2022 Espirito Santo Trophy
Albatros Course at Le Golf National
Tournament information
Dates24–27 August
LocationGuyancourt, France
48°45′12″N 2°04′32″E / 48.7532°N 2.0755°E / 48.7532; 2.0755
Course(s)Le Golf National (Albatros course)
Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche (Red course)
Organized byWorld Amateur Golf Council
Format72 holes stroke play
Statistics
Par71 (Le Golf National)
72 (Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Brèteche)
Length6,317 yards (5,776 m) (Le Golf National)
6,160 yards (5,630 m) (Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Brèteche)
Field56 teams
168 players
Champion
 Sweden
Ingrid Lindblad, Meja Örtengren, Louise Rydqvist
559 (−13)
Location Map
Location in France
Location in Île-de-France

The 2022 Espirito Santo Trophy took place 24–27 August at Le Golf National and Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche south-west of Paris, France.[1][2]

It was the 29th women's golf World Amateur Team Championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy.

Format

The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event. Each team of three players played two rounds at Le Golf National and two rounds at Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche in different orders. The top teams played their final round on Le Golf National, The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total.

Venues

Le Golf National had previously hosted the Open de France every year except two since 1991, the 2018 Ryder Cup and the 1994 Eisenhower Trophy and Espirito Santo Trophy. The facility was scheduled to host the golfing competition during the Olympics in 2024.

Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche had previously hosted the Open de France three times and the 1963 Canada Cup, an event later renamed the World Cup.

Course layouts

Le Golf National (Albatros Course)

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Metre3221264553573513323611724812,9573221323423394563431324043482,8185,775
Yards3521384983913843633951885263,2353521443743714993751444424813,0826,317
Par435444435364344543443571

Golf de Saint-Nom-la-Bretèche (Red Course)

Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Metre3173621353404293384543151332,8233393204471763143121544243252,8115,634
Yards3473961483724693704963441453,0873713504891923433411684643553,0736,160
Par443454543364453443543672

Teams

56 teams entered the event and completed the competition. Each team had three players.

Players in the teams

CountryPlayers
 ArgentinaEla Belén Anacona, María Cabanillas, Valentina Rossi
 AustraliaKelsey Bennett, Maddison Hinson-Tolchard, Kirsten Rudgeley
 AustriaJohanna Ebner, Isabella Holpfer, Anna Neumayer
 BelgiumSophie Bert, Savannah De Bock, Céline Manche
 BrazilValentina Bosselmann, Marina Nonaka, Nina Rissi
 CanadaNicole Gal, Lauren Kim, Brooke Rivers
 Chinese TaipeiHuai-Chien Hsu, Ting-Hsuan Huang, Hsin-Chun Liao
 ChileFlorencia Dufey, Michelle Melandri, Amelia Ruiz
 ColombiaMaria Jose Marin, Ana Murcia, Valery Plata
 Costa RicaVictoria Callahan, Veronica Odio, Scarlet Weidig
 Czech RepublicPatricie Mackova, Agata Vahalova, Denisa Vodickova
 DenmarkCecilie Finne-Ipsen, Sofie Kibsgaard Nielsen, Amalie Leth-Nissen
 EnglandCharlotte Heath, Caley McGinty, Lottie Woad
 EstoniaAnete Liis Adu, Elizaveta Sofia Reemet, Karola Soe
 FinlandAnna Backman, Katri Bakker, Krista Junkkar
 FranceConstance Fouillet, Vaïrana Heck, Maylis Lamoure
 GermanyHelen Briem, Alexandra Försterling, Celina Rosa Sattelkau
 GuamTyanna Jacot, Kayley Kang, Rose Tarpley
 GuatemalaBeatriz Arenas, Hani Lee, Jasmine Youn Shin
 Hong KongChloe Chan, Arianna Lau, Inara Sharma
 IcelandAndrea Bergsdóttir, Hulda Clara Gestsdóttir, Ragnhildur Kristinsdóttir
 IrelandBeth Coulter, Anna Foster, Lauren Walsh
 ItalyFrancesca Fiorellini, Carolina Melgrati, Benedetta Moresco
 JapanSaki Baba, Mizuki Hashimoto, Miku Ueta
 KazakhstanIslamiya Abeldi, Albina Agayeva, Rivekka Jumagulova
 LatviaKatrina Bulkovska, Laila Forstmane, Marlena Gavare
 Liechtenstein Anna Eggenberger, Lisa Sele, Christine Tinner-Rampone
 Lithuania Saulė Jarašūnaitė, Miglė Rusteikaitė, Gilė Bitė Starkutė
 Luxembourg Marie Baertz, Marie Binninger, Lisa Steingrube
 MexicoIsabel Amezcua, Lauren Daiana Olivares, Clarisa Temelo
 MoroccoMalak Bouraeda, Sofia Cherif Essakali, Rim Imni
 NetherlandsAnne-Sterre den Dunnen, Lauren Holmey, Mayka Hoogeboom
 New ZealandEunseo Choi, Vivian Lu, Fiona Xu
 NorwayMia S. Lussand, Vilde Marie Nystrom, Silje Ohma
 Panama Carla Alvarez Perez, Anna Gabriela Furnar, Maria Eugenia Furnari Deleuze
 PhilippinesMikhaela Fortuna, Lois Kaye Go, Maria Rafaela Singson
 PolandMaja Ambroziak, Kinga Kuśmierska, Dorota Zalewska
 PortugalSofia Barroso Sá, Leonor Medeiros, Ana Costa Rodrigues
 Puerto RicoCamila Negroni, Valeria Pacheco, Paola Rosario
 ScotlandHannah Darling, Chloé Goadby, Lorna McClymont
 SingaporeAloysa Margiela Atienza, Hailey Loh, Jaymie Ng
 SlovakiaKatarina Drocarova, Michaela Vavrová, Antónia Zacharovská
 SloveniaBarbara Car, Inja Fric, Lana Malek
 South AfricaBobbi Brown, Caitlyn Macnab, Kajal Mistry
 South KoreaShinsil Bang, Min Byeol Kim, Jiyoo Lim
 SpainCarolina Lopez-Chacarra, Cayetana Fernández, Paula Martin
 SwedenIngrid Lindblad, Meja Örtengren, Louise Rydqvist
  SwitzerlandElena Moosmann, Caroline Sturdza, Chiara Tamburlini
 ThailandEila Galitsky, Navaporn Soontreeyapas, Suvichaya Vinijchaitham
 Turkeyİrem Demir, Ilgın Zeynep Denizci, Zeynep Süalp
 Ukraine Maria Fedorowycz, Sofia Pylypenko, Elvira Rastvortseva
 United StatesRachel Heck, Rachel Kuehn, Rose Zhang
 UruguayVictoria Bargo, Lousiane Gauthier, Jimena Marques
 VenezuelaAgatha Alesson, Stephanie Gelleni, Vanessa Gilly
 WalesDarcey Harry, Ellen Nicholas, Ffion Tynan

Winners

Team Sweden won the trophy for their third title. Silver medalist and defending champion, team United States, had the same total score, but Sweden was declared the winner. The initial tiebreaker, the final round non-counting score of the respective teams, was in the favor of Sweden, 73 against 74. This was the third time in the history of the championship, the winner was decided after a tie. Last time, in 2006, Sweden lost the championship in a similar way.

Team Germany and team Japan shared the bronze on third place one stroke back.

Although there was no official recognition, Meja Örtengren, Sweden, Rose Zhang, United States and Helen Briem, Germany tied for the low individual score at seven-under-par 279.

Results

Team standings

Place Country Score To par
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Sweden * 143-134-143-139=559 −13
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  United States 137-142-140-140=559
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Germany 138-141-136-145=560 −12
 Japan 143-138-141-138=560
5  Spain 141-142-138-140=561 −11
6  Chinese Taipei 140-142-137-147=566 −6
T7  Canada 146-141-140-143=570 −2
 Scotland 150-141-137-142=570
T9  Czech Republic 145-143-141-143=572 E
 South Korea 146-138-146-142=572
T11  England 143-143-142-145=573 +1
 France 143-145-134-151=573
13   Switzerland 141-142-147-144=574 +2
14  Australia 140-146-142-147=575 +3
15  South Africa 141-145-146-148=580 +8
T16  Ireland 146-149-142-146=583 +11
 Norway 142-148-145-148=583
18  Italy 151-144-142-147=584 +12
19  Netherlands 146-144-142-153=585 +13
T20  New Zealand 147-150-146-143=586 +14
 Thailand 146-150-144-146=586
22  Finland 143-152-142-152=589 +17
23  Poland 141-148-152-151=592 +20
24  Belgium 146-151-150-146=593 +21
25  Argentina 148-144-151-151=594 +22
T26  Colombia 147-149-155-144=595 +23
 Denmark 153-151-149-142=595
 Hong Kong 152-143-147-153=595
29  Wales 146-154-151-146=597 +25
30  Philippines 144-153-151-150=598 +26
31  Slovakia 152-147-149-151=599 +27
32  Mexico 148-150-151-152=601 +29
33  Iceland 151-150-150-151=602 +30
34  India 148-153-150-152=603 +31
35  Venezuela 150-150-156-150=606 +34
36  Austria 151-154-148-156=609 +37
37  Uruguay 150-153-157-150=610 +38
T38  Morocco 147-156-152-158=613 +41
 Singapore 148-159-155-151=613
40  Portugal 156-155-151-152=614 +42
41  Slovenia 151-146-161-160=618 +46
42  Chile 151-162-158-158=629 +57
T43  Brazil 153-159-163-156=631 +59
 Estonia 157-157-162-155=631
45  Kazakhstan 160-157-158-157=632 +60
T46  Guatemala 156-151-164-166=637 +65
 Puerto Rico 148-155-169-165=637
 Turkey 156-165-152-164=637
T49  Latvia 160-159-155-169=643 +71
 Ukraine 165-162-155-161=643
51  Lithuania 151-171-158-165=645 +73
52  Panama 157-164-164-166=651 +79
53  Luxembourg 167-166-159-176=668 +96
54  Costa Rica 164-170-173-165=672 +100
55  Guam 171-167-170-166=674 +102
56  Liechtenstein 173-165-176-168=682 +110

* Sweden was awarded the tiebreak, since their third player, Louise Rydqvist, had a lower score than United States' third player, Rachel Kuehn, in the final round, 73 against 74.

Individual leaders

There was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.

Place Player Country Score To par
T1Helen Briem Germany69-72-66-72=279−7
Meja Örtengren Sweden69-68-72-70=279
Rose Zhang United States69-72-69-69=279
T4Saki Baba Japan74-67-69-70=280−6
Hannah Darling Scotland74-71-65-70=280
Ingrid Lindblad Sweden74-66-71-69=280
T7Cayetana Fernández Spain72-71-68-71=282−4
Hsin-Chun Liao Chinese Taipei69-69-70-74=282
Paula Martin Sampedro Spain71-71-71-69=282
T10Min Byeol Kim South Korea72-68-72-73=285−1
Rachel Kuehn United States70-70-71-74=285
Maylis Lamoure France75-71-67-72=285
Brooke Rivers Canada75-70-71-69=285

See also

References

  1. "WATC 2022 France". International Golf Federation. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  2. Leonard, Todd (27 August 2022). "U.S. charge comes up short as Sweden women win World Amateur Team title". Golf Digest. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
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