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GOLF

Sweden’s Nordqvist claims second LPGA tournament title

Eight final round birdies by Swedish golfer Anna Nordqvist helped her take home an unexpected win at the LPGA Tour Championship on Monday.

Sweden's Nordqvist claims second LPGA tournament title

Nordqvist, 22, fired a final-round 65 to finish at 13-under 203 in the tournament reduced to 54 holes because of heavy rain over the weekend.

Mexico’s Lorena Ochoa was two strokes back on 205 and secured her fourth straight Player of the Year award when challenger South Korean Jiyai Shin couldn’t chip in from the front of the 18th green,

The win gave Nordqvist her second LPGA victory and made it through the season without missing a cut in 15 starts. She also won the LPGA Championship this year.

Shin and Nordqvist played in the day’s final group, right behind Ochoa. The Houstonian Golf and Country Club was still water-logged after heavy rain on Friday and Saturday. Players were allowed to lift, clean and place their balls.

Nordqvist surged to the lead at 12 under with five straight birdies from the eighth.

She gave back a shot at 13, then added back-to-back birdies at 14 and 15. With the victory in her grasp, Ochoa and Shin continued their duel.

“I definitely tried to be aggressive,” Nordqvist said. “It was pretty tight up the leaderboard, so you were really going to have to shoot low in order to pull it off.

“I’m just very, very happy that I did.”

Shin may have been feeling the pressure as she struggled with her putter on the front nine. She didn’t make a birdie until the 11th, when Ochoa was already within a shot of the lead.

Back-to-back bogeys by Ochoa at eight and nine opened the door for Nordqvist. Ochoa rebounded with a birdie at 15 to set up the dramatic finish.

Momentum seemed to be swinging Shin’s way when Ochoa needed two strokes to get out of a greenside bunker on the par-three 17th. Ochoa sank a bogey putt as Shin and Nordqvist watched from the tee.

But Shin also found a bunker on 17, blasted out short of the green and bogeyed.

Ochoa landed her approach at 18 about 16 feet from the pin, and gave the leaderboard a hard look as she walked to the green.

She and caddie Greg Johnston discussed the situation before Ochoa stepped up and drained her putt.

Shin’s second shot at 18 was short of the green. Her chip missed the hole by inches and Ochoa patted her heart and hugged Johnston.

Korea’s Na Yeon Choi (64) and second-round leader Kristy McPherson (70) finished tied for third on 206.

Sweden’s Sophie Gustafson and South Koreans Song-Hee Kim and Hee Young Park were tied on 209, and Shin was joined on 210 by Japan’s Ai Miyazato, Norway’s Suzanne Pettersen and Taiwan’s Yani Tseng.

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FOOTBALL

Tennis courts and golf courses to reopen in Denmark

Danes will be able to take up their tennis rackets and golf clubs again after the country's two biggest sports associations announced that outdoor sports with no physical contact can resume again.

Tennis courts and golf courses to reopen in Denmark
Tennis will be one of the first sports to restart. Photo: Søren Bidstrup/Ritzau Scanpix
The Sports Confederation of Denmark and the country's other sports association DGI announced that they had agreed new guidelines for restarting group sports with the Danish Health Authority, in a press release issued on Tuesday. 
 
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“This is the first sign of sport opening up, and we are really pleased that the health authorities have given us guidelines so that some activities can start up again,” Charlotte Bach Thomassen, chair of the Danish sports association DGI, said. 
 
“Of course, joining together in sports clubs must be safe from a  health point of view, so it is important to be aware that in many sports associations you will not be able to meet physically.” 
 
 
DIF chairman Niels Nygaard told Ritzau that the announcement did not mean any organisation would be required to restart activities they did not regard as safe. 
 
“These are voluntary associations where there are differences from association to association and sport to sport,” he said. “Our recommendations are not a requirement for associations to start activities. They can do it if it can be done under safe conditions, and if they have doubts about whether it can be done, then they shouldn't do it.”
 
According to the joint press release, group sports can now restart if: 
 
  • they take place outside 
  • participants can keep a distance of two meters from others
  • participants pay special attention to hand hygiene
  • rackets, clubs or other props are frequently cleaned
  • participants cough or sneeze into your elbow or a paper towel
  • participants stay home if they have a fever, cough or muscle soreness. 
  • shared facilities such as clubhouses and dressing and shower facilities are not used 
 
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