 

Elle Nachmann, 16, of Boca Raton, Fla., will be playing in
her sixth USGA championship. Nachmann qualified for
four USGA championships in 2017, and advanced to match
play at both the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball and U.S.
Girls’ Junior. Her mother, Luanne Spadea-Nachmann, played
tennis at Duke and her uncle, Vince Spadea, was ranked
as high as No. 18 on the ATP Tour in 2005. Her brother, Alec,
qualified for the 2017 U.S. Amateur. In 2017, she won the
Florida State Four-Ball with Dana Williams, whom she
partnered with in the 2017 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball.
Most recently, Nachmann played in the U.S. Women’s
Amateur Four-Ball Championship where she advanced
to the Round of 32 with partner Laura Edmonds. 

Alexa Pano, 14, of West Palm Beach, Fla., two years ago became
the youngest competitor to play in an LPGA of Japan Tour
event – the 2016 Yonex Ladies Golf Tournament. An eight-time
winner of the IMG Junior World Championship and two-time
National Drive, Chip & Putt champion (2016 and 2017), she
has already played in two U.S. Women’s Amateurs, making
match play last year at San Diego Country Club. She was featured
in the 2013 documentary “The Short Game” on Netflix. She
was runner-up in the 2018 U.S. Girls’ Junior, losing 4 and 3
to Yealimi Noh. Last month, she won the Rolex Girls Junior
Championship, one of the prominent invitationals on the
American Junior Golf Association circuit.

Pinya Pipatjarasgit, 18, of Sylvania, Ohio, concluded her
freshman season at Brown University with two top-10 finishes.
Pipatjarasgit, who will be competing in her fourth USGA
championship, received a sponsor exemption to play in the
2018 LPGA Marathon Classic in her hometown. She is classically
trained on the piano and violin and performed at Carnegie
Hall with her school choir in 2015.

Megan Propeck, 16, of Leawood, Kan., will be playing in her
second USGA championship. Propeck qualified for her first
championship U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball this year
with partner Lacy Shelton after shooting a 65 at Mission Hills
C.C. in suburban Kansas City. Propeck won the 2018 Kansas
Girls Junior Amateur and was named the 2018 Kansas Golf
Association Girls Player of the Year. 

Amanda Sambach, 16, of Davidson, N.C., won the 2018
AJGA Rolex Girls Tournament of Champions last November
and recently competed in the Symetra Tour’s 2019 Symetra
Classic in Davidson, N.C., on a sponsor’s exemption, finishing
T-11th. Sambach, currently No. 46 in the Women’s World
Amateur Golf Ranking, reached the Round of 32 in last year’s
U.S. Girls’ Junior and will be playing in her third USGA championship. 

Yuka Saso, 18, of the Philippines, competed in the 2019 U.S.
Women’s Open and the 2019 Augusta National Women’s
Amateur, where she finished tied for third. Earlier this
month, she captured the Girls Junior PGA Championship
in Hartford, Conn. At the age of 15, she reached the semifinals
of the 2016 U.S. Women’s Amateur and earned both individual
and team gold medals for the Philippines in the 2016 World
Junior Girls Championship. Saso, who plans to attend the
University of Georgia in 2020, has twice won the Philippine
Ladies Open. She made history in the 2018 Asian Games for
the Philippines after capturing gold medals in both women’s
individual and women’s team events. 

Brooke Seay, 18, of San Diego, Calif., who will be playing for
Stanford University this fall, is playing in her sixth U.S. Girls’
Junior championship, the most of anyone in the field. Her best
finish came in 2018 when she reached the Round of 16. Seay
has competed in three U.S. Women’s Amateurs, won the 2017
AJGA Annika Invitational and finished fourth in the 2018 World
Junior Girls Championship. She also hit the ceremonial first
tee shot at the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open at
Torrey Pines in 2013. 

Erica Shepherd, 18, of Greenwood, Ind., won the 2017 U.S.
Girls’ Junior champion, defeating Jennifer Chang, 3 and 2,
in the 36-hole final at Boone Valley Golf Club in Augusta, Mo.
She qualified for the 2016 U.S. Women’s Open at CordeValle
when she was 15, and last year became the first player to
compete in the U.S. Women’s Open via the exemption for
the Girls’ Junior champion. Shepherd has competed in
the Wyndham Cup, Junior Solheim Cup and World Junior
Girls championships. She has deep ties to the U.S. Girls’
Junior Championship, as her middle name, Leigh, is in honor
of family friend Leigh Anne (Hardin) Creavy, the 1998 Girls’
Junior champion. Her family is also close with two-time
U.S. Women’s Open champion Betsy King, whom Shepherd
caddied for in the 2017 Senior LPGA Championship at the
French Lick (Ind.) Resort. Shepherd is one of seven left-handed
USGA champions and only the second female left-handed
USGA champion after fellow Hoosier Stater Julia Potter-Bobb.
Earlier this year, she partnered with future Duke teammate,
Megan Furtney, to win the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball
Championship.

Grace Summerhays, 15, of Scottsdale, Ariz., recently became
the second woman ever to qualify for match play in the Utah
State Amateur, playing in the same field as her brother,
Preston, who won the event in 2018. Preston, 16, is competing
in the 2019 U.S. Junior Amateur at Inverness Club in Toledo,
Ohio, July 15-20. Summerhays, playing in her first USGA
championship, comes from a long lineage of golfers. Her
father, Boyd Summerhays, was a Canadian Tour player and
is now a golf instructor who works with well-known PGA
tour player Tony Finau as well as 1999 U.S. Junior champion
Hunter Mahan. Her uncle, Daniel Summerhays, currently plays
on the Korn Ferry Tour and was a quarterfinalist in the
2001 U.S. Amateur, and her great uncle, Bruce Summerhays,
has won three PGA Tour Champions tities. 

Becca Tschetter, 17, of Minot, N.D., is competing in her first
USGA championship. The incoming senior at Minot High in
North Dakota is a distant relative of former LPGA Tour
winner Kris Tschetter. Kris played on the LPGA Tour for
25 years and competed in 17 U.S. Women’s Opens, including
a runner-up finish in 1996 at Pine Needles in Southern Pines, N.C. 

Caroline Wrigley, 18, of Wexford, Pa., is playing in her first
U.S. Girls’ Junior championship. Wrigley will join the Furman
women’s golf team this fall. She won three consecutive individual
district titles, leading North Allegheny High School to three state
championships. Earlier this year, Wrigley played in the U.S.
Women’s Amateur Four-Ball championship where she advanced
to the Round of 32 with partner Lauren Freyvogel . Her uncle,
Frank Fuhrer III, was a member of the 1981 USA Walker Cup
Team, which earned him an invitation to play in the 1982 Masters.
He also played professionally for five years.

Kelly Xu, 15, of Claremont, Calif., was the first female champion
at Augusta National Golf Club when she won the Girls 7-9 Division
in the inaugural Drive, Chip & Putt Championship in 2014, and
returned as a finalist in 2015. Xu is competing in her second
USGA championship after qualifying for the 2018 U.S. Women’s Amateur. 

Lei Ye, 18, of the People’s Republic of China, was born and raised
in Shanghai and moved to Florida when she was 13. She reached
the Round of 32 in the 2016 U.S. Girls’ Junior and later competed
at the 2018 U.S. Women’s Open at Shoal Creek, missing the cut
by one stroke. She also was the runner-up with partner Ya-Chun
Chang in the 2018 U.S. Women’s  Amateur Four-Ball at El Caballero
Country Club in Tarzana, Calif. Ye, who has played in two LPGA
Tour events in her home country (the Blue Bay LPGA and the
Buick LPGA Shanghai), won two junior titles last year at the
Annika Invitational USA presented by Rolex and the Zhang
Lianwei Cup. She will be attending Stanford University this fall. 

Rose Zhang, 16, of Irvine, Calif., was the only 2019 U.S. Girls’
Junior competitor to make the cut in the 2019 U.S. Women’s
Open in Charleston, S.C., where she finished T-55th. Zhang,
a 2016 Rolex Junior All-American, won the 2017 Junior Girls’
PGA Championship and was a member of the 2017 Junior
Solheim Cup and 2018 Junior Ryder Cup teams. This year,
she finished T-17th in the inaugural Augusta National
Women’s Amateur and won the Toyota Junior World Cup.

About the USGA

The USGA celebrates, serves and advances the game of golf.
Founded in 1894, we conduct many of golf’s premier professional
and amateur championships, including the U.S. Open and
U.S. Women’s Open. With The R&A, we govern the sport via
a global set of playing, equipment and amateur status rules.
Our operating jurisdiction for these governance functions is
the United States, its territories and Mexico. The USGA Handicap
System is utilized in more than 40 countries and our Course
Rating System covers 95 percent of the world’s golf courses,
enabling all golfers to play on an equitable basis. The USGA
campus in Liberty Corner, New Jersey, is home to the
Association’s Research and Test Center, where science and
innovation are fueling a healthy and sustainable game for
the future. The campus is also home to the USGA Golf Museum,
where we honor the game by curating the world’s most
comprehensive archive of golf artifacts. To learn more, visit usga.org.