Roared on by her adoring fans, Patty Tavatanakit made a gutsy final-hole birdie to write her name into Honda LPGA Thailand folklore.
Seven days after claiming her maiden Ladies European Tour title in Saudi Arabia, the 24-year-old eked out a dramatic one-stroke victory in the US$1.7 million LPGA Tour showcase at Siam Country Club.
Three shots clear of the field at the start of the final round, Tavatanakit closed with a five-under-par 67 over the Old Course to become only the second home winner in the Honda LPGA Thailand’s 17-year history.
“This is a dream come true, to win in my home country and in front of my parents,” said an emotional Tavatanakit, after posting a 72-hole total of 21-under 267 – one ahead of Switzerland’s Albane Valenzuela, who soared into contention with a best-of-the-week 63.
Two strokes further back on 270 in a share of third place were the Korean duo of Kim Sei-young (65) and Choi Hye-jin, who covered the final nine holes in 29 for a 66.
For most of the day, Tavatanakit appeared to be in cruise control, extending her lead to four shots after her fourth birdie of the day at the 10th following an exquisite flop shot to tap-in distance.
But making it to the winning line from there proved far from straightforward, especially after a scrappy bogey at the short par-four 15th which left the door ajar for fast-finishing Valenzuela, playing two flights ahead of the Thai.
Having holed out from the fairway for an eagle-two at the fifth, Valenzuela strung together a remarkable stretch of seven successive threes from the 11th followed by a testing six-foot putt for a birdie-four on 18 to draw level with Tavatanakit at the top of the leaderboard on 20-under-par.
Having bounced back from that dropped shot on 15 by holing a 10-footer for birdie at 16 and making a five-footer for par on 17, the home favourite now needed to conjure a birdie at the final hole to win. A par would have meant a play-off.
After splitting the fairway with her drive, Tavatanakit struck a mid-iron to the elevated green which came up fractionally short of the putting surface, leaving an uphill chip which she executed perfectly, her ball coming to rest inches from the cup.
After tapping in for the winning birdie, Tavatanakit struggled to hold back the tears as her fellow-Thai players rushed on to the green and doused her in water.
She recovered her composure sufficiently to speak eloquently at the prize-giving ceremony, thanking her team, friends, family and the galleries before being presented with a cheque for US255,000.
Her Siam Country Club win may not have been as clear-cut as her seven-shot romp in Saudi Arabia, but that mattered not to Tavatanakit for whom it was her first LPGA Tour success since her breakthrough win at the 2021 Chevron Championship, one of the five women’s Majors.
She said: “I was so nervous today. I don’t know if I showed it a little bit, but playing in front of everyone who came out and supported me it gave me a little bit of an extra boost.
“I was outside the ropes at one point in my life and now I’m inside and get to play with all these amazing girls. They’re the best in the world. To be able to close it is pretty surreal.
“I was eating a lot on the front nine just so I have plenty of energy on the back. I’m really proud of the way I hung in there on the back nine.”
Tavatanakit is the sixth player from Thailand to earn at least two LPGA Tour victories, following in the footsteps of Pajaree Anannarukarn, Atthaya Thitikul, Moriya Jutanugarn and Jasmine Suwannapura (all two wins), and Ariya Jutanugarn, whose 12 triumphs include the 2021 Honda LPGA Thailand.
In the battle of the amateurs, bragging rights went to Suvichaya Vinijchaitham, who earned her LPGA Tour debut here by dint of winning last month’s Honda LPGA Thailand National Qualifier.
Joint sixth overnight, Suvichaya posted a final-round 71 to finish joint 18th on 12-under 276 – five shots and 23 places ahead of fellow 17-year-old Eila Galitsky, who ended her campaign with a 73.
The 2024 LPGA Tour schedule features 35 events in 10 countries, offering a record total prize fund of more than USD118 million. The Honda LPGA Thailand forms part of the tour’s first Asian swing, which continues this coming week with the HSBC Women’s World Championship at Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore
The LPGA Tour’s second Asian swing will include the USD3 million Maybank Championship, which tees off at Kuala Lumpur Golf & Country Club on October 24-27. France’s Celine Boutier won the title last year in an epic nine-hole-playoff against Thailand’s Atthaya Thitikul.