The CSGA Links Volume 2 Issue 4 June, 2014 | Page 18

2014 Champion Carmen Bandea 16th Connecticut Women’s Open W ith rough more difficult after a late Tuesday rain storm, an overnight temperature drop of thirty degrees, and a stiff wind blowing throughout, the final 18 holes of the Connecticut Women’s Open was as much a battle against the elements as an individual competition. It turned out to be a two-woman fight for the title between four-time champion Liz Caron of Stamford, Conn., and 23 year-old Carmen Bandea of Johns Creek, Georgia. After 85-degree temperatures during the first round, Wampanoag Country Club played 4-5 shots tougher the second day with weather conditions more commonly seen in the British Isles. First round 68s fired by Caron and co-leader Lindsay Ann Aho seemed to have happened in a previous season as the leaders came back to par and all the players bundled themselves in turtlenecks and rain suits. Bandea, after misfortune at the 8th when her second shot to the par-5 buried under the lip of a greenside bunker, displayed impressive composure and determination. With little choice but to take an unplayable lie in the bunker, Bandea produced a 6 on a hole she expected to birdie. “It was a tough break,” said Bandea, “it wasn’t really that bad of a shot. It was just about pin high and only about 20 feet left of the flag. If it lands one inch to the right and takes any kind of bounce I’ve got an eagle putt. But those are the breaks. I know it’s a cliché but I really try to just play one shot at a time. So I couldn’t let it bother me.” After the debacle at the 8th, Bandea orchestrated a spectacular run over the next seven holes. She narrowly missed birdie at the difficult 9th then dropped an eight-footer at the 10th after a brilliant approach. With that birdie, Bandea led for the first time in the championship, by one over Caron. Caron responded with her own brand of brilliance, rifling her second shot to ten feet on the par-5 11th. Bandea also reached in two, but left herself an impossible location far above the hole on the treacherously sloped surface. The inevitable three-putt for par gave Caron a chance for a twoshot swing, but her eagle attempt missed by a hair leaving a tap-in birdie and once more, a share of the lead. At the 12th, also a par 5, Caron struck two more beautiful shots to reach the green. From forty feet her eagle attempt grazed the lip to yield another tap-in birdie. Bandea then, from the back apron, drained a thirty-foot birdie putt to match Caron’s effort.