Golf | Women`s Golf

Alexis Thompson © Gallo Images

Thompson wins in Dubai



American teenager Alexis Thompson pulled away from Lee-Anne Pace of South Africa to win the Dubai Ladies Masters by four strokes and become the youngest professional winner on the Ladies European Tour Saturday.

The 16-year-old Thompson chipped in for a birdie on No 9 to take a one-shot lead over Pace and then extended her advantage with four birdies on the back nine to finish on 15-under 273 for the tournament. Pace (69) started strong with two birdies and an eagle on her first six holes but shaky putting on the back nine ended her chances.

"It feels amazing," Thompson said after her second professional victory. "I'm just honoured they invited me back and I'm just grateful to be here. I've been working on my game really hard and it has paid off. I'm just going to continue working hard and just try to improve every tournament."

Pace, the 2010 European Tour money winner, said she started to lose focus on the back nine and felt the victory eluded her when her approach shot on No 12 went over the green resulting in her second bogey in five holes.

"I am pretty happy. At the end of the day, I played pretty well and kept my composure," she said. "Things could have been a little different. I hit a bad club on 12 which cost me a shot and that is where things changed around."

Sophie Gustafson of Sweden (71) was a shot behind Pace in third place followed by four players a further shot back.

American Michelle Wie (72) came into the final round five shots off the pace and fell out of contention with two bogeys and a double-bogey on the front nine. She finished tied for 12th.

"It was pretty frustrating. I couldn't get my putts going," Wie said. "I just needed to play better on the front nine all week. Nothing really went. Nothing went in. At least, I finished birdie birdie. I gotta work on a lot of things for next season."

FINAL SCORES

273 - Alexis Thompson (USA) 70-66-70-67

277 - Lee-Anne Pace (RSA) 69-72-67-69

278 - Sophie Gustafson (SWE) 71-67-69-71

279 - Pernilla Lindberg (SWE) 72-68-68-71, Stacy Lee Bregman (RSA) 68-73-68-70, Becky Morgan (WAL) 70-69-70-70

281 - Julieta Granada (PAR) 68-71-70-72, Alison Walshe (USA) 70-74-68-69

282 - Georgina Simpson (ENG) 72-70-73-67, Florentyna Parker (ENG) 72-70-71-69, Caroline Hedwall (SWE) 75-69-68-70

283 - Lydia Hall (WAL) 72-74-69-68, Christel Boeljon (NED) 69-72-73-69, Margherita Rigon (ITA) 70-68-74-71, Michelle Wie (USA) 73-67-71-72, Sara Brown (USA) 71-71-72-69

284 - Louise Larsson (SWE) 71-69-77-67, Minea Blomqvist (FIN) 68-73-75-68, Louise Stahle (SWE) 72-70-71-71, Linda Wessberg (SWE) 68-73-71-72, Carlota Ciganda (ESP) 71-72-69-72,

Selected
285 - Melissa Reid (ENG) 72-71-72-70

286 - Anna Nordqvist (SWE) 75-72-68-71

292 - Christina Kim (USA) 73-74-71-74

Report Day 1
Report Day 2
Report Day 3

Shop

Tiger Woods: How I Play Golf
'How I Play Golf' by Tiger Woods - in his own words: 'A master class with the world's greatest golfer'
R279.95
The big miss
The big miss - My Years Coaching Tiger Woods
R251.95
Think like a Caddie...Play like a Pro
Golf's Top Caddies Reveal Their Winning Strategies
R241.95


Comments

More expert analysis and opinion from Sport24
The opinions expressed by Sport24 experts and bloggers are theirs alone, and do not necessarily represent those of SuperSport

Sports Talk



Golf guest
Slow play needs solution - fast
In more peaceful times, when Tiger Woods had gone six months without losing and golf seemed to...

Reuters on Golf
Phil, Tiger - two sides of golfing coin
Rarely has the contrast between golf as an enjoyable game and torturous frustration been as evident...