Home › News  › News

News

The 2026 U.S. Women's Open Amateur Tracker: Every Qualifier, Every Site

With qualifying wrapping up today at Bermuda Dunes and Cross Timbers, this is your complete site-by-site tracker of the 2026 U.S.

2026 U.S. Women's Open Amateur Qualifying Tracker — Road to Riviera
Road to Riviera • 81st U.S. Women's Open

The 2026 U.S. Women's Open Amateur Tracker

From a 17-year-old who lapped the field in California to a Czech standout from Kent State, the amateurs punching tickets to The Riviera Country Club. A site-by-site look at 26 qualifiers, the storylines, and the stats.

For all but 92 competitors, the road to the 81st U.S. Women's Open Presented by Ally began with a single 36-hole day at one of 26 qualifying sites spread across 17 states and three countries. Over four weeks, from a chilly morning at Galveston Country Club on April 20 to today's finale at Bermuda Dunes and Cross Timbers, more than 1,800 entries narrowed to roughly 64 spots into the 156-player field at The Riviera Country Club, in Pacific Palisades, Calif., June 4-7.

This year's qualifying has been an amateur showcase. National Junior Team members have stamped tickets in California, Missouri and Pennsylvania. Two college standouts representing the Czech Republic and England both qualified in Ohio. A Spanish pro who turned over six hours earlier flew overnight from a Las Vegas event to grab co-medalist honors at Streamsong. And the storyline of the day on Monday, May 11, was a 17-year-old from Chowchilla, Calif., who lapped the field by five strokes at Richmond Country Club.

The Riviera Country Club, host of the 2026 U.S. Women's Open
The Riviera Country Club, in Pacific Palisades, Calif., will host the 2026 U.S. Women's Open Presented by Ally June 4–7. It will be the first major women's championship ever held at the George Thomas Jr.–designed course. (USGA)

Amateurs by the Numbers

22+Amateurs Qualified*
10Sites with Amateur Medalists
2.4Max Handicap Index
156Total Field at Riviera

*Through May 12 qualifying; final figure pending results from Bermuda Dunes and Cross Timbers on May 13.

Fast Facts: 81st U.S. Women's Open

VenueThe Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades, Calif.
DatesJune 4–7, 2026
Presenting SponsorAlly Financial
ArchitectGeorge Thomas Jr. (assisted by William Bell), 1926
Yardage / Par6,699 yards / Par 71
Field156 competitors
Entries Accepted1,897 (record: 2,107 in 2023)
EligibilityOpen to any female pro or amateur with a Handicap Index® not exceeding 2.4
Qualifying36 holes at 26 sites, April 20 – May 13
CutLow 60 and ties after 36 holes
PlayoffTwo-hole aggregate playoff if tied after 72 holes
2025 ChampionMaja Stark (Sweden), even-par 72 final round at Erin Hills, edged Nelly Korda by two
Last Qualifier WinnerBirdie Kim, 2005 — the last player to win after coming through qualifying
Champion ReceivesThe Mickey Wright Medal; custody of the Harton S. Semple Trophy; exemptions into the next 10 U.S. Women's Opens and the next five Chevron, AIG Women's British Open, KPMG Women's PGA and Amundi Evian Championships
Historical NoteFirst major women's championship ever conducted at Riviera, and the first U.S. Women's Open in Greater Los Angeles

Big-Name Amateurs: The Mini-Profiles

The amateur class headed to Riviera includes National Junior Team members, college All-Americans, an Augusta National Women's Amateur runner-up, and high-schoolers still working on their senior prom plans. Here's the headline group of amateurs who punched their tickets.

Asterisk Talley
Asterisk Talley Medalist
17 • Chowchilla, Calif. • Richmond CC, 70-69 = 139 (-3) — won by five strokes

The headliner. Talley, a U.S. National Junior Team member and 2024 U.S. Women's Amateur Four-Ball champion, was the only player under par at Richmond and is now headed to her third consecutive U.S. Women's Open. She finished runner-up at both the 2024 U.S. Girls' Junior and U.S. Women's Amateur, was second at this year's Augusta National Women's Amateur, and shared low-amateur honors as a 15-year-old at the 2024 Women's Open.

Veronika Kedronova
Veronika Kedronova Medalist College
Czech Republic • Kent State • New Albany (Ohio) CC, 71-72 = 143 (-1)

The only player to break par at New Albany even after a pair of afternoon double-bogeys. A member of the Czech Republic World Amateur Team, Kedronova will make her major championship debut at Riviera.

Nellie Ong
Nellie Ong College
England • Ohio State sophomore • New Albany (Ohio) CC, 70-74 = 144 (E)

Joined Kedronova in a 2-for-2 amateur sweep at New Albany, finishing three shots clear of a tie for third. The English standout is one of two Ohio State players (along with former teammate Kary Hollenbaugh, who missed at the same site) chasing Riviera.

Veronika Kedronova and Nellie Ong at New Albany Country Club
The 2026 U.S. Women's Open qualifiers from New Albany Country Club: Veronika Kedronova (Kent State, Czechia) and Nellie Ong (Ohio State, England). The pair delivered a rare 2-for-2 amateur sweep. (Photo: Jack Rubin, Ohio Golf Association)
Carla Bernat Escuder Co-Medalist
Spain • 2025 ANWA champion • Streamsong (Black), 69-70 = 139 (-7)

Tied for fifth on the Epson Tour in Las Vegas Sunday, then flew overnight to Florida and shot 69-70 on four hours of sleep to share medalist honors with Taiwan's Peiyun Chien. The first Spaniard to win the Augusta National Women's Amateur is no longer an amateur — she turned pro last summer — but her qualifying run was the storyline of the Florida site.

Sarah Hammett Medalist
Arizona CC, Phoenix, 67-71 = 138 (-6)

The first amateur medalist of the qualifying cycle, Hammett opened with a six-under 67 to set the tone for an amateur-heavy spring. Her -6 was the second-lowest amateur total of any qualifier through May 11.

Sofia Rivera & Siuue Wu Amateur Sweep
Sugar Mill CC, New Smyrna Beach, Fla. • -5 and -3

Rivera (69-70 = 139) and Wu (70-71 = 141) gave Sugar Mill — hosting U.S. Women's Open qualifying for the eighth time — a clean amateur sweep of its two spots, one of the storylines of April 27.

Meja Ortengren Co-Medalist
Sweden • Corral de Tierra (Calif.) CC, 70-70 = 140 (-4)

Tied LPGA pro Muni He at the top of a quiet Northern California site, becoming the first international amateur to medal in the 2026 cycle. Ortengren is one of Sweden's top young amateurs and a fixture on the European junior circuit.

Zoe Cusack & Addie Dobson Co-Medalists
Meadowbrook CC, St. Louis, Mo. • -5 each

Cusack, a USNJT member, and Dobson tied at 139 to deliver another two-amateur sweep in Missouri. Dobson's afternoon hung-on 73 followed a torrid 66 in the morning; Cusack closed in 68 after an opening 71.

Catherin Park
Rainier Golf & CC, Seattle • 71-69 = 140 (-4)

Outlasted a Northwest field to grab the second spot behind pro Lauren Kim. Park finishes off a strong spring of regional play with a Riviera ticket.

Johanna Sjursen Medalist
Piedmont Driving Club, Atlanta • 73-72 = 145 (+1)

The Norwegian was the only amateur medalist on a tough scoring day in Atlanta, edging veteran pro Jasmine Suwannapura by one shot. Sjursen's +1 was the highest winning score of any 2026 site.

Vanessa Borovilos & Michelle Xing
Shannopin CC, Pittsburgh, Pa. • 142 (-2) each

Two amateurs took two of the three Shannopin spots behind pro medalist Melanie Green. Borovilos, a Canadian junior star, and Xing both finished at 142, capping a strong middle round of the qualifying cycle.

Thanana Kotchasanmanee Medalist
Springfield (Va.) Golf & CC • 68-69 = 137 (-5)

The Thai amateur — who narrowly missed at Druid Hills last spring — flipped the script with a five-under medalist performance, becoming one of the lowest amateur scorers of the entire qualifying cycle.

Jie-En Lin Lone Qualifier
Honolulu CC, Hawaii • 70-68 (-6) — one spot available

The lone spot in Hawaii went to amateur Lin, who closed with a 68 to grab the one ticket out of Oahu. With Kimberly Kim (the 2006 U.S. Women's Amateur champ, now 34) chasing a return to a Women's Open at the same site, Lin's win was a generational handoff.

Athena Singh
Morehead, Ky. • Houston commit • Briar Ridge CC, Schererville, Ill.

A high school senior heading to the University of Houston, Singh won a playoff at Briar Ridge for the second spot behind LPGA medalist Paula Reto, who lapped the rest of the field by seven strokes. Singh adds another Riviera-bound name to the growing class of teen amateurs in the field.

Lois Lau and Olivia Mehaffey
Olivia Mehaffey Medalist
Northern Ireland • Ex-Arizona State • Buckinghamshire GC, England, 70-71 (-3)

Now a professional, Mehaffey returns to her third U.S. Women's Open after qualifying as an amateur at Arizona State in 2018 and 2020 — she was first runner-up here in 2022 and finally broke through this time. France's Lois Lau (left) won a sudden-death playoff over English duo Meghan MacLaren and Bronte Law for the second European spot.

Soomin Oh Japan Site
Boso Country Club, Chiba Prefecture, Japan • 71-71 = 142 (-2)

The lone amateur to advance from the season-opening site in Japan, where four spots were available. Oh edged into the final qualifying slot at -2, joining three professionals on the long flight to Los Angeles.

A Look at Riviera

Designed by George Thomas Jr. with assistance from William Bell and opened in 1926, Riviera is celebrating its centennial in 2026. The Pacific Palisades course has hosted the L.A. Open 80 times, the 1948 U.S. Open (Ben Hogan), two PGA Championships (1983, 1995), and the 2017 U.S. Amateur (Doc Redman) — but never a major women's championship. Until this year.

Qualifying Tracker: All 26 Sites

Click any site below to jump to the full leaderboard on AmateurGolf.com. The Full Results button in each block goes directly to the scoring tab.

All 26 Sites — Master Leaderboard Hub

Site with an amateur qualifier    (a)Amateur    MedalistLow score / Medalist
Monday, April 20 — Qualifying Begins

Boso Country Club (East/West) — Chiba Prefecture, Japan

4 spots • International site (5th consecutive year)
  • 1. Miyu Goto — 67-69 = 136 (-8) Medalist
  • 2. Chia Yen Wu — 69-68 = 137 (-7)
  • 3. Sayaka Takahashi — 71-69 = 140 (-4)
  • 4. Soomin Oh (a) — 71-71 = 142 (-2)
Full Results

Galveston (Texas) Country Club

2 spots
  • T1. Yue Zhang — 72-69 = 141 (-3) Co-Medalist
  • T1. Brianna Do — 70-71 = 141 (-3) Co-Medalist
Full Results
Monday, April 27

Arizona Country Club — Phoenix, Ariz.

2 spots • Hosting for 6th time
  • 1. Sarah Hammett (a) — 67-71 = 138 (-6) Medalist
  • 2. Kaleiya Romero — 69-70 = 139 (-5)
Full Results

Sugar Mill Country Club (White/Red) — New Smyrna Beach, Fla.

2 spots • Hosting for 8th time
  • 1. Sofia Rivera (a) — 69-70 = 139 (-5) Medalist
  • 2. Siuue Wu (a) — 70-71 = 141 (-3)
Full Results

Corral de Tierra Country Club — Corral de Tierra, Calif.

2 spots
  • T1. Meja Ortengren (a) — 70-70 = 140 (-4) Co-Medalist
  • T1. Muni He — 69-71 = 140 (-4) Co-Medalist
Full Results
Tuesday, April 28

Rolling Hills Country Club — Monroe, N.C.

2 spots • Emilia Doran (broadcaster/ex-Wake Forest) competed but did not advance
  • 1. Gurleen Kaur — 70-69 = 139 (-5) Medalist
  • 2. Chloe Kovelesky — 68-72 = 140 (-4)
Full Results

Meadowbrook Country Club — St. Louis, Mo.

2 spots • Both spots to USNJT-affiliated amateurs
  • T1. Zoe Cusack (a) — 71-68 = 139 (-5) Co-Medalist
  • T1. Addie Dobson (a) — 66-73 = 139 (-5) Co-Medalist
Full Results

Rainier Golf & Country Club — Seattle, Wash.

2 spots
  • 1. Lauren Kim — 70-68 = 138 (-6) Medalist
  • 2. Catherin Park (a) — 71-69 = 140 (-4)
Full Results
Monday, May 4

New Albany (Ohio) Country Club

2 spots • Hosting for 3rd consecutive year • All-amateur, all-college day
  • 1. Veronika Kedronova (a) — 71-72 = 143 (-1) Medalist (Kent State, Czech Republic)
  • 2. Nellie Ong (a) — 70-74 = 144 (E) (Ohio State, England)
Full Results
Tuesday, May 5

Piedmont Driving Club — Atlanta, Ga.

2 spots
  • 1. Johanna Sjursen (a) — 73-72 = 145 (+1) Medalist
  • 2. Jasmine Suwannapura — 75-71 = 146 (+2)
Full Results

Shannopin Country Club — Pittsburgh, Pa.

3 spots • Hosting for 7th time
  • 1. Melanie Green — 71-65 = 136 (-8) Medalist
  • T2. Michelle Xing (a) — 74-68 = 142 (-2)
  • T2. Vanessa Borovilos (a) — 71-71 = 142 (-2)
Full Results
Wednesday, May 6

Wilderness Country Club — Naples, Fla.

2 spots • Lexi Thompson (chasing 20th straight start) and Curtis Cup captain Meghan Stasi both competed but did not advance
  • 1. Ana Belac — 69-65 = 134 (-8) Medalist
  • 2. Paula Francisco — 68-72 = 140 (-2)
Full Results

Springfield (Va.) Golf & Country Club

2 spots
  • 1. Thanana Kotchasanmanee (a) — 68-69 = 137 (-5) Medalist
  • 2. Katherine Muzi — 72-68 = 140 (-2)
Full Results
Thursday, May 7

Somerset Country Club — Mendota Heights, Minn.

2 spots
  • 1. Anna Huang — 70-71 = 141 (-1) Medalist
  • 2. Danielle Kang — 73-69 = 142 (E)
Full Results
Friday, May 8

Honolulu Country Club — Honolulu, Hawaii

1 spot
  • 1. Jie-En Lin (a) — 70-68 = 138 (-6) Sole Qualifier
Full Results
Monday, May 11 — The Eight-Site Marathon

Richmond (Calif.) Country Club

2 spots
  • 1. Asterisk Talley (a) — 70-69 = 139 (-3) Medalist & Low Amateur
  • 2. Anita Lumpongpoung — 72-72 = 144 (+2)
Full Results

Essex County Country Club — West Orange, N.J.

Multiple spots • Rose Zhang fell in a 4-for-1 playoff and is first alternate
  • Dewi Weber — Medalist
  • Minji Kang
  • Nataliya Guseva (Russia)
  • Gina Kim — won 4-for-1 playoff over Rose Zhang, Erika Hara, Laney Frye
Full Results

Streamsong (Black) — Streamsong, Fla.

2 spots • 10-year-old Cheetah Baez competed (91-95), did not advance
  • T1. Carla Bernat Escuder — 69-70 = 139 (-7) Co-Medalist (2025 ANWA champ; turned pro Aug. 2025)
  • T1. Peiyun Chien (Taiwan) — -7 Co-Medalist
Full Results

Buckinghamshire Golf Club — London, England

2 spots • 50-player European field including 13 LET winners
  • 1. Olivia Mehaffey (Northern Ireland) — 70-71 = 141 (-3) Medalist
  • 2. Lois Lau (France) — 68-73 = 141 (-2) — won sudden-death playoff over Meghan MacLaren and Bronte Law
Full Results

Briar Ridge Country Club — Schererville, Ind.

2 spots
  • 1. Paula Reto — -4 (won by seven shots) Medalist
  • 2. Athena Singh (a) — won playoff (Houston signee, Morehead, Ky.)
Full Results

Marlborough Country Club — Marlborough, Mass.

1 spot
  • 1. Yuri Yoshida (Japan) — won by three shots over Alexa Pano Sole Qualifier
Full Results

The Vancouver Golf Club — Coquitlam, B.C., Canada

International site, 4th consecutive year • Individual results pending publication
  • Results not yet released site-by-site at publication
Full Results

Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club — Rancho Santa Fe, Calif.

2 spots • 68-player field included USNJT members Nikki Oh and Anna Fang
  • Detailed results not yet released at publication — see SCGA/Golf Genius leaderboard for live updates
Full Results
Tuesday, May 12

Walnut Creek Golf Preserve — Westminster, Colo.

2 spots • Hosting for 7th time (3rd consecutive year) • Retired LPGA pro Natalie Gulbis, 43, in the field
  • Results posting this week — check the AmateurGolf.com leaderboard for live updates
Full Results
Wednesday, May 13 — Final Qualifying Day
Live today: The last two qualifiers — Bermuda Dunes Country Club (Calif.) and Cross Timbers Golf Course (Azle, Texas) — close out the four-week qualifying schedule. Results to follow on the USGA leaderboard.

Bermuda Dunes (Calif.) Country Club

2 spots • Marquee field: Lucy Li chasing return (3rd USWO as pro), USNJT amateurs Eliana Saga and Jude Lee in the field
  • Live results — pending
Full Results

Cross Timbers Golf Course — Azle, Texas

2 spots • 78-player field led by 48-year-old major champion and 2026 U.S. Solheim Cup captain Angela Stanford, chasing her 25th U.S. Women's Open start
  • Live results — pending
Full Results

Storylines That Did Not Survive Qualifying

Rose Zhang's tense miss. The two-time LPGA winner and Stanford grad — who finished a hair outside the top-75 cutoff for direct entry — flew to West Orange, N.J., for one final shot at avoiding qualifier purgatory. Former Kentucky standout Laney Frye holed out for eagle on the 35th hole to set up a 4-for-1 playoff with Zhang, Erika Hara, and Gina Kim. Kim prevailed. Zhang is the first alternate at Essex; she can still earn direct entry by cracking the top 75 of the Rolex Rankings by May 25 or by winning an LPGA event.
The Cheetah Baez moment. The 10-year-old from San Antonio, Fla. — fresh off competing in the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals at Augusta in the Girls 7-9 division — became one of the youngest entrants in the history of U.S. Women's Open qualifying. Baez shot 91-95 at Streamsong Black and is now the youngest player ever to enter the championship's qualifying. Lucy Li, the youngest qualifier ever (11 in 2014), will defend her record at Bermuda Dunes today.
Lexi Thompson's streak in peril. The newly married Thompson, 31, teed it up at Wilderness Country Club hoping to extend her consecutive U.S. Women's Open streak to 20 — every championship since she first qualified at age 12 at Pine Needles in 2007. Ana Belac's eight-under 134 at Wilderness ended the streak in qualifying; Thompson did not advance. A special exemption remains the door.
Emilia Doran's double duty. The two-time Curtis Cup competitor and Golf Channel on-course analyst entered at Rolling Hills, Monroe, N.C., hoping to play and broadcast at Riviera. Gurleen Kaur (-5) and Chloe Kovelesky (-4) took the two spots; Doran will be at Riviera with a microphone but not a tee time.
Meghan Stasi and Natalie Gulbis chase nostalgia. Stasi, 47 and the 2024/2026 USA Curtis Cup captain, fell short at Wilderness. Gulbis, 43 and retired from the LPGA, played at Walnut Creek (results pending).

What's Next

Harton S. Semple Trophy at The Riviera Country Club
The Harton S. Semple Trophy on display at The Riviera Country Club ahead of the 81st U.S. Women's Open Presented by Ally. (USGA)

With Bermuda Dunes and Cross Timbers playing today, the field of 156 will be set this week. The 81st U.S. Women's Open Presented by Ally tees off Thursday, June 4 at The Riviera Country Club — the first major women's championship ever staged at the George Thomas-designed jewel and the first U.S. Women's Open ever played in Greater Los Angeles. Broadcast coverage runs on USA Network, Peacock, NBCSN and NBC through Sunday, June 7, when a new name will join Babe Didrikson Zaharias, Mickey Wright, Louise Suggs and Annika Sorenstam on the Harton S. Semple Trophy.

Maja Stark, the Swede who held off Nelly Korda by two at Erin Hills last year, returns to defend the Mickey Wright Medal. But based on what's happened in qualifying, the young amateur class may have the bigger story to tell.

AmateurGolf.com Rankings
2026 season — official results & points
PosPlayerFromPoints
MedalistSofia RiveraFL500
MedalistSarah HammettAustrali500
MedalistMeja OrtengrenSweden500
+18 more — Premium members see every point earnedFull Women's National Ranking

AmateurGolf.com Staff

Editorial Team

Reporting and analysis from the AmateurGolf.com editorial team.