Mirabel Ting—Back-to-Back Third Place Finishes on the Epson Tour, and a Trajectory That Points Straight at the LPGA
There are players who have good rookie seasons, and there are players who announce that the developmental tour is simply a formality. Mirabel Ting is making it very clear which kind she is.
This past weekend at The Highlands in Harbor Springs, Michigan, Ting finished in a tie for third at the Great Lakes Championship, closing the week at 10-under par with a final-round 68. It was her second consecutive third-place finish — coming a week after a solo third at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship — and her sixth top-10 in just nine Epson Tour starts. Consistency at this level, this early, is the single hardest thing for a young professional to produce. Ting is producing it as a matter of routine.
For anyone who followed her amateur career, none of this is a surprise. It is simply the next chapter.
A Resume That Was Already Historic
Before she ever turned professional, Ting had assembled one of the most decorated amateur careers in recent college golf. In 2025 she won the Annika Award as the top female collegiate golfer in the country, was named Golfweek National Golfer of the Year, and earned PING WGCA Player of the Year and ACC Golfer of the Year honors. At her peak she sat at No. 2 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking — a position she held for an extended stretch, against the best amateur players on the planet.
She did it the hard way, too. A native of Miri, Malaysia, Ting started her college career at Augusta University, where she earned All-America honors, before moving to Florida State and turning into one of the most dominant players in the college game. Behind every one of those accolades is a personal story of resilience — one she carries with grace and rarely lets define how she competes.
Then she turned professional, and immediately removed any doubt about how the amateur game would translate. Barely a month into her pro career, she won the PGM Royal Pahang Championship by nine shots. Not a narrow breakthrough. A statement.
Why Fidelity Sports Group Believes
At FSG, the roster is built one relationship at a time, and it stays small on purpose. The firm does not chase volume; it chases conviction. Mirabel Ting is exactly the kind of athlete that model is designed for — a generational talent who deserves attention that never gets diluted across a crowded client list.
What stands out about Ting is not only the ball-striking and the scoring, both of which are clearly LPGA-caliber. It is the temperament. She competes with a calm that belies her age, treats the Epson Tour as the proving ground it is meant to be, and keeps stacking results without forcing anything. That combination — talent plus poise plus week-in, week-out reliability — is what separates good prospects from future stars.
FSG’s job is to make sure the business around her keeps pace with the golf: the right partners, the right platform, the right opportunities at the right moments, with someone available seven days a week to manage it. The golf is going to take care of itself.
The LPGA Is Next — and It Won’t Stop There
The Epson Tour exists to send its best players to the LPGA, and Ting is putting herself squarely in that conversation. Six top-10s in nine starts — including back-to-back thirds — is the language of someone earning her card, not hoping for it.
But the longer view is the one worth stating plainly: Mirabel Ting has the ceiling of a global superstar. A major champion’s resume in the amateur game, an immediate professional win on home soil, and a rapid, composed ascent up the Epson Tour are not the markers of a player who tops out as a tour regular. They are the markers of a player the women’s game will be building around.
Fidelity Sports Group is proud to represent her — and proud to be along for what is shaping up to be a remarkable career.
