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Australian Golf Power Rankings: January 21


A first win for 2025 was just out of reach as the Australian flag flew proudly on international leaderboards this past week.

Starting with David Micheluzzi’s share of the lead after a round of 7-under 65 on day one of the Hero Dubai Desert Classic on the DP World Tour through to Jason Day’s spirited showing at The American Express, the Aussie influence looks like being strong again this year.

As Kiwi and Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia regular, Daniel Hillier, finished second in Dubai, Micheluzzi, Jason Scrivener and Min Woo Lee were all top-15 after 36 holes at the Emirates Golf Club.

Back home, ahead of this week’s Webex Players Series Victoria, West Australian Abbie Teasdale showed her credentials with a playoff win at the Drummond Golf Melbourne International in just her second start as a professional.

10. Kirsten Rudgeley

Tuned up for her quest to win a maiden Ladies European Tour title in 2025 with a wonderful first-up showing at Webex Players Series Perth. After not touching her clubs over the Christmas-New Year break, Rudgeley showed up to Royal Fremantle and led by two after 54 holes before missing the playoff by a shot.

9. Jordan Doull

Rose 560 places in the Official World Golf Ranking on the back of his playoff win at Webex Players Series Perth. Runner-up at the WA PGA Championship, Doull is ninth on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit and second behind Jack Buchanan in both Rookie of the Year points and Total Number of Birdies for the 2024-2025 season.

8. Anthony Quayle

Has one of three DP World Tour cards in his sights after committing to the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia. Comes into this week’s Webex Players Series Victoria at Rosebud Country Club with four top-five finishes in his past five starts.

7. Cameron Smith

Still in pre-season mode with the start of the 2025 LIV Golf season a further two weeks away. The Ripper GC captain led his squad to the team title in 2024 but will be desperate for an individual win this year to fuel his tilt at the majors.

6. David Micheluzzi

Started the year with a bang. Co-leader after Round 1 in his maiden appearance at the Hero Dubai Desert Classic, Micheluzzi book-ended his week with another 7-under 65 on Sunday to climb into a tie for eighth. Rose to a career high of No.192 in the Official World Golf Ranking and is growing in stature on the DP World Tour with every event.

5. Cam Davis

In typically understated fashion, Davis walked away from The American Express with a tie for 19th. Dating back to his second Rocket Mortgage Classic win last June, Davis has finished top 20 in six of his past 12 starts. Was enough to elevate Davis back into the top 50 in the world ranking.

4. Elvis Smylie

Although he dropped three spots to sixth on the DP World Tour Race to Dubai Ranking, the BMW Australian PGA champ showed he is ready to take his place among the elite of world golf. Shot 68 in the second round of the Hero Dubai Desert Classic to advance to the weekend in his first Rolex Series event.

3. Jason Day

Climbs to No.33 in the Official World Golf Ranking on the back of his tie for third at The American Express in California. Day was in the hunt until late in the final round but dropped shots at the 14th and 18th holes to finish three back of champion Sepp Straka. It was his best finish on the PGA TOUR since he was runner-up at The Open in 2023.

2. Adam Scott

Will next tee it up in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am after logging a tie for 39th at the Hero Dubai Desert Classic on the DP World Tour.

1. Hannah Green

Has another week at home in Perth before the three-time winner in 2024 begins her 2025 season at the LPGA’s Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in Florida.

The Australian Golf Power Rankings is a subjective list developed with input from members of the Australian Golf media team.


The cream rose to the top as the 2024-2025 Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia resumed at Webex Players Series Perth hosted by Minjee and Min Woo Lee.

A two-stroke leader going into the final round, Kirsten Rudgeley fought hard to stay in the hunt until the very end, her tee shot at the par-4 15th one of the shots of the tournament.

She would ultimately fall one shot short of the playoff won by Jordan Doull and in a tie for third with Queenslander Anthony Quayle.

It was a continuation of superb form at the back-end of 2024 for Quayle who now has Order of Merit rewards very much in sight.

The action ramps up this week with the WPGA’s Drummond Golf Melbourne International starting Wednesday and tournaments on the DP World Tour, PGA TOUR, Korn Ferry Tour and PGA TOUR Champions.

10. Kelsey Bennett

Makes her first start for 2025 at the Drummond Golf Melbourne International starting Wednesday at Latrobe Golf Club. After a breakthrough win on the LET Access Series, ended 2024 with a tie for seventh at the ISPS HANDA Women’s Australian Open and then came up clutch down the stretch to secure her 2025 Ladies European Tour card at Qualifying School.

9. Minjee Lee

Turned tournament host this past week for the Webex Players Series Perth at Royal Fremantle. Seventh at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open, Lee looks like starting her season at the Founders Cup in Florida in early February.

8. Cam Davis
Missed the cut at Sony Open after opening his 2025 PGA TOUR season with a tie for 13th at The Sentry in Hawaii. High on confidence after second PGA TOUR win last year and tie for sixth at the BMW Australian PGA Championship.

7. Kirsten Rudgeley

Set up a big 2025 season with an excellent showing first up at Webex Players Series Perth. Twelfth on the Ladies European Tour Order of Merit in 2024, Rudgeley led by two going into the final round and only missed the playoff won by Jordan Doull by one stroke.

6. Jordan Doull

Moved to second on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Rookie of the Year standings with a breakthrough victory at Webex Players Series Perth hosted by Minjee and Min Woo Lee. Runner-up to Jack Buchanan in a playoff at the WA PGA, Doull exacted some revenge of his own with a playoff win over Haydn Barron at the second extra hole.

5. Anthony Quayle

A tie for third at Webex Players Series Perth was Quayle’s third consecutive top-five finish and fourth in his past five starts since returning to the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia. Although he stayed eighth on the Order of Merit, narrowed the gap to those ahead of him to bring the top five within reach.

4. Elvis Smylie

After a breakthrough victory at the WA Open, Smylie claimed the co-sanctioned BMW Australian PGA Championship to earn status on the DP World Tour. He puts that new-found status to good use this week at the first Rolex Series event of the year, the $US9 million Hero Dubai Desert Classic.

3. Cameron Smith

The Ripper GC skipper has another month before the start of the LIV Golf season in Saudi Arabia. Given a strong showing in four events on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia, Smith starts 2025 chasing his first individual win since July 2023.

2. Adam Scott

A tie for 15th at The Sentry was a solid way for Scott to start his 25th season on tour, the 44-year-old returning to the DP World Tour this week for the Hero Dubai Desert Classic.

1. Hannah Green

Will start her 2025 campaign at the Hilton Grand Tournament of Champions in Florida in the last week in January after a three-win season on the LPGA Tour in 2024 where she rose as high as No.5 in the Rolex Women’s World Golf Ranking.

The Australian Golf Power Rankings is a subjective list developed with input from members of the Australian Golf media team.


Given the influence Australian golf is currently having on the world stage, we thought it timely to launch the Australian Golf Power Rankings, a weekly feature that will showcase our best performers throughout the year.

In 2025 we will have a record Australian representation on the LPGA Tour, the likes of Adam Scott, Jason Day, Cam Davis and Min Woo Lee chasing more success on the PGA TOUR, Elvis Smylie will join Jason Scrivener and David Micheluzzi as a member of the DP World Tour, Ripper GC will be out to defend their LIV Golf Teams title and Kelsey Bennett will have a rookie season on the Ladies European Tour alongside Kirsten Rudgeley.

We will have competitors on the Asian Tour, Epson Tour, Japan Golf Tour, LET Access Series, Korn Ferry Tour and even TGL.

Success will come, and this will be the place to keep track of it all.

10. Kelsey Bennett
Finished tied for seventh at the ISPS HANDA Women’s Australian Open and then secured her Ladies European Tour card for 2025 at Final Stage of Qualifying School in Morocco. Was exempt into Final Stage courtesy of her finish on the LET Access Series points list highlighted by a breakthrough win in France in September.

9. Lucas Herbert
Was a colossus for Ripper GC and then converted that form into success on home soil with victory at the Ford NSW Open at Murray Downs. Backed that up with a tie for fifth at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open at Kingston Heath.

8. Minjee Lee
A tie for fourth early in the year was Lee’s only top-five finish in 2024, her first winless season since the Covid-interrupted 2020 season. Despite struggles with the putter and shortened preparation was tied for seventh at ISPS HANDA Women’s Australian Open.

7. Cam Davis
Enjoyed a terrific finish to the 2024 PGA TOUR season on the back of a second victory at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. Was tied for sixth at the BMW Australian PGA Championship and was T13th in his 2025 season-opener at The Sentry in Hawaii.

6. Stephanie Kyriacou
It took an eagle on the 72nd hole to deny the Sydneysider a maiden major title at the Amundi Evian Championship and she closed out 2024 with a tie for seventh at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open and 54th on the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings.

5. David Micheluzzi
Completed an outstanding rookie season by playing his way into the DP World Tour Playoffs and then began his 2025 campaign with a fifth-place finish at the BMW Australian PGA Championship.

4. Elvis Smylie
Potential finally translated into professional victories as Smylie took the Australian summer by storm. Battled ferocious winds and Jak Carter to win the WA Open in a playoff and then stared down Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman to win the BMW Australian PGA Championship, thus securing status on the DP World Tour for the next two years. Currently leads Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit.

3. Cameron Smith
After leading Ripper GC to the team title on LIV Golf in 2024, Smith returned home and did everything but win on the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia. Smith was third at the Queensland PGA and then runner-up at both the Ford NSW Open and BMW Australian PGA Championship.

2. Adam Scott
Finished 2024 as Australia’s highest-ranked male player at No.18 in the world and began his 2025 campaign with a tie for 15th at The Sentry in Hawaii.

1. Hannah Green
Last start was a valiant tie for fourth at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open and enters the new year looking to back up her three-win season on the LPGA Tour in 2024.

The Australian Golf Power Rankings is a subjective list developed with input from members of the Australian Golf media team.


When Hannah Green began her 2024 campaign, breaking into the world top 10 was a goal she was desperate to tick off.

With a three-win season on the LPGA Tour – a feat not achieved by an Australian since Karrie Webb in 2006 – there were times this year when Green could lay claims to being the best player in the women’s game.

Granted, everyone played second fiddle to Nelly Korda’s seven-win season and Lydia Ko’s Paris gold medal at AIG Women’s Open title was a remarkable run in its own right but there was no question that Green was part of the conversation.

It took just two starts for the West Australian to record her first win of the year at the HSBC Women’s World Championship, storming home to edge France’s Celine Boutier.

She missed the cut unexpectedly at the Chevron Championship – the year’s first major – but bounced back a week later where she successfully defended her JM Eagle LA Championship title at Wilshire Country Club.

A head-to-head with Nelly Korda at the Mizuho Americas Open led to a playoff defeat at the hands of the world No.1, Green climbing to a career high of No.5 in the world and full of confidence headed to her second Olympic Games.

A slight stumble out of the blocks put the now 28-year-old on the back foot but she clawed her way back into medal contention over the following three days.

A hole-out for eagle at the par-4 17th in a back nine of 6-under in Round 3 put Green within four strokes of the medals heading into the final day. By the time she began the back nine in Round 4, she was in a tie for third and charging towards Australian Olympic history.

A wayward tee shot on 10 would lead to a double-bogey that would ultimately prove fatal, Green making par at the 72nd hole to finish one shot out of a medal playoff.

Green’s third win for the year came at the BMW Ladies Championship in Korea, making it successive Aussie wins after Minjee Lee’s victory in 2023, and was tied for sixth a week later at the Maybank Championship.

A second Greg Norman Medal at the PGA Awards was fitting reward for a season in which she finished sixth in the world ranking, seventh on the LPGA Tour Race to CME Globe standings and asserted her place as one of the dominant forces in women’s golf.

Photo: Andrew Redington/Getty Images


In May, Karl Vilips graduated after four years at Stanford University. In October, he wrapped up a 2025 PGA TOUR card.

In the professional golf of today, such an ascension is almost unheard of.

You are supposed to bide your time, pay your dues, do the hard yards on secondary tours and establish your own path to the highest echelons of the sport.

If you make it there at all.

The fact that Vilips was able to convert status on the PGA TOUR of Americas earned through the PGA TOUR U program into a PGA TOUR card inside five months is one of the more remarkable accomplishments of 2024.

That he was a child prodigy who has been seemingly on this path from the days he could first start walking makes Vilips’ story even more compelling.

With father Paul documenting his golfing development in Melbourne, Vilips came to public awareness with two US Kids Junior Golf Championship wins and a Callaway World Junior title.

After spending time in Perth, Vilips made the move to Florida to complete high school where his impressive golf credentials continued to build.

It made him a sought-after commodity by college golf programs, Vilips choosing to join Tiger Woods as a Stanford alumni where he closed out his college career with victory at the Pac-12 Championship.

That result saw Vilips finish 10th on the PGA TOUR U standings to begin his professional life with status on the PGA TOUR Americas.

After two starts on that tour he received a sponsor’s exemption to play on the Korn Ferry Tour.

He finished second in his second start there and won the Utah Championship in just his fifth tournament as a professional.

Those two results alone went a long way to Vilips’ finishing 19th on the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour Points List and earning Rookie of the Year honours.

Vilips returned home to Australia in November to play the ISPS HANDA Australian Open and will likely complete the whirlwind with his maiden start as a member of the PGA TOUR at the Sony Open in Hawaii in January.


As golf established its place within the Olympic family at Paris 2024, no person had a greater influence on the Australian team than PGA Professional Ritchie Smith.

As swimming coach Dean Boxall guided the fortunes of 10 athletes in the 44-person Australian swim team, Smith (pictured far left with Hannah Green, Minjee Lee, Min Woo Lee and physiotherapist Marty McInnes) had three of the four golfers who wore the green and gold at Le Golf National under his stewardship.

In the men’s competition, Min Woo Lee fought back after a 76 on day one to finish tied for 22nd, Minjee Lee was also tied for 22nd in her third Olympic appearance while Hannah Green finished one shot shy of a playoff for an Olympic medal.

The 27-year-old from Perth was outright third by the time she walked off the ninth green at 7-under par but hit her tee shot on 10 into the water left of the fairway and made double-bogey.

Green thought at that point that her medal hopes had vanished, yet as players around her rose and fell, she fought to stay in touch with the top three, ultimately finishing one shot shy of Australia’s first Olympic golf medal.

Green’s Olympic campaign was just part of a stellar season in 2024 that she and Smith plotted back in January.

Part of that process involved a putter change that turned good ball-striking weeks into victories.

There were three in total on the LPGA Tour in 2024, the last of which came on the same day that Smith was watching another of his players, Elvis Smylie, win the WA Open for his first professional victory.

As Green was named Greg Norman Medal winner for a second time at the PGA Awards in November, Smith was honoured as PGA National Coach of the Year – High Performance for a fourth time.

Five days later he was celebrating again as Smylie showed remarkable composure on the back nine at Royal Queensland Golf Club to win the BMW Australian PGA Championship.


It was fun to be a member of Ripper GC in 2024. Victorian Lucas Herbert joined for his first season of LIV Golf and throughout the season emerged as a talismanic presence within the team that also boasted captain Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman and Matt Jones.

On the back of Smith’s playoff defeat in the individual event, Ripper GC registered their first podium finish of the year in Hong Kong but it was on home turf where their season burst into life.

Individually, all four team members finished inside the top 20 at the completion of 54 holes, enough to force the first ever LIV Golf team playoff against the South African Stinger GC team.

Smith and Leishman represented the Rippers while Louis Oosthuizen and Dean Burmester squared off for the Stingers, scores counting for all four players on each hole.

After dodging a bullet on the first playoff hole, Leishman’s par and Smith’s bogey on the second extra hole sent the home crowd into a state of delirium.

Despite the extensive celebrations that followed, they backed that up by winning the team event at Singapore a week later and arrived at the season-ending team event in Dallas in the hunt to be crowned team champions.

Third in the standings entering the Team Championship Dallas, Ripper GC defeated Fireballs GC in the semi-finals thanks to individual wins by Herbert and Leishman and then won the final thanks to rounds of 4-under 68 from Smith, 3-under 69 from Herbert and rounds of 2-under 70 from both Jones and Leishman.

What happened after that remains a closely guarded secret within the four walls of Ripper GC.

Photo: David Cannon/Getty Images


When Adam Scott dropped out of the top 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking between the November Masters of 2020 and the 2021 Sentry Tournament of Champions, he was 40 years of age.

He’d won the Genesis Invitational less than 12 months earlier and a swing that makes grown men drool looked as fluid as ever, but time remains undefeated.

Yes, Jack Nicklaus won the 1986 Masters at 46 years of age and Vijay Singh rose to No.1 in the world for the first time at age 41 professional golf in the 21st century is very much a young man’s game.

You don’t get better after 40; it’s more a matter of who can delay the inevitable slide the longest.

Adam Scott playing his way back into the top 20 in the world at the Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club deserved more fanfare.

As the golf year draws to its close, Scott remains embedded in the top 20; you have to go down to Justin Rose at No.46 in the world to find another 40-something inside the top 50.

To quote Ron Burgundy of ‘Anchorman’ fame, Scott’s season escalated quickly.

Top 10s at the Hero Dubai Desert Classic and WM Phoenix Open were a solid foundation yet in the lead-up to the US Open Scott’s streak of 91 consecutive majors was in danger as he hovered around 60th in the world.

He lost a playoff to Cam Davis at the US Open qualifier but was given a special exemption on the Monday to tee it up at Pinehurst No.2.

But it was a runner-up finish at the Genesis Scottish Open that sent Scott’s season into overdrive.

A tie for 10th at The Open Championship a week later was his first top-10 in a major since the 2019 US Open and then he played his way into the Tour Championship with a tie for 18th at the FedEx St Jude Championship and tie for second at the BMW Championship.

Having done enough to play his way into the DP World Tour Playoffs, Scott ended his year at the DP World Tour Championship where he finished third, his major streak set to reach 94 at the 2025 Masters.

Photo: Richard Heathcote/Getty Images


Ultimately, it took Elvis Smylie three years to become an overnight sensation but the manner of his BMW Australian PGA Championship win at Royal Queensland was proof enough that this is no flash in the pan.

Paired with three-time champion Cameron Smith – whose scholarship he won just five years earlier – Smylie played like a seasoned campaigner and not the 22-year-old who has already seen the struggle that professional golf can be.

Having burst onto the scene as an 18-year-old who very nearly won in his first professional start in Sydney, Smylie saw the golf world open up to the promise of his potential.

Sponsor invites to play a dozen DP World Tour events didn’t yield a single dollar won, quests at Qualifying School also coming up agonisingly short.

But when he turned up to play the WA PGA Championship at Kalgoorlie in October, there was a confident air about Smylie.

Almost 12 months into working with WA-based coach Ritchie Smith, strength and conditioning coach Luke Mackey, physiotherapist Martin McInnes and mental coach Michael Lloyd, the Smylie puzzle suddenly looked completely assembled,

If not for a wayward tee shot on 18 he’d have had the outright lead through 54 holes at the WA PGA; a week later he tamed cyclonic winds at Mandurah Country Club to edge Jak Carter in a playoff to win the WA Open.

It was tangible proof to everyone – including himself – that he has what it takes to win, his composure under immense pressure at RQ a month later an exclamation point that has propelled him instantly onto the DP World Tour with what is effectively a two-year exemption.


It took an eagle at the 72nd hole to deny Stephanie Kyriacou victory at The Amundi Evian Championship in France.

That’s how close the New South Wales star came to joining the exclusive club of Australian major champions in an enthralling final round at Evian Resort Golf Club.

Leading by one through 54 holes, Kyriacou spent much of the final day engaged in a tug-of-war with American Lauren Coughlin.

Yet as the pair went toe-to-toe and Thailand’s Patty Tavatanakit (63) posted 17-under in the clubhouse, it was Japan’s Ayaka Furue (65) who rode a hot putter over the final five holes to finish at 19-under and edge the Aussie by a shot.

Trailing Coughlin by three standing on the 14th tee, Furue dragged herself back into the mix with three straight birdies and then closed it out with an eagle at the 72nd hole, Kyriacou making birdie to claim outright second and her best finish in a major championship.

Read: https://www.golf.org.au/gallant-kyriacou-second-at-evian-championship/

As the back nine unfolded, Kyriacou was fighting to stay within range of Coughlin.

A steady stream of pars kept Kyriacou in contention until she joined Coughlin at 17-under with a silky pitch and birdie from six feet at the par-5 15th.

She took dead aim at the par-3 16th and converted from four feet to take the outright lead at 18-under, one clear of Furue as Coughlin dropped two back with her first bogey in 29 holes.

Kyriacou and Furue arrived at the 72nd tee tied with Tavatanakit at 17-under par.

https://twitter.com/GolfAust/status/1812473804628939122

Furue’s tee shot finished in the first cut just right of the fairway but Kyriacou was forced to lay up after missing in the deep rough left of the short grass.

There was an anxious moment as Furue’s second just cleared the water front of the green before settling 10 feet above the hole, sounding the death knell to Kyriacou’s major aspirations… for now.

As she continues to establish her presence on the LPGA Tour, it was a performance under pressure that confirmed Kyriacou has what it takes to convert the next opportunity that comes her way.

Photo: Olivier Chassignole/AFP via Getty Images


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