Cape Times

Breakthrou­gh win for India’s Diksha Dagar

- LALI STANDER

INSPIRED BY a magical chip-in on the 16th hole, Indian rookie Diksha Dagar claimed victory in the Investec South African Women’s Open, celebratin­g a maiden Ladies European Tour win in just her fourth profession­al start, at Westlake Golf Club on Saturday.

The 19-year-old left-hander from New Delhi tapped in for par at the final hole for a three-under-par 69 to edge out former three-time champion Lee-Anne Pace by a stroke.

Fellow Ladies European Tour (LET) rookie Esther Henseleit of Germany and Scotland’s Michele Thomson shared third on three-under, with Lydia Hall from Wales and Scotland’s Carly Booth a further shot back in joint fifth.

For most of the final round, the tournament was Pace’s to lose as the nine-time LET champion looked in complete control in front of a vocal home crowd.

She held a three-stroke lead through 12 holes, but a surprise bogey on the par-five 13th cut her advantage to two shots. Dagar, who fired her first birdie at the par-four eighth, made her second at the short 15th to pull within a shot of Pace.

The Indian teenager’s approach at the par-four 16th landed just short of the green, but a precision chip dropped in the hole for a share of the lead. She headed down 18 with a one-stroke lead after Pace let another one slip at 17.

“I just went out today trying to play my normal game,” said the hearing impaired Dagar, who plays with a cochlear implant that helps her hear at close-to-normal levels.

“I really didn’t expect to win, but it happened and I am very happy. I got two lucky breaks towards the end, with a long birdie putt on 15 and then the chip-in on 16. Normally I would just try to chip it close and make the par putt, but this time I had a feeling I could do it and it went in.”

Coming off a tie for fifth in last week’s Women’s New South Wales Open in Australia, Dagar got her tournament off to a nervous start with two double bogeys in the first three holes and signed for an opening round of four-over-par 76.

A flawless second round 66 propelled her into the leading group, and a second consecutiv­e bogey-free round was enough for the former World Deaf Championsh­ip winner to claim her breakthrou­gh.

Victory came with a massive boost to fourth in the LET Order of Merit and the top spot in the LET Rookie of Year Race, but the teenager is keeping her feet on the ground for now.

“My goal for the rest of the season is to just stay focused and take each tournament as it comes,” she said. Pace was gracious in defeat. “Diksha played great and didn’t make a mistake the whole day,” she said. “I’m not too disappoint­ed because I played great golf, but I made two mistakes and they cost me the tournament.”

Despite it being her best finish in her short profession­al career, Henseleit was left with mixed emotions after a bogey at the last dropped her to third.

“At the moment I’m a bit disappoint­ed,” she lamented. “In time I will look back and be quite happy about finishing third. It wasn’t my day.”

GolfRSA Elite Squad player Kajal Mistry lifted the Jackie Mercer Trophy as the amateur winner – marking the fifth successive time that the Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation member has won the leading amateur honours on the Sunshine Ladies Tour this season. The 18-year-old Randpark golfer carded rounds of 73, 76 and 74. A joint-30th finish lifted Mistry to second in the Order of Merit.

 ?? | SHAUN ROY Sunshine Tour ?? DIKSHA DAGAR poses with the SA Women’s Open trophy at Westlake.
| SHAUN ROY Sunshine Tour DIKSHA DAGAR poses with the SA Women’s Open trophy at Westlake.

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