The 16th Solheim Cup produced a memorable final day in Gleneagles with Europe asserting a stunning 14.5-13.5 success over USA with the final putt. Here is an overview of the 12 games which resulted in this thrilling conclusion…
Kang hit a wonderful strategy to eight feet and, hers rolled into provide an early increase to the Americans, following the 15-footer of Ciganda was brief of speed. But Ciganda’s answer was immediate, getting up and down from the back of the 2nd green to degree.
The Spaniard failed to pit out of 10 feet to scramble a par in the fourth that is challenging, when Kang’s bold par putt at the seventh motivated through the break and also Ciganda edged.
Ciganda holed a excellent putt to get a half at the eighth, but a hard drive drive into the knee-high rough in the ninth proved costly as she desired two stabs at getting her ball back to the fairway, out of where she fatted her fourth and let Kang to draw level at the turn.
Both struck stunning methods to gimme range in the 11th, but Kang regained the lead with a birdie at the 13th and did well to scramble a par at 15 to stay one-up with three to play.
However, Ciganda followed a ideal drive using a great fairway-wood into the heart of the green at the long 16th, establishing a two-putt birdie for the triumph, and she almost guaranteed half a stage minimal on 17 only for Kang to pull off a superb level save from the abandoned bunker.
But following both hit great pushes the past they bunkered Kang and their seconds chunked her third to the green. And, when Kang eventually found that the green and dropped from 12 feet for diploma, she reluctantly conceded defeat to give Europe the first stage of the end moment.
Hedwall had struggled for precision on Friday and did not feature at all on Saturday, however, the Swede with a storied Solheim Cup record hammered a perfect drive down the very first, knocked her next to 10 feet and nailed the putt to go one up.
Her lead awakened, though the compliment was returned by Korda on the green, but she gifted a hole back at the third.
Hedwall’s Friday battles were a distant memory when she drained another great putt to go up three at the first time and she maintained that lead at the turn before Korda stopped the rot with a nice 10-footer for birdie at the 10th.
The American left it three in a row having an eight-foot birdie putt on 11 that Hedwall couldn’t fit, and the clash was level on 13 if the Swede could not accompany Korda in for level.
And yet one hole later, Korda had the guide when she pinpointed a 12-footer for one more birdie, and the three-footer for par of Hedwall grazed the edge the debutant went to play with.
But Hedwall dug a clutch putt to get a winning birdie at 16, and she knocked on a tee shot at seven feet in the 17th only to see break to the putt.
Hedwall then missed the green with her third to 18 as well as with her competitor on in three, Hedwall’s must-make birdie putt from the run-off area rushed past the pin and then compelled her to concede defeat.
There was drama before game three had teed off as it appeared that Thompson suffered a recurrence of a back injury while on the scope.
But she’d taken an early lead following pitching to six feet, the par putt stands out since Thompson got down in two to attack first and, if Hall’s second to the very first came. When Thompson underwent treatment on her back after the next before alarm bells rang from the USA camp both birdied the second.
The entire world No 3 stayed in control and Hall had to dig deep to save par from 10 feet in the fifth and Hall then spurned two makeable putts to claw back the deficit onto each of the next two greens.
However, Thompson three-putted that the 10th because Hall pulled out a sublime up-and-down to win the hole with a diploma, and a four at the 11th gave Hall a third consecutive win and the direct when Thompson’s putter again mis-fired.
A remarkable up-and-down in a tricky place in a bunker from Thompson salvaged a level plus a halved hole in 14, and she had been wayward at the 15th and lipped out for par to move two down with three to play with.
Hall missed an opportunity to shut it out at the long 16th, but she made no error in 17 as she found the edge of the green from the tee and lagged her mommy afterwards Thompson blocked her iron to the greenside trap and neglected to hole out from the sand.
Boutier got off to a dreadful start after she needed three attempts and missed the green left at the first, and she couldn’t fit Park’s birdie. The French rookie had a fantastic opportunity to pull you back in the third, only to lip out from six feet, but she refused to fear and pars at the fifth and seventh were enough to level the encounter.
Both birdied the ninth, as well as the 10th appeared set to be clubbed at birdies following Park holed from within 10 feet, only for Boutier to misread her six-foot effort, however she atoned to the next green to restore parity prior to obtaining the cause for the first time in the match when Park’s par putt at 13 horse-shoed out.
Following halving the 14th in birdies, Boutier almost holed her moment to 15 only for Park to hit on her approach even nearer, but failed to convert until Boutier went dormie-two using a brilliant birdie at 16.
Both discovered sand from the tee at the short 17th, but Boutier held her guts to play with a sublime splash-out into gimme range, and Park’s bunker escape was even better but insufficient to expand the contest.
As she dropped a hole behind munoz duplicated Boutier’s under-hit processor in the few minutes before, and Yin’s birdie at the second captured the American off .
Things got worse to the Spaniard if she three-putted the fourth green to hand another hole away, and she rattled at a 30-footer for birdie on the seventh, Yin followed in from 20 ft to remain three ahead.
Yin afterward went four up at the turn when Munoz couldn’t make birdie at the ninth, however the house participant regrouped and birdied 10 and 11 to halve the deficit, and the rejuvenated Munoz pinpointed a birdie putt from 20 feet to on 12 for her third successive win.
However, her momentum stalled if she missed the goal from short range in the second, though Munoz hit back with a winning birdie at the 14th before Yin managed to scramble a good par at 15 to remain up one.
Yin then restored her two-hole edge when she holed from eight feet for a winning birdie at 16, and the match ended when Munoz failed to rally on the birdie she needed on the penultimate hole.
Khang looked anything-but a beginner early on as she won the first having a solid par, and 2 meaty blows into the long second group up another triumph with Hull unable to get into rhythm. The English kid, playing in her fourth Solheim Cup at 23, wasted a couple of chances to respond and another at the seventh, in which her putt for birdie lipped out. Hull looked exasperated in the following when her five-footer played a 180 round the lip and stayed out, but she eventually got you to drop as the hive had been halved in birdie-fours.
Hull’s more-confident stroke on the 10th resulted in a winning birdie and both got at 12 and traded bogeys. Khang erred at 13 before both birdied the 14th since the game levelled with a level.
The house star then moved into the lead for the first time in the match with a clutch birdie at the long 16th, and she had a decent chance to shut it out in 17 to leave her one-up at the past.
But Hull subsequently made a mess of the extended 18th, duffing a pitch along with her before her next raced across the green out of where she was not able to chip-in for level, downing Khang the pit along with a match suit.
Van Dam got off to a flying start, clipping a wedge in close in the very first before Salas didn’t save level anyway and, after they traded birdies at the second, Van Dam went up two with another birdie at the fifth, but a short-range overlook on the next halved her advantage.
Van Dam remained forward at the flip when both birdied the ninth but, after Salas holed for a three in the 10th, the Dutch newcomer dropped from eight feet.
A Salas birdie in 13 gave her the lead for the very first time in the match, and birdied 14 until Van Dam hauled himself back to level pegging when she holed a confident four-footer to get a winning birdie at the long 16th.
However, Van Dam then made a major mistake in 17th when she divides her tee-shot into an awkward lie close to the lip of the greenside trap, and she grabbed her splash-out thin and was not able to coincide with Salas’ solid level from the other side of the surface.
Van Dam appeared in good shape to birdie the final and grab a half if she drilled her second to within several metres of the green, but she obtained habituated together with her pitch and then missed from 10 feet until tearfully conceding defeat.
Masson, keen to atone for lost a wonderful chance to acquire against her fourballs on Saturday evening, appreciated the perfect beginning having a winning birdie in the first, and she doubled that guide after Korda missed a putt for par at the fourth from barely two feet off.
However, the German’s back-to-back bogeys in seven and eight enabled the American to level using a pair of pars, also Korda made it three consecutive wins with a birdie at the ninth to snatch the lead at the halfway stage.
Masson’s apartment at 10 levelled the battle, however Korda went ahead with a birdie at 12 before chipping in from the front knee in the 13th to dual her lead, though Masson’s answer was immediate and swift as she won the 14th with a great three.
However, her delight was short lived as she lost the 15th into Korda’s par, along with the Western wrapped up the point with the following nail putt for birdie at the 16th as Masson’s putt to expand the contest slipped wide.
Ewart Shadoff struck the first blow when Altomare bogeyed the first, but also the American debutant levelled instantly using a birdie at the second. Altomare edged forward at the fifth thanks to a delightful second which was close enough to its Englishwoman to concede.
Altomare has impressed with her putting during this week, and she had been on target again to double her lead in the eighth, along with a shocking miss from within two feet on the ninth by Shadoff talented her rival a three-up lead in the turn.
Altomare went further forward with a ideal 10-footer for birdie at the 10th, and a diploma at 12 gave her a fourth win in five pockets and lifted her to some controlling five-up lead.
Along with also the 28-year-old capped a hugely impressive rookie performance with her sixth birdie of the day at the 14th to complete a 5&4 thrashing of their out-of-sorts Shadoff.
What would end up being the match that decided the Solheim Cup began low key, using the first four holes shared before Pettersen went ahead with a cracking 25-footer for birdie at the fifth, and another fell on the next to take the Deadly stalwart up two.
Alex fell her second birdie of the day at the eighth to pull one back and both made good fours at the very long time before Pettersen went two-up once more with a birdie at the 11th.
Alex pulled back when Pettersen bogeyed the 13th, and the match was all-square 1 hole later when Alex birdied. A stunning pitch from Pettersen snatched a half in the long 16th later Alex’d stiffed her third, and the two missed long-range birdie chances on the penultimate green.
The tension was relegated into the limit going up the past with all eyes on the last match to complete, and Pettersen atoned for a bad drive using a gorgeous third that almost summoned back to the hole prior to coming to rest six feet in the flag.
Alex’s next was arrow-straight but 12 feet , along with her catchy, downhill putt for birdie missed about the right to depart Pettersen staring at a six-footer to win back the trophy for Europe.
Along with also the 38-year-old held her guts to spoil the putt at the center of this cup to prompt wild celebrations from European players and fans amid emotional scenes across the 18th green.
Law’s opening par earned her a triumph at the first, and McDonald birdied the next to degree only to bogey the next, though a great approach to this fifth set up another winning birdie for the American.
They exchanged birdie-twos at the sixth before Law’s three at the next regained her the guide, only for McDonald to strike back in the eighth along with some of birdies at the very long distance left them flat heading into the back nine.
Law then fell behind having a bad miss in three feet at 10, and were not able to save par in the 12th before Legislation levelled what was becoming an increasingly vital match with a birdie at 14.
The English rookie subsequently got off with a error at 15 if she needed two tries to escape a greenside trap, getting up-and-down for bogey following McDonald’s 10-foot par putt shaved the edge of the cup.
Clearly pumped with adrenaline, and Law nailed a 20-foot putt to get a winning birdie at the 16th after a little heavy-handed by her pitch from just a few of the green, and that she was celebrating victory when McDonald bogeyed 17 before all eyes turn to the large screen to see the conclusion of the Pettersen battle ahead.
Nordqvist gained the early advantage when she birdied the ninth before a par at the demanding, par-three fourth had been sufficient to go up two when Pressel overlooked the green from the tee.
Pressel got into further difficulty in the seventh and failed to pit a six-footer for level to gift the Swede that a three-up lead, but it had been Nordqvist’s turn to endure on the greens onto the following as she opened the door with a lip-out from four toes.
Both missed out on birdies at the long run, and Norqvist restored her three-up direct when Pressel bogeyed the 10th prior to the home superstar added another birdie at 11 to flee into a four-up lead.
After the pair traded pars during the next two holes, and then birdies at the 14th, then Nordqvist closed out a one-sided victory with a cast-iron par in the second.

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