logo
Spain's Paula Martin Sampedro wins 2025 Women's Amateur Championship in thrilling final

Spain's Paula Martin Sampedro wins 2025 Women's Amateur Championship in thrilling final

Yahoo15-06-2025
There wasn't a lot of separation until late.
Spain's Paula Martin Sampedro and Farah O'Keefe of the United States found themselves going back and forth during the first 30 holes of the 2025 Women's Amateur Championship final match, a 36-hole marathon at Nairn in Scotland. But down the stretch as O'Keefe made a couple costly bogeys, Martin Sampedro remained steady, and the result was championship worthy.
Advertisement
The rising junior at Stanford, Martin Sampedro defeated O'Keefe 2 and 1 on Sunday afternoon to win the 122nd Women's Amateur Championship. She becomes the sixth winner of the tournament from Spain and first since Azahara Munoz in 2009. She had only one bogey over 35 holes played and was 8 under in the championship match, preventing O'Keefe from helping the Americans go back-to-back in the championship after not winning the title since 1996.
Neither player made a bogey through the first 18 holes, sitting at 5 under heading into the afternoon session.
Martin Sampedro, the 19-year-old who's ranked 12th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, finished the season ranked eighth in the NCAA golf rankings for the NCAA runner-up Cardinal. She went 5-1-2 in match play as a sophomore but fell in the championship match against Northwestern, her lone loss in match play of the year.
Advertisement
Three weeks later, she dominated on the Scottish shores, going 6-0 in match play after earning the fifth seed following 36 holes of stroke play. And on her bag for the final two matches was Paula Francisco, a lifelong friend who Martin Sampedro beat in the quarterfinals.
"I knew it was going to be super tight with Farah, she's a great player," Martin Sampedro said. "I feel like we both played super good and I'm super happy to get the win. I can't believe it right now - it will take a while to sink in.
"The golf level was great through the 35 holes, but the first 18 were amazing, bogey-free both of us. I knew it was going to come down to the last few holes, and I was lucky to have Paula by my side."
On Saturday in the final round, O'Keefe found herself 4 down with five holes to play but fought back to win in 19 holes and earn her spot in the championship match.
Paula Martin Sampedro of Spain reacts to chipping in during the Final on Day Six of the R&A Women's Amateur Championship at Nairn Golf Club on June 15, 2025 in Nairn, Scotland.
"If I'd been told that I was going to be losing 2&1 in the final on 13 green yesterday, I would have taken it, to use Harry Diamond's line against him -- or for my own case," O'Keefe said. "I'm not sour about it. It's a second-place finish. It's really stinking good. Honestly, I came here at the beginning of this week kind of dreading the long week because I've played four or five weeks in a row.
Advertisement
"So to be standing here right now, I'm proud of it and looking forward to the future."
With her victory, Martin Sampedro earns exemptions into the 2025 AIG Women's Open, 2025 Amundi Evian Championship, 2026 Chevron Championship and 2026 U.S. Women's Open. She also earns a spot in the 2026 Augusta National Women's Amateur, though she likely would've earned a spot in the field thanks to her WAGR ranking.
This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Women's Amateur Championship 2025: Paula Martin Sampedro wins final
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BMW Championship: Scottie Scheffler using new caddie again, unsure if Ted Scott will return for Tour Championship
BMW Championship: Scottie Scheffler using new caddie again, unsure if Ted Scott will return for Tour Championship

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

BMW Championship: Scottie Scheffler using new caddie again, unsure if Ted Scott will return for Tour Championship

Scottie Scheffler will have an unfamiliar face on the bag once again this week. The top-ranked golfer in the world confirmed that his longtime caddie Ted Scott will not be with him at the BMW Championship this week for the second leg of the PGA Tour's FedExCup Playoffs. Instead, it will be Michael Cromie alongside Scheffler at Caves Valley Golf Club in Maryland. Cromie typically works with Chris Kirk, though Kirk just narrowly missed the cut to qualify for the BMW Championship. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] 'Ted's good buddies with him. I always liked him,' Scheffler said of Cromie on Wednesday. 'He's a young guy, works hard. Chris was very nice to let Cromie come work with me this week. He had a good finish to the season. He was a little bit on the outside looking in, but played really good and was close at the end. It was really nice of him to lend his caddie for the week. That was very kind of him.' Scott left before the start of the final round at last week's FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, and Scheffler ended up turning to Tour chaplain and close friend Brad Payne to fill in on Sunday. Scheffler ended up finishing in a tie for third, one shot back from winner Justin Rose. Scott returned home to Louisiana for an undisclosed family emergency on Saturday. Though Scheffler said he's talked to Scott in recent days, he doesn't know if Scott will be able to return for the Tour Championship next week in Atlanta. And, based on how he reacted when asked that question on Wednesday, he doesn't care. 'I think Ted's where he needs to be right now, and I think caddying is probably the last thing on his mind, as it should be,' Scheffler said. 'I've been able to talk to him a few times. The family is in good spirits. Everybody seems to be doing well.' Scheffler has won four times on Tour this season, including at both the PGA Championship and the British Open. He holds a massive lead in the FedExCup standings and is a lock to qualify for the Tour Championship next week. The top 30 in the standings after Sunday will advance to Atlanta, though that event will use a traditional start rather than the starting strokes format it's used in recent years. Scheffler will start at even par with the rest of the field instead of the 10-under advantage he would have received under the old format. Scheffler will tee off alongside Rory McIlroy, who is in second in the FedExCup standings, on Thursday morning to open the BMW Championship. Though adjusting to a new caddie certainly isn't optimal during a critical time of the season, Scheffler said he and Cromie are off to a solid, rather basic, start. "He'll ask some questions about things, basically he's just going to try to fill in as best he can this week," Scheffler said. "Just asking little stuff. A lot of it is just more routine, like, 'Hey, how do you want me to give you the numbers? ... What's your hydration? When do you like to eat?' Just stuff like that. "I think there's a lot of little stuff that caddies do that go kind of unnoticed throughout a round, and Michael is doing his best to try and figure those things out."

Scottie Scheffler to use a different caddie at BMW Championship as regular deals with family matter
Scottie Scheffler to use a different caddie at BMW Championship as regular deals with family matter

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Scottie Scheffler to use a different caddie at BMW Championship as regular deals with family matter

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Scottie Scheffler is going with a PGA Tour caddie for the BMW Championship as his regular looper, Ted Scott, deals with a family emergency at home in Louisiana. Scott had to leave immediately after the third round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship, and Scheffler used longtime friend Brad Payne from the College Golf Fellowship. This week he has turned to Michael Cromie. He usually works for Chris Kirk, who missed qualifying for the BMW Championship by one shot. 'He works really hard and does a good job. We're both learning a new golf course this week, so it's been fun,' Scheffler said. The family matter involving Scott was kept private, though Scheffler said he has spoken to him a couple of times and the family was in good spirits. 'I think Ted's where he needs to be right now, and I think caddying is probably the last thing on his mind, as it should be,' Scheffler said. Scheffler finished one shot out of a playoff last week at the TPC Southwind. He remains the No. 1 seed in the FedEx Cup at the BMW Championship and already is assured of a $5 million bonus for staying at the top going into the FedEx Cup finale next week at East Lake. Scheffler said Cromie was learning a lot of the minutiae that often goes unnoticed by spectators, such as when he likes to snack and how often to drink, and how he likes to get the yardage and other conditions communicated to him. There's also the matter of getting yardages from tee-to-green. 'Brad did a great job stepping in, but Brad is a friend, he's not a professional caddie,' Scheffler said. "I think when you have a professional on the bag, it's a bit different. It's not that I don't trust Brad to do the numbers. It was just something that I think both of us probably thought it was a good idea to be double-checking each other. "Going into this week, it will be kind of more of a normal routine for me in terms of preparation over the shot and stuff like that," he said. 'It's nice for me to be able to walk up to the ball, see the shot that I can imagine hitting, and then when the numbers come, we start trying to really dial it in.' ___ AP golf:

McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role
McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role

Masters champion Rory McIlroy said Wednesday he rejected the suggestion he could serve as playing captain at a Ryder Cup "sometime soon," saying he thinks combining roles is too onerous. "I've ben asked to do that, and I've turned it down," the Northern Ireland star said as he spoke to reporters prior to the US PGA Tour BMW Championship in Maryland. McIlroy will spearhead the European challenge against the United States when the match play showdown is held at Bethpage Black in New York September 26-28. Luke Donald will captain the Europeans and the US captain is Keegan Bradley, whose strong form in 2025 has the 39-year-old in 10th place in the qualification standings. After he won the Travelers Championship Bradley acknowledged he would consider casting himself as the first playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963. But McIlroy says the demands on the captain are too great to mesh with a playing role. "The idea of me being a playing captain sometime soon coming up has come up, and I've shot it down straight away," McIlroy said. "Because I don't think you can do it. "I just think the commitments that a captain has -- you think about the extra media that a captain has to do, you think about the extra meetings that the captains have to do with the vice captains, with the PGA of America, in Keegan's case, preparing your speech for the opening ceremony. "Just there's a lot of things that people don't see that the captain does the week of the Ryder Cup, especially now that the Ryder Cup has become so big." McIlroy said the captain would also have less flexibility to play every session over the three days, which could rob a team of an in-form player for some sessions. "Would you rather not have a player that has the flexibility to go twice if he's playing well?" McIlroy said. "It's just my opinion, but I think it would just be very difficult to do." But McIlroy said he is as intrigued as anyone to see whether Bradley will take on the dual role. "I definitely think he's one of the best 12 American players right now," McIlroy said. "That's why everyone is so interested and it's such a compelling case. "I'm just as interested as everyone else to see how it all plays out." bb/nr

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store