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see also: Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship, Augusta National Golf Club

48 of the top 50 players in the world. Two past champions. One teenager who lost by a single stroke last year.
The seventh Augusta National Women's Amateur arrives April 1–4 with 48 of the top 50 WAGR players, two past champions, the reigning U.S. Women's Amateur champion, a Stanford super team that owns four of the world's top five spots, and a No. 1 who may be the best amateur the women's game has ever produced.
Eight years after its founding, the Augusta National Women's Amateur has transformed from a bold experiment into the crown jewel of women's amateur golf — a stage so magnetic that 48 of the world's top 50 players cleared their calendars just to be here.
The Masters arrives in one week. But before the tour's biggest names reclaim the grounds they call home, Augusta National belongs to the finest collection of women amateurs ever assembled. The 2026 Augusta National Women's Amateur — the seventh edition of a championship that has become an institution at remarkable speed — tees off Wednesday, April 1 at Champions Retreat Golf Club in Evans, Georgia, with the final round set for Augusta National itself on Saturday, April 4.
World No. 1 Kiara Romero headlines a field that includes two past champions, the reigning U.S. Women's Amateur champion, last year's runner-up, and five Stanford Cardinal players who collectively occupy four of the top five spots in the Women's World Amateur Golf Ranking. Representatives from 23 countries across every inhabited continent round out the draw. The only two players from the top 50 missing: Shiyuan Zhou (No. 21), expected to turn professional imminently, and Louise Uma Landgraf (No. 42), who rose 24 spots after winning the Portuguese Ladies Amateur but ultimately did not make the trip to Georgia.
The defending champion, Spain's Carla Bernat Escuder — who set the championship record at 12-under 204 last April, birdieing all four par-5s at Augusta National — has since turned professional. That vacancy has attracted nearly every legitimate contender in the women's amateur game to a week where the prize is not money, not a check, not a trophy case addition. It's Augusta National on a Saturday, with the world watching.
| Rank | Player | Country | Key Recent Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kiara Romero Favorite San Jose, Calif. · Age 20 · Junior Oregon | USA | 2025 McCormack Medal winner · 3 wins & 20 top-10 finishes in the past year · Feb. 2026 Chevron Collegiate win breaks Oregon's all-time record (5th career win) · 69.60 scoring average this season · First two-time First Team All-American in Oregon history |
2 | Paula Martin Sampedro Spain · Junior Stanford | Spain | Won the 2025 British Women's Amateur Championship · Winner of 2025 San Diego State Classic (−15) · Key member of Stanford's 2024 NCAA Championship team · Earned 2026 Chevron Championship invitation |
3 | Andrea Revuelta Spain · Sophomore Stanford | Spain | Won her third collegiate tournament in February 2026 (Tucson) · Consistent top-5 finisher · Rapid WAGR ascent in her second college season |
4 | Farah O'Keefe Austin, Texas · Junior Texas | USA | Named Golf Channel "Winner of the Week" in early March 2026 · Among the leaders after Round 1 of the 2025 ANWA (67) · Arriving in the best form of her career |
5 | Meja Örtengren Sweden · Sophomore Stanford | Sweden | 2025 LET Hills Open Champion — as an amateur · Won the 2025 Nanea Invitational · Youngest of the top-5 and still ascending · Power game suits Augusta National's par-5 corridors |
The 20-year-old Oregon junior is the undisputed face of women's amateur golf. Born in New York, trained early at the Joffrey Ballet School, she became No. 1 in the WAGR in July 2025 and has not relinquished the position. The McCormack Medal came the same summer. Her 2025-26 college season has been outstanding: five career wins, a 69.60 scoring average, par-or-better in 15 of 18 rounds. She missed the cut at the 2024 ANWA and finished T-7 in 2025 while leading the field at one point in the final round. She carries two major championship exemptions into a year where everything points toward Augusta National as the turning point.
Her mother is Greek. In Greek, asterisk means "little star." In 2024 she became the first player in USGA history to reach three championship final matches in the same year — the Women's Amateur Four-Ball (won), U.S. Girls' Junior (runner-up), and U.S. Women's Amateur (runner-up). In the 2025 ANWA final, she eagled the par-4 first hole at Augusta National, shot 68, and lost by one stroke. As of March 2026 she has broken into the World Top 10. She is 17 years old. One stroke. She knows it.
This is Ganne's sixth ANWA start — almost certainly her last as an amateur. Four Drive, Chip & Putt national finals, five ANWA starts, and now a sixth. She opened the 2025 ANWA with the all-time record 63 at Champions Retreat — two better than former Stanford teammate Rose Zhang. She returned to win the 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur for her signature title. Healthy after a hip injury that cost her the summer of 2025, she arrives at peak form. The entire arc of her amateur career lives inside this week.
Ranked seventh in the world, Marin is the reigning 2025 NCAA Individual Champion and recently won the 2025 Women's Amateur Latin America (WALA) in a dramatic three-hole playoff — the first Colombian to own that title. Her short game is among the sharpest in the field and her ability to close under pressure has been tested repeatedly. The ANWA's 54-hole format, rewarding patience and mental fortitude above all, suits her profile well.
Galitsky holds one of the most relevant distinctions in this field: she shot a 66 in the 2025 ANWA final round at Augusta National — the lowest score ever recorded in a championship final round on those grounds. Ranked No. 8 in the world, the Thai star also claimed the 2023 Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship. The player who holds Augusta National's final-round record returns knowing exactly what this course can yield. Players who can shoot 66 at Augusta National on a championship Saturday don't stay outside the trophy conversation for long.
In 2024, Malixi became only the second player in history to win both the U.S. Girls' Junior and the U.S. Women's Amateur in the same calendar year, defeating Asterisk Talley in both finals. She withdrew from the 2025 ANWA with a back injury. In January 2026 she shot a course-record 63 at Duke to win the Sea Best Intercollegiate as a freshman. Healthy, motivated, competing at Augusta National for the first time with major championship DNA already on the résumé. The most dangerous player no one has seen at Augusta before.
Kajitani was a teenager when she won in 2021, becoming the first international champion and the first winner from Japan at Augusta National in any tournament. Eight days later, Hideki Matsuyama won the Masters — Japan's week in April. She won in a playoff over Emilia Migliaccio. No player has won the ANWA more than once — but Kajitani's relationship with this course is unlike anyone else in this field. She's been here. She knows how Saturday feels. She's the most experienced player in the draw by the only measure that matters at Augusta National.
Davis was 16 when she shot a final-round 69 to become the ANWA's youngest-ever champion in 2022. Now a junior at Auburn, she has set program records with rounds of 64 and finished T-11 at the 2025 ANWA. She and Kajitani are the only players in this field who know what it feels like to stand in Amen Corner holding the ANWA trophy. That psychological edge is real. Augusta National in April, with the Masters a week away, is unlike anywhere else in golf. Davis has felt it before and walked away a champion.
| Player | Country | Why They Could Win |
|---|---|---|
Aphrodite Deng Short Hills, N.J. · Canada | Canada | Defending U.S. Girls' Junior champion. Fresh USGA title at the highest level. Proven ability to close under pressure at the biggest junior events. |
Elizabeth Rudisill Charlotte, N.C. | USA | In scorching form — jumped 30 places in WAGR rankings after shooting an 8-under 64 at a recent collegiate event. One of the hottest players in America right now. |
Jasmine Koo Cerritos, Calif. · USC | USA | Curtis Cup veteran. Four wins in 17 recent counting appearances. Made the cut at the 2024 LPGA Chevron Championship — one of two amateurs to do so — and finished T-13. Proven big-stage performer. |
Amanda Sambach Raleigh, N.C. · Virginia | USA | Sixth ANWA start — tied with Ganne for most in the field. Top-20 finish in each of her last three ANWA appearances. Nobody in the field has more Augusta familiarity without a champion's badge. |
Beth Coulter Northern Ireland | Ireland | Curtis Cup team member whose consistent ball-striking suits Augusta National's patience-first demands. The methodical British school — she out-grinds her way through a difficult week. |
Farah O'Keefe Austin, Texas · Texas | USA | Sitting World No. 4 in peak form. Golf Channel's "Winner of the Week" in early March 2026. Was among the leaders after Round 1 at the 2025 ANWA. The talent has always been there; now the timing is right. |
| Year | Champion | Country | Notable Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
2025 | Carla Bernat Escuder Turned professional — not in 2026 field | Spain | Set championship record at 12-under 204; birdied all four par-5s in the final round. One-stroke victory. |
2024 | Lottie Woad Now LPGA Tour professional, ranked No. 8 | England | First European champion. Birdied Nos. 17 & 18 to win by one. Won in her LPGA Tour debut, matching Rose Zhang's feat. |
2023 | Rose Zhang Won in her LPGA professional debut | USA | Won via playoff to close out one of the most decorated amateur careers in history. Stanford teammate of Ganne, Martin Sampedro, Revuelta & Örtengren. |
2022 | Anna Davis ★ Returning 2026 Junior at Auburn; set program records with rounds of 64 | USA | Youngest champion at age 16. Final-round 69. |
2021 | Tsubasa Kajitani ★ Returning 2026 Continues to compete internationally | Japan | First international champion. First winner from Japan at Augusta National in any tournament. Won via playoff. Eight days before Hideki Matsuyama won the Masters. |
2020 | Championship canceled — COVID-19 pandemic | ||
2019 | Jennifer Kupcho Inaugural champion | USA | World's top-ranked amateur. Played the final six holes in 5-under, including an eagle on the par-5 13th at Augusta National. |

54-hole stroke-play tournament that will include a 72 player international field. The field will include winners of other recognized tournaments while also utilizing the Women's World Amateur Golf Rankings. The first two rounds will be played at Cham...

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