Year down, Nishna Patel makes some amends at WAAP 2022

Nishna Patel - TheGolfingHub
Nishna Patel started with two bogeys in first two holes, but fought back with two birdies to get to even par.

Sixteen-year-old Nishna Patel from Mumbai was the best Indian at T30 after an even-par 72 in the first round of the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific Championship. Kriti Chowhan (73) was the next best at T43 and the highest-ranked Indian and the national champion Avani Prashanth (74) was T52 at the Waterside Course at the Siam Country Club.

Related: Women’s Indian Open high drives Avani Prashanth at WAAP

Of the three other Indians, Mannat Brar (75) at three-over was T61, Sifat Sagoo (77) at 5-over was T71 and Ceerat Kang (79) at 7-over was T78th

Nishna, who represented India at the Women’s Amateur in Scotland and the World Amateur Team Championship in France, trains at the Bombay Presidency Golf Club. She also missed the cut at the WAAP last year in Abu Dhabi. She started with two bogeys in first two holes, but fought back with two birdies to get to even par.

Malaysia’s Liyana Durisic, 21, had seven birdies, five of them in last six holes in a round of 6-under 66 for a one-shot lead over Australia’s Kelsey Bennett and local Natthakritta Vongtaveelap, who shot 5-under 67 each. Bennett and Vongtaveelap were among the three players, who tied for second in 2021 behind the winner Mizuki Hashimoto, who was  tied fifth at 69 after the first round on Thursday.

The winner of the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific championship, gets a spot in the Women’s Open and the Evian Championships, besides berths at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur and the Hana Financial Service event in Korea.

Avani had some great saves, but she also dropped shots when she went into the bunker and failed with up-and-down for pars. She also had three-putted the ninth, which was her last hole. 

Kriti, who was T34 in the 2021 edition of WAAP, shot 1-over 73 with two birdies against three bogeys.

Leader Durisic, 21, from Kuala Lumpur, is at Iowa State University, and has made the cut in all three previous WAAP events.