Home pressure could prove positive for Canadian contingent at CP Women's Open
Brooke Henderson leads strong field hoping to replicate England's Georgia Hall's win at Royal Lytham
England's Georgia Hall can relate to the pressure that Canadian golfers may be feeling at the CP Women's Open.
"Just enjoy being at home and enjoy having your family and friends come and watch," Hall said Wednesday. "That's what I did. Don't really worry about the outcome. Four days is a lot of golf. So just enjoy it and see what happens."
Brooke Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., headlines the list of 16 Canadians in the field this week at the Wascana Country Club. The world No. 14 has one victory and eight top-10 finishes this season.
Jocelyne Bourassa was the last Canadian to win this tournament, taking the 1973 title in Montreal.
"That's a long time," Henderson said. "Yeah, [there's] a little bit [of pressure]. I would love to win this tournament. I don't know if that's this year. Hopefully before my career is over."
'Like the 6th major'
Henderson finished in a tie for 12th last year in Ottawa. She has an afternoon tee time for Thursday's opening round with new world No. 1 Sung Hyun Park of South Korea and Sweden's Anna Nordqvist.
"It's kind of like the sixth major for me on the LPGA Tour," Henderson said. "It's very meaningful, very important to me, especially being a CP ambassador and playing here in my home country."
Other Canadians include LPGA Tour regulars Alena Sharp of Hamilton, Maude-Aimee LeBlanc of Sherbrooke, Que., Anne-Catharine Tanguay of Quebec City and Brittany Marchand of Orangeville, Ont.
Symetra Tour players include Jennifer Ha of Calgary, Saskatoon's Anna Young, Augusta James of Bath, Ont., Elizabeth Tong of Thornhill, Ont., and Megan Osland of Kelowna, B.C. Canadian Golf Hall of Famer Lorie Kane of Charlottetown will make her record-tying 28th appearance.
National amateur squad member Naomi Ko of Victoria is also in the field with development squad players Celeste Dao of Notre-Dame-de-l'Ile-Perrot, Que., and Ellie Szeryk of London, Ont. Amateur Grace St. Germain of Ottawa was a late withdrawal.
Added pressure could be positive
Vancouver teenager Tiffany Kong is playing on an exemption and Saskatoon native Bobbi Brandon earned a spot with a top-four finish in Monday's qualifier.
"It's about time that one of us wins it and it'd be awesome to do it this week," Sharp said. "[I] just want to have a chance at it going into the weekend."
Golf Canada's national women's head coach Tristan Mullally said it's possible for players to treat the added pressure in a positive way.
"You can use that if you leverage it correctly," he said. "I often say, 'You can sit at the edge of a cliff and you can look down and be scared or you can look out and enjoy the view.'
"I think it's that perspective. It's got to be where, 'These people are rooting for me. I can use that energy."'
Aggresive play rewarded
Second-ranked Ariya Jutanugarn of Thailand, China's Shanshan Feng and Americans Morgan Pressel and Paula Creamer are some of the other big names in the field.
The wind was howling on a warm, sunny afternoon for Wednesday's pro-am championship. Similar conditions are expected for the first two rounds but rain is in the forecast for the weekend.
There are opportunities to go low on the 6,675-yard course. It's a flat track with long, narrow fairways, thick rough and fast greens.
Players who are long off the tee — like Henderson — could give themselves opportunities as the course often rewards aggressive play.
This will be Hall's first tournament since her first major title — and first victory — on Tour. The rookie will play in a group with three-time CP Women's Open champion Lydia Ko of New Zealand and American Lexi Thompson.
Play continues through Sunday at the $2.25-million US event. The champion will earn $337,500.