Rolex RankingsRolexCurtis Cup - Bandon Dunes 2006

Championships - Girls' International Matches 2008

« Back to news indexNews for this championship

Panmure Golf Club

07.08.2008

England wins Stroyan Cup at Panmure with victory over Wales.

ENGLAND WIN STROYAN CUP
England’s 7-2 win over Wales on the final day of the Girls Home Internationals clinched the recapture of the title and the Stroyan Cup which had been in Scotland’s possession for the past two years.
On another wet day at Panmure Golf Club, England swept the foursomes – as they did against the Scots on Wednesday – and then took the singles 4-2 from Wales.
That meant the English finished with a 100 per cent record through the three days, having earlier beaten first Ireland and then Scotland.
The balance of Under-18 power has swung back to England who had that strength in depth advantage over the other countries. England’s skipper Julie Brown relied in the main on a nucleus of six players over the three days.
Ireland beat the Scots 5-4 today, coming back from 2-1 down at lunchtime, to take the Swansea Spoon as runners-up with one win (over Scotland) and one draw (with Wales).
Scotland slipped down to third place with one win (over Wales) and two defeats.
And so the pecking order established in the recent European girls’ team championship was more or less confirmed. England were beaten finalists at Murcar Links with Ireland seventh, Wales 16th and Scotland 17th of 19.
English women’s champion Hannah Barwood and Holly Clyburn built on the 3-0 foursomes lead to get their team’s points total up to the winning figure of five.
Hannah, who birdied the first and fourth holes to jump into a two-hole lead, went on to beat Wales’ Chloe Williams by 5 and 3. Chloe raised her hopes by winning the 10th and 11th but Barwood bounced back by winning four holes in a row from the 12th for a 5 and 3 victory.
Clyburn started like an express train on her way to a 7 and 5 win against Laura Watkins. The English player won the first three holes, halved the fourth and then took the next three holes to be six up on the eighth tee. Watkins stemmed the tide, if only momentarily by winning the eighth.
But Clyburn was not to be derailed. She won the ninth and 11th – lost the 12th – but won the 13th to end the match.
Katherine O’Connor put a point on the board for Wales by beating newcomer Katie Mundy 3 and 2. After losing the first hole, O’Connor won five out of seven holes in a row from the fourth to get into the driving seat and stay there.
Welsh girls champion Amy Boulden doubled the Welsh points tally with a 3 and 2 win over Heidi Baek. Amy took a grip on the match early on by winning the first, second, fifth and sixth, losing only the fourth. Heidi hung on in there to cut her deficit to one hole at the 11th but Boulden finished just the stronger, taking the 13th, 16th and 17th to Baek’s win at the 15th.
In the battle of the “Kellys,” Tidy of England beat Miller of Wales by 2 and 1. Kelly Tidy was never headed after winning the third but it was all square after seven and it was the English player’s successes at the 10th, 12th and 16th that proved crucial in the final analysis.
Rachel Connor, daughter of the Scots-born Manchester pro, gained England’s seventh point of the day with a 2 and 1 win over Natasha Gobey who mounted a little comeback after being four down at the turn but could not improve on a deficit of two holes.

Scotland started their singles with a one-point lead over Ireland and Kelsey MacDonald made it 3-1 with an impressive 7 and 6 win over Ireland’s Sarah Crowe, a performance by the Scot that included three birdies. That was completed at 3.20pm – and it was almost another two hours before Scotland got their only other win in the singles.
Sarah Cunningham, promoted to the No 1 singles position in the absence of the injured Leona Maguire, the Irish women’s champion, scored her only win of the three days – but it was a notable scalp she claimed. Sarah beat Scots girls champion and Junior Ryder Cup player Carly Booth by 4 and 3, having been four up at the turn.
On a holes-won count, Sarah had a 7-3 advantage over her much more highly-rated opponent.
Lisa Maguire, the Irish girls title-holder, dropped down to the No 3 slot outclassed Sammy Vass with a 5 and 3 scoreline, rounding off the match by winning the 12th, 13th, 14th and 15th, and Emma O’Driscoll was also a handsome winner, by 7 and 6 over Annabel Niven. Emma did not lose a hole and was four up after seven. She ended the tie by winning the 10th, 11th and 12th.
Stephanie Meadow got the winning fifth point for Ireland, beating Rebecca Wilson by 3 and 2 in a match that was very tight for a long spell after Rebecca cancelled out Stephanie’s wins at the first two holes. Successes at the 12th, 15th and 16th tipped the scales in favour of the US-based Irish girl.
Scotland won the last tie to finish with 14-year-old Lesley Atkins, who was three times two down, battling on strongly to win four holes in a row from the 12th, losing the 16th and then clinching a two-hole win by winning the 18th.
Six players finished the tournament with five wins out of six.
England had three with that fine record – Holly Cluburn, Rachel Connor and Kelly Tidy. The others sharing the “Most Valuable Player” honour were Scotland’s Kelsey MacDonald, Ireland’s Lisa Maguire and Amy Boulden of Wales.



Scotland shaded the morning foursomes 2-1 against Ireland while England, for the second day in a row, made a clean sweep of their foursomes, this time 3-0 against Wales.
The loss of their national women’s champion, Leona Maguire, with a back injury was a blow to Ireland as they met Scotland in the contest which looked like deciding who would be runners-up to England.
Sarah Cunningham replaced Leona as foursomes partner to 13-year-old twin sister Lisa Maguire in the first tie off the tee on another very wet morning at Panmure Golf Club.
Scotland’s top pairing of their Under-18 girls champion Carly Booth and
Under-21 title-holder Kelsey MacDonald beat the make-shift Irish pairing by 4 and 2 after winning the second, third, fourth and seventh in teeming rain.
Sarah and Lisa did win the fifth, eighth and 10TH to be one down on the 11th tee but after a couple of halved holes, the Scots pulled away again with successes at the 13th, 15th and 16th.
It was Lisa Maguire’s first defeat after four wins through four sessions of play.
Scotland went 2-0 up when Annabel Niven and Lesley Atkins beat Stephanie Meadow and Sarah Louise Winter by 3 and 2. The key stretch in this tie saw the Scots win the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth to move from one down to four up at the turn.
It was a first win in the tournament for bo th the young Scots.
Ireland kept their hopes alive by restricting Scotland to a one-point lunchtime lead. Ireland’s Patrice Delaney and Emma O’Driscoll won the 18th to finish one up on Rebecca Wilson and Sammy Vass after a ding-dong struggle.
The Scots were two up after 13 but Delaney and O’Driscoll won the 14th and 15, lost the 16th to go one down again but won the last two holes.
English women’s champion Hannah Barwood and Holly Clyburn staged a grandstand finish to win the last three holes for a two-hole win over the Welsh pair of girls champion Amy Boulden and Katherine O’Connor in the top foursome.
It was a see-saw match in which Barwood and Clyburn won the fifth and sixth to two up after the third and fourth holes had been exchanged.
Boulden and O’Connor squared matters with successes at the ninth and 11th and the Welsh pair went one up for the first time at the 14th.
After the 15th was halved, Barwood and Clyburn squared the tie at the 16th, went one up at the 17th and, with a birdie 3, clinched their victory by taking the 18th for a two-hole win.
It was Amy Boulden’s first reverse after four wins.
Rachel Connor and Heidi Baek advanced England’s morning lead to 2-0 by beating Kelly Miller and Gemma Bradbury 2 and 1. The Welsh pair won the second and fifth to go two up but Connor and Baek levelled it by winning the sixth and seventh.
Then20the English pair went two up by taking the 10th and 12th . Miller and Bradbury cut their deficit to one by winning the 13th but that was their last success. Connor and Baek went two up again at the 14th and halved their way from there.
Kelly Tidy and Alex Peters made it a comprehensive 3-0 foursomes win for England by beating Natasha Gobey and Laura Watkins 3 and 1 in the last tie to finish. Tidy and Peters lost the first and third holes but won the second and then took the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh for a three-hole lead.
The Welsh won the eighth but Tidy and Peters regained a three-hole lead at the ninth.
The English advantage increased to four holes at the 13th.

Do you have comments or questions about the LGU?

Ladies' Golf Union, The Scores, St. Andrews, Fife, KY16 9AT
Tel: 01334 475811, Fax: 01334 472818

Website design by Cite

LGU Championship Statistics

Entries, draws, scores and results from any 2006 event