CSGA Publications: 2014 Championship Annual | Page 17

16 TH CONNECTICUT WOMEN’S OPEN Wampanoag Country Club West Hartford, Conn. May 27 - 28 EYES ON THE PRIZE From the first hole to the final putt, Carmen Bandea of Johns Creek, Georgia never lost her composure en-route to her first Connecticut Women’s Open title. W Top: Same pose, different day- dressed in winter clothes, Carmen Bandea tees off on the first playoff hole. Middle: Liz Caron came close to capturing her record fifth-straight Women’s Open title on her childhood course. Bottom: Carmen Bandea smiles with the Women’s Open trophy after making birdie the second playoff hole. ITH HEAVY ROUGH made more difficult after a late Tuesday rain storm, an overnight temperature drop of thirty degrees, and a stiff wind blowing throughout, the final 18 holes of the Connecticut Women’s Open looked to be a battle against the elements. It turned out to be a two-woman fight for the title between four-time champion Liz Caron of Stamford, and 23 year-old Georgian, Carmen Bandea. Through the first nine holes Caron and Bandea dropped from 4-under and 3-under respectively to be tied for the lead at even par. Caron’s front nine 40, and Bandea’s 39 were not shocking given the conditions. That first round leader, Lindsay Ann Aho (-4, 68) shot 45 after multiple three-putt greens was surprising, as the former Big Break Florida star was coming off a smooth 4-under par opening round. Bandea, after misfortune at the 8th hole when her second shot to the par five buried under the lip of a greenside bunker, could have faltered if not for impressive composure and relentless determination. With little choice but to take an unplayable lie in the bunker, Bandea produced a 6 on a hole she expected to birdie. “It was a tough break,” said Bandea, “it wasn’t really that bad of a shot. It was just about pin high and only about twenty feet left of the flag. If it lands one inch to the right and takes any kind of bounce I’ve got an eagle putt. But those are the breaks.” After the debacle at the 8th, Bandea orchestrated a spectacular run over the next seven holes. She narrowly missed birdie at the difficult 9th then dropped an eight-footer at the 10th after a brilliant approach. She then went on to birdie the 12th with a forty-footer, and the 14th and 15th with downhill sliders to gain a one-shot lead over Caron. Much the way they started, perhaps again succumbing to the elements, the players struggled to reach the clubhouse and the official scorer’s table. Bandea bogeyed 16 and 17, and Caron bogeyed 18. That left them tied at 142, 2-under par, and in the ensuing sudden death playoff that began with a return to the 18th tee, both halved with bogeys and then halved the second playoff hole (the par 4 10th) with pars. Bandea’s quest for her first Connecticut Open title, and Caron’s bid for her fifth came to resolution at the third playoff hole, the par 4, 17th. Bandea’s perfectly struck nine iron came to rest ten feet from the hole. With Caron unable to match the play, Bandea rolled in her birdie to claim the 16th playing of the championship Bandea’s father served as her caddy over the 36 hole test. Shortly after his daughter won her second tournament as a professional (she won the Maryland Open in 2011), he remarked, “We learned a lot from Liz Caron today. How to play certain shots, how to compete, how to conduct yourself. Valuable lessons and a great experience. The $5,000 first place prize money will help as well.” 16th Connecticut Women’s Open Championship Wampanoag Country Club ~ West Hartford, Conn. ~ May 27-28 Par: 36-36--72 ~ Yardage: 5,804 ~ Entries: 68 1 www.csgalinks.org Carmen Bandea, Johns Creek, Georgia 69-73--142 2 3 4 5 8 Elizabeth Caron, Stamford, Connecticut Seul-Ki Park, Northbrook, Illinois Lynn Valentine, East Lyme, Connecticut Alexa Re Rancourt, Simpsonville, South Carolina Amanda Steinhagen, Herndon, Virginia Teri Hjelte, Greenwich, Conn. Ashli Bunch, Morristown, Tennessee Michelle Dobek, Chicopee, Massachusetts Jordan Lintz, Milford, Connecticut Katy Jarochowicz, Flinders, New South Wales 68-74--142 73-74--147 74-75--147 76-74--150 74-76--150 70-80--150 75-77--152 74-78--152 74-78--152 73-79--152 Connecticut State Golf Association 2014 17