Scrapping it around
The member of Edmonstown Golf Club in Dublin made seven birdies and dropped just two shots during his second round. Not bad considering he wasn’t hitting his driver well.
“I wasn’t good off the tee today,” he admitted. “I was sort of scrapping it around and I’m quite sick at the minute about that. My swing was about 60% and I was just trying to get the ball on the fairway somewhere.
“But my irons were quite good. I was on point with those and then anything from 12 feet and in I holed them more times than not. I birdied all the par-5s so I took advantage of my chances.”
Weaver was part of a three-way play-off at Troia Resort, Portugal in February 2022 but was eliminated at the first extra hole as Maynooth students Jordan Boles and Ryan Griffin shared the title. Sundleson shared the lead after 36 holes in Halmstad last month, eventually finishing joint third. Fior is making his fourth STS start, and with third in France last season his best effort.
Breaking new ground
Nilsson returned a three-under 70 to go with her opening 69 to get to seven-under, a shot ahead of three-time STS winner Lucy Jamieson of St Andrews and Maynooth’s Kate Lanigan. Nilsson is also breaking new ground: she has never led an STS tournament after 36 holes.
Nilsson began the second round with a two-shot lead and built on that with five birdies in her first 12 holes to get to eight-under. A dropped shot at the 13th took her back to seven-under before she reeled off five straight pars.
The Halmstad scholar counts two third place finishes as her best STS placings. “I didn’t play as well as yesterday,” she said. “I was a little bit better with my irons yesterday. I just didn’t get the ball as close to the flags today, so I had to work a little harder on the greens.”
Nilsson has watched as teammates Elice Fredriksson, William Leu and Jesper Littorin have won STS events. Needless to say, she’s keen to add her name to that winner’s list.
Comfortable
“I feel comfortable in this position, but I know I have to work hard,” she added. “I can only control my game and do my own thing. Hopefully it works. I have very much experience in this series. I have two third place finishes and hopefully I do much better tomorrow.”
Jamieson and Lanigan will take some beating. Chemistry scholar Jamieson made a career high eight birdies and returned her lowest STS score, a six-under-par 67, one stroke better than a 68, also six-under, around the Jubilee Course at St Andrews in April en route to winning the 2023-24 Final.
Lanigan won in Italy last season and had runner-up finishes in Portugal and France on her way to winning last season’s Order of Merit.