KirkwoodGolf: JOANNA KLATTEN NOTCHES FIRST PRO VICTORY ON AUSSIE DEBUT

Sunday, January 08, 2012

JOANNA KLATTEN NOTCHES FIRST PRO VICTORY ON AUSSIE DEBUT

FROM THE AUSTRALIAN WOMEN'S PRO TOUR WEBSITE
France's Joanna Klatten, playing her first tournament in Australia, certainly made it a memorable one by recording her first professional victory at the Women's Victorian Open.
Klatten, pictured, was sitting in the Spring Valley Golf Club bar celebrating what she thought was her first professional win. But her celebrations at that stage were just a shade premature, even though her nearest rival South Korean Haeji Kang was trailing by two halfway up the par-four 18th.
Kang, the highest ranked player in the field, then holed sand wedge from 98 metres range from the right rough for an eagle to force what was an unlikely play-off.
Klatten, 26, hurriedly went looking for her bag and caddie and headed to the practice range, no doubt regretting the glass of beer she had been downing minutes earlier.
On the first play-off hole, Klatten holed a 15-foot putt for par to force them back to the 18th for more sudden death. Both players hit the 18th in regulation and Klatten just missed her birdie putt and had a tap in for par, Kang left herself a testing downhill 1 metre par putt. The pressure got to the South Korean and she missed the putt, which saw her French rival begin to celebrate for real.
Klatten then confirmed that as Kang played the last hole, she (Joanna) had been handed a beer, her friends thinking it was all over bar the shouting, "But I did tell them it was not over, she could hole the shot - and she did!" Klatten said. "I don't drink normally, so one beer got me a little bit tipsy. I was a little bit worried. I went to hit some balls and I tried to chug as much water as I could to sober up.
"It's very special, especially the way it happened. Very, very special. And my first time in Australia, even more special, I love Australia."
Parisienne Klatten came storming up the leaderboard in the final round by firing a bogey-free, five-under-par 68 which included three birdies and an eagle, meaning she played her final 25 holes in 11-under par, after taking an 8 on the par-three 10th on Saturday.
 Kang and overnight leader Rebecca Flood had scrapped for the lead for much of the day until Klatten finished eagle-birdie-birdie in regulation to vault clear. Kang had mixed emotions after her spectacular eagle still left her runner-up.
 "It's disappointing, but I'm OK. I'm happy with the result -- I'm here to check my golf before the Australian Open and I know how I'm doing."
Flood was disappointed not to have broken through for her first maiden professional victory, but was delighted to have contended for so long and finished outright third at 5-under par.
"The nerves were there, but I just made two soft bogeys on one and two, then couldn't get the putter going."
New South Wales’ Rachel Bailey and West Australian Kristie Smith each fired seven-under 66s to better Flood's Saturday 67 as the new course record. Bailey finished tied for fifth with New South Wales' Frances Bondad (70) at four-under par.
Su Hyun Oh carded a final round of 71 to finish at three-under and tied for sixth to take out the leading amateur title.
Scott Arnold won the mens version of the Victorian Open in this unique format beating Kurt Barnes by one shot.

TO VIEW ALL THE WOMEN'S VICTORIA OPEN FINAL TOTALS

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