logo
Former tennis phenom Gabi Ruffels attends Wimbledon, then co-leads Amundi Evian in France

Former tennis phenom Gabi Ruffels attends Wimbledon, then co-leads Amundi Evian in France

USA Today10-07-2025
Gabi Ruffels prepped for the LPGA's fourth major championship of the season by attending another major as a fan. Before heading to France for the Amundi Evian Championship, where she co-leads, Ruffels first stopped in London for a relaxing day at Wimbledon.
The daughter of two tennis pros, Ruffels first excelled at tennis back in Australia before abruptly switching to golf. She was 6 years old the last time she attended Wimbledon and didn't remember much.
"I went with my boyfriend and also we went kind of as guests of Todd Woodbridge, who was a doubles champion and really good friends with my dad. My dad coached him throughout his whole career," said Ruffels of her father Ray.
"So it was nice meeting up with them. He got us into the member's only area which was so cool. It was such a cool experience. Yeah, it's just kind of like a perspective switch as well from golf to kind of get in the tennis world."
Ruffels' opening bogey-free 6-under 65 gives her a share of the lead in France with fellow Aussie Grace Kim, Jennifer Kupcho, Andrea Lee and Leona Maguire, who was buoyed by a mid-round ace. Minjee Lee, winner of last month's KPMG Women's PGA, sits one shot back at 5 under while world No. 1 Nelly Korda holds a share of seventh at 4 under.
"I didn't drive it very well, especially with my driver, so I'm going to the range after," Korda told her sister Jessica, who was working for Golf Channel, after the round. "Going to FaceTime my coach, Jamie (Mulligan), and kind of figure out what was going on.
"I had two misses and that's never good on a tight Evian golf course with the rough being pretty thick. Putting as the day went on progressively got better."
While it's more of the same for players like Lee and Kupcho, the recent winner of the Meijer LPGA Classic, Ruffels hasn't had a top 10 yet this season. The 2019 U.S. Women's Amateur champion noted that she's been working hard on her swing with instructor Bret Lederer and was pleased with Thursday's results.
"My irons were really good but I made a lot of putts, too," said Ruffels. "I made a lot of putts outside like 20, 25 feet which really helps out here. Then made some good putts inside 15 feet."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

U.S. Women's Amateur live updates: Scores, second-round tee times, highlights at Bandon Dunes
U.S. Women's Amateur live updates: Scores, second-round tee times, highlights at Bandon Dunes

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

U.S. Women's Amateur live updates: Scores, second-round tee times, highlights at Bandon Dunes

BANDON, Ore. — The 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur is heading into the final day of stroke play. Come Tuesday night, the field will be cut to the top 64 players, who will advance to Wednesday's first round of match play at Bandon Dunes. On Monday, defending champion Rianne Malixi got off to an excellent start, and Junior PGA champion Asterisk Talley, the runner-up from last year, continued her strong play from last week. Follow the second round of stroke play at the 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur on Tuesday for live updates, highlights, leaderboard, scores and more. U.S. Women's Amateur live leaderboard Click here to follow scores from the U.S. Women's Amateur. U.S. Women's Amateur second-round tee times All times EDT. U.S. Women's Amateur format Every player in the field will compete in 36 holes of stroke play on Monday and Tuesday, where the field will be cut to the low 64 players for match play, which begins Wednesday. A playoff will be used if needed to determine the 64 players. Then, the Round of 64 takes place Wednesday, Rounds of 32 and 16 on Thursday, quarterfinals on Friday, semifinals on Saturday and the 36-hole championship final on Sunday. U.S. Women's Amateur TV information All times ET U.S. Women's Amateur tickets Fans do not need a ticket to attend the U.S. Women's Amateur. What the winner of U.S. Women's Amateur receives

Slight equipment change has former surfer Scarlett Schremmer in contention at U.S. Women's Am
Slight equipment change has former surfer Scarlett Schremmer in contention at U.S. Women's Am

USA Today

time15 hours ago

  • USA Today

Slight equipment change has former surfer Scarlett Schremmer in contention at U.S. Women's Am

BANDON, Ore. — Scarlett Schremmer hits the ball higher than most amateur golfers. Bandon Dunes is not a place you want to hit the ball high. Winds rushing off the Pacific Ocean cover the spectacular Oregon layout like a blanket, nabbing loosely-hit golf balls and sending them into the crevices of the property. The wind, on a good day, can make a good shot average and a bad shot forgettable. When it's really blowing, it can whisk away any hope for a good round. Schremmer, who grew up a surfer in Hawaii before turning to golf, knew to compete at the 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur, she needed to make a change. So she did. She changed from a Callaway Chrome Tour X+ to a Chrome Tour X during Sunday's practice round, and it's a change that paid dividends Monday. Schremmer shot 3-under 69 on Monday and is one shot off the lead after the first round of stroke play. She'll head out early Tuesday in more benign condition to begin, but with only 18 holes separating her from match play, another strong round will have her in contention for the Robert Cox Trophy. "I kind of struggled it around during the practice round. But I think changing golf balls was a key part, and just having my mom out there," Schremmer said. "I was basically playing the spiniest ball they have, and now I'm right in the middle." The result of the change? Six birdies, three bogeys and a early appearance near the top of the leaderboard for a motivated Schremmer, the incoming freshman at Texas A&M who missed the cut in the U.S. Girls' Junior three weeks ago in Atlanta. At one point in the opening round, Schremmer was tied for the lead at 4 under but had to birdie the last to get in the clubhouse a shot behind. Her last USGA event, the U.S. Girls' Junior, is a tournament that has bugged her since she went home after stroke play. That letdown was no match for her Monday. "The U.S. Girls' Junior definitely was a kind of gut punch," she said. "I felt like I was a pretty main contender going into that week, so it was pretty heartbreaking to leave early. I definitely took it as motivation, and I'm just happy to be here and kind of open a new chapter as I close my junior golf career."

Almost forced to withdraw, Rianne Malixi among early leaders in U.S. Women's Amateur defense
Almost forced to withdraw, Rianne Malixi among early leaders in U.S. Women's Amateur defense

NBC Sports

time15 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Almost forced to withdraw, Rianne Malixi among early leaders in U.S. Women's Amateur defense

A dozen players have won consecutive U.S. Women's Amateur trophies, though the last to do so, Danielle Kang, won her second of back-to-back titles 14 years ago. Rianne Malixi could add herself to that list Sunday at Bandon Dunes. Malixi, the Philippines star who won not only last year's U.S. Women's Amateur at Southern Hills but also the U.S. Girls' Junior a few weeks prior, opened her title defense of the former with a 4-under 68 Monday on Bandon's namesake layout on the Oregon coast. Malixi's first-round score was matched by fellow co-leaders, Arizona's Julia Misemer and Texas' Cindy Hsu. Malixi's defense almost was over before it started. She had been awaiting approval of her student visa – the 18-year-old will start her college career at Duke later this month – when a typhoon delayed an already lengthy process. 'Worst-case scenario, I am not going to play,' Malixi said. 'The best-case scenario is I might miss the practice rounds and head straight to the first round. Then, boom, I got a notification that my passport is ready and visa was ready.' She picked up her documents six hours before her flight last Thursday from the Philippines to Portland, Oregon. She arrived at Bandon on Saturday afternoon and was able to sneak in nine holes before getting in a full 18 on Sunday. Malixi is competing in her first amateur event since the Women's Amateur Asia-Pacific in early March, when she made it through just five holes before withdrawing with what Malixi described as a back strain. Later in March, Malixi withdrew from the Augusta National Women's Amateur on the eve of the first round after her ailing back limited her to about 40-50% in the practice round. She immediately shut it down for three weeks, traveling to Australia to see her physical therapist and also visiting a chiropractor. 'I was very mis-aligned, and hitting 400 balls a day made it worse, so I had to rest,' Malixi said. She didn't compete again until the U.S. Women's Open in late May at Erin Hills, where she shot 79-78 to miss the cut. She also missed cuts in her other two starts this summer, at the JLPGA's Ai Miyazato Suntory Ladies Open (76-72) and Amundi Evian Championship (74-72). It was fair to say that Monday's opening round by the third-ranked amateur was a pleasant surprise. 'To be honest, I haven't been feeling 100% lately,' Malixi said. 'I played a couple of majors, Evian and U.S. Women's Open, but I didn't play well. I am just happy enough to be playing 18 holes and 36 holes a couple of days ago. I haven't been shooting well, but today was eye-opening for me.' Malixi didn't record a bogey while adding short birdie makes at Nos. 3, 9 and 13, plus a 25-foot birdie conversion at No. 17. Malixi estimated she hit three drives into fairway bunkers where she had to lay up on par-4s before wedging close with her third shots to set up stress-free pars. The player whom Malixi beat in both USGA finals last year, 16-year-old Asterisk Talley, was among those at 3 under, along with Wake Forest grad and current Golf Channel on-course reporter Emilia Doran, Texas A&M incoming freshman Scarlett Schremmer, Auburn's Anna Davis and N.C. State grad Lauren Olivares, who in 2023 became the first player in NCAA women's golf history to shoot 60. Talley is fresh off a victory at the Girls Junior PGA Championship in Indiana. Malixi's fellow Duke newcomer, Avery McCrery, was part of a large group at 2 under. Princeton's Catherine Rao also carded 70, though she turned in 6 under before coming in with a birdie-less 40 on the back nine. World No. 1 amateur Kiara Romero shot 1 under, as did reigning U.S. Girls' Junior champ Aphrodite Deng.

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