Rose Zhang has admitted her life has become busier since her victory in the Mizuho Americas Open in her first start as a professional., but to speak to her fellow Stanford students and family, you wouldn’t know any different.
The 20-year-old only turned professional last month following a historic amateur career that included a long list of achievements including a US Women’s Amateur victory, a win in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and a record of 141 consecutive weeks at the top of the World Amateur Golf Ranking.
Her first outing as a pro on the LPGA Tour was just as impressive, as she held off the challenge of the far more experienced Jennifer Kupcho to win at Liberty National.
That brought unprecedented attention onto the American, and, as she prepares for the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at Baltusrol, she admitted it took her by surprise.
She said: “I definitely did not expect a lot of frenzy to occur over my last win. I expected people to know. I expected people to be just super happy about it, but I never thought that media would also be like all over it, as well. It was definitely a lot more than I expected, but I’ve been doing quite a few press interviews, press conferences.”
Nevertheless, she then revealed that once back in the sanctuary of her university campus, life continued as normal despite the win, which earned her prize money of $412,500. She explained: “Once I got back on campus, all my friends were like: ‘Yo, congrats.’ After that we spent time just talking about random things and how they have been surviving campus life.”
Zhang then said that despite the additional press attention that came her way following her most high-profile victory to date, her life at home is not dissimilar to how it had been.
She continued: “I feel like it’s crazy to say that other than all the additional press interviews and all the extra attention, my life hasn’t really changed as drastically as everyone may think. It’s just super busy, obviously, and there’s a lot more happening.
“With the people around me, they haven’t really changed, and I appreciate that because they are a sense of like normalcy when I’m around them, especially back home.
“My family, my mom, my brother and my sister-in-law, I was playing with my niece in the last three days that I was at home. Obviously my niece is two and a half. She’s not going to know that I won a tournament or she doesn’t even know that I play golf. It’s more I go back home and everything is…
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