2010 Espirito Santo Trophy

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2010 Espirito Santo Trophy
Tournament information
Dates20–23 October
LocationBuenos Aires,
Argentina
34°28′01″S 58°41′56″W / 34.467°S 58.699°W / -34.467; -58.699
Course(s)
Organized byInternational Golf Federation
Format72 holes stroke play
Statistics
ParOlivos: 72
Buenos Aires: 72
LengthOlivos: 6,110 yards (5,590 m)
Buenos Aires: 6,110 yards (5,590 m)
Field52 teams
155 players
Champion
 South Korea
, ,
546 (−30)
Location Map
Buenos Aires Golf Club is located in South America
Buenos Aires Golf Club
Location in South America
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The 2010 Espirito Santo Trophy took place 20–23 October at the and in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

It was the 24th women's golf World Amateur Team Championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy.

The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event. There were a record 52 team entries, each with two or three players.

Each team played two rounds at Olivos and two rounds at Buenos Aires. The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total.

South Korea won the Trophy for their second title, with a record 30-under-par score of 546, 17 strokes ahead of silver medalist team United States. Defending champion team Sweden shared the bronze medal with France and South Africa on third place, another five strokes back.

The individual leaderboard was headed by the three South Korean players, with Han Jung-eun on top, scoring 275, 13 under par. The third South Korean player was individually five strokes ahead of the best player of any other team. If the South Korean team would have been forced to count the two worst scores in each round, they would still have won the team competition with five strokes.

Chloé Leurquin, Belgium, made a hole-in-one in the fourth round on the 7th hole at Olivos Golf Club from 162 yards.[1][2][3]

Teams[]

52 teams entered the event and completed the competition. Each team had three players, except team Tanzania, which only had two.

Country Players
 Argentina Manuela Carbajo Re, Martina Gavier, Victoria Tanco
 Australia Julia Boland, Stacey Keating, Alison Whitaker
 Austria Stefanie Endstrasser, Sarah Schober, Marina Stuetz
 Belgium Laura Gonzalez Escallon, Chloé Leurquin, Margaux Vanmol
 Bolivia Susana Benavides, Raquel Gumucio, Natalia Perez
 Brazil Mariana de Biase, Patricia Carvalho, Isadora Stapff
 Canada Sara-Maude Juneau, Jennifer Kirby, Christine Wong
 Czech Republic Adéla Cejnarová, Klára Spilková, Karolina Vlckova
 Chile Paz Echeverría, Maria José Hurtado, Macarena Silva
 China Ying Luo, Zhou Ying Qing Luo, Yuyang Zhang
 Chinese Taipei Liu Yi-chen, Hsu Ke-hui, Yao Hsuan-yu
 Colombia Laura Blanco, Juliana Murcia, Lisa McCloskey
 Denmark Line Vedel Hansen, Therese Köelbaek, Charlotte Lorentzen
 Ecuador Coralía Arias, Daniela Darquea, Maria José Ferro
 England Hannah Burke, Holly Clyburn, Kelly Tidy
 Finland Linda Henriksson, Sanna Nuutinen, Noora Tamminen
 France Lucie André, Alexandra Bonetti, Manon Gidali
 Germany Pia Halbig, Lara Katzy, Sophia Popov
 Guam Tessie Blair, Rose Cunliffe, Aiga Payne
 Guatemala Beatriz de Arenas, María José Camey, Lucía Polo
 Hong Kong Tiffany Chan, Michelle Cheung, Stephanie Ho
 Iceland Signy Arnorsdottir, Gudrun Bjorgvinsdottir, Tinna Johannsdottir
 Ireland Leona Maguire, Lisa Maguire, Danielle McVeigh
 Israel Laetitia Beck, Petra Bogoslavsky, Hadas Libman
 Italy Alessandra Averna, Giulia Molinaro, Anna Roscio
 Japan Mami Fukuda, Mamiko Higa, Natsuka Hori
 Latvia Laura Jansone, Krista Puisite, Mara Puisite
 Malaysia Vivienne Chin, Dianne Luke, Iman Nordin
 Mexico Gabriela Lopez, Marijosse Navarro, Paola Valerio
 Netherlands Myrte Eikenaar, Marieke Nivard, Karlijn Zaanen
 New Zealand Caroline Bon, Cecilia Cho, Lydia Ko
 Norway Tonje Daffinrud, Marita Engzelius, Rachel Raastad
 Paraguay Johanna Doria, Diana Fernández, Paloma Vaccaro
 Peru Alexandra Gibson, Kiara Hayashida, Maria Salinas
 Philippines Dottie Ardina, Chihiro Ikeda, Mia Piccio
 Portugal Magda Carrilho, Joana Pinto, Marta Vasconcelos
 Puerto Rico Patricia Garcia, Kyle Roig, María Fernanda Torres
 Scotland Louise Kenney, Kelsey MacDonald, Sally Watson
 Slovakia Lujza Bubanova, Natalia Heckova, Victoria Tomko
 Slovenia Ursa Orehek, Katja Pogačar, Tajda Sarkanj
 South Africa Connie Chen, Kelli Shean, Kim Williams
 South Korea , ,
 Spain Carlota Ciganda, Mireia Prat, Marta Silva Zamora
 Sweden Caroline Hedwall, Louise Larsson, Camilla Lennarth
  Switzerland Melanie Mätzler, Anais Maggetti, Fanny Vuignier
 Tanzania Madina Iddy Hussein, Hawa Ayoub Wanyeche
 Trinidad and Tobago Tracey Clarke, Martine de Gannes, Monifa Sealy
 Turkey Basak Aydin, Damla Bilgic, Sena Ersoy
 United States Cydney Clanton, Danielle Kang, Jessica Korda
 Uruguay Manuela Barros, Maria Victoria Fernández, Maria Garcia Austt
 Wales Gemma Bradbury, Amy Boulden, Tara Davies
 Venezuela Nicole Ferré, Ana Margarita Raga, Fabiana Salazar

Results[]

# Country Score To par
1st place, gold medalist(s)  South Korea 145-128-134-139=546 −30
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  United States 136-138-146-143=563 −13
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  France 140-144-141-147=572 −4
 South Africa 142-139-143-148=572
 Sweden 146-135-145-146=572
6  Spain 142-145-138-148=573 −3
7  Canada 144-138-149-143=574 −2
T8  Germany 142-135-146-152=575 −1
 New Zealand 148-140-145-142=575
 Philippines 144-135-151-145=575
T11  Denmark 145-140-145-142=577 +1
 Ireland 144-143-147-143=577
T13  Argentina 140-141-144-153=578 +2
 Mexico 143-138-149-148=578
T15  Australia 147-146-142-145=580 +4
 China 145-144-142-149=580
T17  Colombia 150-143-141-147=581 +5
 Wales 149-147-143-142=581
19  Austria 149-144-146-143=582 +6
T20  Chinese Taipei 142-147-146-148=583 +7
 Netherlands 149-141-147-146=583
 Puerto Rico 149-141-149-144=583
23  Norway 149-144-142-149=584 +8
24  Japan 146-139-147-153=585 +9
25  England 151-142-145-148=586 +10
26  Italy 150-143-145-149=587 +11
27  Belgium 148-141-151-149=589 +13
T28  Chile 146-150-148-146=590 +14
 Scotland 151-143-148-148=590
30  Slovenia 148-148-154-141=591 +15
31   Switzerland 148-151-145-148=592 +16
32  Czech Republic 152-141-156-147=596 +20
33  Portugal 154-146-150-151=601 +25
34  Finland 159-146-153-145=603 +27
T35  Paraguay 149-153-155-147=604 +28
 Peru 154-148-154-148=604
37  Malaysia 159-151-147-148=605 +29
T38  Israel 144-161-149-152=606 +30
 Trinidad and Tobago 155-145-159-147=606
 Venezuela 153-147-156-150=606
41  Hong Kong 157-151-154-145=607 +31
T42  Brazil 153-154-152-150=609 +33
 Iceland 155-152-151-151=609
44  Bolivia 153-155-153-150=611 +35
45  Latvia 156-147-156-153=612 +36
46  Guatemala 150-162-153-148=613 +37
47  Uruguay 154-155-155-156=620 +44
48  Ecuador 154-158-164-152=628 +52
49  Slovakia 154-162-158-155=629 +53
50  Turkey 159-161-165-159=644 +68
51  Tanzania 174-166-170-164=674 +98
52  Guam 183-182-182-184=731 +155

Source:[2]

Individual leaders[]

There was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.

# Player Country Score To par
1 Han Jung-eun  South Korea 72-65-68-70=275 −13
2 Kim Ji-hee  South Korea 75-63-68-71=277 −11
3 Kim Hyun-soo  South Korea 73-70-66-69=278 −10
T4 Amy Boulden  Wales 72-72-69-70=283 −5
Jessica Korda  United States 68-68-73-76=283
Kelli Shean  South Africa 70-69-72-72=283
7 Christine Wong  Canada 70-67-76-72=285 −3
T8 Dottie Ardina  Philippines 73-65-77-71=286 −2
Manuela Carbajo Re  Argentina 70-67-73-76=286
Cydney Clanton  United States 68-72-73-73=286
Danielle Kang  United States 70-73-73-70=286
Lisa McCloskey  Colombia 74-70-69-73=286

References[]

  1. ^ "World Amateur Team Championships: Women's World Amateur Team Championship". Golfstat. 23 October 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  2. ^ a b "World Amateur Team Championships, Womens Records". World Amateur Golf Council. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Golf: Korea wins Womens World Amateur Championship, U.S.second Championship". Women's Sports & Entertainment Network. 23 October 2010. Retrieved 26 January 2021.

External link[]

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