McClymont struggles
So it proved. McClymont returned a final round 13-over-par 85, easily done around the demanding south of Lisbon layout, to throw the tournament wide open. Jamieson took full advantage by returning a 1-over-par 73 to pip Trinity College’s Kate Lanigan by a shot, with the Irish international posting a best of the week 2-under 70, the only score under par over three rounds in the women’s section.
“I’ve played here enough to know that a good score can move you up the leaderboard,” the English player said. “But I wasn’t thinking about where I might finish, I just wanted to play well for myself. I did that today. I’m more than happy to shoot 73 around here because, as tough as this course is, it’s probably a par 75 for us in all reality.”
Jamieson’s St Andrews’s win last year was special because it was her maiden Student Tour Series victory, and in her adopted home town. However, passing the Troia examination may just top that victory.
Golf club design
“I’m going to get my degree and take it from there. I might try the Ladies European Tour Qualifying School if I feel my game is good enough, but in an ideal world I’d like to go into golf club design, golf club engineering.”
The way she wielded her clubs around Troia in the final round suggests Jamieson will be more than a dab hand at designing the golf clubs of the future.
A coin toss
The men’s tournament came down to Walker and Edge Golf College’s Noah Brummer. They separated themselves from the rest of the field early on, with Walker eagling the par-5 first to the Swiss player’s birdie, and then went head to head down the stretch. It was practically a coin toss to see who would come out on top. Walker only settled things on the par-5 final hole.
Holding a one-shot lead, the 21-year-old Irishman closed out the tournament in style by nearly holing his third shot for eagle. He was left with tap in birdie to give the men of Maynooth University a third consecutive Portuguese win.