KirkwoodGolf: SHANSHAN FENG LEADS BY FIVE IN DUBAI

Friday, December 12, 2014

SHANSHAN FENG LEADS BY FIVE IN DUBAI

GEORGIA HALL ACE WINS A MERCEDES
 BUT SHE NEEDS DRIVING LESSONS!

LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR NEWS RELEASE

In a near repeat of her dominant performance two years ago, Shanshan Feng pushed her lead to five strokes after the third round of the Omega Dubai Ladies Masters today.

On 199, 17-under-par, the world number five from China was one stroke shy of her 2012 54-hole tournament record score in the season-ending event on the Ladies European Tour.

Feng fired a third round 66 to sit five clear of Melissa Reid from England (65) with Carlota Ciganda, Anna Nordqvist and Charley Hull two shots back in a tie for third.

When Feng posted a record winning total of 21-under par in 2012, she fell one stroke short in matching Sorenstam's largest winning margin of six shots she recorded in the inaugural edition in 2006.

On this year’s plans, she said: “My goal was actually to get to 20‑under, so now I'm 17.  So I think, yeah, still have a chance to get to 20,” said Feng, who was 26-under when she won the Reignwood Classic in 2013.
 “If I make it top three, I'm happy.  But of course, you know, if I have a chance to win, I'm going to give all my best.

Feng birdied the first and eagled the third hole, but dropped her only shot on the fourth. She was 14-under and four ahead of Hull when the 18-year-old from England took a triple bogey seven after going out of bounds on the 12th hole but Hull immediately recovered with three birdies in her last six holes.

Hull said: “I'm actually really happy to be honest. I got off to a fast start and I was 3‑under through ten holes, and just lost a little bit of concentration for two holes.  I fought back after making a triple and a bogey with three birdies after that, so I'm really proud of myself for doing that. Just bad course management.  
"My caddie told me to chip out and I was like, no, I'm going for it.  But I'm happy I went for it because I've learned from my mistakes.  I have to make my own mistakes to learn from them.  So I'm happy ‑‑ I'm not happy for making it, but I've definitely learnt and I'm happy I holed like a 50‑foot putt.”

Another English star, Reid, who won the last of her four Ladies European Tour victories at the 2012 Prague Masters, said she had played some of her best ever golf.

“It's been a long time coming.  I worked actually a week with my coach, Kevin Craggs, a week before this week at Saadiyat, and I think we just found kind of the missing ingredient.  So it was nice to put it into play.  I played really well yesterday.  
"I think I missed three greens yesterday and then today I think I missed one.  So I'm hitting it well.  I'm just trying to keep it simple and get the noise out of my head.  It's working,” she said.

“It's been a really tough couple years.  It's been a lot harder than I expected and I probably didn't give myself enough credit for what's happened and stuff. 
" Things change, and I actually feel that my personal life is stable, which is quite nice, not being a rebel anymore. The last two or three months, everything has quieted down and everything's good and I'm happy, and I think it's now showing through in my golf.”

Earlier in the third round, England’s Georgia Hall produced the perfect shot when she aced the 167-yard par-3 15th hole using a 4-iron. The 18-year-old from Bournemouth in Dorset won a gleaming Mercedes Benz C 200 worth around €60,000 and will now have to buy herself some driving lessons as she can’t yet drive! 
It was the second hole in one of the week, after Stacey Keating aced the fourth for no prize in the first round.

Elsewhere, young Indian amateur Aditi Ashok continued to make her presence felt in a world-class field, carding level-par 73 in third round to stay at one over, four shots behind Lee So-young, the only other amateur in the field.
SCOTSWATCH: Having had to birdie the last hole to beat the second-round cut by one shot, Sally Watson surged up the leaderboad with a four-under-par 68, one of the lowest scores of the third day. She is now the leading Scot on two-under 214 and joint 29th. 
Watson birdied the second, third, short 11th, 16th and 17th in haves of 33-35. Her only bogey came at the 15th.
In contrast, Kylie Walker had quadruple bogey 9 at the par-5 18th to shoot a 74 for T34 on 217.
She had halves of 32-42, birdieing the second, third, ninth, 10th and 17th. She bogeyed the 12th, 13th and 14th before he calamitous finish.
Pamela Pretswell and Kelsey MacDonald are joint 59th on 219.
Pamela has had rounds of 72, 71 and 76, her third round including birdies at the third, 11th and 15th but also a double bogey at the short fourth in halves of 39-37.
Kelsey has scored 71-72-76. She too had three third-round birdies, at the second, ninth and 16th but also a double bogey at the long 11th and five bogeys.


  THIRD-ROUND SCOREBOARDE
    Par 216 (3x72)

199 Shanshan Feng (CHN)  66 67 66

204 Melissa Reid (ENG)  70 69 65

206 Carlota Ciganda (ESP)  69 71 66, Anna Nordqvist (SWE)  69 69 68, Charley Hull (ENG)  67 70 69

207 Nicole Broch Larsen (DEN)  71 70 66, Noora Tamminen (FIN)  72 66 69

208 Caroline Masson (GER)  68 71 69

209 Gwladys Nocera (FRA)  69 69 71

210 Malene Jorgensen (DEN)  74 69 67, Sarah Kemp (AUS)  71 68 71, Ashleigh Simon (RSA)  70 71 69, Liz Young (ENG)  70 71 69, Becky Brewerton (WAL)  67 73 70

211 Stacy Lee Bregman (RSA)  72 70 69, Thidapa Suwannapura (THA)  71 72 68, Klara Spilkova (CZE)  70 70 71, Felicity Johnson (ENG)  73 68 70, Cheyenne Woods (USA)  70 69 72, Pornanong Phatlum (THA)  68 72 71

212 Minjee Lee (AUS)  74 68 70, Isabelle Boineau (FRA)  72 72 68, Caroline Hedwall (SWE)  72 71 69

213 Joanna Klatten (FRA)  70 72 71, Amy Boulden (WAL)  70 74 69, Katie Burnett (USA)  71 69 73, Soyoung Lee (SKOR)  67 74 72, Whitney Hillier (AUS)  71 69 73

214 Holly Clyburn (ENG)  72 69 73, Lee-Anne Pace (RSA)  67 73 74, Sally Watson (SCO)  76 70 68

215 Margherita Rigon (ITA)  72 71 72, Jade Schaeffer (FRA)  73 69 73, Veronica Zorzi (ITA)  74 71 70, Rebecca Hudson (ENG)  71 70 74

216 Becky Morgan (WAL)  71 71 74, Sophie Walker (ENG)  71 71 74, Connie Chen (RSA)  74 70 72, Pernilla Lindberg (SWE)  71 75 70, Nikki Campbell (AUS)  68 76 72, Valentine Derrey (FRA)  70 72 74, Sophie Giquel-bettan (FRA)  72 74 70

217  Marion Ricordeau (FRA)  71 75 71, Cathryn Bristow (NZL)  70 73 74, Aditi Ashok (IND)  72 73 72, Rebecca Codd (IRL)  71 74 72, Linda Wessberg (SWE)  74 72 71, Titiya Plucksataporn (THA)  71 70 76, Kylie Walker (SCO)  71 72 74

218 Stacey Keating (AUS)  70 76 72, Elisabeth Esterl (GER)  74 66 78, Bree Arthur (AUS)  72 74 72, Sophie Sandolo (ITA)  75 71 72, Mireia Prat (ESP)  69 75 74, Caroline Martens (NOR)  71 72 75, Holly Aitchison (ENG)  70 72 76, Georgia Hall (ENG)  75 69 74, Mallory Fraiche (USA)  74 71 73

219 Ann-Kathrin Lindner (GER)  73 71 75, Pamela Pretswell (SCO)  72 71 76, Maha Haddioui (MAR)  71 75 73, Eleanor Givens (ENG)  72 72 75, Kelsey MacDonald (SCO)  71 72 76, Carin Koch (SWE)  66 77 76

220 Minea Blomqvist (FIN)  74 72 74

221 Stefania Croce (ITA)  71 75 75 
 

Bethan Cutler

Media Manager


Ladies European Tour

Tel: +44 (0)1895 831 028

Mob: +44 (0)7980056045

Bethan.cutler@ladieseuropeantour.com


 

cid:image001.png@01CFF4F8.BD6540B0

 

 

 

 

 

Labels: