Indian-American Megha wins US Women’s Amateur title
0 3 min 8 mths


Indian-American golfer Megha Ganne created history by winning the 2025 US Women’s Amateur title at Bandon Dunes, beating Brooke Biermann 4 and 3 in the 36-hole final to stun the golfing world.

ย 

Ganne, a rising senior competing in her seventh US Women’s Amateur, defeated the 2025 Michigan State graduate Biermann. Twenty-one-year-old Meghaโ€™s parents, Sudha Ganne, an endocrinologist, and Hari Ganne, an IT entrepreneur, are originally from India. They are first-generation immigrants to the United States. They live in Holmdel, New Jersey, with their two daughters, Megha and Sirina.

ย 

In 2021, Megha, then a teenager, held the lead after the first round at the US Women’s Open and was tied for third, going into the final round. She finished tied 14th, but grabbed eyeballs in the golfing world. Alongside Indian-Americans Akshay Bhatia and Sahith Theegala on the PGA Tour, Megha may well be the next big name in golf. Another golfer of Indian origin, Aaron Rai, who is Indo-British, is also a PGA Tour winner and has been ranked inside Top-30.

ย 

Indo-Canadian Sudarshan Yellamaraju, and Indo-American Julian Suri, both of whom won on the Korn Ferry Tour this year, are other golfers of Indian origin making waves around the world. On a day when Megha won the US Women’s Amateur, Bhatia was tied sixth and Rai was tied 22nd at the St Jude Championship in PGA Tourโ€™s FedEx Cup play-offs and Yellamaraju was fourth at Pinnacle Bank championship on Korn Ferry Tour.

ย 

By winning the 125th edition of the world’s second-oldest womenโ€™s amateur competition, Megha has earned an exemption in next yearโ€™s US Women’s Open at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California as well as guaranteed spots on the 2025 USA Womenโ€™s World Amateur team which will compete in Singapore in October.

ย 

En route to the final, the No. 11 player in the Women’s World Amateur Golf Ranking dispatched three consecutive top-20 players โ€“ Anna Davis (14), Kary Hollenbaugh (20) and Eila Galitsky (6) โ€“ 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 in the semifinals.

ย 

There wasn’t much drama in the championship match. Megha never trailed, although each player won three holes, and the match was all square through 11 holes in the morning. Biermann lost the next three holes with bogeys and never caught up. Megha was 3 up after 18 holes, and Biermann never got closer. Sometime back, Megha beat Lottie Woad, then World No. 1 amateur, and now a winner on the LPGA.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *