KirkwoodGolf: 11 Sept 2011

Sunday, September 11, 2011

US CURTIS CUP CAPTAIN FOR NAIRN MADE HER MARK AS A PLAYER

FROM THE USGA WEBSITE
By Rhonda Glenn
Pat Cornett is the captain of the 2012 USA Curtis Cup Team, which will play its biennial match against a team from Great Britain and Ireland next June in Nairn, Scotland.
For a once-a-week golfer, Pat, 57, of Mill Valley, California, pictured right from USGA website, had quite a good round today in the USGA Senior Women's Amateur Championship stroke-play qualifying.
Cornett’s second-round 70, two under par, gave her a 36-hole total of 4-over-par 148, good enough for a seventh place tie among early finishers.
“It’s certainly my USGA historic low,” laughed Cornett. “It just was fun to hit the ball well and make a few putts. You get in a groove.”
Cornett isn’t just any once-a-week golfer. A lifelong amateur, she’s made a mark in American women’s golf. In 1987, she was runner-up in the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur. She’s recorded several high finishes in the U.S. Women’s Amateur and is a Women’s Western Amateur champion. Those feats landed her on USA Curtis Cup Teams in 1978 and 1988.
Add to that her career as an oncologist and maintaining a home for her two daughters with her husband Mike Iker, and Cornett finds that playing golf is a luxury. Once a week, sometimes twice, she and Mike, who has an 8 handicap index, feel lucky to head out for a round of golf.
Cornett now has another pressing assignment: She’s captain of the 2012 USA Curtis Cup Team, which will play its biennial match against a team from Great Britain Ireland next June in Scotland.
Last month, Cornett attended the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Rhode Island Country Club in Providence to scout potential American players.
But this week is all about Pat and her own return to competitive golf. With stroke-play qualifying behind her, virtually assured of a slot in match play, Cornett can’t wait.
“I feel more comfortable in match play than stroke play, quite honestly,” Cornett said.
Few would be surprised to see Cornett do well here. Like a retired fire horse who hears the alarm bell, she’s ready for the race.
If not, she’s already had a great trip. “I’ve really enjoyed The Honors Course,” Cornett said. “It’s got shots out here that are risk-reward. You could compare it in that way to Pebble Beach.”
For now, Cornett isn’t giving much thought to her Northern California home or her medical practice or even the Curtis Cup Team. For Cornett, as for every other contestant here, this is an opportunity for her light to shine, if only for a short while.

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LADIES GOLF UNION NEWS RELEASE

SENIOR LADIES BRITISH OPEN AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP
Over 54 holes at Belvoir Park GC, Belfast
September 13 to 15, 2011

All six top finishers in last week’s Irish Senior Ladies’ Open Stroke Play Championship at Greenore Golf Club (September 7 to 9) are in the field for this week’s Senior Ladies’ British Open Amateur Chamionship at Belvoir Park Golf Club, Belfast.
Finland ’s Minna Kaarnalahti will be bidding for back-to-back victories on the Emerald Isle.
She won the Irish title at Greenore by one shot from joint runners-up Pauline Walsh (Headfort), Alison Bartlett (Royal Dornoch) and Helen Jones (Strabane).
Winning the British title would go some way towards compensating Helen Jones for losing the Irish championship as a result of a Rules infringement.
Helen Jones was in the field at wild and windy West Kilbride Golf Club, Ayrshire 12 months ago when England’s Bev New, from the Lansdown Golf Club, Somerset, making her debut in the event, having reached her 50th birthday, came through on the final day from joint fifth place overnight with a three-birdie performance and the low round of the tournament, a 73, to win with a three-round total of 19-over-par 235 – one shot ahead of another debutante, Pat Doran (Donabate), with Vicki Thomas, the 2009 champion, third on 238 and Scotland’s Maureen Richmond (Royal Liverpool), the joint second-round leader, fourth on 239.
Bev New, pictured above with a local piper after her West Kilbride victory, turned pro after a stellar amateur career which saw her win the English title and play for Great Britain and Ireland in the Curtis Cup. She was reinstated as an amateur after continuing her successful golfing career as a professional on the Ladies European Tour.
Running a busy coffee shop in Burnham-on-Sea, Somerset , does not leave Bev much time for golf but she has reached the quarter-finals of the English seniors’ close championship this year and also finished third in the English seniors’ stroke-play championship.
A truly international field will be assembling at Belvoir Park with thirteen countries represented.
The Belvoir Park Golf Club course is sited in 136 acres of mature woodland, but only two miles from Belfast ’s City Centre.
Harry S Colt was the course designer in the 1920s and there are those who rate Belvoir Park as one of the best inland courses, not only in Ireland but further afield.
The 54-hole championship tees off on Tuesday and there will be a cut to the leading 40 and ties after Wednesday’s second round for the final 18 holes on Thursday. In the event of a tie for first place after the third round, there will be a sudden-death play-off.

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LORA FAIRCLOUGH RETIRES FROM LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR

By DAVID BIRTILL
Lancashire lass Lora Fairclough has sunk her last putt on the Ladies European Tour.
“It is time to go,” said the four-time winner and Solheim Cup player who joined the professional ranks 20 years ago following a sparkling amateur career.
“I’ve been suffering from a knee injury from a skiing accident which kept me out of action last season and despite two operations it’s still not right and that accelerated my decision.
“I tried to make a comeback this summer although I did all right in the
first two tournaments my game was not what it was and my self-belief had
gone.”
“I’ve seen players a lot older than me continuing to compete, and
some of them successfully, but that’s not for me.”
Lora, 41, is back in her Adlington home after a brief spell living in West
Sussex and is embarking on a second career as a coach, expanding her public
speaking engagements and playing pro-ams.
But her main ambition is to try to attract more youngsters, especially
girls, into the game.
“It’s shameful that clubs have so few junior members,” she said.
Her own roots are firmly planted at Chorley Golf Club where, encouraged by
her dad Gerald, she picked up her first club when she was 11.
“I was six months too young to join but the secretary turned a blind eye,”
she recalled.
In her rookie LET season she won £9,000 and by 1993 had trebled the sum,
thanks to her maiden victory in the IMB Open which earned her a place in the
European team for the biennial Solheim Cup match against the United States
the following year.
Despite Mickey Walker’s side losing 13-7 at West Virginia resort The
Greenbrier, Lora won her foursomes and four-ball matches with Dale Reid
before succumbing to Kelly Robbins in the singles.
“That was my most memorable experience,” she said. “Playing for your country is a great honour.”
She had plenty of experience on that score through her amateur days, as a
girl and full England international and representing Great Britain and Ireland
in the Vagliano Trophy match against the Continent of Europe in 1990.
She was also England Girl and Intermediate champion and won the Northern
title twice and the English Schools’ crown.
But it was as a Lancashire player that Lora first made her mark, claiming
the county championship on two occasions.
“I owe a lot to the people who helped me in those early days,” especially my
coach Howard Bennett,” she reflected.
Back on tour, 1995 was her most successful season, winning the Ford
Classic and European Masters and banked more than £81,000 as she achieved
her best ranking of four. She also won the German Open in 1998 and three
minor tournaments.
“I’ve been very fortunate but now I feel a cloud has been lifted and I’m
excited about doing other things,” she added. “I’ve a lot of experience and
I want to pass it on.”

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JADE SCHAEFFER CZECH-MATES THE OPPOSITION IN PRAGUE




NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
Report by BETHAN CUTLER, L E T Media Manager

France’s Jade Schaeffer earned her second Ladies European Tour title at the inaugural Raiffeisenbank Prague Golf Masters in the Czech Republic.
The 25-year-old from Paris, who last won two years ago in Germany, shot a final round 70 to win by two shots on a hot and sunny afternoon at Albatross Golf Resort.
Jade is pictured with the trophy, by Tristan Jones of the LET staff.
Fellow Frenchwoman Julie Greciet was second on 11 under with Sweden’s Linda Wessberg one stroke further back in third.
England’s Kym Larratt, Scotland’s Kylie Walker and Becky Brewerton of Wales finished tied for fourth on nine under, with Czech rookie Klára Spilková two strokes behind in a tie for ninth place.
Beginning the day four strokes clear, Schaeffer birdied the second before a bogey at the third. She followed that with an eagle two on the fourth after hitting her drive up to ten feet (three metres) right of the flag on the 285-yard hole. She then birdied the ninth and was four clear of Greciet at the turn.
A second bogey followed at the 15th, but Schaeffer safely made par on each of the closing three holes with fellow Tour player Melodie Bourdy on the bag.
“I’m so happy,” said long-hitting Schaeffer, in her fifth season as a professional. “It’s very good because I won two years ago and I think it’s the best sensation, the win, for the golfer.
“My golf today was very good and I played so well, the same as the last day, but my putting did not rendezvous. It’s okay.”
Schaeffer now has two wins on the LET, but she also won twice on the LET Access Series, the official feeder tour, last year, before having wrist surgery in January.
She made her LET comeback in Germany in May and tied for 35th, before missing three straight cuts in the middle of the season. She was steadily improving with top-20 finishes at both of her last two events in Scotland and Austria, but a career-low round of 64 on the second day proved the catalyst to victory.
Greciet, who earned a career best finish of second with a final round 65, was one of a group of French players who ran onto the 18th green to spray Schaeffer in champagne as she raised her hands aloft in celebration.
The fourth year professional, said: “I am very happy. The putting was very good. I made 27 putts and that’s great.”
Wessberg had to settle for her second third place finish in a fortnight but said: “I played great today, actually. I missed a few shorter putts, like six to eight footers, probably five of them, so that hurts. Overall I’m pretty happy with the way I played and the way I hung in there.”
Spilková, tied for second overnight, was overcome with emotion as she ended the round in front of a vociferous home gallery.
The teary 16-year-old sensation from Prague explained: “I was just happy. I finished with two bogeys but I was happy, because there were so many people and it’s really nice. This is good for us. This is good for the Czech Republic, for a small country. I hope it will grow up and be better and better.”
The LET now heads south to Spain for the Open de España Femenino.
FINAL TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
203 - Jade Schaeffer (FRA) 69 64 70
205 - Julie Greciet (FRA) 69 71 65
206 - Linda Wessberg (SWE) 69 69 68
207 - Kym Larratt (ENG) 70 70 67, Kylie Walker (SCO) 69 71 67, Becky Brewerton (WAL) 69 70 68
208 - Ursula Wikstrom (FIN) 70 71 67, Louise Stahle (SWE) 69 70 69
209 - Ashleigh Simon (SA) 72 69 68, Anne-Lise Caudal (FRA) 69 72 68, Nikki Garrett (AUS) 68 73 68, Anja Monke (GER) 69 70 70, Cassandra Kirkland (FRA) 70 69 70, Caroline Masson (GER) 68 69 72, Klara Spilkova (CZE) 67 70 72
210 - Carmen Alonso (ESP) 75 67 68, Malene Jorgensen (DEN) 66 75 69
211 - Kaisa Ruuttila (FIN) 68 75 68, Julie Maisongrosse (FRA) 72 70 69, Stefanie Michl (AUT) 70 71 70, Danielle Montgomery (ENG) 72 69 70, Felicity Johnson (ENG) 68 71 72, Beth Allen (USA) 70 69 72
212 - Titiya Plucksataporn (THA) 74 70 68, Lee-Anne Pace (SA) 72 72 68, Stacey Keating (AUS) 71 72 69, Veronica Zorzi (ITA) 70 70 72, Kiran Matharu (ENG) 69 69 74
213 - Marianne Skarpnord (NOR) 72 72 69, Caroline Westrup (SWE) 71 73 69, Carly Booth (SCO) 72 72 69, Karen Lunn (AUS) 73 71 69, Louise Larsson (SWE) 74 69 70, Nontaya Srisawang (THA) 72 71 70, Joanna Klatten (FRA) 69 74 70, Martina Gillen (IRE) 71 71 71, Marjet van der Graaff (NL) 70 72 71, Henrietta Zuel (ENG) 73 67 73, Sophie Giquel-Bettan (FRA) 68 72 73
214 - Caroline Afonso (FRA) 70 74 70, Lotta Wahlin (SWE) 73 71 70, Margherita Rigon (ITA) 70 71 73, Elizabeth Bennett (ENG) 70 70 74, Marieke Nivard (NL) 70 70 74
215 - Jenni Kuosa (FIN) 73 71 71, Diana Luna (ITA) 74 70 71, Caroline Rominger (SWI) 76 68 71, Tania Elosegui (ESP) 71 72 72, Lynn Kenny (SCO) 72 71 72, Laura Davies (ENG) 70 69 76
216 - Holly Aitchison (ENG) 75 69 72, Sahra Hassan (WAL) 72 72 72
217 - Stefania Croce (ITA) 72 72 73, Stacy Lee Bregman (SA) 72 72 73, Maria Beautell (ESP) 71 71 75
218 - Rebecca Codd (IRE) 72 72 74, Laura Cabanillas (ESP) 74 67 77, Vikki Laing (SCO) 69 72 77

E: bcutler@ladieseuropeantour.com

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YANI AND AMY SHARED LEAD IN NW ARKANSAS CHAMPIONSHIP

FROM THE GOLF.COM WEBSITE
ROGERS, Arkansas (AP) — Defending champion Yani Tseng shot a 4-under 67 on Saturday and Amy Yang had a 64 to share the second-round lead in the LPGA Tour's NW Arkansas Championship at 9 under.
The top-ranked Tseng, the LPGA Championship and Women's British Open winner, leads the tour with four victories this season and has seven overall wins this year.
"I think it's hard to not have pressure because, I mean, for sure I've got pressure tomorrow, defending champion and in the lead," Tseng said. "The kind of thing's going to be a little pressure, but I just want to enjoy that pressure. I know tomorrow, first couple holes going to be nervous. If I were not nervous, that would be a little weird, so I mean, I care."
Taylor Leon (67) was a stroke back, and former Arkansas star Stacy Lewis (69) was 7 under along with U.S. Solheim Cup teammate Cristie Kerr (66), Inbee Park (65) and Jin Young Pak (68).
"I was kind of frustrated," Lewis said. "I left a lot of putts out there. My speed was just a little off and my lines were a little off, but still it was a good enough round that it kept me in it for tomorrow."
Michelle Wie missed the cut with rounds of 78 and 72.
Tseng had six birdies and two bogeys on the Pinnacle Country Club course. She nearly aced the 160-yard 15th hole, hitting to 2 feet to set up a birdie. She played her back nine in 32.
"I worked on my tempo on the back nine," Tseng said. "I got a little too fast with my tempo, but I just keep to myself, keep focused, and actually back nine I got really lucky. I had a good bounce on No. 8, good bounce on No. 4 or 5, and I have a great up and down on par 3, so those three shots were important."
Yang is winless on the LPGA Tour. She eagled the par-5 seventh.
"Everything was good today," Yang said. "I was hitting the ball solid and hitting the putts solid. You know, from tee to green, I was playing good. I'm really happy about my game."

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES AND SCORECARDS ON THE LPGA TOUR WEBSITE

CLICK HERE

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LPGA FUTURES TOUR SCOREBOARD

$120,000 Price Chopper Tour Championship presented by SEFCU
at the 5964-yard, par 35-35 - 70 Capital Hills at Albany,
Albany, N.Y. (a-denotes amateur):
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
1 Jackie Barenborg (Vero Beach, Fla.) 66-67 - 133
2 Angela Buzminski (Oshawa, Ontario) 67-67 - 134
Jenny Gleason (Clearwater, Fla.) 70-64 - 134
4 Hannah Burke (Welwyn Garden City, UK) 68-68 - 136
Mesha Levister (Louisburg, N.C.) 73-63 - 136
6 Ashley Prange (Noblesville, Ind.) 69-68 - 137
Cydney Clanton (Concord, N.C.) 69-68 - 137
Cara Freeman (San Tan Valley, Ariz.) 68-69 - 137
Sydnee Michaels (Temecula, Calif.) 69-68 - 137
10 Jodi Ewart (North Yorkshire, England) 70-68 - 138
Mo Martin (Altadena, Calif.) 70-68 - 138
Kristin Walla (Aspen, Colo.) 69-69 - 138
Sarah Brown (Lopatcong, N.J.) 66-72 - 138
Jessi Gebhardt (Chandler, Ariz.) 69-69 - 138
Megan McChrystal (Stuart, Fla.) 68-70 - 138
Izzy Beisiegel (St. Hilaire, Quebec) 70-68 - 138
Hanna Kang (Seoul, South Korea) 70-68 - 138
18 Elisa Serramia (Barcelona, Spain) 70-69 - 139
Laura Nochta-Martin (Cortland, Ohio) 71-68 - 139
Erica Moston (Belmont, Calif.) 69-70 - 139
Lisa Ferrero (Lodi, Calif.) 68-71 - 139
Ayaka Kaneko (Honolulu, Hawaii) 69-70 - 139
Katie Kempter (Albuquerque, N.M.) 72-67 - 139
24 Veronica Felibert (Caracas, Venezuela) 72-68 - 140
Mallory Blackwelder (Versailles, Ky.) 70-70 - 140
Ashley Knoll (The Woodlands, Texas) 70-70 - 140
Miriam Nagl (Berlin, Germany) 69-71 - 140
Briana Vega (Andover, Mass.) 69-71 - 140
Valentine Derrey (Paris, France) 68-72 - 140
Courtney Mahon (Lee's Summit, Mo.) 68-72 - 140
Victoria Park (Irvine, Calif.) 69-71 - 140
Dolores White (Lakeland, Fla.) 68-72 - 140
Tzu-Chi Lin (Chinese Taipei) 67-73 - 140
Brittany Johnston (Akron, Ohio) 68-72 - 140
Rachel Connor (Manchester, England) 67-73 - 140
Stephanie Na (Adelaide, Australia) 70-70 - 140
Rebecca Samuelsson (Gothenburg, Sweden) 71-69 - 140
Madeleine Holmblad (Stockholm, Sweden) 71-69 - 140
39 Amy Eneroth (Spokane, Wash.) 70-71 - 141
Seul Ki Park (Northbrook, Ill.) 68-73 - 141
Sue Kim (Langley, B.C.) 69-72 - 141
Sara Maude Juneau (Fossambault, Quebec) 70-71 - 141
Nicole Morales (a) (South Salem, N.Y.) 71-70 - 141
Selanee Henderson (Apple Valley, Calif.) 72-69 - 141
45 Yu-Ling Hsieh (Chinese Taipei) 72-70 - 142
Victoria Elizabeth (Dayton, Ohio) 73-69 - 142
Nicole Smith (Riverside, Calif.) 71-71 - 142
Tiffany Tavee (Tempe, Ariz.) 73-69 - 142
Natalie Sheary (West Hartford, Conn.) 70-72 - 142
Laura Kueny (Whitehall, Mich.) 70-72 - 142
Laura Bavaird (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 70-72 - 142
Cathryn Bristow (Auckland, New Zealand) 69-73 - 142
Stefanie Kenoyer (Lighthouse Point, Fla.) 68-74 - 142
Ashley Sholer (Hamilton, Ontario) 69-73 - 142
Lili Alvarez (Durango, Mexico) 67-75 - 142
Katy Harris (Houston, Texas) 69-73 - 142
Ashley Medders (Alma, Ga.) 71-71 - 142
Lauren Doughtie (Suffolk, Va.) 71-71 - 142
59 Marcela Leon (Monterrey, Mexico) 72-71 - 143
Renee Skidmore (Everett, Wash.) 71-72 - 143
Min Seo Kwak (Seoul, South Korea) 70-73 - 143
Candace Schepperle (Birmingham, Ala.) 69-74 - 143
Aimee Neff (Carmel, Ind.) 71-72 - 143
Kathleen Ekey (Sharon Township, Ohio) 71-72 - 143
Aimee Cho (Orlando, Fla.) 72-71 - 143
Chelsea Curtis (New Seabury, Mass.) 71-72 - 143
Susan Nam (Edmonton, Alberta) 72-71 - 143
68 Daniela Iacobelli (Viera, Fla.) 74-70 - 144
Jane Rah (Torrance, Calif.) 72-72 - 144
Marina Choi (Los Angeles, Calif.) 71-73 - 144
Emma Jandel (Dayton, Ohio) 72-72 - 144
Danielle Mills (Pointe-Claire, Quebec) 70-74 - 144
Jutta Degerman (Kaunianinen, Finland) 71-73 - 144
Sophia Sheridan (Guadalajara, Mexico) 70-74 - 144
Jean Chua (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) 71-73 - 144
Karlin Beck (Pike Road, Ala.) 73-71 - 144
Kelly Jacques (Longmont, Colo.) 73-71 - 144
Britney Choy (Wahiawa, Hawaii) 74-70 - 144
MISSED THE CUTSue Ginter (Appleton, Wis.) 73-72 - 145
Michelle Jarman (Wilmington, N.C.) 72-73 - 145
Maria Laura Elvira (Buenos Aires, Argentina) 72-73 - 145
Stacey Miller (Bloomington, Ill.) 73-73 - 146
Ginny Brown (Austin, Texas) 69-77 - 146
Whitney Neuhauser (Charlottesville, Va.) 74-72 - 146
Maiya Tanaka (San Diego, Calif.) 74-72 - 146
Kendall Dye (Edmond, Okla.) 74-72 - 146
Lyndsay McBride (Elkhart, Ind.) 75-72 - 147
Carrie Riordan (Spring Valley, Ill.) 74-73 - 147
Whitney Wade (Glasgow, Ky.) 73-74 - 147
Annie Brophy (Spokane, Wash.) 73-74 - 147
Molly Aronsson (Shelburne, Vt.) 76-71 - 147
Stephanie Connelly (Pasadena, Md.) 74-73 - 147
Blair O'Neal (Tempe, Ariz.) 75-72 - 147
Olivia Jordan-Higgins (Channel Islands, UK) 78-69 - 147
Sofi Toccafondi (Del Viso, Argentina) 79-68 - 147
Juliana Murcia Ortiz (Bogota, Colombia) 75-73 - 148
Elizabeth Dotson (White Bluff, Tenn.) 75-73 - 148
Carling Coffing (Middletown, Ohio) 73-75 - 148
Kristin Berretta (Pointe-Claire, Quebec) 73-75 - 148
Mayule Tomimbang (Kissimmee, Fla.) 73-75 - 148
Kelly Lagedrost (Brooksville, Fla.) 73-75 - 148
Megan Leineweber (Salisbury, Md.) 74-74 - 148
Lacey Agnew (Jonesboro, Ga.) 77-71 - 148
Laura Jansone (Jurmala, Latvia) 75-74 - 149
Lisa Maunu (St. Thomas, Ontario) 73-76 - 149
Ashley Smith (Calgary, Alberta) 73-76 - 149
Dawn Shockley (Estes Park, Colo.) 75-74 - 149
Leah Wigger (Louisville, Ky.) 74-75 - 149
Gloriana Soto (San Jose, Costa Rica) 74-76 - 150
Gemma Webster (Glasgow, Scotland) 74-76 - 150
Marlowe Boukis (Lutherville, Md.) 76-74 - 150
Kim Augusta (Rumford, R.I.) 76-74 - 150
Inhong Lim (Seoul, South Korea) 77-74 - 151
Eileen Vargas (Ibague, Colombia) 78-73 - 151
Rhea Nair (Dubai, United Arab Emirates) 77-74 - 151
Jennifer Hong (Granger, Ind.) 74-77 - 151
Caroline Park (Seoul, South Korea) 74-77 - 151
Alison Meyer (Duluth, Minn.) 75-76 - 151
Pamela Ontiveros (Gomez Palacio, Mexico) 78-73 - 151
Rachel Smith (a) (Mansfield, Texas) 76-75 - 151
Benedikte Grotvedt (Nesbru, Norway) 75-78 - 153
Allie Bodemann (Palm City, Fla.) 75-78 - 153
Lene Krog (Lier, Norway) 78-75 - 153
Ulrika Van-Niekerk (Cape Town, South Africa) 81-72 - 153
Sam White (Potomac, Md.) 80-74 - 154
Rebecca Kim (Tigard, Ore.) 76-78 - 154
Erika Malik (Hinsdale, Ill.) 79-75 - 154
Alexandra Casi (East Palestine, Ohio) 84-71 - 155
Susan Choi (Natick, Mass.) 75-80 - 155
Paz Echeverria (Santiago, Chile) 76-79 - 155
Elena Robles (Redondo Beach, Calif.) 78-77 - 155
Meghan Trainor (Charlotte, N.C.) 77-81 - 158
Angel Sze (San Marino, Calif.) 82-77 - 159
Melissa Mabanta (Langley, B.C.) 80-81 - 161
Emma Calderone (Toronto, Ontario) 87-77 - 164
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Kirby Dreher (Fort St. John, B.C.) WDI

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