AUSSIE ARTIS SCORES FIRST WIN ON LET IN HELSINGBORG OPEN
Happiness is cup shaped for Rebecca Artis at the Helsingborg Open
Image by courtesy of Tristan Jones
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
REPORT BY BETHAN CUTLER, L E T Media Manager
Australian Rebecca Artis came from five strokes behind overnight leader Caroline Hedwall to secure her first Ladies European Tour victory at the Helsingborg Open in Sweden.
The 24-year-old from Coonabarabran in New South Wales fired rounds of
69, 71, 71 and 69 to post a winning total of 280, eight-under-par,
ending a stroke ahead of Hedwall after a warm and windy week at
Vasatorps Golf Club.
“It was a great day out there. I played solid golf all day and to walk
away with a win is unbelievable,” said Artis, who had husband Geoff on
the bag. “I just had to go out there and play steady early and see if I
could make a couple of birdies early on.”
When asked if she was surprised to win, especially in such a high
quality field against three of the world’s top 25 players, Artis
continued: “I’d like to say I’m not surprised. It’s a lot of hard work
that goes into winning a golf tournament and I’m absolutely delighted.
“When I came here, I said to my husband that I thought it was a great
golf course. I’d heard it could get windy around here and I thought if
it got windy and I was hitting the ball as well as I had been doing I
could definitely give it a chance.
“We get wind in Australia, it depends where you are, but I like playing
in the wind, I enjoy tough conditions and go out there and grind it
out.
“I knew that I had to go out there and make some birdies early on and
put some pressure on the leaders. I put myself into contention going
into the back nine and knew that if the conditions were like they were
the first three days and windy, that anything could happen out there.
It’s not an easy golf course when the wind’s up like that, so I just
knew that if I could get off to a good start and post some birdies I
could be right in it down the stretch.”
The win capped a tremendous six weeks for Artis, during which time she
had earned two top ten finishes, although it could have been three. Only
four weeks earlier, she was lying in sixth place going into the final
round of the Pilsen Golf Masters when forced to pull out with a back
injury.
“My back went on me on the golf course during the second round and I
pulled out before the final round because I just didn’t feel fit enough
to go out there. I’ve had previous back injuries so I didn’t want to
force it. I didn’t want to be in the same position again,” Artis
explained.
“I’ve had some great weeks out here, great results, and I’ve been
playing really well the last three or four tournaments so I felt pretty
confident coming in this week with the way my golf was. My coach, Luke
Edwin, I brought him over from Australia in Spain and it’s paid off.”
Artis earned a €37,500 first prize cheque and punched her ticket to
next week’s Evian Championship in France, the final major of the year.
Although she began the final round slowly with a bogey on the fifth
hole, Artis stormed up the leader board with four birdies in five holes
from the seventh. She tied for the lead with Hedwall after 10 holes and
moved two clear after 11.
Hedwall’s challenge stalled with a double bogey on the fifth, followed
by bogeys on 10 and 11 and she was unable to recover. After Artis holed a
putt of seven feet for birdie on 17, she moved three ahead with a hole
to play and although Hedwall also birdied 17, it was too little too
late.
After hitting a fantastic approach shot to just 12 feet below the hole
on 18, Artis three-putted, opening the door for Hedwall, but the Swedish
Solheim Cup star could only make par, ending in second place.
“This is not how I wanted it to end but I’m very happy for Rebecca,”
Hedwall said. “She played awesome today and it just wasn’t meant to be
this time for me.
“Obviously it was my putting. I didn’t make anything. I was playing
solid golf tee to green and I made a birdie at the end but that wasn’t
enough.”
Two strokes further behind in solo third place, Frenchwoman Valentine
Derrey earned her career best finish in three years on the LET, while
Order of Merit leader, South African Lee-Anne Pace, was two strokes
further back in outright fourth.
England’s Laura Davies showed some vintage form as she earned a
season-best finish of fifth at two-under-par. Davies fired seven birdies
and four birdies in a three-under 69 and said: “I played well, putted
well, got a bit unlucky on a couple of holes. A couple of three putts
from long range but overall played really well.
“I hit a couple of really good drivers into the wind and gave myself a
good chance to get within 50, 60 yards of the par fives. I think it was
because of how I drove it, but also I putted well.
"I love the course and
the tournament; I think they’ve done a great job. Condition wise it’s
magnificent. It’s the best result of the year so I have to be pleased
with it.”
Swedish 16-year-old Linnea Strom, a member of the recent European PING
Junior Solheim Cup Team in Colorado, was the leading amateur in equal 38th
place.
At the other end of the experience spectrum, Helen Alfredsson
announced that this would be her final tournament in Sweden as she is
stepping away from her competitive career, although she is still in the
field for next week’s Evian Championship, where she has won three times.
FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72)
280 Rebecca Artis (AUS) 69 71 71 69
281 Caroline Hedwall (SWE) 69 70 67 75
283 Valentine Derrey (FRA) 68 68 74 73
285 Lee-Anne Pace (RSA) 69 68 73 75
286 Laura Davies (ENG) 73 72 72 69287 Caroline Afonso (FRA) 72 71 71 73
288 Pernilla Lindberg (SWE) 66 73 75 74, Malene Jorgensen (DEN) 70 70 71 77, Anna Nordqvist (SWE) 70 71 73 74
289 I K Kim (SKOR) 65 72 75 77, Linda Wessberg (SWE) 70 72 70 77, Nontaya Srisawang (THA) 68 74 72 75
290 Stacy Lee Bregman (RSA) 70 74 73 73, Nikki Garrett (AUS) 68 78
70 74, Liz Young (ENG) 68 74 75 73, Maria Hjorth (SWE) 68 76 72 74,
Camilla Lennarth (SWE) 68 70 77 75, Trish Johnson (ENG) 73 70 73 74291 Celine Herbin (FRA) 72 73 75 71, Pamela Pretswell (SCO) 72 76 73 70, Gwladys Nocera (FRA) 68 73 75 75, Marianne Skarpnord (NOR) 73 73 73 72, Joanna Klatten (FRA) 69 79 72 71, Ashleigh Simon (RSA) 70 72 74 75, Stephanie Na (AUS) 70 72 77 72
292 Steffi Kirchmayr (GER) 73 68 74 77, Mireia Prat (ESP) 70 77 70
75, Eleanor Givens (ENG) 73 74 73 72, Antonella Cvitan (SWE) 73 74 73
72
293 Maria Salinas (PER) 74 71 71 77, Sophie Sandolo (ITA) 69 77 76
71, Julie Greciet (FRA) 71 76 73 73, Holly Clyburn (ENG) 69 76 73 75,
Viva Schlasberg (SWE) 72 73 74 74
294 Lina Boqvist (SWE) 75 69 74 76, Louise Larsson (SWE) 73 72 77 72, Vikki Laing (SCO) 70 73 76 75295 Linnea Strom (SWE) (am) 77 68 76 74, Carin Koch (SWE) 74 69 82 70
296 Beth Allen (USA) 72 71 79 74, Alexandra Vilatte (FRA) 73 74 73
76, Rebecca Sorensen (SWE) 74 71 78 73, Marjet Van Der Graaff (NED) 72
74 79 71, Sophie Walker (ENG) 72 75 75 74, Maria Hernandez (ESP) 76
71 75 74, Line Vedel (DEN) 75 73 73 75, Sarah Kemp (AUS) 70 74 77 75
297 Mikaela Parmlid (SWE) 73 75 73 76, Nikki Campbell (AUS) 72 75
74 76, Whitney Hillier (AUS) 73 74 75 75, Helen Alfredsson (SWE) 71 76
73 77
298 Tania Elosegui (ESP) 71 77 74 76, Anne-Lise Caudal (FRA) 71 72 79 76, Mallory Fraiche (USA) 72 75 74 77
299 Eva Bjarvall (SWE) 72 76 78 73, Tara Davies (WAL) 73 74 75 77
300 Klara Spilkova (CZE) 68 77 74 81, Galina Rotmistrova (RUS) 73
70 80 77, Malene Krolboll Hansen (DNK) 74 71 73 82, Stefania Croce
(ITA) 73 75 77 75, Jade Schaeffer (FRA) 68 80 79 73
301 Florentyna Parker (ENG) 73 75 76 77, Nina Holleder (GER) 74 72 74 81, Charlotte Ellis (ENG) 78 70 72 81
304 Connie Chen (RSA) 74 71 79 80
306 Marion Ricordeau (FRA) 75 72 78 81
309 Sahra Hassan (WAL) 74 73 80 82
Labels: LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
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