Player of the Year Ian Siebers Selected for Junior Presidents Cup

Ian Siebers of Bellevue, Wash. is one of 12 golfers selected to represent the U.S. team in the 2019 Junior Presidents Cup, to be held December 8-9 at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Australia. The event will open the week of the PGA Tour’s Presidents Cup, also being held at Royal Melbourne.

Ian Siebers
LOUISVILLE, KY – July 31: Ian Siebers hits his tee shot on the fifth hole during Round One for the 43rd Boys Junior PGA Championship held at Valhalla Golf Club on July 31, 2018 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Traci Edwards/PGA of America)

Siebers was named the 2018 Junior Boys’ Player of the Year for both the Pacific Northwest Golf Association and the Washington State Golf Association. Earlier this summer, Siebers had won the individual title in the Junior America’s Cup, representing Team Washington.

The 2019 Junior Presidents Cup is hosted by the American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) and PGA TOUR. The event’s second edition will welcome players from 10 states, Australia, China, Chinese Taipei, India, Korea and South Africa. South Africa will have the most representation on the International Team with five, while two Australians – Karl Vilips and Joshua Greer – will have the opportunity to compete on home soil. North Carolina and Texas will be represented by two players each on the U.S. Team.

U.S. Team qualification was determined by the Rolex AJGA Rankings, while International Team selection was based on the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR).

Set to take place on the Melbourne Sandbelt at the famed Royal Melbourne Golf Club, the Junior Presidents Cup will kick off Presidents Cup week on Sunday and Monday, Dec. 8-9. All 24 players will compete in six Four-ball matches on Sunday morning followed by six Foursomes matches that afternoon. The Junior Presidents Cup will conclude with 12 Singles matches on Monday morning.

Ian Siebers
Siebers hits tee shot.

U.S. Team

The U.S. Team will be led by 12-time PGA TOUR winner and AJGA alum Justin Leonard and represented by players from 10 states including Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Kentucky, North Carolina, Massachusetts, Ohio, Texas and Washington. North Carolina and Texas each have two representatives. Five of the U.S. Team members are Rolex Junior All-Americans, nine have given a verbal commitment to play college golf and nine have competed in the AJGA’s annual East vs. West match play competition, the Wyndham Cup.

Maxwell Moldovan of Uniontown, Ohio, headlines the U.S. Team as the No. 1-ranked player in the Rolex AJGA Rankings following a T4 finish at the Junior PLAYERS Championship. Moldovan captured the match-play format Polo Junior Golf Classic at Liberty National in late June and added runner-up results at the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley and the Memorial Junior hosted by Sung Hyun Park to secure the Ohio State commit’s trip to Royal Melbourne.

Canon Claycomb of Bowling Green, Kentucky, sits at No. 3 in the Rolex AJGA Rankings and qualified as the No. 2 player in the Junior Presidents Cup standings. A two-time first-team Rolex Junior All-American and University of Alabama commit, Claycomb is the only member of the 2017 U.S. Junior Presidents Cup Team to qualify again in 2019. Claycomb delivered a 2-1 record at Plainfield Country Club in 2017.

2018 U.S. Junior Amateur champion and Stanford commit Michael Thorbjornsen (No. 5) will make his Junior Presidents Cup debut after an eventful year that included becoming the second youngest player in U.S. Open history to make the cut. The Wellesley, Massachusetts, native was also grouped with 2017 U.S. Junior Presidents Cup Team Captain David Toms in the first two rounds at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

Preston Summerhays (No. 6) of Scottsdale, Arizona, followed in Thorbjornsen’s footsteps by winning the 2019 U.S. Junior Amateur, which moved him into contention for a Junior Presidents Cup berth. Summerhays defeated International Team member Bo Jin in the Final match.

Duke University commit Ian Siebers began the Junior PLAYERS Championship at No. 16 in the Junior Presidents Cup standings, but a T7 result was enough to vault the Bellevue, Washington, native to No. 10 in the standings and punch his ticket to Melbourne.

Benjamin James of Milford, Connecticut, rounds out the U.S. Team as the only member of the 2022 high school graduating class. James is verbally committed to the University of Virginia.

The U.S. Team captured the 2017 Junior Presidents Cup with a 14-10 victory over the International Team at Plainfield Country Club in Edison, New Jersey.

United States Team – Captain Justin Leonard
Maxwell Moldovan – Ohio
Canon Claycomb – Kentucky
Brett Roberts – Florida
Jack Heath – North Carolina
Michael Thorbjornsen – Massachusetts
Preston Summerhays – Arizona
Jackson Van Paris – North Carolina
Alexander Yang – California
Vishnu Sadagopan – Texas
Ian Siebers – Washington
Stephen Campbell, Jr. – Texas
Benjamin James – Connecticut

 

 

International Team

Led by nine-time PGA TOUR winner and five-time Presidents Cup participant Stuart Appleby, the International Team is composed of players from five countries (Australia, China, India, Korea, South Africa) and Chinese Taipei. South Africa will have the most representation with five players, including four of the top six in the standings. Karl Vilips (Australia), Jayden Schaper (South Africa) and Christo Lamprecht (South Africa) will make their second Junior Presidents Cup appearances after competing on the International Team in 2017.

At No. 47 in the WAGR, Australia’s Karl Vilips qualified as the No. 1 player for the International Team. Originally from Perth, Australia, Vilips moved to Wesley Chapel, Florida, at 11 years old and has verbally committed to Stanford. Vilips is a three-time Rolex Junior All-American and owns five AJGA titles. As a member of the 2017 Junior Presidents Cup team, Vilips recorded a 1-2 record, which included a Singles match win over Prescott Butler.

Adding to the Australian contingent at the Junior Presidents Cup is Connolly’s Joshua Greer, who bookends the International Team as the last player to qualify at No. 12 in the standings. Currently No. 408 in the WAGR, Greer won the 2019 Western Australia Amateur, finished T17 at the IMG Academy Junior World Championship and qualified for his first U.S. Junior Amateur Championship this year.

Martin Vorster (No. 2) of Mossel Bay qualified as the leading South African in the standings following a successful summer that included a win at the East of Ireland Amateur Championship. Vorster finished seventh in last week’s Junior PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass, which was won by South African counterpart Jayden Schaper, who notched his first AJGA Invitational title. Schaper qualified for the Junior Presidents Cup at No. 3 in the standings behind Vorster.

Christo Lamprecht (No. 5), Samuel Simpson (No. 6) and Jordan Duminy (No. 11) round out the South Africans in the Junior Presidents Cup. Having five players represent South Africa has also occurred in the Presidents Cup, with Branden Grace, Ernie Els, Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel and Richard Sterne competing in the 2013 Presidents Cup at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

While China is represented in the Presidents Cup for the first time in 2019 by Haotong Li, it will have two players compete in the Junior Presidents Cup, with Bo Jin (No. 9) and Andi Xu (No. 10) narrowly qualifying for their first Junior Presidents Cup.

Jin, an Encinitas, California, resident, advanced to the Final of the U.S. Junior Amateur before falling to U.S. Junior Presidents Cup qualifier Preston Summerhays, 2 and 1, at Inverness Golf Club. Jin and Xu met earlier in the round of 64, where Jin was victorious, 5 and 4.

Jin is verbally committed to Oklahoma State University and was a 2018 Rolex Junior All-American.

At the Junior PLAYERS Championship, the top-3 finishers were Junior Presidents Cup International Team members: Schaper (1st), Jin (2nd), Vilips (3rd).

India will have a representative in the Junior Presidents Cup for the second time with Kartik Sharma qualifying at No. 4 in the standings. Sharma has already won in Australia this year, having captured the New South Wales Amateur Championship at Terrey Hills north of Sydney.

Korea’s Jang Huyn Lee, a member of the 2022 high school graduating class, is the youngest player on the International Team. Lee has primarily competed in New Zealand since relocating there in 2015 but qualified for both the U.S. Junior Amateur and The Amateur Championship and finished T7 at the Junior PLAYERS Championship.

International Team – Captain Stuart Appleby
Karl Vilips – Australia
Martin Vorster – South Africa
Jayden Schaper – South Afica
Kartik Sharma – India
Christo Lamprecht – South Africa
Samuel Simpson – South Africa
Jang Hyun Lee – Korea
Chuan-Tai Lin – Chinese Taipei
Bo Jin – China
Andi Xu – China
Jordan Duminy – South Africa
Joshua Greer – Australia