International Golf Tournament
January 3 - 6, 2026
Biltmore Golf Course
The Junior Orange Bowl International Golf Championship is one of the longest standing international invitation only junior amateur golf tournaments in the world, having been played for over 60 years. Our field is made up of the biggest and brightest stars from around the world, including the top 25 US based players, national champions from countries throughout Europe, Asia, South America and Africa, along with a host of other players who gain entry through our automatic qualifying process. Past Champions include a plethora of PGA and LPGA players, Olympic and Major Champions, college coaches and players who went on to successful careers outside the game of golf.
2026 FIELD / PAIRINGS / RESULTS
Past Participants and Champions include:
Boy’s Championship:
Tiger Woods, Sergio Garcia, Mark Calcavecchia, Bubba Watson, James Vargas, Ryjui Imada, Camillo Villegas, Kevin Na, Joaquin Niemann, Karl Villips, Sebastian Moss
Girl’s Championship:
Christie Kerr, In-Bee Park, Grace Park, Ariya Jutanugarn, Lexi Thompson, Brooke Henderson, Albane Valenzuela, Anna Davis, Maria Jose Marin
Thanks to the generosity and support of the City of Coral Gables, the Championship has been hosted at the Biltmore Golf Course for 61 consecutive years. Over the years, the Jr. Orange Bowl has hosted players from over 112 countries and coaches from over 152 colleges and provided an exciting tournament where the best junior players in the world can showcase their talents. Many of our participants go on to successful collegiate and professional careers.
The Championship is set up as a four round stroke play tournament with no cut, guaranteeing every player 4 rounds to show their talents and allowing them to gain significant experience against the best junior golfers in the world. The international component also allows the players to meet and carry on with players from all over the world.
We also host a JrAM on the practice round day allowing our sponsors to meet and play with one of the top players in the Championship, while providing the players with an opportunity to practice playing rounds with sponsors, as they will do during their professional playing careers.
PRESS RELEASES
Past meets present as trio of alumni offspring set to debut
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (Dec. 29, 2025) — Flip through the Junior Orange Bowl International’s golf history, and the names Woods, Kuchar and Compton catch the eye.
Tiger Woods ran off with the boys’ title in 1991, almost adding a second before setting off on one of the hallmark careers in the game. Matt Kuchar eyed a top-3 finish in 1995 before a windy final day got to him — something he solved on the way to nine PGA Tour wins.
“I was thoroughly challenged at that golf course,” Kuchar recalled recently.
Erik Compton already was a medical miracle when he placed third in 1997, playing on a transplant heart he’d received at age 12. Years later, he tied for second at the 2014 U.S. Open on a second new heart.
As the Junior Orange Bowl’s 62nd edition approaches this week, those names stand out again.
Charlie Woods makes his debut, arriving as the highest ranked entrant in the boys’ division. One of his chief rivals could be Cameron Kuchar, fresh off an eye-popping weekend with his dad to win the PNC Championship.
Petra Compton will tee it up in the girls’ division, hoping for a little home advantage at the historic Biltmore Golf Course.
“It’s pretty cool that we’re now seeing past players’ kids in our field,” said tournament director J.R. Steinbauer. “It’s a brilliant illustration of what the Junior Orange Bowl has meant over the last 61 years, and that the tradition continues.”
Though they’re not the first tour-pro offspring to play the Junior Orange Bowl — Guy Boros competed in 1981, Robert Floyd in 1993, John Daly II in 2021 — the convergence of three in a single field is extraordinary.
No doubt, it stirred memories from those past editions.
“The Junior Orange Bowl probably was the biggest (junior) tournament in the country at the time, other than the U.S. Junior and a few others,” Erik Compton recalled. “The crowds seemed to be pretty big, too. But everything seems that way when you’re a kid, right?”
Said Matt Kuchar: “It was such a cool atmosphere. It was very much an international atmosphere, which was unique.”
This year’s field features entrants from 38 different nations, including Lithuania, Bermuda, Romania, Singapore, Paraguay, Iceland, Zimbabwe and Turkiye.
“It was one that was on (Cameron’s) radar,” Kuchar said. “He’s definitely excited to get the invitation.”
He also enters with momentum, off a stellar pre-Christmas weekend that fueled a record-setting win at the PNC Championship. While combining for a Sunday 54 in the PNC’s scramble format, Matt took only three putts as Cameron drained most everything.
The younger Kuchar also has fared well on his own, topped by a runner-up finish at last summer’s Western Junior and share of fifth at the Ralph Lauren Junior Classic.
Charlie Woods missed the PNC as his dad recovers from recent back surgery, but arrives off a breakout season that includes his first AJGA win at the Team TaylorMade Invitational and a share of ninth at the Junior PGA Championship.
Though Petra Compton competes mostly locally, she’s also had a breakthrough year in which she won her high school district event and was runner-up at regionals. She preceded that with a victory on the South Florida PGA Junior Tour, winning in a playoff.
“It’s an exciting time for all of us to be able to watch her play,” the elder Compton said. “She’s just now getting used to being recognized and playing in front of a gallery. Hopefully the Junior Orange Bowl will give her more of a chance to showcase her game.”
The Comptons also hope playing on familiar turf will help keep Petra in the mix. The Biltmore is her home course, working with her dad at the Jim McLean Golf School, and home for her high school matches.
“It’s a national event at her home course,” Erik Compton said. “I think that’ll get her attention a little bit more.”
Tiger Woods, for what it’s worth, still holds the record for largest margin of victory in Junior Orange Bowl history, cruising to a 14-shot triumph in 1991. A year later, he took a share of the lead to the final day but was outplayed by Zimbabwe’s Lewis Chitengwa.
Though he didn’t make history as the event’s first repeat boys’ winner, Woods still left an impact in that event.
In those days, trophies were given to the top five finishers, sometimes requiring playoffs to break ties. Woods shared second with Spain’s Oscar Sanchez, prompting him to make a request after going five extra holes.
“Mr. Steinbauer, it’s for second and third place,” Woods said. “Suggest just doing a scorecard playoff.”
Steinbauer said he’d run it past the tournament committee. A year later, extra holes for anything but first place were eliminated, and trophies were scaled back from five to three.
The Golf Championships are among nine athletic, artistic and cultural events that make up the Junior Orange Bowl International Youth Festival, which marks its 78th edition in 2025-26. The festival draws more than 7,500 youth participants to South Florida’s community each year.
For more information on the Golf Championships or other Junior Orange Bowl activities, visit JuniorOrangeBowl.org.
Full scoring: JuniorOrangeBowl.org/golf
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (Jan. 6, 2025) — Nobody ever suggested to Lorenzo Rodriguez that closing out the Junior Orange Bowl International golf championship would be easy. After last year’s edition, he’d already kind of learned that.
Then again, he didn’t expect the stress test that Monday provided.
The payoff was sweet in the end, though, as the Miami teen finally raised the trophy that had eluded him a year earlier, showing his moxie through a precarious final day to claim a one-shot triumph at historic Biltmore Golf Club.
“Yeah, it was definitely a stressful one out there,” said Rodriguez, who steadied himself after a double bogey at No. 11 to keep Switzerland’s Joshua Hess at bay. It was definitely a grind out there, but I was able to get it done.”
In contrast, there wasn’t much stress at all for girls’ winner Shauna Liu. The Canadian entrant again found her form that had fashioned an opening 64, steadily pulling away to turn a two-shot cushion into a six-shot romp.
“If they were trying to make birdies, I was trying to make birdies too,” Liu said after a 5-under-par 66 left her just one stroke shy of matching the girls’ four-day scoring record.
They now join a list of Junior Orange Bowl champions highlighted by Tiger Woods (1991) and LPGA Hall of Famer Inbee Park (2002). The lineup also features LPGA major winners Lexi Thompson (2009) and Brooke Henderson (2013), plus current Saudi International champion Joaquin Niemann (2014).
“It’s a big confidence boost to tell myself I’m a great player,” said Rodriguez, set to attend Wake Forest in the fall. “Sometimes I feel like I’m not there yet, but seeing my name next to all those great players is a big shot of confidence.”
Liu, meanwhile, becomes the fourth Canadian girl to capture the Junior Orange Bowl crown and second in the five years alongside Emily Zhu (2021). Maude-Aimee LeBlanc was the first in 2006, joined by Henderson seven years later.
“It’s just such an honor to be with them and have my name beside theirs,” said Liu, who completed four rounds at 8-under 276. “And not just the Canadians, but all of these past champions. They’re all really good players.”
For Rodriguez, it was a day to dig down deep. After posting his first three rounds in the 60s, including a third-round 65 that opened a two-shot cushion, he needed every bit of it to survive Monday’s 5-over 76.
“I was hitting the ball great,” he said, “but I couldn’t make a putt to save my life out there”
Fortunately for Rodriguez, Hess was enduring similar struggles. With a five-shot margin to their nearest pursuers — most of whom were faring little better — their anticipated two-man duel became one to see who could grind it out the best.
“The putter got a little cold,” said Hess, who briefly shared the early lead on the way to a 75. “I didn’t make a couple of up-and-downs that would have kept me in it a little better. I didn’t make any big mistakes, but in the end, (Rodriguez) just made fewer mistakes.”
A Hess bogey at No. 4 gave Rodriguez the sole lead again, and despite everything the Miamian never relinquished it. He took a two-shot advantage to the turn, then survived a couple of situations that could have turned things sideways.
The biggest came at No. 11, where Rodriguez found the front of the putting surface but would have had to putt through a cut-in in the green’s shape. He opted to chip instead — sending a low bullet off the back of the green.
“That was definitely my low point,” said Rodriguez, who carded double bogey.
But Hess also bogeyed the hole, leaving Rodriguez still ahead.
“I was telling myself I was still up one at that point,” Rodriguez said. “It wasn’t like I lost my lead. Stay in it and you’ll be fine.”
From there, Rodriguez carded only one more bogey to go with six pars — one a critical up-and-down at No. 14 after finding trees and a greenside bunker.
And though Hess birdied the par-5 18th, Rodriguez needed only to two-putt from 10 feet to seal the triumph.
“Those last couple of putts, (the stress was) definitely a 10,” he said. “I was shaking. I don’t remember much beyond that.”
Rodriguez’s 76 was the highest round by a Junior Orange Bowl winner in more than four decades, since Adam Armagost won the 1980 title with a 77. Then again, a win is a win.
And it was especially sweet after last year, when he also struggled after entering the final day one shot off the pace. He shot 75 that day to place seventh.
“I definitely feel like I played better this year compared to last year, even though it was almost the same score,” he said. “I just feel like I was more mentally there this time.”
Colombia’s Tomas Restrepo took third, just two shots off the pace after a final-round 70.
With Liu’s closing 66, she bookended the week’s two lowest rounds in the girls field around a middle 72-73. That left her just shy of Lily May Humphries’ four-day record of 9-under 275 when she won the 2017 title.
“The first day was just really good, but that’s not going to happen every week,” Liu said. “The middle two days, I was just trying to stay consistent and hold onto that. Then today — it’s the last day, so we’re just giving everything we’ve got.”
Liu birdied three of Monday’s first six holes, the last a chip-in from just off the green at the par-4 sixth. That pushed her lead to four shots over Hawaii’s Alexa Takai, and the lead grew to six when Takai took double bogey at No. 7.
“I was just playing as if we really didn’t have a gap,” said Liu, who essentially slammed the door with back-to-back birdies at Nos. 12 and 13. “I looked at it as if we were tied. I was just doing my best.”
Takai finished second after a closing 70, three shots ahead of Maryland’s Zoe Cusack in third.
“(Liu) doesn’t look like she gets worked up over bad shots,” Takai said. “And she’s such a solid putter. When you’re going up against someone who’s sinking 10- and 12-footers, it’s going to be difficult.”
This year’s field brought together entrants from such diverse locales as Bermuda, Iceland, Ecuador, Czechia, Paraguay, Switzerland, Peru, Bolivia and Turkey.
The tournament also welcomes new sponsor Babygrande Golf, a multimedia company that also underwrites two other junior events.
The Golf Championship is one of nine athletic, artistic and cultural events that make up the Junior Orange Bowl International Youth Festival, which marks its 76th anniversary in 2024-25. The festival draws more than 7,500 youth participants to South Florida’s community each year.
For more information on the Golf Championships or other Junior Orange Bowl activities, visit JuniorOrangeBowl.org.
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BOYS TOP 5
1. Lorenzo Rodriguez, Miami 67-69-65-76=277 (-7)
2. Joshua Hess, Switzerland 68-69-66-75=278 (-6)
3. Tomas Restrepo, Colombia 71-70-68-70=279 (-5)
t4. Keegan Shutt, Zimbabwe 67-70-77-68=282 (-2)
t4. Harry Cox, England 72-70-72-68=282 (-2)
t4. Joey Iaciofano, Jupiter, Fla. 70-75-68-69=282 (-2)
GIRLS TOP 5
1. Shauna Liu, Canada 64-74-72-66=276 (-8)
2. Alexa Takai, Honolulu 67-75-70-70=282 (-2)
3. Zoe Cusack, Potomac, Md. 73-69-70-73=285 (+1)
4. Sahana Chokshi, Jacksonville, Fla. 71-72-71-72=286 (+2)
5. Perla Sigursbrandsdottir, Iceland 72-70-72-73=287 (+3)
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Contact us
Steven Gonzalez
Chair, Golf Committee
J.R. Steinbauer
Tournament Director