Five Scots in Ladies European Tour Final Q School in Morocco
LET NEWS RELEASE
FROM BETHAN CUTLER, LET Media Manager
LET NEWS RELEASE
FROM BETHAN CUTLER, LET Media Manager
The Ladies European Tour’s
Lalla Aicha Tour School Final Qualifier begins on Friday, December 18 and concludes on Tuesday, December 22 at
Amelkis Golf Club and Samanah Country Club in Marrakech, Morocco named in honour of HRH the Late Princess Lalla Aicha of Morocco.
Each
player will compete on the two courses alternately for the first four
rounds, followed by a cut to the top 60 players and ties after 72 holes
before the final
round (18 holes) is played at Samanah Country Club.
There
are 115 players from 35 countries in the field competing for Membership
on the 2016 Ladies European Tour. The top 30 and ties
will earn Membership in Category 8, while those who make the cut and
finish in positions 31 and below will be eligible for Membership in
Category 9b. Players who fail to make the cut may join the LET with
Membership in Category 12a, although they will have a limited
number of playing opportunities.
In layman’s terms, this means that
those in Category 8 will earn their ‘full card” while those in 9b have a
“conditional card.”
Last year, Nanna Koerstz Madsen from Denmark earned medallist honours at the Final Qualifier, with a total of
343,
17-under-par, for a two stroke margin of victory. The 20-year-old went
on to achieve ninth position on the 2015 Ladies European Tour Order of
Merit, with six top 10 finishes, including
her season best result of third in New Zealand.
England’s Georgia Hall,
who was second at last year’s Final Qualifier, went on to finish 32nd
on the 2015 Order of Merit. Meanwhile, Emily Kristine Pedersen from
Denmark finished fourth at Lalla Aicha Tour School
and then won the Hero Women’s Indian Open in her first year on Tour,
ending sixth on the LET Order of Merit and clinching the 2015 Rookie of
the Year Award.
The
success of these prodigious young talents is a clear indicator of the
ever-improving standard of play on the Ladies European Tour
and this year’s field is equally impressive, with three of the world’s
top ranked amateurs competing.
ANGEL YIN
Potentially
the next big star in women’s golf, the Californian is only 17 years old
and her length off the tee and the quality of her
ball striking has been remarked upon by several of the players who have
seen her practise on the course and driving range.
A member of the
victorious United States 2015 PING Junior Solheim Cup Team in Germany,
Yin is currently ranked seventh on the World Amateur
Golf Ranking. She said: “I just wanted to take my game to the next
level and try something new, so I decided to come to Europe. It’s my
first time in Morocco, but I played in the Junior Solheim Cup in
September so I got to go to Germany, which was really nice.”
LUNA SOBRON
The
21-year-old from Majorca, who is 10th on the World Amateur Golf
Ranking, won this year’s European Amateur Championship. She also
tied for 13th in the Ricoh Women’s British Open at
Turnberry, where she won the Smyth Salver awarded to the leading amateur
and could follow in the footsteps of previous Smyth Salver winners such
as
Rebecca
Hudson, Michelle Wie, Melissa Reid, Anna Nordqvist and Caroline
Hedwall, now that she had almost finished her business degree in Madrid.
She said: “My objective is to get my card and
I think the two courses are very different. The Samanah is short but
the Amelkis has more slopes and the wind. I think Amelkis is easier and
more fun, but it’s a five round tournament. I think the tournament will
be won on the greens.”
ADITI ASHOK
The
only Indian to have played in the Asian Youth Games (2013) and Youth
Olympic Games (2014), Ashok has won 15 international titles
including the 2015 St. Rule Trophy and Ladies
British Amateur Open Stroke Play Championship. She has won two
professional Women’s Golf Association of India (WGAI) titles, including
being the youngest winner of a WGAI professional tournament in 2011 at
13 years 5 months. She played in several Ladies European Tour events as
an amateur, notably finishing as the low amateur three times in the Hero
Women's Indian Open in 2012, 2014 and 2015
at T8th, T14th and T13th respectively. She was also the first Indian to
play in the Omega Dubai Ladies Masters where she finished 38th.
OF
NOTE: Charlotte Thompson’s boyfriend, Matthew Southgate, who recently
qualified for the European Tour, is acting as her caddie this
week and the English pair are hoping to do the double by earning their
tour cards. Southgate made headlines when he overcame testicular cancer
to finish sixth out of more than 150 players at Spain’s PGA Catalunya
Resort in November.
NATIONALITIES
There
are 115 players from 35 nationalities represented at the Final Stage of
Lalla Aicha Tour School, with the number of players from
each country as follows:
Australia: 2
Austria: 3
Belgium: 2
Brazil: 1
Canada: 2
Colombia: 4
Czech Republic: 2
Denmark: 1
England: 16
Finland: 6
France: 11
Germany: 3
Hungary: 1
India: 2
Iceland: 2
Italy: 4
Kazakhstan: 1
Latvia: 1
Malaysia: 1
Mexico: 1
Morocco: 1
Norway: 2
Poland: 1
Paraguay: 1
Russia: 1
Scotland: 5 (Gemma Dryburgh, Kelsey Macdonald, Alyson McKechin, Michele Thomson and Jane Turner).
South Africa: 1
Slovakia: 1
Spain: 11
Swaziland: 1
Sweden: 11
Switzerland: 4
Thailand: 3
Chinese Taipei: 1
USA: 5
Labels: LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
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