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Gemma’s flying visit from Moffat wins English match-play title
A
flying visit from Scotland paid off for Gemma Batty when the Stirling University student won the
English women’s open match-play championship at Holme Hall in
Lincolnshire.
She
signed off with a birdie as she beat Kent’s Cloe Frankish 4 and 3 in the
final and said: “I am really, really pleased. I have always wanted to
win a national title and to do it like this, without a practice round
and not seeing the course as much as I’d like, is very special.“I knew my game was good but I needed to prove it to myself and I’ve done that this week.”
Batty,
22, is a student at Stirling University and couldn’t get to Holme Hall
in time for a practice round after playing in the World University
Games. But, once through the stroke play stage of the championship,
there was no stopping her.
“I’ve
played really well, very solid,” said Batty, who was born in Leeds,
Yorkshire, and learned her golf at Pike Hills, but is now based in
Scotland where she’s a member at Moffat.
Today,
she made her way past Sophie Madden 2 and 1 in the semi-finals, to meet
English U16 girls’ champion Cloe Frankish in the final.Frankish, 17, (Chart Hills) had a marathon battle to reach the final, eventually defeating Georgina Blackman (Chelmsford) with a birdie on the 21st. It was the second time she had to dig deep to win in extra time during the championship. When the final got underway Batty hit the birdie trail, notching up four by the time the match was over. She quickly got ahead, helped by a chip-in on the fourth, and was two up through five. She lost the eighth but pushed ahead on the back nine – despite a heavy downpour - winning the 11th, 12th and 14th before the 15th was halved in birdie. “I am very happy,” said Batty (Image © Leaderboard Photography), who also defeated Georgina Coughlin (St Annes Old Links) and Lianna Bailey (Kirby Muxloe) in earlier rounds.
Now
she’s off to France for a university match against injured Servicemen
in the Battleback Trophy and then to Croatia for the European University
Games. Batty has also been a member at Trentham in Staffordshire and at
St Annes Old Links in Lancashire before moving to Scotland.
Her ambition is to play for Scotland under the five-year residency clause.
For
Frankish there was great disappointment but now her attention turns to
the prospect of competing in qualifying for the Women’s British Open and
in the English women’s amateur championship at West Lancashire.
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Lyndsey Hewison Press Officer England Golf pr@englandgolf.org 07825 752 193 |
Labels: Amateur Ladies
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