Augusta National is a singular experience for most amateurs, who visit once and remember it as a career highlight. Asterisk Talley, however, has competed here three times before turning 18, consistently placing near the top of the leaderboard.
Talley, 17, from Chowchilla, California, is ranked No. 1 in every major junior ranking and No. 10 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Her mother gave her the nickname “little star.” She has had seven wins and 18 top-10 finishes in the past two years, confirming her status. She is not a prospect for the future; she is already competing at the highest level.
Talley’s record at Augusta is consistent. In 2024, she finished eighth in her ANWA debut. In 2025, she shot a closing 68, including the first-ever eagle on Augusta National’s par-4 first hole in tournament history, and finished one shot behind the winner. In the 2026 opening round, she posted a bogey-free 66, eagled her ninth hole from a bunker, and is one shot off the lead.
“I’m definitely hitting it a lot farther, so it makes the course a little shorter and more accessible. But also mature, just knowing that I don’t have to go for every flag.”
Talley’s results outside Augusta are just as strong. She is the first girl to win multiple Sage Valley Junior Invitational titles. She has won the Girls Junior PGA Championship and the ANNIKA Invitational. She was a co-medalist at the U.S. Women’s Amateur. At the 2024 Curtis Cup, she defeated world No. 1 Lottie Woad in singles. These are results that stand up at any level of amateur golf.
In 2024, Talley became the first player in USGA history to reach three championship finals in one year: the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball, the U.S. Girls Junior, and the U.S. Women’s Amateur. This is not just about quantity. It is about performing under pressure, which is what separates future professionals from those who fall short.
Talley is already testing herself against professionals. Last week, she played the Ford Championship on a sponsor’s exemption, shot 65 in the second round, and was in the top 10 after 36 holes against a full LPGA field. The gap between junior and professional golf is closing, and she is setting the pace.
“It means everything. Not only the courses, but I think just the field, too. It’s just kind of what makes this event so special.”
Talley’s commitment to Stanford is another step on the established path to professional golf.
Asterisk Talley, Rose Zhang, and the Stanford Pipeline That Keeps Producing LPGA Stars
Rose Zhang moved from a strong junior career to two NCAA titles at Stanford, then won the Mizuho Americas Open in her first LPGA start. She was the first to do that since 1951. Talley is about to follow the same path, as she has also committed to Stanford.
At the same points in their amateur careers, both Zhang and Talley were on Augusta leaderboards, ranked in the world amateur top 10, and played in professional majors before starting college. Talley’s story is different from the usual junior prodigy. She has consistently achieved remarkable results in fields where her age is an exception rather than the norm. Zhang was 19 when she won the ANWA.
Talley finished one shot away from that title at age 16. The timeline is moving faster, but her results remain strong. Miles Russell, the top-ranked junior boy, was set to caddie for Talley at this week’s ANWA until a Korn Ferry Tour start changed his plans.
The post Who Is Asterisk Talley? Everything You Need to Know About the 17-Year-Old Amateur appeared first on EssentiallySports.

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