Rochelle Morris is on tenterhooks - nervously awaiting an envelope through the door or the all-important phone call.

Has she done enough for the long-awaited England call-up?

The England ladies’ squad is due to be announced any day and the Woodsome Hall player is praying her recent impressive form have swayed the selectors.

She said: “England will be announcing the team the first week in September, and I’ll find out with a call or a letter.

“I’ve got my fingers crossed that I’ve done enough. I feel like I have.”

If she gets the nod, it will be her first time she has been selected for the full squad. Unlike the men who have tiers of squads, the women just have one.

In her younger days she was a reserve for the Under-16 team and was part of the England coaching set up from ages 14 to 16.

Morris has just had the best month of her golfing career.

Last week she recovered from a disappointing start in the British Women’s Open at Moortown to post a three-under-par 71 final round for a 12th place finish.

The previous week the 20-year-old was pipped for the title of English Women’s Amateur Strokeplay Champion on the final green of the final hole.

Cornwall’s Sammie Giles holed a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th to clinch a one-shot win in the Championship at St Annes Old Links in Lancashire.

In July Morris celebrated winning the runner-up trophy in the English Women’s Amateur Championship.

She hung on to second place following a tense battle for second spot at Hunstanton after world number three Bramhall’s Bronte Law blew the rest of the field away with a 16-shot winning margin.

The players had no idea what the placings were, due to poor reception and England Golf officials being unable to relay live messages to the scoreboards.

And it was a nail-biting 30 minutes after they had finished that Morris learned she was second on a countback, and her name would be etched on to the runner-up trophy, alongside illustrious players like Charley Hull.

Most of the season’s main tournaments are over, but Morris still has the Fulford Salver to look forward to, along with the LET access competition in October, having earned a place by finishing fourth in the England Golf Ladies Order of Merit 2015.