Smart links golf
“It’s really links golf and you need to know where to hit the ball and where to miss the ball especially,” she said. “This morning when we were teeing off number one it was still and there was no wind. I totally got the right side of the draw in that respect. I’m not sure if I’ll be able to shoot the same score tomorrow just because of the wind. It’s significant, there is a big difference. With the wind picking up some of the par fours are playing like par fives and some of the par fives are playing like par fours.
“It’s missing it on all the right spots, making sure I don’t make too many big numbers, keeping the bogeys off the card and letting the birdies chances fall in and not forcing anything to happen. Tomorrow is another opportunity to go learn some more about the golf course and maybe dial it in a little bit. That’s my goal for tomorrow, just keep it simple, miss it in the right spaces and don’t get too far ahead of myself.”
Top field at Portmarnock
This is one of the strongest fields in the history of The Women’s Amateur with four players in the top ten of the WAGR and 21 in the top 50.
Two shots back from the leaders was another top 25 player in Meja Ortengren, from Sweden, who carded a one-under-par round of 71. The semi-finalist in last year’s R&A Girls’ Amateur Championship at Ganton is on the same mark as 18-year-old Savannah De Bock from Belgium.
English hopes Euphemie Rhodes and Isla McDonald-O’Brien are on level par alongside Anne-Sterre den Dunnen from the Netherlands, Caitlyn Macnab from South Africa and the USA's Megan Propeck.
The 144-strong field will take part in the second round of stroke play stage on Tuesday 25 June with 64 players advancing to the match play stage from Wednesday 26 to Saturday 29 June.