WAGR

Romero awarded McCormack Medal as world's leading female amateur

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The R&A
13 Aug 25
6 mins
Kiara Romero.

Kiara Romero, of San Jose, California, has won the Mark H. McCormack Medal as the leading female player in the 2025 World Amateur Golf Ranking® / WAGR®. 

The McCormack Medal winner receives exemptions into the 2026 US Women’s Open Presented by Ally at The Riviera Country Club and the 2026 AIG Women’s Open at Royal Lytham & St Annes in England, provided she remains amateur. “It’s an incredible honour to win the McCormack Medal,” said Romero. “This is a really nice reminder of how far I’ve already come in my golf career. I know how special winning this medal is, and I hope I can follow in the footsteps of the inspiring players who have won it before me.” Romero, who will begin her third year at University of Oregon as a junior this autumn, has dominated at the collegiate level thus far, shattering programme records.

Romero records

She was the first ever Duck to be named the National Freshman of the Year in 2023, recorded the best Oregon single-season record with a 70.84 scoring average across 31 rounds of stroke play, broke the programme record for birdies in a season with 118 and became the first player in programme history to shoot under par across a 72-hole tournament while leading Oregon into match play of the NCAA Championships. She also carded two individual wins in her first five stroke play events as a freshman. Outside of collegiate accolades, Kiara took home her first USGA championship win in 2023 at the US Girls' Junior and competed in the US Women’s Open at Lancaster Country Club in 2024 — her first major championship appearance. She also won the AJGA Polo Golf Junior Classic at Liberty National in 2021 and participated in the 2024 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Most recently, she made it to the quarter-finals of the 2025 US Women’s Amateur at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort.
Kiara Romero.
Kiara Romero has won the Mark H. McCormack Medal.
“On behalf of the USGA, we congratulate Kiara on this prestigious honor,” said John Bodenhamer, Chief Championships Officer, USGA. “Kiara’s commitment to the game is evident, with her first USGA championship victory already among her lengthy list of accolades. Her back-to-back starts in the US Women’s Open along with her display of consistent top performances in her collegiate career is an exceptional showcase of a player deserving of the McCormack medal.”

Hugely consistent

Professor Steve Otto, Chief Technology Officer at The R&A, said, “Kiara has enjoyed a hugely consistent year, performing at a high level in a number of leading amateur championships and impressing in the US Women’s Open alongside leading professionals. Given Kiara only turned 19 earlier this year, winning the women’s McCormack Medal is an outstanding achievement and we look forward to seeing her career continue to develop.” The R&A and the USGA co-award the McCormack Medal annually. It is named after Mark H. McCormack, who founded sports marketing company IMG and was a great supporter of amateur golf. The World Amateur Golf Ranking, which is supported by Rolex, was established in 2007 when the men’s ranking was launched. The men’s ranking encompasses over 3,500 counting events, ranking 4,520 players from 118 countries. The women’s ranking was launched in 2011 and has a calendar of around 2,300 counting events with more than 3,322 ranked players from 85 countries.

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