Sunday’s final round at the 2022 Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open is one LPGA rookie Ayaka Furue won’t soon forget.
Furue torched Dundonald Links on Sunday in Ayrshire, Scotland, firing a course record and tournament record of 10-under 62 to overcome a four-stroke deficit and capture her first LPGA victory. Japan’s newest LPGA winner finished at 21 under, three shots better than Celine Boutier, who was tied for the 54-hole lead with Lydia Ko.
“My all-around game was really good,” Furue said. “The putts I needed to make, I made. My putting was really good.”
The stats back that up. She hit 17 of 18 greens and 13 of 14 fairways. She putted 26 times, recording 10 birdies and no bogeys en route to her course record. Furue made six straight birdies from Nos. 6-11. She shot 5-under 31 on each side. And she did it without lighting up the par 5s, as she birdied only one of the four three-shotters, the finishing hole.
Furue, 22, began the final round four shots behind the leaders but quickly made up that ground. She birdied the par-4 first before recording four straight pars. Then the birdie streak started, and more followed on Nos. 15, 17 and 18 to finish at 21 under.
By the time the final group came to the 18th tee, Furue had locked up the victory.
Course record
Tournament record
First LPGA Tour win
Watch highlights from Ayaka Furue's winning Sunday 62 at the @Womens_Scottish! pic.twitter.com/XW3w0obkw8
— LPGA (@LPGA) July 31, 2022
Boutier shot 3-under 69 in the final round, which included seven birdies. Ko, who led after 36 holes, shot her second straight 1-under 71 after back-to-back rounds of 65 to open the tournament. Ko finished five shots behind Furue in a tie for fifth place.
Hyo-Joo Kim and Cheyenne Knight finished tied for third at 17 under, four shots behind Furue.
The win could be pivotal for Furue heading into the final women’s major championship of the season next week, the AIG Women’s British Open at Muirfield.
“It builds up a lot of confidence,” Furue said. “I look forward to more tournaments and next week.”