Great Britain and Ireland produced a superb unbeaten session in the afternoon fourballs to take a two-point lead over the United States into the final day of the Curtis Cup.
Catriona Matthew’s side battled back on Friday afternoon to claim a share of the spoils after the opening day, then won one and halved one of the three foursomes matches on Saturday morning in front of strong crowds at Sunningdale.
That left the scores locked at 4.5-4.5 heading into the afternoon session, where Great Britain won two and halved one of the three matches to move into a 7-5 advantage over the defending champions.
It leaves Great Britain and Ireland requiring three and a half points from Sunday’s eight singles matches to win the Curtis Cup for the first time since 2016, with the United States needing five points to retain the trophy and five and a half points for a fourth consecutive win.
All three foursomes contests proved tense and tight on Saturday morning, with two finishing on the 18th and the other decided on the 17th hole to leave little to separate the two teams.
Lottie Woad and Sara Byrne finished all-square against Melanie Green and Rachel Kuehn, with the Great Britain and Ireland pair losing their lead with back-to-back bogeys from the 16th before snatching the half-point when Green missed a five-footer for victory on the 18th.
The USA’s only full point of the day came when Catherine Park and Zoe Campos edged Patience Rhodes and Beth Coulter 2&1, before Hannah Darling and Aine Donegan ensured the morning ended level with a one-hole win over Anna Davis and Megan Schofill.
Darling and Mimi Rhodes defeated Jasmine Koo and Asterisk Talley 3&2 in the afternoon fourballs, with Lorna McClymont and Coulter then beating Anna Davis and Green 2&1.
Sara Byrne had the chance to complete a session whitewash but was unable to hole from 12 feet for birdie on the 18th, meaning she and partner Lottie Woad had to settle for half a point against Rachel Kuehn and Megan Schofill.
“I hit a really great shot in there to give me the opportunity, the putts just didn’t drop today,” a frustrated Byrne told Sky Sports. “I was struggling today for the putts to drop but that’s golf.
“Me and Lottie both played unbelievable and Lottie holed a great, great putt on the 16th to get us fired up. Tomorrow is a crucial day and the last few holes are crucial. There’s big magic moments happening every time.”
Looking ahead to Sunday’s singles, Woad, who won the Augusta National Women’s Amateur earlier this year, added: “I think you’ve just got to not think too far ahead, just focus on your own match. You can only win your own point so don’t focus on what the whole group’s doing and win your match.”
Who will win the Curtis Cup? Watch the Sunday singles live from 10am on Sky Sports Golf and from midday on Sky Sports +. Stream the LPGA Tour, Ladies European Tour and more sport with NOW.
Sky Sports+ has officially launched and will be integrated into Sky TV, streaming service NOW and the Sky Sports app, giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Find out more here.
Watch the PNC Championship to see Tiger Woods in competitive action for the first time since July when he partners his son Charlie at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in
Refresh 2024-12-18T03:31:20.617Z CRYPTO WIN FOR MCILROY AND SCHEFFLERLet's not forget that for their efforts, Scheffler and McIlroy earn $10m in CRO cryptoc
Before a potential merger can be finalized, the worlds of LIV Golf and the PGA Tour collide on Tuesday in Las Vegas.While a major c
Is the golf civil war drawing to a close? Or is it just getting started?The Showdown will pit two PGA Tour stars against two LIV Golf tearaways in a bid to win