The AIG Women’s Open might be one of the most coveted prizes in the world of golf, but the prestigious Smyth Salver is also up for grabs at the Championship, with six amateurs currently in with a chance of claiming the award.
Presented to the leading amateur who completes all four rounds, the Smyth Salver has an impressive roll of honour that includes Major champions Michelle Wie West (2005), Anna Nordqvist (2008), Danielle Kang (2011), Lydia Ko (2012, 2013), and Georgia Hall (2013).
The Championship offers those amateurs who have qualified the opportunity to compete against one of the strongest and most international fields of the season. England’s Georgia Hall is the only Smyth Salver recipient to have gone on to win the AIG Women’s Open since 2001 - lifting her first major title at Royal Lytham & St Annes in 2018 just five years after finishing as the joint-leading amateur alongside Ko at St Andrews.
The only player to achieve the rare feat of winning both honours in the same Championship is Spain’s Marta Figueras-Dotti, who prevailed as an amateur to become the champion at Royal Birkdale in 1982.
Ten of the last 14 Smyth Salver winners are set to compete in the 2021 AIG Women’s Open as professionals, with 12 of the last 15 recipients having recorded professional victories on either the LPGA, Symetra Tour or Ladies European Tour since winning the award.
ONES TO WATCH
Leading the charge for Smyth Salver success is America’s Rose Zhang, who enters this week as the 2021 McCormack Medal winner, having been the leading women’s amateur golfer in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) for a second consecutive year.
The 18-year-old is no stranger to the big stage, having captured the 2021 US Girls’ Junior and 2020 US Women’s Amateur championships, while she recorded a T11 finish at the 2020 ANA Inspiration.
Making her debut in the AIG Women’s Open, the Californian said: “I am really looking forward to playing golf in Scotland again having first visited in 2019 for The PING Junior Solheim Cup. Carnoustie has a reputation as being one of the toughest tests in golf and it is an exciting challenge for me to see how my game holds up against some of the world’s best players.”
Home favourite Louise Duncan, who won the 118th Women’s Amateur Championship at Kilmarnock (Barassie) in June, hopes to someday follow the example of Catriona Matthew, the last Scot to lift the trophy in 2009.
Duncan commented: “Winning the Women’s Amateur Championship was the biggest moment of my career but playing the AIG Women’s Open is right up there. The chance to rub shoulders with some of the players I look up to is so exciting and the fact my friends and family are able to come and support in the crowd is an added bonus.”
Joining her in the race is Japanese teenager Tsubasa Kajitani, who won the second edition of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur earlier this year, while Germany’s Aline Krauter qualified with a victory in the 117th Women’s Amateur Championship in 2020.
They will also be joined by the 2021 European Ladies’ Amateur Champion, Ingrid Lindblad of Sweden, who will compete in the AIG Women’s Open for a second time after earning a place in the 2019 Championship via Final Qualifying.
Eager to follow in the footsteps of compatriot and defending champion, Sophia Popov, Krauter added: “I have been waiting to play in the AIG Women’s Open since last summer and I am excited to learn from all of the professionals.
“I have heard Sophia talk about her experience of playing in the Championship at Carnoustie as an amateur, so to watch her go on and achieve what she has really shows how important it is for us to compete on this stage and understand what it is like to play under this pressure.”
The amateur line-up also includes Ireland’s Lauren Walsh, who qualified as the highest-ranked Great Britain and Ireland golfer on the WAGR.
With 15 spots available at Final Qualifying at Panmure Golf Club today, including a number of budding amateurs aiming to qualify, the final field of 144 competitors will be available to view here.