2026 Bucket List

Cheer on Elite Women Athletes Across the South

Top golfers, softballers, and surfers will head to Augusta, Oklahoma City, Virginia Beach, and a sports bar near you
A golfer hitting in a fairway

Photo: Matt Slocum/Associated Press

Asterisk Talley at the Augusta National Women's Amateur golf tournament.

Where: around the region
When: year-round 
If you like: the outdoors and sports

Why you should go: Nationwide there’s a growing spotlight on women’s sports, and the South plays host to three events drawing major fanfare. In Georgia, the Augusta National Women’s Amateur kicks off the week before the Masters in April, the seventh time it will invite elite international players to inspire greater interest in women’s golf. (Last year roughly half of the seventy-two competitors hailed from outside the U.S.) Then, from May 28 through early June, Oklahoma City’s Devon Park will host the NCAA Women’s College World Series; last year Texas took the trophy in the Division I softball competition, but the Sooners won it the previous four years—fitting given that nearby Oklahoma City is the Softball Capital of the World. (It’s hosted the College World Series since 1990 and in 2028 will welcome players from around the globe for the summer Olympics.) 

Finally, the largest female surfing event in the world will go down on the shores of Virginia Beach in September. For the twentieth anniversary of the Super Girl Festival, more than four thousand athletes will compete in beach volleyball, inline skating, and of course, surfing. Keep an eye out for Florida native and Olympic shortboard gold medalist Caroline Marks.

G&G tip: As the popularity of women’s sports has grown, so has television coverage—and places dedicated to watching it. Two bars in Texas—1972 in Austin, named for the year Title IX passed, and SidePeace in Houston—are devoted to women’s sporting events. In Atlanta, Jolene Jolene broadcasts matches at pop-up locations around town. 


Lindsey Liles joined Garden & Gun in 2020 after completing a master’s in literature in Scotland and a Fulbright grant in Brazil. The Arkansas native is G&G’s digital reporter, covering all aspects of the South, and she especially enjoys putting her biology background to use by writing about wildlife and conservation. She lives on Johns Island, South Carolina.


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