Haley Moore putts on the fourth green during the first round of the U.S. Womenโ€™s Open at The Olympic Club on June 3, 2021, in San Francisco. The former Wildcat is fighting to regain her status on the LPGA Tour.

Haley Moore walked into the Jim Click Hall of Champions at McKale Center on Tuesday and was immediately brought back in time.

It wasnโ€™t only that she was surrounded by Arizona photos and trophies from the past. There was specific piece of hardware that spoke to her โ€” the 2018 national championship for womenโ€™s golf.

Moore was a member of the team that took a magical ride that spring. The Wildcats overcame obstacle upon obstacle, from qualifying for the round of 15, then beating Baylor in a sudden-death playoff to make the next cut as one of the top eight teams to advance. Next, the Wildcats knocked off No. 1 UCLA and No. 5 Stanford to make the finals against No. 2 Alabama.

It all came down to the final pairing โ€” Moore and Bamaโ€™s Lakareber Abe โ€” in a match that went to an extra hole. Win it and Arizona would take home its third national titleย โ€” its first in 18 years. Lose it and the Wildcats would finish as runners-up for the third time.

It was what all athletes dream of. Itโ€™s what plays in a loop in their heads during all those grueling hours of practice: match on the line, you putt and you win the title.

And thatโ€™s exactly what happened. With all eyes on Moore, she calmly stepped up to her ball and made the 5-foot putt to bring the trophy back to Tucson.

The photo that is etched in everyoneโ€™s mind is one of all her teammates surrounding her, celebrating and jumping up and down.

Arizona players mob Haley Moore, center, after the Wildcats defeated Alabama for the national title in 2018.

Moore, who is now in her fifth year as a professional golfer, carries the moment that defined her collegiate career with her. Thatโ€™s why stopping by to see the actual trophy in person is special.

โ€œEvery time I (am in Tucson), I have to always go in there and look at it, because it just brings goosebumps,โ€ Moore said. โ€œI have great memories, and I know itโ€™ll be there forever, which is nice.โ€

Moore, who was a candidate for the LPGAโ€™s Rookie of the Year in 2020, is in Tucson this week to compete in the Casino Del Sol Golf Classic at Sewailo Golf Club, which starts Thursday.

Moore, 24, didnโ€™t perform well enough to keep her status on the LPGA Tour and is fighting to get it back.

Moore and her title teammates, Bianca Pagdanganan and Gigi Stoll, who also play on the Epson Tour, are very familiar with the course. The Wildcats spent hours practicing and playing matches at Sewailo. Moore thinks this might give them a slight advantage.

โ€œThe back nine is a little bit different setup than the front nine,โ€ Moore said. โ€œYou need to play smart golf instead of trying to be really aggressive, like you can on the front. I feel like if you just play smart and be patient on that back nine, birdies will come ... because you know you have the front nine to score.

โ€œ(There is also an advantage) on the greens. Putting on them for so many years, you know what the breaks are going to do. Itโ€™s just the small things of knowing where to hit it.โ€

For Moore, itโ€™s also plus to have her Wildcat family on the road with her. They hang out and play practice rounds together. They even have a few side bets to keep things interesting. It helps make the grind not so much of one.

The UA womenโ€™s golf team celebrates its 2018 national championship in its return to Tucson. Haley Moore, holding the trophy, sunk the winning putt on the 19th hole to clinch the win over Alabama.

Mental game

Moore said she feels like her game is on an upswing. For her, as with many golfers, it comes down to the mental side of things. Keeping steady and not letting outside criticisms creep into your thoughts is key to playing any sport, especially an individual one.

โ€œIโ€™ve just kind of told myself ... โ€˜Hey, that happens in golf,โ€™ โ€ Moore said. โ€œYouโ€™re going to have this bad stretch of golf where you think youโ€™re playing well, youโ€™re putting up good scores, but itโ€™s just not quite good enough. Just keep practicing, putting your pedal down to the metal and mentally just being there and not giving up on yourself. You just keep practicing what you want to do, and it will all come together at one point.

โ€œNot every shot is going to be perfect out there. You canโ€™t just get upset with yourself. You have to be like, โ€˜OK, itโ€™s golf.โ€™ Just deal with it and move on. Go focus on the next shot, because the most important shot in golf is the next one youโ€™re going to hit. You never know, you could chip it in or putt it in, and youโ€™re like, โ€˜Oh wow! There we go.โ€™ โ€

Case in point was last weekโ€™s tournament at Morongo Casino Resort & Spa in Beaumont, California. Moore put up a 71 in the first round, then shot 74 and 75 to finish at 4 over. Although she wasnโ€™t happy with that performance, one thing that stood out was that she recovered from those bad shots and didnโ€™t dwell on them โ€” they didnโ€™t blow up her entire round or tournament. She was steady, and after every bogey or even that dreaded double bogey, she responded with a par.

That mental fortitude will be the difference when she fights her way back onto the LPGA Tour. Moore has a hunger to get back. She knows what it takes and said itโ€™s all about believing in herself, being positive and playing freely.

Haley Moore hits from the fifth tee during the first round of the U.S. Women's Open at The Olympic Club on June 3, 2021, in San Francisco.

Support, self-talk

It helps that she has many in her corner cheering her on, including her former coaches at Arizona, Laura Ianello and Derek Radley (whoโ€™s now at Oregon).

Ianello, who played professionally after winning that 2000 NCAA championship, knows how hard the first years on tour can be. Sheโ€™s given Moore tips and pep talks along the way. Radley, who Moore ran into Monday night at a local restaurant, reminded her that she has the talent to do big things โ€” so just play.

Moore knows that all it takes is one week; one win could change everything. Thatโ€™s why she spends all those extra hours on the practice range, hitting putt after putt, chip after chip and drive after drive.

โ€œItโ€™s what Iโ€™ve done since Day One. Iโ€™ve been playing golf since I was 5 years old,โ€ Moore said. โ€œIโ€™ve had those stretches in junior golf and even in college. I might have had a couple bad events in a row, but I just know that itโ€™s something that I love and I intend on doing it for the for most of my life โ€” as long as it makes me happy. Iโ€™m still happy playing the game. Iโ€™m still very motivated and being positive to myself that I can get back out there (on the LPGA Tour).

โ€œJust knowing that I can win out there and I want to win. I want to feel that moment of winning a big event. Telling myself every week that it can be my week. I want going in there saying. โ€˜I want to win. Iโ€™m here to win. Iโ€™m not here to get second place.โ€™ โ€

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Outraged golfer films landscaping crew at The Gallery Golf Club at Dove Mountain.


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Contact sports reporter PJ Brown at pjbrown@tucson.com. On Twitter: @PJBrown09