Saturday, October 4, 2025

2025 U.S. Women’s Mid-Am – For The Love of the Game

The United States Golf Association (USGA) runs seventeen championship tournaments each year, thirteen of which are open exclusively to amateur golfers. The final championship of the year in 2025 is the Women’s Mid-Am, an event that is open to amateur golfers age 25 and up with a maximum handicap of 9.4. Coming on the heels of the Walker Cup, which was held just last month at the Cypress Point Golf Club, the tournament is being held this year at another of the beautiful golf courses on the Monterey Peninsula, the aptly named Monterey Peninsula Country Club, deep in the heart of the Del Monte Forest.

Monterey Peninsula Country Club, owner of one of the coolest logos in golf,
is hosting the 2025 USGA U.S. Women’s Mid-Am tournament this year. 


This scenic, and exclusive, region – which covers eight square miles of the approximately 20 square miles of the Monterey Peninsula – is home to some of the finest golf anywhere: Pebble Beach Golf Links; Spyglass Hill; The Links at Spanish Bay; Poppy Hills, the home and headquarters of the Northern California Golf Association (NCGA); and the Cypress Point Club (the site of this year’s Walker Cup).


“Amateur: one who engages in a pursuit, study, science, or sport as a pastime rather than as a profession”

Home to two courses, the Shore and Dunes, MPCC is familiar to golf fans from its 31 years in the rota for the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, most recently from 2010 to 2020, 2022 and 2023, on the Shore Course. This tournament is being contested on the Dunes course, the original course on the property, which was one of the three courses in the rota for the famed pro-am in the “Crosby Clambake” days, from 1947 to 1964. Designed in 1924 by Seth Raynor, the Dunes course was revisited by Rees Jones in 1998 and the Fazio Design Group in 2016.

A field of 132 players ranging in age from 25 to 63 years, from thirty-four states and thirteen countries, will play two rounds of stroke play this weekend, after which the top 64 golfers will enter the single-elimination match play stage of the contest, with the winner determined by an 18-hole final on Friday, October 10th.

The prizes to be won are a trophy, an entry into the following year’s U.S. Women’s Open (and if the winner will be 50 or over, the U.S. Senior Women’s Open) – and a footnote in the history of the game. True to the spirit of amateur competition, while there are perks (as just listed) and a deep sense of personal accomplishment, there is no monetary reward.

One of the most highly renowned golfers in American history, Bobby Jones, was a lifelong amateur, a man who played solely for the love of the game, and the USGA’s amateur events carry on in that spirit.

The two USGA Open championships, for men and women, feature fields that will contain amateurs each year, but mainly consist of professional players. Even the U.S. Amateur and the Women’s Amateur, the two Junior championships, and the international team events – the Walker Cup for men and the Curtis Cup for women – generally feature players at least some of whom have their eyes set on a future in professional golf.

The Mid-Am events, however, are deep with players who are making their way in the world in business or a profession, with golf comprising “a pastime rather than a profession.” The Women’s Mid-Am, which was initiated in 1987, attracts a field of former collegiate players, for the most part, women with a desire for competition who play for the love of the game, for the opportunity to play at beautiful and often private, exclusive courses such as this year’s venue. It is, in my opinion, the purest expression of golf competition.

There are eight competitors from around the Bay Area in the event this year, including former Cal golfer Katherine Zhu and 2002 medalist Lara Tennant. As a bonus for the local golf fan, the event is free for spectators – and if you tell the guard at the entrance to the 17-Mile Drive that you are going to the tournament they will waive the $12.25 entry fee. Come out this weekend or any day through Friday, October 10th.


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