Friday, 21 June 2013

NEWS: INIZIANO I CAMPIONATI RAGAZZI/E “TROFEO MARAZZA”

 http://www.fairwayladies.it/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Farina-Ludovica-1-grande.jpg  




Al via, al GC Villa Condulmer, dal 19 al 21 giugno, i Campionati Nazionali Ragazzi/Ragazze – Trofeo Silvio Marazza, riservati a giovani nati dopo il 1 gennaio 1995. Al campionato femminile parteciperanno 86 concorrenti. Cercheranno di sfruttare la perfetta conoscenza del campo le due giocatrici di casa, Ludovica Farina e Giulia Caratolo, tra le altre Camilla Mortigliengo, Carlotta Ricolfi e Lucrezia Colombotto Rosso (Sanremo), Martina Flori (Montelupo), Camilla Mazzola (Villa d’Este), Camilla Acquarone (Rapallo) e Francesca Avanzini (Monticello). Le gare si svolgeranno sulla distanza di 72 buche medal. Dopo 36 il taglio promuoverà ai due giri finali, che avranno luogo nella stessa giornata, i primi 40 classificati e i pari merito al 40° posto. - See more at: http://www.fairwayladies.it/news-iniziano-i-campionati-ragazzie-trofeo-marazza/#sthash.gUTvqNCC.93knkV55.dpuf

 NEWS: INIZIANO I CAMPIONATI RAGAZZI/E “TROFEO MARAZZA”

Monday, 10 June 2013

LETAS: successo per la francese Cassandra Kirkland vicino a Parigi Ottimo 4° posto per Elisabetta Bertini


 kirkland_2  

La francese Cassandra Kirkland (69-68-72=209) ha vinto il Fourqueux Ladies Open, giocato nei pressi di Parigi, mantenendo i 4 colpi di distacco che aveva prima dell’ultima giornata. La Kirkland, che ha iniziato il giro finale in 7 sotto il par, sembrava controllare tranquillamente l’andamento della gara, soprattutto grazie ai birdies alle buche 5 e 6 che le hanno permesso di raggiungere un ragguardevole -9. La francese, a causa di un doppio bogey, ha ceduto leggermente solo sul par 5 dell’ottava buca e per colpa del bogey alla 12, ma si è ripresa in fretta con un birdie alla par3 della 13. La Kirkland, che aveva vinto il LET Sanya Ladies Open in Cina lo scorso ottobre, ha giocato le restanti 5 buche in par e questo le ha permesso di ottenere la vittoria. La Spagnola Patricia Sanz Barrio (73-71-69) ha ottenuto il 2° posto parimerito con l’inglese Charlotte Wild (71-75-67) in 3 sotto il par, confermando il suo buon momento di forma. La spagnola aveva bisogno di un par alla buca finale per finire seconda da sola ma il suo tee shot è finito a destra del green della 18 e non le sono bastati un chip e putt. Nonostante la delusione la 22enne dilettante spagnola è a pochissimi punti dalla vetta dell’Order of Merit (guidato dalla connazionale Mireia Prat) e ha ottenuto un prestigioso invito per il Lacoste Ladies Open valevole per il Ladies European Tour, che si giocherà nel mese di settembre al Chantaco Golf Club. La rookie inglese Charlotte Wild ha ottenuto il miglior punteggio di giornata, con un impressionante 5 sotto il par, in 67. La Wild non ha fatto alcun bogey sulle prime 9, segnando birdies alle buche 1,3,5 e 7 per chiudere il turno in 4 sotto il par. La golfista del Cheshire, grazie ancora ai birdies sulle buche 10 e 12 arrivava a 3 colpi della leader. Purtroppo due bogeys nelle ultime sei buche hanno fermato la sua corsa, ma il suo è il miglior score da quando è professionista. Ottimo il risultato della nostra Elisabetta Bertini (74-71-70) che si è classificata 4a insieme all’australiana Bree Arthur (71-70-74). Al 6° posto, parimerito, la tedesca Steffi Kirchmayr (76-68-72) e la ceca Daniela Prorokova (70-72-74). Buono anche il 14° posto di Anna Rossi (72-77-71); 35a Laura Sedda (75-74-77). Non hanno superato il taglio Chiara Brizzolari (77-74), Vittoria Valvassori (79-77), Alessandra Averna (77-80) e Martina Migliori (79-79). Ora Elisabetta Bertini con il 12° posto nell’Order of Merit con 4633 punti è la nostra miglior rappresentante. LET Access Series ritornerà, per l’Ingaro Ladies Open dal 25 al 27 Luglio, in Svezia.
a cura di G. Rondolotti

 LETAS: successo per la francese Cassandra Kirkland vicino a Parigi Ottimo 4° posto per Elisabetta Bertini

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

LET Access Series - Jamila Jaxaliyeva flying the flag for Kazhakstan

   

She was born in Kazhakstan, studies in Switzerland and speaks four languages. Meet 22-year-old amateur golfer Jamila Jaxaliyeva, who is hoping to represent Kazakhstan at the 2016 Summer Olympic Games.
Jaxaliyeva teed up in the 2013 Turkish Airlines Ladies Open at National Golf Club after receiving an invitation from event Promoter Mineks International. Although she was ill and missed the cut after rounds of 84 and 79, she feels that this was the start of a bigger journey: to Rio2016.
Her next stop will be France, where she is competing at the Fourqueux Ladies Open on June 6-8 and Wales, where she will be the first Kazakh ever to play for the British Women's Amateur title.
The confident Kazakh had a late introduction to golf, by Vladimir Shkolnik, professor of theoretical physics and one of the founders of golf in Kazakhstan, when she was aged 15. Her golfing education has been somewhat unorthodox, as she is coached by her father, Magzhan, an engineer who is very technically minded. The Kazakh President, Nursultan Nazarbayev, who is a passionate golfer himself, gifted her first set of clubs and follows all of her results in tournaments.
An extremely talented mathematician, Jaxaliyeva recently decided to take a year out from her maths degree at the public University of Geneva to pursue her dream and concentrate on golf full-time.
She has been playing on the Suncoast Series in America and is planning to turn professional in August. Determined to become Kazakhstan’s first prominent golfer, she will attend qualifying school for the Symetra Tour in the USA in August before taking a third attempt at the LET’s Tour School for 2014.
“I’m hoping to be a popular golf player creating a good image for Kazakhstan and maybe the second person after Borat!” she said. “Maybe have a second option for what to think of for Kazakhstan, also Jamila: that would be great!
“I’m the first girl from Kazakhstan to play at the international level. I’d like to be the ambassador of it, introducing more golf to the country. We have lots of young kids that are playing already, seven, eight year olds with loads of talent, so I think that generation might bear fruit.”
Jamila's dream is to host a co-sanctioned event between the LET and LPGA in the capital of Kazakhstan Astana to give more impulsion to the sport’s development. She cites Lorena Ochoa as a big inspiration, not only in golf, but also her humanitarian work in Mexico.
Kazakhstan is the ninth largest country in the world and shares borders with Russia, China and has access to the Caspian Sea. The country is partly European, partly Asian, not only geographically but also culturally. Many ethnicities, religions and nationalities live together peacefully.
There are currently seven golf courses in the country and many more are under construction. The Kazakh golf association is planning to construct the most modern and ecologically friendly golf course in the world for the upcoming 2017 Expo which will be staged in Astana.
There are three teaching professionals in Kazakhstan but 14-year-old Daulet Tuleubayev is perhaps the country’s most famous golfing export after he led the International Junior Golf Tour’s under-14 Rankings and competed in the Kazakhstan Open on the Challenge Tour in 2012.  Three of Jaxaliyeva’s cousins, Issatay and Nurtay Jaxaliyev and Laura Kadyrova, are also making swift progress under the tutelage of her father, but she has the unique opportunity to become the first touring golf professional from one of the fastest growing economies in the world.
“My goal, obviously, is the Olympic Games in 2016. That’s really my plan. That’s why I took a year off because taking three semesters off golf was impossible for me because if you want to go to the Olympics you cannot just not play golf for a year and then get back,” she said.
“For the Olympics, the top 15 in the world ranking gets in; if I’m top 15 it would be great. I would like to go into the Olympic Games being the top, but first of all I have to get in, qualify, turn pro, you know, step by step. That’s my goal.
“We have the Expo in 2017 so it would be great to have the gold medal and get my country into the spotlight. That would be great. The Olympics is huge in Kazakhstan. In London, we won so many medals, we were better than many other countries, so we were really proud, so I hope that will work out if health and everything is good.”









LET Access Series - Jamila Jaxaliyeva flying the flag for Kazhakstan

Ladies European Tour (LET) - Anne Lise Caudal: La Solheim Cup dans un coin de la tête

   

A deux mois et demi de la prochaine Solheim Cup, qui se déroulera dans le Colorado à la mi-août, le joueuse basque ne se fait pas trop d’illusions au regard de son mauvais début de saison. Mais elle garde tout de même espoir d’intégrer l’équipe européenne qui défendra son titre acquis il y a deux ans en Irlande.
Anne Lise ne se raconte pas d’histoires : pour faire partie de l’équipe européenne qui défendra son titre sur le parcours du Colorado Golf Club, dans la semaine du 13 au 18 août, elle est condamnée à obtenir une série de très bons résultats sur les tournois à venir pour engranger des points. Mais cela tombe bien puisqu’elle joue cette semaine l’Open d’Allemagne qu’elle remportait brillamment l’an dernier, après un play-off qui l’opposait à la grande Laura Davies.
« Je me sens bien ici, à Munich, où j’ai forcément beaucoup de souvenirs de l’an passé, ça me met en confiance, se réjouit Anne Lise Caudal. En plus, j’ai été très bien accueillie en tant que tenante du titre. J’ai participé à la cérémonie d’ouverture, j’ai été pas mal sollicitée par les organisateurs mais ils ont veillé à ne pas perturber ma préparation. Et j’ai plutôt bien joué le pro-am. »
L’idéal serait bien sûr qu’elle renouvelle sa victoire cette année mais aucune joueuse n’ignore la difficulté que cela représente de remporter deux fois de suite la même épreuve. La joueuse de Ciboure, la petite ville où elle est née en 1984, ne pense pas à ça : « J’ai bien sûr envie de bien faire, mais je ne pense pas à une victoire. Je vois les choses jour après jour, je ne me focalise pas sur le dernier tour. »
Anne Lise ne ressent pas de pression particulière du fait de défendre son titre, elle sait trop que son sport comprend une part d’éléments aléatoires. « En golf, on ne sait jamais ce qui peut arriver, annonce-t-elle. L’an dernier, j’avais commencé par jouer 2 coups au-dessus du par lors du premier jour pour faire trois tours en - 5 les trois derniers jours ! Il peut toujours y avoir des surprises et on n’est pas toute seule sur le parcours. Il faut être patiente. »
Le problème de la joueuse française est qu’elle a fait un début de saison peu encourageant : des huit tournois qu’elle a joué, elle n’a passé le cut qu’à trois reprises et son meilleur résultat est une place de 37e. Alors qu’elle était 13e au classement des points Solheim Cup à la fin de la saison précédente, elle n’occupe désormais que le 24e rang.
Que s’est-il donc passé entre la fin 2012 et les premiers mois de 2013 ? Anne Lise impute son passage à vide à une mauvaise organisation de son calendrier : « Je pense que j’ai démarré la saison trop tôt. L’an dernier, j’avais fait l’impasse sur les tournois  en Australie et j’avais mis à profit cette période pour très bien préparer ma saison. Au début de cette saison, je pense que je n’étais pas prête. J’ai tenté le coup quand même et ça ne m’a pas trop réussi. »
De fait, en 2012, l’Open d’Allemagne était seulement son cinquième tournoi de la saison alors que, cette année, elle dispute à Munich sa neuvième épreuve. Avoir des mauvais résultats n’est un drame en soi mais cela peut entraîner des conséquences fâcheuses : « Le fait de mal jouer en début de saison m’a fait perdre confiance et, petit à petit, de fil en aiguille, j’ai aussi perdu le plaisir de jouer », avoue Anne Lise.
Ce changement dans ses habitudes a donc été un facteur de déséquilibre chez cette jeune femme qui a au contraire besoin de stabilité. Née à Ciboure, elle y réside toujours, tout près du parcours qui l’a vu naître au golf, celui de La Nivelle. Mieux encore, dans ces périodes où la tendance serait plutôt à l’inconstance, elle s’entraîne toujours avec Jean-Bernard Lecuona, ce pro de La Nivelle qui l’avait initiée au golf.
« J’ai en effet besoin de stabilité, admet Anne Lise. Le rôle de ma famille et de mes amis est très important, pour moi c’est une ressource fondamentale. Et je suis très attachée au Pays Basque. » Voilà un sentiment qui la rapproche de deux autres joueuses, basques elles aussi mais originaires de l’autre côté des Pyrénées, Tania Elosegui et Carlota Ciganda.
« On se connaît depuis très longtemps avec Tania, depuis qu’on est gamines. Elle a joué dans mon club, à La Nivelle. Carlota est plus jeune, mais c’est aussi une très bonne relation et quand on est toutes au Pays Basque, on essaie de se retrouve pour faire une partie ensemble. Et on aimerait le faire plus souvent. »
En revanche, Anne Lise n’a jamais eu de caddy basque, ni français d’ailleurs. Mais cela représente néanmoins un avantage à ses yeux : « Ça me permet d’améliorer ma maîtrise de l’anglais, même si je le parle avec l’accent basque », s’amuse-t-elle. Ah, si plusieurs tournois du LET pouvaient se jouer au Pays Basque ! Ce serait moins difficile de se qualifier pour la Solheim Cup.
Mademoiselle Caudal ne se souvient pas très bien de la première fois qu’elle a entendu parler de cette épreuve qui oppose tous les deux ans des équipes européenne et américaine. « Je ne sais pas précisément quand c’était, mais je sais que j’étais encore une joueuse amateur. C’était probablement au cours d’un déplacement pour un tournoi dans le cadre de l’équipe de France. Mais je me souviens très bien que j’avais un DVD sur la Solheim Cup avant de passer professionnelle. »
Cela fait donc longtemps que Anne Lise pense à cette épreuve : « Représenter l’Europe, qui plus dans une forme de jeu en équipe, ce doit être génial ! Même à la télévision, l’ambiance que l’on ressent est extrêmement forte. C’est un rêve de jouer une Solheim Cup, et même plusieurs ! Après chaque édition, les filles qui l’ont jouée en parlent beaucoup et ça donne encore plus envie d’y participer. »
Son attirance est telle que, à choisir, elle préférerait jouer une Solheim Cup que performer dans un tournoi Majeur : « Bien, réussir une belle performance dans un Majeur fait envie, mais je pense que je suis plus tentée par une Solheim Cup. C’est quelque chose qui est vraiment ancré très fort dans un coin de ma tête. »
Mais pour l’heure, la priorité d’Anne Lise est retrouver confiance et plaisir de jouer, de façon à compléter au plus vite un palmarès qui compte pour le moment l’Open du Portugal, gagné en 2008, et l’Open d’Allemagne 2012. « J’espère que le déclic se fera cette semaine à Munich ! »
Ladies European Tour (LET) - Anne Lise Caudal: La Solheim Cup dans un coin de la tête

Ladies European Tour (LET) - Hull to be star attraction at ISPS Handa Ladies European Masters

   

English youngster Charley Hull’s arrival on the professional golf scene has been simply spectacular. In the five events she has played so far this season, she has been runner-up five times – believed to be an LET record - and it cannot be long before she earns her breakthrough win.
The 17-year-old from Northamptonshire moved to the top of the ISPS Handa Order of Merit on the Ladies European Tour after her second place finish at the Deloitte Ladies Open in the Netherlands a fortnight ago.
After a play-off defeat to last year’s European No.1 Carlota Ciganda in the UniCredit Ladies German Open presented by Audi over the weekend, she is no doubt that she is the LET’s hottest player and there is now a strong possibility of her becoming the youngest ever player to represent Europe on this year’s Solheim Cup team.
Hull started the season with a conditional card for the Ladies European Tour having just missed out on the top 30 at Tour School in December, but since finishing second to Ariya Jutanugarn at the Lalla Meryem Cup in Morocco, she has not slipped outside the top 20 on the LET’s ISPS Handa Order of Merit, with additional joint second place finishes at the South African Women’s Open and Turkish Airlines Ladies Open.
She learned the ropes as a 16-year-old amateur last year, when invited to play in four professional tournaments including the Turkish Airlines Ladies Open, where she tied for fifth, the Irish Ladies Open, where she tied for 18th, ISPS Handa Ladies British Masters at Buckinghamshire Golf Club, where she tied for 18th and Kraft Nabisco Championship, a major championship on the LPGA Tour, where she tied for 38th position.
She would love for nothing more than to win her home tournament this summer when the ISPS Handa Ladies European Masters is played on July 26-28 at Buckinghamshire Golf Club, just a short drive from her home in Kettering.
“I’m really looking forward to it, it should be really, really good, playing in front of a home crowd, not too far from where I live, about an hour,” Hull said.
“A few of my friends and family from Kettering will come down and I’ll just do my normal preparation, nothing more, nothing less.”
Hull, a member of the victorious GB&I Curtis Cup team at Nairn Golf Club last summer, is desperate to qualify for the European Solheim Cup team and was captained by the European skipper Liselotte Neumann in the PING Junior Solheim Cup in Ireland.
Hull’s mentor, Tony Jacklin, who led the European Ryder Cup team the first time they won in America in 1987, is confident that she has the game to qualify, or be one of the four wild card picks.
Hull recently spent time with Jacklin in America and speaking from his Miami home, he said: “She’s a real winner this girl; she’s terrific. You don’t see that kind of dedication and ability that she’s got very often and I knew already that she just wants to win golf tournaments. She’s a very unusual girl and I think she’s going to dominate.
“We got the chance to play quite a bit with some other professionals and everybody was saying that she’s exceptional. I think that she’s a world beater, I really do.
“There’s no way if she stays healthy that she’s not going to be on that team; I can promise you that. She’s a phenom, this young lady and she’s so driven to be as good as she can be. I talked to her for many hours about her attitude and some of the things that I believe are important. She went off with some books that I gave her to read and she’s hungry for knowledge. She had tremendous confidence. She’s going to be a good asset and I’ve got absolutely no doubt in my mind that she’ll be part of that team.”
 Ladies European Tour (LET) - Hull to be star attraction at ISPS Handa Ladies European Masters

Sunday, 2 June 2013

Enhorabuena Carlota! UniCredit Ladies German Open winner

Photo: We have the winner here! Enhorabuena Carlota!


Carotta Ciganda won the UniCredit German Ladies Open 2013 in Munic via extrahole. Due to bad weather they had serveral breaks before. Hole 15 Spain's Carlotta birdied against Charley Hul. Besides the money
she won a Audi Q5


  


SHARMA NICOLLET



Sharmila Nicollet registered her best result ever on the Ladies European Tour with a tie for 17th at the Turkish Airlines Ladies Open.
Nicollet, who was lying 38th at the end of the third round, vaulted up the leader board with a final round of one-under 72 despite a double bogey and a bogey in the middle of the round.
This was Nicollet’s first cut of the year and will give her a lot of confidence in the coming season, which is only in its early stages. We caught up with her for a quick-fire 18.
Sharmila said:
Who is your inspiration? Mom
What golfers do you admire the most? Tiger Woods and Adam Scott!
What’s the biggest change you’ve noticed in golf the last 10 years: Looking back to the turn of the century, the evolution in golf equipment and training aids, custom fitting, knowledge about golf specific fitness training and dietary regimes (top players are now rightly regarded as athletes), qualified coaches and academies,  courses have become longer and often tighter at tour level. As a result players are peaking much earlier making the tours much more competitive and also has enabled many of us to become better players.
If I wasn’t a pro golfer, I’d be: An athlete: a swimmer, or a fashion designer or perfumer.
The favourite hole for me to play is: Par 5s - eye candy!
My favourite course is: Berkshire and Torrey Pines.
When I’m not working, I like: TV shows, music, reading, dinners and spas.
The most common question I get is: Are you a model?
Funniest question I’ve had is: I've lost my number, can I have yours?
The favourite places my golf travels have taken me is: Bangkok, Cannes, South Africa, Prague, Tenerife, Turkey.
One piece of advice is: The harder you practice the luckier you get.
Funniest thing that’s happened to me on the golf course: Chased by a snake, tripped over a ball and fell backwards during a tournament.
Favourite websites: Ted, Stumbleupon, Piccsy, Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr.
Shot I love to practice: Driving!
My workouts are: Yoga, cardio, weight training and swimming.
Words I live by: Draw a line and live above it.