Outrageous fortune
McClymont’s lead over Megan Ashley of St Andrews University and Halmstad University’s Elice Fredriksson would be larger if not for suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune that all golfers suffer from time to time, even Scottish internationals of her calibre. The Milngavie Golf Club member bounced back from consecutive bogeys at the opening two holes to get to level par for the round after the 10th, thanks to birdies at that hole and the third. However, a quadruple bogey at the 16th knocked her back.
“I came back well after the start and played solid to get back to level par,” McClymont said. “My driving was good, my putting was good, but at 16 I hit it left off the tee. I had a bush behind my ball but I had a line to the green, but the ball hit a pine cone. I hit my third shot onto the green and had a seven footer for par and four putted.
Ping pong
“We’re here to play golf not ping pong, but that’s what it felt like on the 16th.”
As 1992 U.S. Open champion Tom Kite once said, “This game has made cry-babies out of all of us at one time or another.”
While McClymont can certainly relate to that quote, she still odds on to win her third straight Student Tour Series event of this campaign, and continue Stirling women’s dominance in Portugal.