Four Indians, including Avani Prashanth, who plans to turn pro with the Final qualifiers of the Ladies European Tour, joined Vani Kapoor, who failed to keep her card in 2024 and Hitaashee Bakshi, who topped the domestic WPGT
Pranavi, former Order of Merit winner in India, is tied third with Helen Briem of Germany who shot 66-69 to be 9-under. Lying second is Pia Babnik of Slovenia, who has had two straight 67s
Pranavi, playing her rookie season on the LET, birdied holes two, three, seven, eight, 12 and 18 for her round of six-under. The three players sharing the second place with Pranavi included the German duo Helen Briem and Patricia Isabel Schmidt, and Spain's Ana Pelaez Trivino all fired round
Manon De Roey, second on the Ladies European Tour's Order of Merit, was one of two players to master the difficult DLF course on Moving Day, returning a 7 under 65 along with Austria's Emma Spitz
The stage is all set for the latest edition of the Women's Indian Open, which gets underway on October 24 at the DLF Golf and Country Club. With 114 players from 31 nations, many of whom have been recent winners of the Ladies European Tour, the tournament is set for a battle royale.
Diksha Dagar paid heavily for the price of 6-over 78 in the first round and even a 72 in the second could not help her. She is next due to play the Women's Indian Open at home
Switzerland's Tamburlini, who is leading the LET Order of Merit, began her round with a bogey at the first before a birdie on the fifth. After another dropped shot on the sixth, the two-time LET winner found her groove making three birdies on the trot on holes eight, nine and ten.
This week Diksha, a two-time winner on the LET, has been named captain with her teammates being Moa Folke of Sweden and two Chinese players Xinyu Cao and Shaoyun Ding
Vani started the final day three shots behind the overnight leaders, Hitaashee Bakshi and Vidhatri Urs. Playing one group ahead of the leaders, Vani was one-under for the front nine, but still trailed Hitaashee who was 2-over for the front nine and Vidhatri, who was even par
Vidhatri Urs started almost two hours later than her original tee time as play was pushed back on account of the weather and forecast of heavy rain and wet conditions. She opened with a bogey on Par-5 first but birdied the second, fifth and seventh for a 2-under 34 that took her 27-hole tota