LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR PAYS FIRST VISIT TO DELHI GOLF CLUB, INDIA
GOLF INDIA-STYLE. Action from the 17th tee at Delhi Golf Club. Picture by courtesy of Ladies European Tour.
LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR NEWS RELEASE
From Vanessa Vignali
LET Pays First Visit to Delhi Golf Club
New Delhi, India: Gwladys Nocera, Sophie Gustafson, Holly
Clyburn and Charley Hull are among the leading names hoping to make
their mark in the Hero Women’s Indian Open, starting tomorrow.
The three-day event over 54 holes is being held at the historic Delhi Golf Club for
the first time, having moved from the traditional DLF Golf and Country
Club in Gurgaon.
A tree-lined, narrow fairways course puts a premium on accuracy over distance
and the leading golfers in the field will have to stay alert to gain an
advantage over the local talent.
Sweden’s Sophie Gustafson, a four-time winner of the Ladies European
Tour Order of Merit with 26 tournament wins to her credit, is one of the
longer hitters on tour with an average drive of 256 yards, however the
tight nature of the course means that power will not necessarily be
advantageous.
After playing in the Pro-Am, Gustafson said: “I’m 99 per cent sure I’m
going to take my driver out of my bag because I won’t use it. I actually
have two different three woods on me so I’m going to keep them both in
the bag.
"I wouldn’t have done it normally but there isn’t one hole that
I’d even consider taking driver. I have two Callaway three woods and one
is about 13 years old.”
On the other hand, Frenchwoman Gwladys Nocera, ranked fourth on the LET
after two wins this season in Slovakia and China, plans to use her
driver.
“My accuracy with the driver is good so it’s not a problem of the fairway being narrow,” said Nocera, who won her 12th
LET title at the Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open a month ago. It’s more like
if there is something in the way, like a tree in the middle of the
fairway. There are some dog legs and sometimes it’s not worth taking
driver, distance wise. It’s more about distance control.”
Leading LET rookies Charley Hull and Holly Clyburn from England are
visiting India for the first time and looking to make progress in the
race to win the 2013 LET Rolex Rookie of the Year Award.
With just two events to play on the 2013 Ladies European Tour schedule,
in India and Dubai, Hull is currently sixth on the ISPS Handa Order of
Merit with euro 115,601.18 in earnings, less than euro 3,000 ahead of
eighth ranked Clyburn.
Both young players have had phenomenal seasons. Clyburn, 22, won the
Deloitte Ladies Open in the Netherlands in May and finished in the top
40 in both of the European majors.
Hull, the LET’s youngest member, aged 17, started the year with five
straight second places and made a sensational Solheim Cup debut as part
of the first European team to win on US soil.
Hull feels that a solo victory is within her grasp and it could come in
India: “My game is good enough this year. I’ve had a great season and
just need that first win to top the season off. Hopefully I’ll win in
the next two weeks.”
Clyburn admitted: “Everyone’s talking about rookie of the year and me
and Charley. It’s been nice that we’ve set a stamp and great for young
English golf and the LET. All I want to do is win that. My focus this
week is to perform in the top ten, or top five but I take one round as
it comes.”
Although both LET rookies find the Delhi golf course tricky, they were
full of praise for the facilities and hospitality. Hull said: “India is a
lot nicer than I thought it would be! I haven’t seen much, but it’s
pretty clean,” while Clyburn added: “So far, so good!”
The Hero Women’s Indian Open, which started in 2007, joined the Ladies
European Tour schedule in 2010 and is tri-sanctioned by the LET, Ladies
Asian Golf Tour and Women’s Golf Association of India.
The tournament
carries a purse of US $300,000, the highest prize fund in the history of
women’s professional golf in India and will be played from Thursday,
November 28 to Saturday, November 30. The field of 108 competitors,
including 45 LET members, will tee up in the 54-hole stroke play event,
with a cut to the leading 60 professionals and those tied after two
rounds.
Labels: LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
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