Monday, June 6, 2022

42nd Curtis Cup Match - Fact Sheet

Merion Golf Club will be set up at 6,130 yards and will play to a par of 36-34–70 for the 42nd Curtis Cup.

The yardage for each session of the competition will vary due to course setup and conditions.

MERION GOLF CLUB HOLE BY HOLE

Hole    1           2          3          4          5          6          7          8          9

Par      4           5          3          5          4          4          4          4          3              36

Yards  358       554      172      558      394      410      354      327      148        3,275

Hole     10        11        12        13        14        15        16        17        18           Total

Par        4          4          4          3         4          4           4         3           4              34

Yards   288      343      349      107      391     361       398      209       409       2,855

COURSE RATING AND SLOPE

Based on the course setup for the championship, the USGA Course Rating™ for Merion Golf Club is 77.2 and its Slope Rating® is 152.

ARCHITECT

Hugh Wilson; restoration by Gil Hanse from 2014-2018.

THE CURTIS CUP MATCH

The Curtis Cup Match is contested by female amateur golfers, one team from the United States of America and one team composed of players from Great Britain & Ireland. The teams consist of eight players and a captain. The Match is conducted every two years, alternately in the USA and in Great Britain or Ireland. This is the 42nd Curtis Cup Match.

TEAM SELECTION

The USA Team is selected by the United States Golf Association’s International Team Selection Working Group. The R&A selects the team from Great Britain and Ireland.

2022 CURTIS CUP CAPTAINS

USA

Sarah LeBrun Ingram

Sarah LeBrun Ingram returns as the USA captain after her side rallied over the final two days at Conwy Golf Club in Wales to produce a 12½-7½ victory. She is a three-time U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion who also has represented the USA in three Curtis Cup Matches. The Nashville, Tenn., resident won her first Women's Mid-Amateur title in 1991, defeating Martha Lang, 6 and 5, at Desert Highlands Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz. She followed that up with titles in 1993 and 1994. Only Meghan Stasi and Ellen Port have won more Women's Mid-Amateur titles (four apiece).

Ingram also was the runner-up to Jill McGill in the 1993 U.S. Women's Amateur Championship at San Diego Country Club in Chula Vista, Calif., as McGill earned a 1-up victory in the 36-hole final.

Those performances led to selections to the 1992, 1994 and 1996 Curtis Cup Teams. The USA went 0-2-1 in those competitions, losing, 10-8, in 1992 at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England, and 11½-6½ in 1996 at Killarney Golf & Fishing Club in the Republic of Ireland. The team played to a 9-9 tie in 1994 at The Honors Course in Ooltewah, Tenn., with GB&I retaining the Cup. Ingram owns a 2-1 mark in singles, with her lone defeat coming to current GB&I captain Elaine Ratcliffe in 1996, 3 and 1.

Ingram was a two-time All-American and four-year letter winner at Duke University from 1985-88 and is a member of the Duke University Sports Hall of Fame, Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame and Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame. She twice represented the USA in the Women's World Amateur Team Championship, helping the side to victory in 1994 in France.

Ingram also won the 1986 and 1987 Maryland State Women's Amateurs, the 1990 Canadian Women's Amateur, the 1991 Women's Western Amateur and Tennessee State Amateur, the 1992 Broadmoor Women's Invitational and 1993 Women's Southern Amateur. She was the low amateur in the 1995 U.S. Women's Open at The Broadmoor.

In 2018, Ingram served as the general chair of the U.S. Women's Amateur at The Golf Club of Tennessee, her home club. She also qualified for the 2019 and 2021 U.S. Senior Women's Amateurs, advancing to the Round of 16 and the Round of 32, respectively. She played in the 2021 U.S. Senior Women’s Open, missing the 36-hole cut.

GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND

Elaine Ratcliffe

Elaine Ratcliffe, of England, returns as captain of the Great Britain and Ireland side following a 12½-7½ defeat at Conwy Golf Club in Wales last August. Ratcliffe enjoyed a decorated amateur career that included victories in the 1997 Finnish Women's Amateur and 1998 English Women's Amateur. Ratcliffe was a member of the victorious 1996 Great Britain and Ireland Curtis Cup Team that defeated the USA 11½-6½ at Killarney Golf & Fishing Club in the Republic of Ireland. Ratcliffe posted a 1-0-1 mark in singles (she did not play in either foursomes session), defeating current USA Curtis Cup captain Sarah Ingram, 3 and 1, on Sunday. She tied her Saturday match with Marla Jemsek. Ratcliffe also played on the victorious 1997 Vagliano Trophy Team that defeated Continental Europe by one point at Royal Aberdeen in Scotland.

She also represented Great Britain and Ireland in the 1996 Women's World Amateur Team Championship, when the side finished tied for fourth in the Philippines. She also represented England in the European Amateur Team Championships.

Ratcliffe turned professional and was named the Ladies European Tour's Rookie of the Year in 1999, and regained her amateur status in 2008. She has since captained England in a number of international matches, including the Ladies Home Internationals and European Amateur Team Championships. She also has twice led a Europe team against Asia-Pacific in the Patsy Hankins Trophy.

SPECTATORS

Fans are welcome to attend the 42nd Curtis Cup Match. Entry is complimentary.

Two Junior Clinics will be hosted on Saturday, June 11, at the Merion Golf Club Practice Facility, at noon and 1:30 p.m. Registration is required. Lunch will be provided for all participants.

A Junior Scavenger Hunt will take place throughout the Match to further the experience for juniors. Kids can pick up their Scavenger Hunt Scorecard from the Golf Shop and follow instructions to receive a prize.

SCHEDULE OF PLAY

On Friday, June 10, and Saturday, June 11, there will be three morning four-ball matches and three afternoon foursomes (alternate-shot) matches. On Sunday, June 12, there will be eight singles matches. All matches will be 18 holes.

All Times Local (EDT)

Thursday, June 9 (Note: All times are subject to change)

6 p.m. – Flag-Raising Ceremony

Friday, June 10

7 – 7:24 a.m. – Four-Ball (three matches)

1:10 – 1:32 p.m. - Foursomes (three matches)

Saturday, June 11

8 – 8:24 a.m. – Four-Ball (three matches)

3:10 – 3:32 p.m. - Foursomes (three matches)

Sunday, June 12

2 – 3:17 p.m. – Singles (eight matches) 

FOURSOMES

Foursomes is a match in which two players compete against two other players in an alternate-shot format, with each side playing just one ball. The players take turns hitting the tee shots, with one player hitting them on the odd-numbered holes, the other on the even-numbered holes.

SCORING

A victory in each match scores one point. In the event a match goes 18 holes without a winner, a half-point is awarded to each team.

The team that scores the most points wins the Match. In the event of a tie, the team that won the previous Match retains the Curtis Cup.

TELEVISION SCHEDULE

A full broadcast schedule can be found below:

Thursday, June 9

Golf Channel

6:05-7 p.m.

Friday, June 10

Golf Channel

9 a.m. - 12 p.m.

Peacock

2-5 p.m.

Saturday, June 11

Peacock

10-11 a.m.

Golf Channel

11 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Peacock

4-5 p.m.

Golf Channel

5-7 p.m.

Sunday, June 12

Peacock

2-5 p.m.

Golf Channel

5-7 p.m.

CURTIS CUP MATCH HISTORY

Officially named “The Women’s International Cup,” the cup for the Curtis Cup Match was officially presented in 1932 by Harriot and Margaret Curtis, sisters who won the U.S. Women’s Amateur four times between them. The cup, a silver bowl of Paul Revere design, is inscribed: “To stimulate friendly rivalry among the women golfers of many lands.” The cup was first presented in 1927 to give momentum to the competition, but play didn’t begin until 1932, largely because of financial reasons.

As beloved as the Curtis Cup Match is among those who have battled for it, no other USGA competition has had such problems getting off the ground.

The Match dates to an informal match played in 1905. Frances Griscom, of Philadelphia, the 1900 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, suggested that it would be fun for a group to play in the British Ladies Open Amateur, at Cromer, England. Eight Americans made the trip to play, including Griscom, Georgianna Bishop, the 1904 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion; and Harriot and Margaret Curtis.

An informal match developed between the Americans and a team from Britain. Although the USA was soundly beaten, the exhilaration and goodwill established by their visit always stayed with the competitors, particularly Margaret and Harriot Curtis.

Interest in an international match was revived at a 1924 meeting of the Women’s Eastern Golf Association and became a subject of discussion among the Association, the British Ladies’ Golf Union (LGU) and the French Golf Union over the next five years. In 1927, the Curtis sisters gave the idea another push by donating a cup for an international match. Fanny Osgood, of Boston, was appointed to again take up the matter with the LGU. A match was tentatively planned for 1928, but financial obstacles made it impossible.

In 1928, the USGA Women’s Committee appointed a subcommittee to consider an international match, but the idea was stymied again by a lack of money. In 1930, the great American amateur Glenna Collett took matters into her own hands and arranged for a group of her countrywomen to play in Great Britain.

In 1931, the LGU agreed to regular matches with the United States. The USGA then decided to finance the American team and administer the competition. The Curtis Cup was accepted that same year as the official trophy.

The series began the following year at Wentworth Golf Club in England with the USA opposing Great Britain, with a proviso that France might join in whenever it was able to do so. While it was hoped that many nations would eventually join the Match, the Curtis Cup has remained a two-team competition.

Although the Americans own a lead in the biennial competition, the true meaning of the Curtis Cup Match has never been overshadowed by the results and the Match has always been regarded as a vehicle of international friendship and understanding.

The Match also has proved to be a launching ground for future professional stardom. Those competitors include U.S. Women's Open champions JoAnne Gunderson Carner, Paula Creamer, Juli Inkster, Cristie Kerr, Hollis Stacy and Michelle Wie, as well as LPGA Tour stars Beth Daniel, Jessica Korda, Stacy Lewis, Nancy Lopez and Lexi Thompson.

Top Great Britain and Ireland players include World Golf Hall of Fame inductee Laura Davies, Angela Bonnallack, Mary McKenna, Catriona Matthew, Belle Robertson, Karen Stupples, Georgia Hall, Bronte Law, Charley Hull and three-time McCormack Medal winner Leona Maguire.

World Golf Hall of Famer Carol Semple Thompson competed in a record 12 Curtis Cup Matches, while seven-time USGA champion Anne Sander was a member of eight USA teams. McKenna has represented GB&I a record nine times.

RECENT CURTIS CUP HISTORY

2002: USA 11, GB&I 7; Fox Chapel Golf Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.

2004: USA 10, GB&I 8; Formby Golf Club, Merseyside, England

2006: USA 11½, GB&I 6½; Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (Pacific Dunes Course), Bandon, Ore.

2008: USA 13, GB&I 7; Old Course at St. Andrews, Scotland

2010: USA 12½, GB&I 7½; Essex County Club, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass.

2012: GB&I 10½, USA 9½; The Nairn Golf Club, Nairn, Scotland

2014: USA 13, GB&I 7; St. Louis Country Club, St. Louis, Mo.

2016: GB&I 11½, USA 8½; Dun Laoghaire Golf Club, Dublin, Ireland

2018: USA 17, GB&I 3; Quaker Ridge G.C., Scarsdale, N.Y.

2021: USA 12½, GB&I 7½; Conwy G.C., Conwy, Wales

FUTURE SITES

2024: Sunningdale Golf Club, Berkshire, England/Dates TBD

2026: Bel-Air Country Club, Los Angeles, Calif./June 12-14

2030: National Golf Links of America, South Hampton, N.Y./June 7-9

2038: Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Bandon, Ore./Dates TBD

2021 CURTIS CUP RECAP

The USA rallied from a three-point deficit after Day 1 to defeat its Great Britain and Ireland counterparts, 12½-7½ at Conwy Golf Club in Wales. The Americans retained the Cup following its dominant 17-3 performance in 2018 at Quaker Ridge. The biennial competition was postponed one year due to COVID-19. World No. 1 Rose Zhang led the USA with a 4-0-1 mark in Wales.

2022 GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND TEAM:

The current Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking™ for GB&I players is as follows: Darling (No. 10), Duncan (No. 62), Fuller (No. 41), Heath (No. 51), McGinty (No. 11), Walsh (No. 27), and Williamson (No. 53).

Hannah Darling, 18, Broomieknowe, Scotland

Having previously represented GB&I in the Junior Vagliano Trophy and Europe in the Junior Solheim Cup, Darling made her Curtis Cup debut at Conwy last year and secured an impressive three points. Winner of the 2021 St. Rule Trophy and the 2021 R&A Girls’ Amateur Championship, Darling has continued her form after joining the University of South Carolina. The Scot has already posted six top-10 finishes on the US college circuit and made her debut at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur in April.

Louise Duncan, 22, West Kilbride, Scotland

The 2021 R&A Women’s Amateur champion won the final at Kilmarnock (Barassie) by a record 9-and-8 margin and became the first Scot to triumph in 24 years. The victory helped seal her Curtis Cup debut at Conwy. An R&A Foundation Scholar and student at the University of Stirling, Duncan finished tied for 10th at the AIG Women’s Open last August, securing her exemption into the 2022 championship at Muirfield. A Scotland international, Duncan posted four top-10 finishes on the R&A Student Tour Series in 2021-22 and made her debut at the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

Annabell Fuller, 19, Roehampton, England

Fuller made her second Curtis Cup appearance at Conwy in 2021, earning an impressive three points. Winner of the 2020 English Women’s Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship and runner-up at the 2020 R&A Women’s Amateur Championship. Fuller, who has also represented Europe in the Junior Solheim Cup and is a regular international for England, has also shone at the University of Florida. In 2022, she has secured four top-10 results, including a runner-up finish in the Clemson Invitational. Fuller also qualified for the AIG Women’s Open last August.

Charlotte Heath, 20, Huddersfield, England

Heath secured a point in her Curtis Cup debut in Wales last year. Winner of the 2020 Australian Amateur Championship and a member of the victorious England teams at the European Ladies’ Team Championship and Women’s Home Internationals in 2021. The Florida State University student has secured five top-12 finishes on the U.S. college circuit in 2022, including fourth place in the Moon Golf Invitational, building on four top-10 results in her 2021 season.

Caley McGinty, 21, Knowle, England

GB&I’s leading scorer in her Curtis Cup debut in 2021, securing 3½ points in her five matches. Last year, McGinty earned the Mid-American Conference (MAC) Golfer and Freshman of the Year awards after securing three wins at Kent State in Ohio. She was also a member of the victorious England teams at the European Ladies’ Team Championship and the Women’s Home Internationals. McGinty transferred to Oklahoma State from Kent State prior to the 2021-22 academic year and made an immediate impact on her new team, winning both the Schooner Fall Classic and the Jim West Challenge before making her Augusta National Women’s Amateur debut in April.

Emily Price, 22, Ludlow, England

In August 2020, Price celebrated the biggest win of her career after coming from behind to defeat Lily May Humphreys in the English Women’s Amateur Championship final. At Kent State in the U.S., she has impressed, including wins in the Indiana Invitational and the Illini Women’s Invitational in 2021 and most recently at the Lady Buckeye Invitational in April 2022. A participant for the International team in the Arnold Palmer Cup last year, Price has added three other top-20 results in the U.S. in 2022.

Lauren Walsh, 21 Castlewarden, Ireland 

Walsh was the highest-ranked player on the GB&I Curtis Cup Team at Conwy in 2021 and went on to earn a point. The Irishwoman played in the AIG Women’s Open last August and finished eighth in the 2019 ISPS Handa World Invitational on the Ladies European Tour. Walsh won the 2021 NCAA Championships as part of the team representing Wake Forest University and has achieved four top-20 results in 2022, including a third-place finish at the ACC Women’s Golf Championship in April, fresh off her first start in the Augusta National Women's Amateur. A regular international for Ireland, she was also a member of the International team at the Arnold Palmer Cup in 2021.

Amelia Williamson, 21, Sheringham, England

The Florida State student won the individual title at the Florida State Match Up in February, building on her second-place finish in the same event in 2021. She also has three other top-10 results to her name in the U.S. in 2022. Back home, Williamson enjoyed a fine summer last year, including third-place finishes in the English Women’s Amateur and the English Women’s Open Amateur Stroke Play. She was also seventh in the Helen Holm Scottish Women’s Open and helped England win the Women’s Home Internationals.

2022 USA TEAM:

The current Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking™, for USA players is as follows: Avery (No. 24), Castle (No. 64), Ganne (No. 18), Heck (No. 3), Kuehn (No. 8), Migliaccio (No. 18), Stone (No. 35), and Zhang (No. 1).

Amari Avery, 18, of Riverside, Calif.

Avery is a freshman at the University of Southern California who just enrolled for the spring semester. She recently earned a T4 finish at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur after an impressive junior career that included an appearance on the 2021 U.S. Junior Solheim Cup team, as well as starts in several professional events, including the 2021 U.S. Women’s Open and 2021 LPGA Founders Cup. She won the 2019 California Women’s Amateur and is currently No. 24 in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Jensen Castle, 21, of West Columbia, S.C.

Castle defeated Yu-Chiang (Vivian) Hou, 2 and 1, to win the 121st U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at Westchester Country Club in Rye, N.Y., last August. Three weeks later, she earned 2 points for the victorious USA Curtis Cup Team, finishing with a 1-1-2 record in Wales. Castle, who set Kentucky’s single-season stroke average record as a freshman, notched two top-20 finishes in the fall and led the team with a 71.75 stroke average. She recently earned a T12 finish at the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. She is currently No. 67 in the WAGR.

Megha Ganne, 18, of Holmdel, N.J.,

Ganne shared the first-round lead in the 2021 U.S. Women’s Open at The Olympic Club before earning low-amateur honors with a T14 finish. In the past year, she won the Scott Robertson Memorial, recorded top-five finishes in the Annika Invitational, Girls Junior PGA Championship and the AJGA Tournament of Champions, in addition to representing the United States in both the Junior Solheim Cup and Junior Ryder Cup. In November, she officially committed to attend Stanford University. Ganne is a four-time Drive, Chip and Putt National Finalist and is an active participant in The First Tee of Metropolitan New York. She is currently No. 20 in the WAGR.

Rachel Heck, 20, of Memphis, Tenn.

Heck is a sophomore at Stanford University who won the 2021 Annika Award as the top collegiate golfer. She became the third player in women’s college history to sweep conference (Pacific 12), regional (Stanford Regional) and national titles (NCAAs), joining USC’s Annie Park and Arizona’s Marisa Baena. She is the first Stanford woman to win an NCAA title, and the ninth freshman to achieve the feat. Heck’s 69.72 scoring average over 25 rounds is the lowest in NCAA women’s golf history. She was a semifinalist in the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur, and a member of the victorious USA Curtis Cup Team last summer, compiling a 2-2-1 record. She is currently No. 3 in the WAGR.

Rachel Kuehn, 20, of Asheville, N.C.

Kuehn, a junior at Wake Forest University, earned medalist honors in the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at Westchester Country Club, posting 6-under-par 138 on the famed West Course. She had a strong start to her collegiate season, finishing runner-up at the Bryan National Collegiate before winning the Tar Heel Invitational by a stroke after a second-round 63, the lowest 18-hole score in Wake Forest women's golf history. She won the 2020 North & South Women’s Amateur and the 2020 Ladies National Golf Association Amateur. Kuehn’s mother, Brenda Corrie Kuehn, was a member of the USA Curtis Cup Team in 1996 alongside Sarah Ingram, as well as in 1998, when she went 4-0 and scored the clinching point in the USA’s victory. The Kuehns became the second mother/daughter tandem to have played in a Curtis Cup when Kuehn played in 2021 at Conwy Golf Club in Wales, where she joined her mother by earning the clinching point for her team, on the way to a 3-1-0 record. She is currently No. 8 in the WAGR.

Emilia Migliaccio, 23, of Cary, N.C.

Migliaccio will make her second Curtis Cup Team appearance, having gone 2-2 in her Match debut last August. She was a quarterfinalist in the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur and finished runner-up to Tsubasa Kajitani in the 2021 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Migliaccio, who last spring graduated from Wake Forest University, was a two-time first-team All-American and helped lead the Demon Deacons to the 2019 ACC title while capturing the ACC individual title. Migliaccio decided against turning professional and returned to Wake Forest in the fall for a two-year master’s program in communication. She will rejoin the school’s women’s golf team next year. She currently works part-time as a writer and on-air broadcaster for Golf Channel, during which she has covered LPGA, NCAA and USGA events. She is currently No. 17 in WAGR.

Latanna Stone, 20, of Riverview, Fla.

Stone, a junior at LSU, finished T2 in the 2022 Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship. Stone has played in three U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships. In 2012, at the age of 10, she became the youngest competitor in the championship’s history, a distinction she still holds. As a sophomore, Stone earned All-America honors after five top-10 finishes, leading LSU back to the NCAA Championships. She was selected for the 2020 Arnold Palmer Cup team and posted a 2-0-2 record, helping the United States earn back the Cup. She also played in the 2016 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship. She is currently No. 28 in the WAGR.

Rose Zhang, 19, of Irvine, Calif.

Zhang is a two-time USGA champion and currently No. 1 in the Women’s WAGR, having won the McCormack Medal as the world’s leading amateur in August for the second consecutive year. After winning the 2020 U.S. Women’s Amateur in Maryland, Zhang earned her second USGA title last July, defeating Bailey Davis, 6 and 4, in the final match of the 2021 U.S. Girls’ Junior, becoming just the eighth player to win both the U.S. Girls’ Junior and U.S. Women’s Amateur. A freshman at Stanford University, Zhang began her collegiate career by earning individual victories in her first three starts. It was the first time in Cardinal history that a freshman – male or female – won their first three events. Prior to arriving at Stanford, Zhang went 4-0-1 to lead the USA over GB&I in the 2021 Curtis Cup. She has competed in six women’s major championships, making the cut in three, including a T11 finish in the 2020 ANA Inspiration. Zhang finished T12 at this year’s Augusta National Women’s Amateur and finished T40 at the U.S. Women's Open.

MERION GOLF CLUB HISTORY

Founded in 1896 as the Merion Cricket Club, Merion’s East Course was designed by Hugh Wilson and opened in 1912. A lifelong amateur golfer who was a member of the golf team at Princeton University, Wilson was assigned the task of creating the East Course by the Merion Cricket Club Golf Committee. He also designed Merion’s West Course (1914) and Cobb’s Creek Golf Club (1916) in Philadelphia. Today, every effort is made to ensure that people playing the East Course compete on the same course as the champions of old.

Several of the game’s greats have won USGA championships at Merion, including Charles “Chick” Evans Jr. (1916 U.S. Amateur); Bob Jones (1924 and 1930 U.S. Amateurs); Dorothy Porter (1949 U.S. Women’s Amateur); Ben Hogan, who defeated Lloyd Mangrum and George Fazio in a playoff (1950 U.S. Open); Lee Trevino, who defeated Jack Nicklaus in a playoff (1971 U.S. Open); and Justin Rose (2013 U.S. Open).

Merion is one of only three clubs in the United States to have hosted both the Walker Cup and Curtis Cup matches. The Minikahda Club in Minneapolis, Minn., hosted the 1957 Walker Cup and 1998 Curtis Cup matches. Quaker Ridge Golf Club in Scarsdale, N.Y., hosted the 2018 Curtis Cup Match as well as the 1997 Walker Cup Match.

USGA CHAMPIONSHIPS AT MERION

Merion Golf Club holds the record for the most USGA championships hosted by a club (19). Merion hosted its first USGA championship in 1904 – the U.S. Women’s Amateur. The U.S. Open has been played five times (1934, 1950, 1971, 1981, 2013) at the club, while six U.S. Amateurs have been held (1916, 1924, 1930, 1966, 1989 and 2005). Bob Jones won two of his record five U.S. Amateurs (1924, 1930) on Merion’s East Course. The club will establish a record for the most U.S. Amateurs hosted when the Amateur is contested there for the seventh time in 2026, breaking a tie with Oakmont and The Country Club.

CURTIS CUP IN PENNSYLVANIA

The 2022 Match will be the third conducted in the state of Pennsylvania. Merion previously hosted the Match in 1954 and Fox Chapel Golf Club, in Pittsburgh, hosted in 2002.

USGA CHAMPIONSHIPS IN PENNSYLVANIA

The 2022 Curtis Cup will be the 89th USGA championship conducted in the state of Pennsylvania. Later in June, the Keystone State will host its 90th USGA championship, the 42nd U.S. Senior Open at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem, from June 23-26.

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