Three days of brilliant play had given 18-year-old golf pledge Julia Engström a dream position ahead of the finish at Kenyan Vipingo Ridge. A management with seven strokes are few prone to have 18 holes left to play, but at the same time the Swede told me that she did not feel completely curated and had difficulty getting food and enough nutrition.

Perhaps it was a combination of nerves and sincerity that lay behind Engström's swaying round.

The blow ran away

A birdie on hole 2 was a good start, but then the beats started to run away while the competitors ate up the lead. Best of all was Esther Henseleit. When the German made her seventh birdie on hole 13, she was in the lead and when shortly afterwards Engström made her third bogey on the same hole, the hatch grew to two strokes.

Julia Engström finally got in today's second birdie on the 15th hole, but then put the putter down. The Dutchman missed a very short birdie putt on the 16th and then an almost as short par putt on the 17th.

It was a tight-lipped and noticeably disappointed Engström who finished the round of 74 strokes, two over par. Her 11 under par total reached third place, two behind Indian Aditi Ashok and three behind Henseleit who finished 64 laps.

Henseleits double happiness

Esther Henseleit is one who knows how difficult it can be to tie the bag together and take her first European tour victory. The 20-year-old rookie has reached four second places earlier this year, but the first victory delayed the season's final competition. Not only that - with the victory, Henseleit also passed Norwegian Marianne Skarpnord in the total and won the European Tour's "Order of Merit".