X-Tra Long, X-Tra Clutch: Xavier's Isabel Brozena Wins Massachusetts Women’s Amateur - MASSGOLF

Isabel Brozena Outduels Shannon Johnson In 18-hole Instant Classic At Concord Country Club

By: Steve Derderian
sderderian@massgolf.org

CONCORD, Massachusetts (August 15, 2025) – Isabel Brozena didn’t flinch when Shannon Johnson stuffed a shot to three feet on the par-3 15th, officially erasing a 3-up lead and tying the match. She nodded. She gave Johnson her due and then stepped to the 16th tee with a plan.

“She deserved to win that hole,” Brozena said. “I think that’s how I’ve been getting through this week, by saying, ‘if someone deserves to win the hole, they should win it. I want to win it by beating them out.’”

With the match tied and two par-5s ahead, Brozena, a 19-year-old from North Reading and a rising sophomore at Xavier University, didn’t overcomplicate the moment. Driver in hand, she leaned into her length, the weapon she’d trusted all week.

She dialed up another 300-yard drive flush down the fairway on 16, then locked in on a 156-yard approach, which spun back inside three feet and for a moment appeared like it would drop in for an astonishing albatross. The downhill eagle putt dropped instead, and the match tilted back in her favor.

“I hit an absolute bomb. I put something extra on that one,” Brozena said of the decisive 16th, which played 440 yards. “You have to take the opportunities when they come, and I just hit the right number.”

That swing gave Brozena a 1-up lead she wouldn’t give back. She held steady through two tense closing holes, including a fairway bunker shot to the middle of the green on 18, to win the 122nd Massachusetts Women’s Amateur Championship at Concord Country Club, 2-up, capping a breakthrough week where she drove the ball as far as anyone in the field and showed the nerve to match it.

The victory not only marked her first state amateur title, it also earned her a spot in the 2026 U.S. Women’s Amateur at the Honors Course in Tennessee.

“You could ask any player that starts this week. We know how big this tournament is, so to know that I made it to Friday, let alone the end of it, is really exciting,” Brozena said.

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Like many of her matches, Brozena set the tone early. Johnson, 42, of Thorny Lea Golf Club and the 2018 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion, found herself 2-down early after hitting her opening drive into the penalty area. It took some time to settle into the match, but Johnson responded with a clutch par save on the 4th and won the 5th after Brozena’s second shot found a greenside bunker.

But Brozena’s driver, the difference all week, reasserted itself. After winning the 6th by getting up and down from the bunker, she smashed a driver downwind to about 50 yards short of the green to go 3-up. She nearly gave Johnson a window on the par-4 8th, leaving two putts to win the hole, but left the first short and pushed the second wide.

Both players made birdie on the par-3 9th with near identical shots into the green. Brozena pumped her fist when hers dropped. Johnson, needing to keep pace, walked hers in.

“Obviously, making that birdie putt on nine kind of set the wheels in motion a little bit,” said Johnson, the stroke play medalist this week at Concord. “Today I just got a little out of sorts to begin the match, a little quicker tempo than I had the last couple days. I know I have the game in there, and it’s just sometimes those swings come out under pressure.”

Shannon Johnson rallied from 3-down at the turn to tie the match on the 15th hole. (David Colt)

At the turn, Brozena had the edge. But Johnson, the 2018 champion and perennial contender, wasn’t done.

On the 10th, Brozena airmailed the green with her approach for the second day in a row and lost the hole. A bogey on the 11th dropped her lead to just 1-up. Johnson applied constant pressure with steady ball striking and well-read putts, forcing Brozena to dig in.

“I think I definitely gave her a couple windows of opportunity,” Brozena said. “And I think that’s why it was so close, because anyone can hit a shot any which way, and you never knew what was going to happen, and she kept making putts.”

Brozena answered with gritty par saves on 12 and 14, each about six feet, both followed by fist pumps to maintain her narrow lead after Johnson earned conceded pars.

“Especially on a course like this when you have so many sliders, you have to be aggressive with those, and that’s the way to make them,” Brozena said. “That’s a huge reason why I won so many matches this week.”

Isabel Brozena celebrates a made putt during the final match. (David Colt)

Johnson finally pulled even on 15, stuffing her tee shot that was tracking toward the hole and converting the birdie to square the match. Brozena didn’t flinch. She respected the shot, even admired it, but kept her focus forward. It displayed a form of respect combined with competitiveness, the kind that says, “I’ll win by playing my best, because I expect you to do the same.”

While the match gradually got more intense throughout the morning, with Brozena increasingly frustrated with a few of her putts, especially after the turn, she and her father finally shared a smile on the 13th green, seemingly providing a much-needed reset amid the biggest match of her life.

“We were just standing there thinking, this is pretty fun, because she was playing incredible,” Brozena said. “She was 3 down, and I knew she was playing pretty darn good. This is at the point where it was kind of hilarious how good she’s playing, and I knew I had to have my best game to beat her.”

With a 1-up lead on 18, it came down to execution. Brozena’s tee shot found the fairway bunker, 130 yards out. The pin was tucked front right, but her approach climbed out clean and landed safely in the center of the green.

“With the way she was playing today, she was probably going to get that up and down,” Brozena said. “So I figured, make my life easy.”

Johnson, needing to win the hole to extend the match, hit a cut just short of the green despite her second shot leaving her in a suboptimal position behind a tree. But her pitch came out heavy and stopped short on the front edge. When the par putt missed, she reached out her hand, ending one of the most exciting final matches this event has seen in recent years.

“Overall, this week was awesome,” Johnson said. “I’ve been playing some good golf coming into this, but you never know until you get here what’s actually going to happen. I can’t be more proud of how I fought out there.”

 

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CHAMPION’S PROFILE

Isabel Brozena

Hometown: North Reading, MA

Club: Indian Ridge Country Club (Andover, MA)

Age: 19; School: Xavier University ’28

Accolades:

  • 2025 Mass Women’s Amateur champion
  • 2024 Mass Girls’ Junior Amateur champion
  • 2024 Ouimet Memorial Tournament champion
  • 2025 All-BIG EAST Selection
  • 2022 & 2024 MIAA Girls Individual State Champion
  • 2024 U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship qualifier
  • 2025 LPGA FM Championship Local Qualifying Round participant

 

ROAD TO THE CHAMPIONSHIP
Stroke Play: 72-69-141 (3rd overall)
R32: Def. Annie Dai, 6&5
R16: Def. Amanda Adams, 3&1
Quarterfinals: Def. Kaitlyn Doe, 2&1
Semifinals: Def. Molly Smith, 3&2
Finals: Def. Shannon Johnson, 2-up


Final Round Notes

  • Brozena is the 69th individual to win the Mass Women’s Amateur in the 122 years it has been contested.
  • In addition to winning the Championship Bowl, Brozena is automatically exempt into the 2026 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship at the Honors Course in Tennessee. This is the second year the winner from the Mass Women’s Amateur earned an automatic spot in next year’s U.S. Women’s Amateur.
  • Friday was the first final match to reach the 18th hole since 2022, when Morgan Smith edged Rebecca Skoler at Orchards Golf Club in South Hadley.
  • This was the fourth time Johnson has reached the final match. In addition to her 2018 win, she also reached the final match in 2015 at Thorny Lea Golf Club and 2021 at Plymouth Country Club.
  • Concord Country Club member Pam Gardner served as the referee for the 18-hole final, with Carolyn O’Donnell as the forward observer.
  • Oak Hill Country Club in Fitchburg will host the 123rd Massachusetts Women’s Amateur in August 2026. Oak Hill previously hosted the event in 1994, when 7-time winner Anne Marie Tobin secured the victory. Laura Torrisi won the 1999 title there as well.
  • Other future sites for this event include The Kittansett Club, Marion (2027); William J. Devine Golf Course at Franklin Park, Boston (2028); Wyantenuck Country Club, Great Barrington (2029); and The Country Club, Brookline (2032). Full List >

Watch: Video Highlights From The Final Match


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