Isabella McCauley's training includes six days of golf a week, sometimes spending as long as seven hours playing a round followed by work on the practice range.
McCauley, a junior at Simley High School in Inver Grove Heights, has her own crew of prep golfers to play with when it's time to work on her game. It includes her sister, Reese, a freshman at Simley who bombs drives off the tee; Sam Udovich of St. Croix Lutheran Academy, who won the drive, chip and putt competition in April during Masters week in Augusta, Ga.; and two players from Cretin-Derham Hall, Miles Bollinger, son of former Vikings quarterback Brooks Bollinger, and Joe Honsa.
"We have a lot of competitive rounds," said McCauley, a member at Southview Country Club, "then I go to the range and I work on stuff. I spend a lot of time hitting balls and rehitting putts."
How competitive are the rounds? The crew is still stung by a recent outing in which Reese beat the boys and her older sister.
"Yeah," Isabella McCauley said with a sheepish grin. "We don't like to talk about that."
The dedication to her craft should have been on display this weekend with her Simley teammates at the state high school sectionals, but McCauley kind of messed that up.
On Saturday, McCauley, 17, and her family flew to California to prepare for the U.S. Women's Open at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. McCauley finished second in a qualifying tournament at Somerset Country Club in Mendota Heights to qualify for the tournament. She was out of the picture through nine holes during the final round until an eagle on the 12th hole kicked off a rally that ended with a par on 18 to secure the spot.
"It's something that you dream about in your practices when you're standing over a seven-footer on the practice green," she said. "I've got to make this to make the U.S. Open. To actually have that happen was really cool."