A SCENE at Champions Retreat Golf Club, which hosts the opening two rounds of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur before qualifiers advance to the iconic Augusta National. Inset: Rianne Malixi eyes redemption after withdrawing from last year’s edition due to a back injury. Photographs courtesy of ANWA
GOLF

Rianne eyes redemption at Augusta National

DT

Rianne Malixi returns to Augusta National this week not as a wide-eyed first-timer, but as one of the most accomplished amateurs in the 2026 field, determined to finally leave her mark on one of the sport’s most hallowed stages.

The 19-year-old Filipina star begins her campaign in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur (ANWA), which tees off 1 April at Champions Retreat Golf Club, with the top 30 and ties advancing to Saturday’s finale at Augusta National Golf Club.

Malixi, a sophomore standout at Duke University and currently ranked inside the world’s top 20 amateurs, arrives as one of the most closely watched international players in the 72-woman field.

She swept the US Girls’ Junior Championship and the US Women’s Amateur Championship in 2024 — only the second player in history to achieve the double — using that breakthrough summer to secure her return to Augusta after an injury-marred 2025.

Last year, Malixi was forced to withdraw from the ANWA with a lower-back injury after just a few holes in practice at Champions Retreat, a setback that also forced her out of the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific Championship.

The painful episode sharply contrasts with the form she brings into this year’s edition.

She has climbed to No. 8 in the U S college rankings on the strength of a torrid spring campaign for Duke, highlighted by a school-record-tying nine-under-par 63 and a 16-under 54-hole total — one of the lowest in NCAA history — at the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate.

Malixi won’t be easing into the tournament. She has been drawn into one of the more intriguing early groups at Champions Retreat, teeing off at 9:55 a.m. in the opening round alongside Korea’s Soomin Oh and American standout Megha Ganne. The trio stays together for Thursday’s second round with an 8:12 a.m. start from the 10th tee.

Oh, a member of Korea’s national team program, brings the polished ball-striking and international pedigree that have made Korean amateurs fixtures on elite leaderboards worldwide.

Ganne, meanwhile, is one of the biggest American names in the field — a Stanford senior and reigning US Women’s Amateur champion who has already logged strong showings at Augusta, including a blistering nine-under-par 63 and a top-10 finish in a previous ANWA.

That grouping reflects how tournament officials view Malixi — not as a token international invite, but as a legitimate contender paired with two of the event’s most dangerous players.

They are part of a field so deep that 48 of the top 50 players in the World Amateur Golf Ranking are competing.

Among the headliners are US junior phenom Aphrodite Deng, last year’s US Girls’ Junior champion; Thailand’s Eila Galitsky, who nearly stormed from behind with a closing 66 last year; Colombia’s Maria Jose Marin, the 2024 US Women’s Amateur medalist and reigning NCAA individual champion; and Spain’s Paula Martin Sampedro, who swept the British Women’s Amateur and European Ladies’ Amateur before claiming low-amateur honors at the AIG Women’s Open.

Also in the mix are rising stars Asterisk Talley and Kiara Romero, both coming off big results at last year’s ANWA and other major amateur events.

For Malixi, however, the mission is as personal as it is competitive. She missed the cut in her first ANWA appearance in 2024, then didn’t even make it to the first tee in 2025 due to injury.

This time, she arrives with a healthier back, a more mature, college-hardened game, and the confidence of a player who has already conquered elite fields.

The blueprint is simple but unforgiving: survive 36 holes at the demanding Champions Retreat layout — where precision off the tee and disciplined course management are essential — then try to produce something special on Saturday at Augusta National, where a single stretch of brilliance can redefine an entire week.

With Oh and Ganne alongside her in the opening rounds and a star-studded field chasing the same dream, Malixi steps onto the first tee on 1 April, carrying not only her own ambitions, but also the hopes of Philippine golf.

This time, she finally gets the chance to let her clubs — not her back — decide the story.