Winning a national championship for any athlete is an exhilarating feeling. Megha Ganne experienced such elation in 2024 when the Holmdel, N.J., native helped the powerhouse Stanford University women’s golf program collect its third NCAA title.
But it wasn’t until a sun-splashed and breezy Sunday at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort that the 21-year-old got to experience such a feat as an individual.
Ganne, a rising senior competing in her seventh U.S. Women’s Amateur (15th USGA championship), defeated 2025 Michigan State graduate Brooke Biermann, 22, of Wildwood, Mo., 4 and 3, in the 36-hole championship match, becoming the fourth player associated with Stanford to etch her name on the Robert Cox Trophy. Previously, Anne Sander (1958, 1961, 1963), who attended the school officially sponsored golf before Title IX, Joanne Pacillo (1983) and Rose Zhang (2020) won titles. Ganne and Zhang were briefly teammates on The Farm.
By winning the 125th edition of the world’s second-oldest women’s amateur competition, Ganne earns an exemption into next year’s U.S. Women’s Open Presented by Ally at The Riviera Country Club, in Pacific Palisades, Calif., as well as guaranteed spots on the 2025 USA Women’s World Amateur Team that will compete in Singapore in October.She also joins an illustrious list of champions that includes Babe Didrikson Zaharias, JoAnne Gunderson Carner, Juli Inkster, Beth Daniel, Morgan Pressel, Lydia Ko and Zhang.
Biermann, playing in her final amateur event before LPGA Tour Qualifying School this fall, also earned a spot in the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open, but would forfeit that spot should she turn professional.
“It’s so crazy,” said Ganne. “It's so much harder than it seems to win one of these, and it takes not only like a lot of patience, but so many things working in your favor: good health, good luck, good fortune, and good timing. All those things coming together just feels like it's fate. I feel very blessed right now.”
Many who have followed Ganne’s amateur career, which included four visits to Augusta National Golf Club for the Drive, Chip & Putt Championship, appearances in the Junior Ryder Cup and Junior Solheim Cup, a semifinal run in the U.S. Women’s Amateur at age 15, playing in the final pairing of the 2021 U.S. Women’s Open and being low amateur at The Olympic Club as a 17-year-old, and a 3-0 performance on the victorious 2022 USA Curtis Cup Team, could see this moment coming.
It took a while for Ganne to figure out the mental fortitude it takes to win matches against top players. Five times – three U.S. Women’s Amateurs and two U.S. Girls’ Juniors – Ganne lost in the opening round of match play. In her final U.S. Girls’ Junior in 2022, she was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard. A year ago, she was bothered by a hip injury and then had to withdraw from the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club due to food poisoning on the morning of the first round.
But in Stanford’s run to the 2024 NCAA title at the Omni La Costa Resort & Spa, in Carlsbad, Calif., she posted a 2-0 individual match-play record (her quarterfinal match was not completed) that included a 4-and-3 win over UCLA’s Natalie Vu in the championship match.
This past May, Ganne went 2-0-1, but Stanford, which won the stroke-play portion of the championship by 21 strokes, lost to Northwestern in the final. Among Ganne’s victims was then-world No. 1 amateur Lottie Woad of Florida State in the semifinals. Woad has since won on the LPGA Tour in 2025.
“I can't say I loved how I played match play my whole life, but definitely worked on it the last three, four years, especially after going to Stanford,” said Ganne, a product of LPGA-USGA Girls Golf and The First Tee. “I really wanted to contribute points during our national championship. So, I was like just let's figure out how to become a better match-play player. I think I just worked on it and changed my mentality a little bit.
“I think my match against Lottie gave me a lot of personal confidence. To see her doing so well on Tour now and knowing my game was right there with hers was a huge confidence booster for me this week.”
That gritty match-play mindset was certainly required at Bandon Dunes this week, where Mother Nature threw a variety of windy conditions at the competitors. Firm and fast playing conditions also created a stern test.
En route to the final, the No. 11 player in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking®/WAGR® dispatched three consecutive top-20 players – Anna Davis (14), Kary Hollenbaugh (20) and Eila Galitsky (6) – before rallying from 4 down with seven to play in her 19-hole semifinal triumph over No. 63 seed Ella Scaysbrook, a player who had never trailed in any of her matches until the last hole on Saturday.
Ganne never trailed against Biermann, but the match was tied after nine holes before a balky putter by the latter on Nos. 11-13 opened the door for the New Jersey native to grab a 3-up lead by the lunch break.
Biermann, who survived three extra-hole matches this week to reach the final, never managed to cut the deficit closer than 3 down the remainder of the match. Ganne converted a 35-foot birdie at the 22nd hole for a 4-up lead. Biermann did convert winning birdie putts from 15 and 3 feet on Nos. 24 and 27, but in between she bogeyed the 25th hole when she missed the green and could not recover for par.
“Megha is a great player,” said a gracious Biermann, who had never made a cut in any of her five previous USGA appearances. “Unfortunately, the putter went cold today.
“Overall, I felt like I gave it my all and I had a blast out here. What a beautiful place to play in a finals match…I feel like this taught me a lot about myself. How I can push through adversity and under pressure make a lot of great putts.”
Ganne was conceded her birdie on the 29th hole when Biermann’s approach went over the green into a sandy area and she took two shots to reach the green. But showing no quit, Biermann answered with a 10-foot birdie on the par-5 31st hole. She just couldn’t sustain any momentum. She left her 25-footer from the fringe on the 32nd hole 5 feet short, and then missed the putt to go 4 down with four to play.
Two putts by Ganne on the par-3 35th ended the festivities and drew a nice applause from the approximately 350 spectators. She immediately put her hands over her face to take in the greatest moment of her golf career. Then it was time to celebrate, first with her Pebble Beach-based caddie Logan Goettsch, whom she first met when winning the Carmel Cup, a college event on the Monterey Peninsula.
Then she hugged parents Hari and Sudha, her longtime instructor Katie Rudolph, who was here all week, Stanford assistant coach Demi Runas and her manager at Excel Sports, Ashley Kim. Stanford women’s head coach Anne Walker was in Spain and sent upbeat text messages and photos of her family from afar.
It also culminated quite a summer for Stanford’s women’s golf team. Ganne’s teammate Paula Martin Sampedro, No. 2 in the WAGR, won The Women’s Amateur at Nairn Golf Club, the European Women’s Amateur and posted a top-10 finish in the AIG Women’s Open. Now Ganne can bring back the Robert Cox Trophy to the Palo Alto, Calif., campus.
“I think I love playing any sort of tournament, but I really do love being in the spotlight,” said Ganne. “I like performing under pressure and I think it brings out the best in my game.”
What the Champion Receives
A gold medal and custody of the Robert Cox Trophy for one year
Exemptions into the next 10 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships, if eligible
Exemption into the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open Presented by Ally at The Riviera Country Club, in Pacific Palisades, Calif. (can play as a professional or amateur)
A likely invitation to the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur
Likely exemptions into the 2026 Chevron Championship, Amundi Evian Championship and AIG Women’s Open
Name engraved on the 2025 USGA champions’ plaque that will reside in the Hall of Champions inside the USGA Museum and Library, in Liberty Corner, N.J.
Notable
Runner-up Brooke Biermann received a silver medal and a three-year U.S. Women’s Amateur exemption.
The next USGA competition to be staged at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort will be the 2028 Walker Cup Match. The U.S. Women’s Amateur, along with the U.S. Amateur, will be conducted at the resort in consecutive weeks in 2032. Courses for all three events have yet to be announced.
Each of the finalists had the opportunity to put in a special order for lunch. Megha Ganne chose a Wanpaku turkey sandwich (with American cheese) and a salmon avocado sushi roll. Brooke Biermann went with a turkey bacon wrap with fries.
Longtime Michigan State women’s head coach Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll, who is entering her 29th season in East Lansing, took a private flight out to Oregon to catch the championship match. Slobodnik-Stoll will be competing in a USGA championship later this month as she has qualified for the U.S. Senior Women’s Open at San Diego Country Club. Her ex-teammate, Shannon Kennedy, also came on the flight.
Former USGA Executive Committee member Col. Cliff Shahbaz, of Portland, Ore., served as the referee for the morning 18 of the final, while current Executive Committee member Courtney Myhrum, of Pittsburgh, Pa., officiated the afternoon round. Lew Erickson was the first-tee starter all week.
Quotable
“They're like the definition of unconditional love. My parents, my sister, coach, Katie [Rudolph], and all my family from home, from Stanford, my Stanford coaches. It genuinely takes a village to make something like this happen, and there is not a day that goes by where I don't feel so much love from people in my life regardless if I am on the golf course or off or winning or losing. So that's super special. Wins like this are really cool, but having people to celebrate and share that with is even cooler.” – Megha Ganne
“I think all of my shots into the 15th hole, the par-3, were my favorite. I either found the green or somewhere very near it. I think that's one of the hardest shots. Pressure is really high on this tee box and that's the point where the match changes. I just hit really solid shots in [the] high winds, so that was my favorite hole.” -- Ganne
“She taught me how to love the game of golf, and that's the most important thing that you can teach someone that's picking up the game, especially the young ages where you have so many options of sports to play. Having an instructor that makes you want to stick with something for more than just the competition, but just because you actually love being out there, love playing, making friends, being on the golf course, she did such a great job of that that it was just such an easy choice for me to pursue golf and then take it to a higher level, because the foundation is of it was just so fun. It still is.” – Ganne on her longtime coach Katie Rudolph
“Oh, my gosh, so much. I had my whole family here. My coach [from Michigan State] flew in with my teammate. Honestly, like such a family and I'm so thankful for that.” – Brooke Biermann
“We were roommates all four years, but she has a fifth year of eligibility, so I am going to be rooting for her. Thankfully, they texted me that they were coming. I think I would have been in shock if they had just shown up. I was like, wow, I can’t believe she is here.” – Biermann on teammate/roommate Shannon Kennedy coming in for the final
“My grandpa gave me a dozen golf balls when I first started playing golf and they were yellow. Unfortunately, he passed away a couple of months after that. A couple of tournaments [later], I got a hole-in-one with a yellow golf ball. That was when I was like 7 years old. From then on out, I have played with a yellow golf ball. Every time I tee it up, he is with me…It was my dad’s dad. He was a golfer and [Bandon Dunes] was his favorite golf spot he’d ever [visited]. And he told my dad that before he passed away. I had to qualify to get into this [championship]. My dad wanted me to get out here so bad so I could experience what his dad experienced. I’m so glad my dad (Bill Biermann) was able to see this place.” -- Biermann
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