Golf Australia

THE ‘UNROOKIE’ ROOKIE

For someone who’s been playing golf seriously only eight years, Gabi Ru els has unexpected poise as she enters her rookie LPGA Year.

- WORDS KAREN HARDING PHOTOGRAPH­Y GETTY IMAGES

Gabi Ru els is a very unrookie Rookie for the LPGA Tour season of 2024. By rights she should be pretty raw, given it’s only eight years since she started playing golf with any form of commitment and just six years since she enrolled at the University of Southern California on a golf scholarshi­p. But, no, she’s not raw. At all.

A lot has happened in that short time, most of it unexpected by others. But this is a player with her head firmly screwed on, her feet firmly on the ground and her eyes not on the prize but the process. A player who seemingly came from nowhere yet has met challenges at every level of her developmen­t and used them as learning opportunit­ies to springboar­d to the next level. And then repeated that. Learn, improve, leap, learn, improve, leap.

As she starts the 2024 LPGA season, it’s the same thing. No definite goals for her as such, just the desire to keep getting better.

“I’ll definitely focus on one step at a time and just raising my standard,” Ruˆels tells

Golf Australia magazine on the eve of her o‰cial debut event, the LPGA Drive On Championsh­ip. “I feel like everything takes care of itself, so I haven’t really set any distinct goals. I just enjoy the process. Things come from that, and then you adjust.”

There were goals very early on. Well, ambitions anyway. In 2017, aged 17 and in her second year in the Victorian state team, her profile for a story published in Golf Victoria magazine listed them as “go to college, get a degree and play college golf, and then play on the LPGA Tour”.

These seemed keen but perhaps lofty aspiration­s for someone who’d played Junior Pennant only two years earlier oˆ a substantia­l handicap and lost every match. And yet, here we are, and Ruˆels has achieved all those goals, almost without blinking an eye.

One of the intriguing elements of Ruˆels’ path is that it’s been circuitous, changing midway from a promising tennis career - at 12 years old she was the No.1 ranked junior in Australia - to a more-or-less novice golfer at 15.

We say more-or-less because she first hit a golf ball aged six or seven (she can’t quite remember), around the same time she was handed a tennis racquet and ball by her former tennis profession­al parents Anna Maria (nee Fernandez) and Ray. She liked the tennis, hated the golf.

“I would split a half hour lesson with my brother Ryan, maybe twice a year, with (PGA Southern California member) Brian Schippel. My mum says it was really hard to get me out to play because I did not like it at all. But she’d always say, you never know when you might want to use it in the future and it’s good to get the fundamenta­ls.”

Brother Ryan, two years older, took to the game and pursued it with considerab­le vigour and talent, turning profession­al at 18. Gabi followed him to join Victoria Golf Club at 11, but played rarely and was no more than half-baked about the game. Until she lost her passion for tennis at nearly 15, that is, and found it where she didn’t expect – in golf.

After that Junior Pennant season and still just months into regular golf, Ruˆels took her first ‘leap’. Learning what matchplay needed, she practiced hard, reduced her handicap close to scratch and in 2016 became a member not just of the state and national teams but of Victoria GC for whom she played her first season of Melbourne Metropolit­an Pennant.

The club’s Division 1 team included some of the best amateurs in the state, such as the ageless Sue Wooster and fellow state squad members Olivia Kline, Kono Matsumoto and

Stephanie Bunque, now a pro herself. The level of her teammates’ play inspired Ruffels further and she won five out of six matches in a season which saw Victoria GC take home the flag for the first time in 22 years.

The following year, 2017, she was part of the victorious Victoria team which nudged out NSW in the Australian Interstate Teams series. Playing at number one, Ruffels nailed a par putt on the 17th to give her team victory.

Team manager Ashley Marshall, then head of high performanc­e for Golf Victoria, recalls Ruffels as a hard worker with a strong competitiv­e streak.

“Gabi was very green at that time but always had a great deal of potential,” Marshall says. “She was very driven, always wanting to win, yet very level-headed. She was, and still is, a player who keeps pushing forward and going forward.”

The following year, Ruffels enrolled at the University of Southern California (USC) on a golf scholarshi­p, following in the footsteps of her mother who was a highly successful collegiate tennis player.

“Mum’s a diehard USC fan and so is the whole family as two of her sisters also went there, so it was my dream school growing up, that’s where I wanted to go,” Ruffels says.

Once again, she encountere­d stiff competitio­n from teammates, players of the ilk of Allisen Corpuz, the 2023 U.S Women’s Open champion, among them.

“That was one of the best things about going to USC, how strong that team was,” Ruffels says. “There were eight really good players and only five could travel (to compete), so right from the get-go we had qualifying almost every week, almost every day. It really pushed me to want to get as good as these girls.”

Again, the hard work paid dividends, Ruffels shaving 2.36 shots off her scoring average in the 12 months after she started with the Trojans.

And then, 2019, and she burst forward. In her post-collegiate season, she qualified for the U.S Women’s Open, missing the cut, before winning the time-honoured North & South Women’s Amateur, followed by the 119th U.S Women’s Amateur, birdieing four of the last five holes to defeat Albane Valenzuela 1up. Valenzuela of Switzerlan­d was No.5 on World Amateur Golf Rankings (WAGR); Ruffels was 52nd and the first Australian to claim the Robert Cox Trophy.

At the time, Ruffels described the win as “a breakthrou­gh”. With four years’ hindsight, she notes: “I think I just didn’t know much then, and it was definitely kind of an underdog thing, and it was so special that it happened so quickly. I’d only been playing seriously for four years and I’d only been at USC for a year and a half. I hadn’t been sure what I was going to do in the future, maybe use my business degree, but that moment gave me a bit of confidence to pursue this as a career.”

It not only built her confidence, it also opened doors, providing exemptions and invitation­s to LPGA and other events. The

following year, 2020, she finished tied fifth in the Epson Tour Championsh­ip and made two cuts from five starts on LPGA - both of them in majors and both top-15. She was also runner-up in her defence of the U.S Women’s Amateur, going to 38 holes against phenom Rose Zhang.

“It all added experience and belief that maybe I can compete with the best players in the world when I’m playing my best and made me consider more my decision about turning pro.”

This she did, in February 2021, by now ranked No.6 on WAGR and 212 on Rolex World Rankings. With the COVID-19 pandemic swirling, 2021 was a challengin­g time in the world but it meant Ruffels was able to study online, and travel to play on sponsors’ exemptions. As well as five events on the secondary Epson Tour, she played eight events on the LPGA Tour, making five cuts, including two for two at majors, T19 at the ANA Inspiratio­n and T33 at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championsh­ip.

Ruffels played two more majors in her rookie Epson Year, 2022, tying for 25th at the ANA Inspiratio­n, the third successive year in which she had been top-25 or better at the championsh­ip. But other matters made the year more memorable still.

After a season in which she made 18 out of 20 cuts with modest success, Ruffels finished 15th in the Epson Tour Race for the Card, automatica­lly qualifying her for the LPGA Q-Series. Unfortunat­ely, due to an oversight, she missed the registrati­on deadline and her chances of an LPGA card for 2023 were done and dusted. In true Ruffels fashion, though, she let it hurt for a few days and then decided to use it as a positive.

“I was very, very disappoint­ed but what I did well was I got over it pretty quickly. My dad said, if your standard of golf is improving, you’ll get there. I also realised that I didn’t exactly ‘kill it’ on the Epson in 2022. I feel like if you can’t win on the Epson Tour, then it’s going to be hard to win on the LPGA, so I still had much to work on.

MISSING MY CARD IN 2022 WAS A BLESSING IN DISGUISE. ONE THING ABOUT MY SECOND SEASON ON EPSON WAS THAT I LEARNED HOW TO WIN.

– GABI RUFFELS.

“It was that mental switch: hey, I need to work hard, improve, and see how I do on Epson in 2023.”

She did well – very, very, well. She burst from the gate, winning in only her second event, the Carlisle Arizona Women’s Golf Classic, which she won by two shots, with four rounds in the 60s.

Only five starts later, she won again, at the Garden City Charity Classic, setting an Epson Tour scoring record of 10-under (62) in the first round and following that up with eightunder 64 to set a new 36-hole scoring record - smashing the previous one by three shots - and concluded by tying the 54-hole scoring record and winning by four.

Six starts later and she won again, this time the Four Winds Invitation­al, shooting 70-6569 to finish three shots clear of the field.

It was an emphatic answer to the question asked of her following the Q-Series mishap. And it mathematic­ally clinched her spot on the LPGA Tour for 2024, assuring her of a place in the top-10 at season’s end and Category 9 qualificat­ion. (‘Battlefiel­d Promotion’, whereby three wins gives automatic promotion, exists on the PGA Tour but was discontinu­ed on LPGA after the 2018 season.)

It also taught Ruffels more about herself. “Missing my card in 2022 was a blessing in disguise. One thing about my second season on Epson was that I learned how to win. I think that’s definitely a thing, it’s not easy,” she says.

Ruffels’ spectacula­r season earned her both Player of the Year and Money List honours, accruing $159,926 from just 13 starts, a particular­ly fine achievemen­t considerin­g second was Malaysia’s Natasha Andrea Oon, who won $10,256 less from 19 starts.

On a personal level, too, it was all made more special by having her mum on the bag for those three wins. It’s a close unit, the Ruffels family, and one from which both Gabi and Ryan have drawn support.

“I feel like I couldn’t have done it without both my parents,” Ruffels says. “They serve different roles. My mum has been particular­ly hands-on with both my brother and me. She’s pushed us with getting us out there practicing. She has a lot of energy and you’ll never catch her just sitting down, she likes to go, go, go!

“She also travels with me a lot and makes my life so much easier. She’s caddied for me a bit over the last couple of years and I’m super, super appreciati­ve. It was so cool having her there for those three wins, I’ll always remember that.

“What I’ve learned from both my parents is the mental side of things and their work ethic, how they went about their daily routines. I pick their brains a lot because I think tennis and golf correlate so much.”

It also seems the only time ‘sibling rivalry’ appears is on the tennis court. Ryan’s YouTube channel recently featured a fun post ‘Ruffels vs Ruffels, Can I Beat My Sister in Tennis?’, a riveting event which took place in early January, attendees including their parents. No, we’re not saying who won.

For 2024, the LPGA has announced its biggest ever schedule. The tour will travel to 15 U.S states and 10 countries, including two multi-event swings in Asia. Three new events, including the Drive On Championsh­ip, appear amongst 33 official events with a total prize fund of more than $US118 million, the highest in LPGA Tour history. It’s part of a wider recognitio­n and appreciati­on of women’s sport and a sign that sponsors see women’s golf as worthy of corporate support.

So, where to for super-rookie Ruffels? She heads into the year with some strong game weapons – a high rate of making cuts, a 2023 Epson scoring average of 69.85 (the lowest) and the money makers: consistenc­y and ball striking.

“I would say consistenc­y is one of my strengths. I also think ball striking. I feel like wherever you go, whatever course, whatever grass, whatever conditions, you need those,” she says.

WHAT I’VE LEARNED FROM BOTH MY PARENTS IS THE MENTAL SIDE OF THINGS AND THEIR WORK ETHIC … I PICK THEIR BRAINS A LOT BECAUSE I THINK TENNIS AND GOLF CORRELATE SO MUCH.

Along with grit and perseveran­ce, Ru els says she feels like a calm person. “My dad’s very big on not getting too high or too low. He’s instilled that in me.”

She may have help in this respect from veteran caddie John Killeen, on the bag for the first few events as a trial. Killeen is noted for his calming presence, having assisted such players as Juli Inkster, Meg Mallon, Cristie Kerr, Angela Stanford and Lizette Salas.

Team Gabi also consists of coach Craig Chapman, Golf Australia Sport Medicine and Performanc­e manager Luke Mackey, her manager and her parents. She also has support from Stacey Peters, Female Pathway Manager at Golf Australia.

“I think Gabi’s going to do really well and have a smooth transition,” Peters says. “That last year put her in good stead and she definitely knows how to win. She’s had opportunit­ies to play LPGA before, she’s played in majors, so I don’t feel the transition is going to be diˆcult for her. I would not be surprised if she won this year. That might sound a bit crazy but I really do think she can.”

Maybe not that crazy; she’s defied odds before. Karen Lunn, CEO of WPGA Tour Australasi­a, who knows a thing or two about profession­al golf, agrees.

“Gabi is an extraordin­ary talent,” Lunn says. “It really is incredible to think that she has only played golf for a relatively short amount of time. She knows now that she has the game to contend at the highest level and there is no doubt in my mind that she will be a regular contender on the LPGA Tour in 2024.”

Ru els says “it’s all been a bit of a blur”. “I look back and think, wow, that’s pretty good but it’s still always going back to that one step at a time. I feel all those results in the last seven years or so are just experience being added and I’m enjoying it. That’s how I want to keep progressin­g.

“Golf is something that I just really, really enjoy. I just love the atmosphere of it, taking a walk down some of the beautiful places we get to go. Sometimes I just pinch myself and think, wow, I’m so lucky to be doing this.”

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 ?? ?? RUFFELS IN FULL FLIGHT DURING THE WOMEN’S AUSTRALIAN OPEN LAST DECEMBER.
RUFFELS IN FULL FLIGHT DURING THE WOMEN’S AUSTRALIAN OPEN LAST DECEMBER.
 ?? ?? OFF TO THE LPGA TOUR: GABI COLLECTS A PRIZED MEMBERSHIP AFTER A SUCCESSFUL 2023.
OFF TO THE LPGA TOUR: GABI COLLECTS A PRIZED MEMBERSHIP AFTER A SUCCESSFUL 2023.
 ?? ?? GABI AND MUM, ANNA MARIA DURING THE 2019 WOMEN’S U.S AMATEUR CHAMPIONSH­IP.
GABI AND MUM, ANNA MARIA DURING THE 2019 WOMEN’S U.S AMATEUR CHAMPIONSH­IP.
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