It is not often that a junior golfer has a second chance to win a national championship, given that those who reach a final often age out of the junior ranks, but Filipino Rianne Malixi gave herself an opportunity and responded with a resounding victory in the U.S. Girls Junior Championship on Saturday.
Malixi, 17, a runner-up in 2023, staked herself to a 6-up lead through 18 holes, and went on to rout Asterisk Talley, 15, of Chowchilla, Calif., 8 & 7, in the 36-hole final at El Caballero Country Club in Tarzana, Calif
A year ago, Malixi, 19th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, took champion Kiara Romero to the 36th hole, where Romero saved par from over the green to secure a 1-up victory. Romero will soon be a sophomore at Oregon. Malixi, meanwhile, became the first player to reach consecutive Girls Junior finals since Eun Jeong-Seong did so in 2015 and ’16, winning back to back.
“I know it was such a heartbreak last year because I was so close,” Malixi said.”After that U.S. trip I just got some practice, kept on training. I spent a lot of hours training in Manila. I sacrificed a lot of my social time, school time. Not only me, but my dad also sacrificed a lot of time for me just to accompany me, train. I’m just really grateful for everything.
“It’s huge I know. It’s hard for me to comprehend right now because everything just came in so quickly. I know being USGA champion means a lot, it means huge here.”
Malixi, who has verbally committed to Duke University in 2025, won five straight holes in the morning 18, the 10ththrough 14th holes, with four birdies and a par to open a 7-up lead that Talley cut to 6-down on the 15th hole. Malixi, meanwhile, took a 6-up lead into the afternoon 18, halved the 19th hole with birdies, then won the 20th hole with another birdie to regain a 7-up lead.
Talley, 57th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking with a USGA championship on her resume, seemed unwilling to to succumb quietly, winning the next two holes. Talley and partner Sarah Lim won the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball championship earlier this year.
But her rally was short-lived. Malixi won the 25th, 27th and 29th holes to secure the victory to become the second Filipone to win a U.S. national championship. Yuka Saso, who was born in the Philippines to a Filipino mother and a Japanese father, is a two-time U.S. Women’s Open champion.
“I’m proud of myself for how I played this week, but I made too many mistakes out there today,” Talley said. “I tried to turn it around on the back but I was too far away and I couldn’t reach her. She was playing too well. She played her butt off today and I couldn’t do anything.”
Despite being one of the 10 players to earn a highly coveted PGA Tour card through his performance on the DP World Tour, it appears Tom McKibbin will be joining
Video inside Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy's TGL golf league SoFi CenterInside the SoFi Center with three of the 24 PGA Tour pros who will make up the six teams and
Tiger Woods says he's not 'tournament sharp' at Hero World ChallengeTiger Woods wanted to play his event this week in the Bahamas, the Hero World Challenge. Hi