Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Sarah Schmelzel
American professional golfer (born 1994) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Sarah Hawley Schmelzel (born May 12, 1994) is an American professional golfer and LPGA Tour member.[1]
Remove ads
Early life, college and amateur career
Schmelzel grew up in Phoenix, Arizona.[1] Although she started playing golf when she was five, Schmelzel first competed in gymnastics. She was a talented at uneven bars and was an Arizona State Champion in the discipline. In 2001, she watched Annika Sörenstam card a 59 at her home course of Moon Valley, which sparked a passion for the game.[2][3]
Schmelzel was highly ranked in both the National Junior Golf Scoreboard rankings and the Golfweek junior rankings. She was a standout at Xavier Prep and won the 2011 Arizona State High School Championship. Schmelzel led her school to its third team state title in four years, and carded rounds of 71-66 at the state championship to tie the Arizona state high school record with Amanda Blumenherst.[4] She won the AJGA Bass Pro Shops/Payne Stewart Championship by 12 strokes with rounds of 69-71-70.[5]
Schmelzel attended the University of South Carolina between 2012 and 2016 and played on the South Carolina Gamecocks women's golf team, where she captured one individual title. She was on the Southeastern Conference All-Freshman Team and was an honorable mention All-American as a senior.[4]
Remove ads
Professional career
Schmelzel turned professional after graduating and joined the 2017 Symetra Tour. In her second season, she recorded seven top-10 finishes, including four top-five results in her last five events to finish 13th on the Epson Tour money list. She finished third at the inaugural LPGA Q-Series to earn her LPGA Tour card for the 2019 season.[1]
In 2021, Schmelzel finished tied 17th at the Bank of Hope LPGA Match-Play, after her opponent Carlota Ciganda was assessed a slow-play penalty. Ciganda and Schmelzel came to the 18th hole tied, but as the slow-play penalty in match play is loss of hole, Schmelzel was awarded the hole, and won the match 1-up.[6]
In 2022, Schmelzel made six birdies in her final seven holes to jump up the leaderboard into solo third at the LPGA Drive On Championship, her career-best finish on the LPGA Tour so far.[7][8]
On March 10, 2024, she had her best finish, second-place at the Blue Bay LPGA tournament, with a 273 (−15) to first-time LPGA winner Bailey Tardy who shot a new tournament record 269 (−19). Schmelzel earned $208,128 to the winner's $330,000.[9]
Remove ads
Amateur wins
- 2005 Kingman City Junior Championship
- 2006 Mesa City Junior Championship, Yuma City Junior Championship, Tucson Conquistadores Spring Classic
- 2007 Yuma City Junior Championship, JGAA Winter Classic
- 2008 Antigua/Milt Coggins Arizona Junior Championship, Yuma City Junior Championship, Tucson Conquistadores Spring Classic, JGAA Fall Classic
- 2009 Yuma City Junior Championship, Thunderbird Invitational
- 2011 Arizona State High School Championship, Pro Shops/Payne Stewart Championship
- 2016 Bryan National Collegiate
Source:[10]
Results in LPGA majors
Top 10
Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
NT = no tournament
T = tied
Summary
- Most consecutive cuts made – 5 (twice)
- Longest streak of top-10s – 1 (twice)
Remove ads
LPGA Tour career summary
Official as of 2024 season[11][12][13]
* Includes matchplay and other tournaments without a cut.
Remove ads
World ranking
Position in Women's World Golf Rankings at the end of each calendar year.
U.S. national team appearances
Professional
- Solheim Cup: 2024 (winners)
Solheim Cup record
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads