Tom McKibbin has been named Men’s Professional of the Year by the Irish Golf Writers’ Association for the second year running. The 22-year-old from Co Antrim enjoyed another memorable year in just his second season on the DP World Tour, finishing 18th in the Race to Dubai to clinch one of ten dual memberships of the PGA Tour for 2025. McKibbin, who also won the award in 2023, became only the 16th Irishman to break into the top 100 in the world rankings when he finished runner-up after a playoff in June’s Italian Open.
It was one of nine top-ten finishes recorded by the Holywood golfer, who made his major debut in the US Open at Pinehurst No. 2 and also qualified for The Open at Royal Troon, making both cuts.
Co Kildare’s Lauren Walsh was named Women’s Professional of the Year as she marked her rookie season by finishing 18th in the Order of Merit on the Ladies European Tour. A product of Castlewarden Golf Club, the 24-year-old Wake Forest University graduate recorded 12 top-25 finishes, including four top-tens. She was third to Leona Maguire in the Aramco Team Series-London, third in the VP Bank Swiss Ladies Open, fourth in the Jabra Ladies Open and eighth in the Amundi German Masters. She went on to qualify for the final stage of the LPGA Q-Series, securing status on the LPGA’s second-tier Epson Tour for 2025.
Royal Dublin’s Max Kennedy was named Men’s Amateur of the Year. Winner of the General Hackler Championship in his final year at the University of Louisville, he was runner-up in the East of Ireland Championship and the European Amateur Championship before going on to complete all three stages at the DP World Tour Qualifying School, securing a European Challenge Tour card.
Douglas’ Sara Byrne won Women’s Amateur of the Year award for the second year running. She recorded six top-tens with the University of Miami in 2024, securing a Curtis Cup appearance at Sunningdale, where she was unbeaten and played a key role in Great Britain’s 10.5-9.5 victory over the United States.
The Cork golfer turned professional immediately after the Curtis Cup and, like Walsh, went on to qualify for the final stage of the LPGA Q-Series, securing status on the LPGA’s Epson Tour for 2025. Earlier this month she secured her full Ladies European Tour card alongside Anna Foster and Annabel Wilson at the Qualifying School in Morocco, where AIG Irish Women’s Close champion Canice Screene also won LET status.
Co Wicklow’s Eamonn Darcy will receive the 2024 Distinguished Services to Golf Award, recognising his important contribution to the professional game in Ireland. After turning professional with a handicap of 12 as a 16-year-old in 1968, he went on to win 16 times around the world, making a memorable contribution to Europe’s 1987 Ryder Cup win at Muirfield Village in Ohio with his singles victory over Ben Crenshaw in his fourth appearance in the event. He was also a member with Des Smyth and Ronan Rafferty of the Irish team that won the Dunhill Cup on the Old Course at St Andrews in 1988, defeating Canada, the USA, England and Australia en route to victory.
The awards lunch, which is supported by AIG, will be hosted by the 5-star Anantara The Marker Dublin Hotel in Grand Canal Dock in Dublin on Friday, 24 January.
2024 Irish Golf Writers’ Association Awards winners
- Women’s Amateur – Sara Byrne
- Men’s Amateur – Max Kennedy
- Men’s Professional – Tom McKibbin
- Women’s Professional – Lauren Walsh
- Distinguished Services to Golf – Eamonn Darcy