AIG WOMEN OPEN: Charley Hull aims to break Major Duck in Royal Porthcawl

Hull has been almost incredible years since Hull has been on a professional stage with five successful seconds in Ladies European Tour (LET).
He continued to record six victory in the LPGA tour and became the key member of the last six European Solheim Cup team, and the three second finishing finish was the best Hull in the largest championships of the sport.
“The second is the first losing,” he said, England’s best sequential player.
“But I’m a great position because if you don’t ask [about my chances]I’m not doing anything right. “
Hull has been a small explosion or bust in the main branches in recent years. At the beginning of the last 24, he missed eight times, but in 2023, when the Surrey course was held at Walton Heath, he finished the top 25 at the age of 15, including the second.
In contrast to the open championship of men organized in the coastal connections course, the female equivalent is played in internal courses.
Hull says that he “prefers” Parkland, while he has positive experiences to be drawn from Porthcawl.
In 2011, the opening refers to playing at the young Vagliano Trophy, “I won here when I was 14, so I have fond memories – – Great Britain and Irish Agaist amateur competition, which attracts the continental continental Europe.
“Connections will be a challenge, and I hope the wind is ready because I like to find the connections difficult.”
Three times, he finished the point behind the winner in the previous 59 major matches. There are more 10s.
“I don’t really look at things like that,” he said.
“I have nothing to do. As I am alive, I go to the next thing when I’m done.”
And what to do to take your game to the next level, Hull said: “I shouldn’t put too much pressure on my golf, I shouldn’t be too obsessed with golf.
“As I was younger, I was never so obsessive.”
Perhaps a windy Porthcawl will help call the memories of more innocent days in Blustery Turnberry.