NOW ONLY 50 AND TIES WILL PLAY FINAL TWO ROUNDS
How often do you see a big flag like this flying out straight? Only when a gale-force wind is blowing! Image by courtesy of the Ladies European Tour
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
By BETHAN CUTLER, LET Media Manager
Play
was abandoned for the day early in the afternoon at the Ricoh Women’s British Open at Royal
Liverpool Golf Club, Hoylake, due to high winds. Round two is scheduled
to start at 6.50am local time Saturday.
Earlier in the day the Rules Committee declared the scores returned Friday morning null and void in accordance with Rule 33-2d.
The
competitors began their round in extremely adverse weather conditions
and conditions subsequently worsened despite the belief that they would
remain stable.
According
to the official statement issued by Susan Simpson, Ladies’ Golf Union
Tournament Director: “It would have been unfair to those competitors not
to declare play null and void and cancel all scores for the round in
question.”
A
total of 36 players recorded scores on Friday morning at the Royal
Liverpool Golf Club before play was suspended at 8:18 a.m. local time.
Winds gusting up to 60 mph made it difficult for players to keep balls
on the green or on the tee.
While
officials had hoped to resume play mid-afternoon, the conditions had
not drastically improved and the decision was made at 2 pm to suspend
play until Saturday morning.
Having
lost a whole day’s play on Friday, the Championship Committee met to
review the format for the remainder of the Ricoh Women’s British Open
Championship with the primary objective of retaining the 72-hole format
of the event.
With weather conditions for Monday predicted to be
similar to Friday (today) the Championship Committee decided that Round
Two will be played on Saturday to completion and a cut will be made. The
cut will be reduced from 65 plus ties to 50 plus ties, including
amateurs.
Rounds three and four will be played on Sunday, with no redraw after round three. A two tee start will be utilised.
Prize
money will be paid as normal to those players who make the cut. In
addition, official prize money will be paid to those who would have
normally made the cut under the original conditions of play.
This is in accordance with Clause F of the Championship Conditions as follows: The
Championship Committee reserves the right to amend the Championship
Conditions and the decision of the Championship Committee shall, in all
matters, be final.
The
forecast is for the wind to drop overnight for Saturday, with rain a
possibility on Sunday. However winds of 25-35 miles per hour are
forecast for Monday, which could have presented unplayable conditions
once again.
Michelle Wie, one of the tallest players on tour, went out in the second group from the 10th tee on Friday morning and joked that this was one day when her height was not an advantage.
“I
think it's one day that's really good to be short, because I felt like a
flagpole out there,” Wie said with a laugh. “I felt really tall and
like I was going all over the place.”
The 2004 champion Karen Stupples
teed off in the first group on Friday morning at 7 am and she said that
while the wind was a factor throughout the few holes she played, she
experienced something new on the third green.
“On
the third, my ball started oscillating and it wouldn't stop,” Stupples
said. “It just sat there and just kept moving and I had to call for an
official to come and figure out what the ruling was with that, and she
said, hit it. Even if it's oscillating, you can hit it. I'm like,
really? It's quite disconcerting, because how do you hit a moving
ball? Because it can wobble a little bit, and you catch it not quite
where you used to. I don't know, it can affect everything, and it did.
I made double‑bogey there.”
Before
play was suspended there were no birdies on the score board and the
decision to cancel play was largely welcomed by the players.
Suzann
Pettersen commented: “I don’t think from the players’ perspective that
there was any other outcome. It wasn’t just unfair conditions, it was
unplayable.”
Next year, the Ricoh Women's British Open returns to an August 1-4 date at the Old Course, St Andrews with no Olympic Games to be taken into consideration for another four years.
Bethan Cutler
Media Manager
Ladies European Tour
Mobile: +44 (0)7980056045
Labels: Pro Ladies
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