Julia Misemer (Darren Carroll/USGA)
Through the first two days of stroke play at the 122nd U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at Chambers Bay, player after player recited a variation of the same mantra: Seeding doesn’t matter in match play. On a cool, damp Wednesday along the shores of Puget Sound, several higher-seeded players experienced that truth the hard way.
Chief among them was
Latanna Stone of Riverview, Fla., who less than 24 hours earlier was riding high after a record-setting 8-under-par 65 earned her co-medalist honors and the No. 1 seed. But rather than making a run at the title, Stone ran into a buzzsaw in the form of No. 64 seed
Julia Misemer, who early this morning defeated two other competitors on the last hole of a playoff to earn the final coveted spot in match play.
The 18-year-old from Overland Park, Kan., took full advantage of the opportunity – she won two of the first three holes and never looked back in defeating Stone, 2 and 1.
“Honestly I wouldn't say I was intimidated because we’re all at such a high level, I feel like it’s really anyone’s game,” said Misemer, who will begin her collegiate career later this year at the University of Arizona. “I kind of got that No. 64 coin on the first tee and I was like, I want to always remember this as a good thing. I just tried to relax.”
Rachel Heck (Darren Carroll/USGA) Another player who looked relaxed in match play was
Rachel Heck of Memphis, Tenn. The No. 3 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking™ (WAGR) is the No. 52 seed but relied on her considerable championship experience to defeat 13th-seeded
Melanie Green of Medina, N.Y., by a comfortable 5-and-3 margin.
Heck made some fireworks right off the bat. On the par-5 first hole, she rolled in a putt she estimated to be 65 feet for eagle to take a lead that she never relinquished.
“I feel really good about my game right now,” said Heck, a junior at Stanford and the 2021 NCAA individual champion. “It’s really fun to have my dad [Robert] on the bag. We work super well together. Anything can happen, but we feel really confident.”
Heck was one of six players who competed on the 2022 USA Curtis Cup Team to make match play, and one of three to win their first-round matches. The other victors were
Rachel Kuehn of Asheville, N.C., who defeated Ashley Kim, 3 and 2, and
Amari Avery, of Riverside, Calif., who rallied to beat Vanessa Borovilos, 1 up. The other players from this year’s victorious USA Curtis Cup Team – Stone,
Megha Ganne and defending champion
Jensen Castle – all suffered defeats.
The two youngest players remaining in the field both won their matches. No. 2 seed and co-medalist
Alice Zhao, 13, of the People’s Republic of China, defeated left-hander
Camryn Carreon of San Antonio, Texas, 4 and 3. Fellow 13-year-old Anna Fang of San Diego, Calif., won the first three holes of her match against
Taglao Jeeravivitaporn of Thailand en route to a 3-and-2 victory.
What’s Next
The Round of 32 begins at 7 a.m. PT on Thursday, followed by the Round of 16 at 1:30 p.m. Golf Channel will broadcast live from 4-7 p.m. PT (7-10 p.m. ET).
by Greg Midland, USGA
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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