Hero Women's Indian Open 2024
Sara Kouskova leads by one; Ridhima and Pranavi top Indians on Day 1 of Hero Women’s Indian Open

Sara Kouskova leads by one; Ridhima and Pranavi top Indians on Day 1 of Hero Women’s Indian Open

Gurugram, October 24, 2024: Sara Kouskova of the Czech Republic led the field by a stroke after a testing first day at the US $ 400,000 Hero Women’s Indian Open. She carded a 3 under par 69 at the DLF Golf and Country Club here on Thursday.

The 25-year-old was one of just seven players in the 114-strong field to break par and led Mireia Prat of Spain, Florentyna Parker of England, and France’s Perrine Delacour, who returned matching 2 under 70s, by a shot on a day that did not see a single bogey-free round.

Sharing the fifth place were Singapore’s Shannon Tan, Maria Hernandez of Spain and WGAI invitee Maha Haddioui of Morocco on 1-under 71 each while there was a five-way tie for eighth place on even par 72 between Agathe Sauzon of France, Norway’s Marianne Skarpnord, Momoka Kobori of New Zealand, Australian Kirsten Rudgeley and Alice Hewson of England.

Kouskova, who has five top 10 finishes in the season so far including third place at the La Sella Open in Alicante, Spain, picked up two early birdies on the 11th and the 12th, before she dropped a triple-bogey 7 on the par-4 13th hole. She quickly made up as she holed from 85 yards for the day’s only eagle A bogey on the 16th saw her turn in even par.

Speaking after her round, Kouskova said, “The front nine was wild. But we were like, ‘ok, this is DLF,’ this is what can happen. We stayed very positive. I hit a really really good shot on 15. I thought it was a really good distance and it ended up pitching just short and going in the hole. I didn’t see it go in because it was behind the ridge. I heard a couple of cheers!

“It was lots of steady golf after that. We tried to play as confident as possible. It was needed. The course is playing really tough this year, but the condition is still spectacular. It’s just as it should be for a world class event like this. So it’s really enjoyable but really tough.”

On her second nine, she had three birdies on third, sixth and the ninth and no bogeys for a good 3 under 69 aggregate for the day.

On her love for India, the Czech said, “I love it here in India. Last year was my first time and we have lots of good memories. I was able to secure my LET card here last year. So that was a happy memory. My caddie loves it here as well. He’s spent a lot of time here.”

Talking about her thoughts for tomorrow, Kouskova said, “I think I’ll do the same tomorrow and play as confident as possible.”

On her heels were the trio of Prat, Delacour and Parker. Prat in fact had one of the better cards of the opening day with a single bogey against three birdies, all of which came on the front nine.

Delacour and Parker had more eventful rounds, the Frenchwoman balancing five birdies against three dropped shots and Parker mixing four bogeys with six birdies, including three in her last five holes.

Said Prat after her round, “I’m very happy with the round. I think finishing under par here is always a good round. I played very solid out there. I’m very happy. I missed a few very short birdie chances. But you have to be patient on this course. The greens are rolling very fast and they are firm. It’s all about being patient. It’s a very good course. It’s always in good shape and the facilities are great.”

Ridhima Dilawari and Pranavi Urs led the home challenge with 2 over par 74s in a big group that was tied for 17th place with promising amateur Zara Anand a shot behind in shared 34th place with fellow-amateurs Mannat Brar and Janneya Dasanniee a further stroke behind in tied 41st position.

Hero Shot skills challenge and Pro-Am winner Diksha Dagar struggled through the day to 6 over 78 that contained five bogeys, a double-bogey on the par-5 8th hole and the two-time LET winner needed a closing birdie to salvage her round. Tvesa Malik was a shot ahead of Dagar on 5 over 77 along with Khushi Khanijau in tied 56th place.