Sweden’s Anna Nordqvist on Sunday became the oldest winner on the youthful LPGA Tour this year when she successfully defended her title at the ShopRite LPGA Classic in New Jersey.
Nordqvist, who started the final round two strokes behind overnight leader Karine Icher of France, stormed to victory with a brilliant seven-under-par 64 in strong winds at the Stockton Seaview Golf Club in Galloway.
She did not miss a green in regulation until the par-five 18th, where she made amends for a poor approach shot by curling home a 12-foot par putt.
Photo: AP
Nordqvist finished at 17-under-par 196, one stroke ahead of Japan’s Haru Nomura (66).
Icher did not do a lot wrong, but a closing 69 was only good enough to earn her third place, three strokes behind the winner.
Taiwan’s Cheng Ssu-chia carded a final-round even-par 71 to finish tied for 31st and Hsu Wei-ling tied for 45th with a four-under 209 total.
Nordqvist, who turns 29 on Friday, is not exactly ancient, but it speaks volumes of the youth movement in women’s golf that she became the oldest winner this year by five years.
All previous 14 LPGA events this year had been won by players 23 or younger, with Lydia Ko the youngest winner at the age of 18 years, 11 months when she won consecutive tournaments in late March and early April.
“It feels really special, because I’ve been playing pretty good all spring,” Nordqvist said after collecting her sixth LPGA victory and becoming the first player to win back-to-back at the ShopRite in the 28-year history of the tournament.
“I just haven’t really got any results, and it really got frustrating there for a while,” she said.
“My caddie just told me to stay patient and so did the rest of my team, because they knew how well I was playing, getting really zero out of it. Sometimes the longer you have to wait and the more patient you have to stay, the sweeter it feels when it finally pays off,” she added.
Nordqvist also spoke of the caliber of competition provided by the wave of young players.
“There’s just so many good players these days, and at their age of 18 and 19, I wasn’t even close to being as good as they were,” Nordqvist said.
Nordqvist also became the first European winner in almost a year, since Suzann Pettersen of Norway claimed the Manulife LPGA Classic in June last year.
The tour has been dominated this year by Asian players.
South Korean-born players have picked up seven victories, including a pair by Ko, who is now a citizen of New Zealand.
Lexi Thompson remains the only US winner. Her victory came in Asia at the Honda LPGA Thailand tournament.
The LPGA Tour next heads to the second major of the year, the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship starting at Sahalee Country Club outside Seattle on Thursday.
Additional reporting by staff writer
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