The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Rejuvenate­d Lewis loving return to links golf at Ladies Scottish Open

American claims share of lead with sizzling 66 at Renaissanc­e Club

- STEVE SCOTT

For a good time it seemed that Stacy Lewis might be American golf’s answer to the Korean women’s invasion, but she had other plans.

In 2013 Lewis won the Women’s Open at St Andrews, just five years after she’d gone five-for-five in the Curtis Cup at the Old Course. She was LPGA player of the year in 2012 and 2014, with 11 wins by the end of that year, the same kind of impending dominance that Rory Mcilroy was enjoying in the men’s game at that time.

The surprise is that neither has won a major since. Lewis, now 35, has won just once in the six years on the LPGA Tour – and she gave all her winnings away from that to hurricane relief – had a baby daughter and changed all her priorities.

Not that she can’t get it round pretty well, especially on links courses.

Yesterday in the Aberdeen Standard Investment­s Ladies Scottish Open she returned a brilliant five-under 66 on the Renaissanc­e Club course to claim a share of the lead going into the weekend with Spain’s Azahara Munoz.

Lewis has played pretty well since motherhood, winning a place in last year’s US Solheim Cup team at Gleneagles only to have to withdraw at the 11th hour with a back problem.

Yesterday’s travails – finishing off her first round due to the weather delays, and then playing the second – put some strain on everyone’s back, she joked.

“With Covid stuff, we are not allowed to take buggies, so it was probably a good mile walk through the grass, we came in from there at 9pm and walked back out there early this morning.

“Everybody’s feet are hurting. We were all kind of rubbing our backs at the end. It’s definitely an adventure the last two days.”

She finished off the marathon day with a birdie at 18, however, to set the early mark, and she correctly spots the difference between the new style links like this and the Old Course, her preferred kind.

“It’s not like old ones, St. Andrews, Troon,” she said. “You have some goofier greens, more mounds, more things going on, so you get some weird bounces. It reminds me of Kingsbarns with the elevation changes.”

Lewis was schooled in links golf – and specifical­ly the Old Course – by one of the best, current St Andrews caddie manager Fraser Riddler.

“It was the Curtis Cup at St Andrews, and Fraser was my caddie that week,” she recalled.

“He truly taught me links golf, where to land a pitching wedge and let it bounce out.

“He picked out all these shots for me and helped me visualise things. I really think it was the experience with him and playing the Old Course as many times as we did that week is what made me fall in love with it.”

The lockdown meant Lewis could spend more time with her daughter Chesnee, but it was also good for her.

“The Covid break has done wonders for my golf swing and my body,” she said.

“Even before I was pregnant I had to pull out of tournament­s. And then I go into having Chesnee and you know, just never really get my body back in shape where it needs to be.

“But during this break, I met some ladies at home, they have helped me a lot just understand­ing how my body works and getting inflammati­on out of my joints, and helping me manage the dayto-day and not be hurt so much, and be a little bit more free.

“And it’s helped me understand what’s going on there.”

Munoz did play in the Solheim Cup and made a formidable partnershi­p with Georgia Hall, and the Spaniard is motoring along well after a two-under 69 brought her level with Lewis.

“I’m not getting in any trouble, and I kind of think that’s the key here,” she said.

“It was not the greatest day for home hopes, with leading Scott Gemma Dryburgh’s birdie at 18 salvaging only a four-over 75, sending her to two-over for the championsh­ip.

Kylie Henry looked like doing better at two-under for the day early on in her round, but a poor run of five shots lost in five holes on the back nine pushed her out to four-over.

Best Scottish performanc­e of the day was from Michele Thomson, who was four-under after 10 and eventually came in with a 69, enough to just ease inside the cut mark at five-over.

stscott@dctmedia.co.uk

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 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Stacy Lewis on the second tee yesterday as she carded a five-under 66 to claim a share of the Scottish Ladies Open lead.
Picture: PA. Stacy Lewis on the second tee yesterday as she carded a five-under 66 to claim a share of the Scottish Ladies Open lead.

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