Isi Gabsa and Celina Sattelkau secured limited status on the LET for 2025 after finishing inside the top 50 at Q-School.
At the Ladies European Tour Qualifying School, Isi Gabsa and Celina Sattelkau finished inside the top 50, earning them limited playing rights for the upcoming season. Gabsa placed T21, narrowly missing out on a full tour card by just one stroke. Sattelkau ended the tournament at T36. Carolin Kauffmann just missed the top 50 cutoff, finishing 51st after a costly bogey on the final hole. The tournament, shortened to 72 holes due to poor weather, was won by Poland’s Dorota Zalewska with an impressive 19-under-par total.
LET Q-School: Gabsa’s Final Push Falls Just Short
Isi Gabsa delivered her best round of the week on Saturday with a 66, climbing the leaderboard thanks to a hot stretch of three straight birdies on holes 5 through 7. She kept the momentum going on the back nine with four more birdies in her first five holes. A single bogey on the 12th hole, however, proved decisive, leaving the 30-year-old one shot shy of a full tour card and a top-20 finish.
Celina Sattelkau played a steady final round, carding two birdies and one bogey to finish at 6-under-par for the tournament and T36 overall. The 24-year-old improves her LET status from Category 17 to Category 16 for the 2025 season, a small but meaningful step forward in her professional career.
Late Bogey Costs Kauffmann, Hausmann Also Misses Cut
Carolin Kauffmann suffered a late setback on the final hole, where a bogey dropped her out of the top 50 by a single stroke. Despite the disappointment, her 85th-place finish in the Order of Merit secures her Category 17 status, allowing her to compete in most LET events in 2025 and aim for a top-80 finish.
Sophie Hausmann also fell short of the top 50, finishing T58 at 3-under-par. Her final-round 69, which included an eagle on the 10th hole, was her best of the week, but an earlier round of 3-over on Thursday proved too costly. Having spent recent seasons on the Epson Tour in the U.S., the missed LET card is a setback but not a career-defining one for the 28-year-old.