The R&A Student Tour Series (STS) is breaking new ground this week as the 2024/25 season gets underway in Halmstad, Sweden, the Tour’s first visit to Scandinavia.
Fifty-eight male and female golfers from 18 universities across Europe and the world will begin the fifth season of the STS over the course that staged the 2007 Solheim Cup from 10-12 September. The Tour takes in five different countries, culminating in the Final at St Andrews next April.
Two-time Student Tour Series order of merit winner Lorna McClymont proved how important the STS is to player development. The recently graduated Stirling student won seven STS tournaments during her university career, using the series to help claim a place on the Great Britain and Ireland Curtis Cup team that defeated the United States of America at Sunningdale ten days ago.
McClymont, who will work as an assistant coach to University of Stirling performance director Dean Robertson this autumn, won two points out of three to help the GB&I cause – including a pivotal role in the Sunday singles where she defeated Megan Schofill 3&2. McClymont will be missed on the STS but there is plenty of talent waiting to follow in her footsteps.
Lanigan returns
Maynooth University student Kate Lanigan returns to try to retain the Order of Merit title she won last season. The Irish internationalist, winner of last season’s STS Italy, edged out Halmstad student Elice Fredriksson by two points to top the 2023-24 table.
Lanigan is the highest ranked player, male or female, at 251st on the World Amateur Golf Ranking® (WAGR®). Fredriksson, winner of last season’s STS Spain, will be hoping to use home course advantage this week to start the season with another win. She is ranked 440th on the WAGR® table.
University of St Andrews student Lucy Jamieson also returns for this campaign. The Heswall Golf Club member is a three-time STS winner, including victory in the St Andrews Final in April in the inclement weather conditions that swept over the Old Course. The world number 895 placed fourth on last season’s order of merit.
St Andrews scholar Ellie Monk notched up five top-ten’s on her STS debut last season, including third-place finishes in France and St Andrews. The English player, the third highest ranked individual at 709th, will be looking to improve on those finishes after winning this year’s Helen Holm Scottish Women’s Open Championship.
Masters student Canice Screene of University College London, formerly a student at Boston College in the USA, arrives in Sweden for her first STS event fresh from winning the AIG Irish Women’s Amateur Close Championship.