The Mail on Sunday

Georgia has a Euro fightback in mind

- By Derek Lawrenson

A ROUSING Europe fightback in the evening gloaming means there is nothing to separate the home side and America going into today’s singles of a gripping Solheim Cup.

Losing in all four matches in the afternoon fourballs at 4pm, it looked bleak indeed for Europe, given they’ve never won the trophy when trailing going into the final session. Here, it appeared they would go from one point ahead after three series to two points adrift.

Step forward the brilliant Georgia Hall and her resolute French partner Celine Boutier. They looked for all the world like they would lose their first match together when they fell three down with five holes to play.

But you don’t win a British Open aged 21 without fighting to the end.

A marvellous eagle two from Boutier at the driveable par-four 14th set in train a stunning comeback, as they won every hole from there. They’ve now contribute­d three points from three matches together. With the EnglandGer­many partnershi­p of Jodi Ewart Shadoff and Caroline Masson fighting back to earn a precious half-point, it means the teams are locked on eight points a piece heading into what promises to be a nerve-shredding last day.

There cannot have been too many fourballs sessions in this event containing the drama of the four matches played out in horrendous conditions, with a strong crosswind and driving rain.

Yes, it’s fair to say it was all miles too slow, with matches taking six hours. But you could hardly blame the players for treating every shot like the destinatio­n of the trophy depended on the outcome.

Three of the four fourballs went to the final green, including the top one, which will go down as one of the best matches in this year’s edition. It ended in a defeat for Suzann Pettersen, which was desperatel­y unfair on the valiant Norwegian, who had five birdies in six holes during a high-quality affair.

Alongside her, Anne Van Dam from the Netherland­s got to experience the full gamut of emotions the Solheim can generate. On a high on Friday evening after carrying Pettersen to a fourballs success, here she was the weak link in a crushing one-hole loss.

In the morning foursomes, alongside Anna Nordqvist, she was four up after six holes and a new star had seemingly been found. But the Scandinavi­ans three putted that hole from nowhere and so began a dramatic shift in fortune. Over nine holes they went from four up to three down — and Van Dam never really recovered. It will be some recovery if the longest hitter in women’s golf can win her singles.

What a final day it promises to be.

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