The unfamiliar number didn’t compute. Why would someone from Georgia be calling Monica Vaughn in Arizona? When the call went to voicemail, no message was left. When a follow-up call from the same number resulted in a message from USGA President Diana Murphy, Vaughn suddenly realized this might be important.
“Oh my gosh,” she thought. The moment she’d anxiously anticipated since December had arrived. Murphy informed Vaughn she was officially a member of the eight-woman 2016 USA Curtis Cup Team. The 39th Curtis Cup Match, a biennial competition between teams of female amateurs from both the USA and Great Britain and Ireland, will take place June 10-12 at Dun Laoghaire Golf Club in Enniskerry, Ireland.
“The first couple of weeks after the San Diego practice session [in late December], I was really antsy,” said Vaughn, the third Oregon native to be selected for a USA Curtis Cup Team, joining Grace DeMoss (1952) and Mary Budke (1974). “But after a while, I realized … it was out of my control.
“This is huge. It’s the first time I’ve ever played on a team representing the United States. It gets me really excited and makes me feel like I am doing something.”
Welcome to the 2016 🇺🇸 #CurtisCup Team, @Mvaughn13! pic.twitter.com/oqQd8G5jYl
— USGA (@USGA) February 23, 2016
Eight months ago, such an honor didn’t seem possible. The Curtis Cup was as far off Vaughn’s radar as her hometown of Reedsport, a city surrounded by three rivers on the central Oregon coast and a population barely surpassing 4,000. Despite a 2015 season that included All-America honors and a fifth-place finish in the NCAA Championship as a sophomore at Arizona State University, Vaughn took a hiatus from competitive golf. She spent 17 days in Australia with her college roommate and ASU tennis player Gussie O’Sullivan. A kitchen remodeling and her sister Aubrey’s wedding at their family residence occupied the rest of her time.
In fact, she played only three competitive rounds: a 73 at Portland (Ore.) Golf Club to qualify for the 2015 U.S. Women’s Amateur at the same venue, and 73-80 in the championship proper to miss the cut. A bewildered Vaughn left the scoring area that Tuesday with her worst score since high school. Vaughn realistically didn’t envision winning the Women’s Amateur, but she fully expected to make match play.
Even mentioning the words 2016 Curtis Cup would have drawn a hearty chuckle from Vaughn. Her limited USGA résumé included missed cuts in the 2011 U.S. Girls’ Junior and 2015 U.S. Women’s Amateur, as well as a Round-of-32 defeat in the 2014 U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links.
“When she left for ASU [in 2013], she probably had a 1-in-100 chance [of making the Curtis Cup],” said her father, Chris.
So when an email arrived last fall inviting Vaughn to an informal practice session in San Diego, everyone, including Monica, was shocked. A strong 2014-15 college campaign, which included six top-10 finishes and her first collegiate victory, in the2015 PING/ASU Invitational, was enough to place her into the top 30 of the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking™ (WAGR) and catch the attention of the USGA’s International Team Selection Committee.
Could not be more excited to attend the Curtis Cup Practice session in December! Thank you @USGA for this amazing opportunity! #CurtisCup
— Monica Vaughn (@Mvaughn13) November 16, 2015