Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Evian bids farewell to Sept., and hopefully its weather

- By Graham Dunbar

EVIAN-LES-BAINS, France — The Evian Championsh­ip will bid farewell to September, and hopefully its bad weather, when the final women's golf major of the season starts Thursday.

It's the final edition of Evian before it reverts to its former July slot in 2019, a move that players hope will avoid more weather-hit days like last year's opening round — which was wiped out by a severe storm.

However, rain and possible thundersto­rms are forecast for the first round at the picturesqu­e hillside course overlookin­g Lake Geneva, after Wednesday's final practice was held in sunshine and 83-degree heat.

“It deserves to be played in great conditions,” defending champion Anna Nordqvist said Wednesday.

Nordqvist won her second career major last year in a playoff through a hailstorm that was chilling even to a native Swede.

“Everyone who has grown up in Europe knows that September can be a little sketchy. July is going to be great,” she said.

The 2017 edition saw Thursday's round stopped because of the storm before all scores were struck and a Friday restart was ordered. Twice in its five years as a major, Evian became a 54-hole event.

Evian is also the last chance for the United States to win a women's major this season. The previous four went to Europe or Asia: The ANA Inspiratio­n to Pernilla Lindberg of Sweden, the U.S. Women's Open to secondrank­ed Ariya Jutanugarn of Thailand, the U.S. Women's PGA to top-ranked Sung Hyun Park of South Korea, and a crowd-pleasing English win for Georgia Hall at the British Women's Open.

The top-ranked American, No. 5 Lexi Thompson, is seeking her first title in 2018 and skipped the British Open last month. Thompson, the runner-up here in 2015, wrote on Instagram that she wanted “to recharge my mental batteries, and to focus on myself away from the game of profession­al golf.”

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