Len Grant chases victory in the Swedish, Scandinavian Mixed European Tour competition.
After two rounds, the Swede was in the main fight.
– I didn’t get into that “flow”, I made some small mistakes but got a good grade, she says.
Lynn Grant Keep playing good golf. The Swedish talent turned professional less than a year ago and has since racked up two wins on the European Tour – most recently in Belgium at the end of May.
After two rounds of mixed Scandinavian competitions in Halmstad, I bid to win again.
Admittedly, the 22-year-old started with a ghost. But then she played her part. Grant went on 68 strokes, four strokes below par, splitting a second on -10.
“It’s good from a tee, good posture, but a little iron pulls to the left side, which I’m not a big fan of,” Grant tells Viaplay and tells us about his plan for the future.
A track record of Australians
– I’m going to drive as before. I’ll try to get the iron to feel a little better, but it works. So it drives the same way.
Golf icon Annika Sörenstam, who played on the same ball as Grant, was heavier and was noted with 75 strokes and with a total of +5 that ended up on the wrong side of the cut.
– I wish I could have played better, she tells Viaplay.
– I tried but it didn’t work.
Maja Stark, +3, is also finished playing.
Jason Scrivener, Australia, toured 64 strokes – a new course record – and tops the scoreboard at -12.
Henrik Stenson and Christopher Broberg share seventh with three others with a four-stroke difference.