- I never looked at the leaderboard. I continued to fight and if I were to win I would and now it went the way, says a taken Sagström, ranked 116th in the world, in Viasat's broadcast while tears are running down her cheeks.

The 27-year-old put a putt for par from 1.5 meters in the last hole and then waited for fellow player Nasa Hataoka to hit his equally long putt but the ball slipped past.

Sagström did not understand that she was winning but was told by the caddy whispering while Hataoka hit her bogey putt in the hole. Then the tears began to flow and the emotions took over.

Today's blow on the 17th hole

Sagström stood for today's blow on the 17th hole. She placed the ball about half a meter from the hole on her throw from around 160 meters and made a simple birdie and gained the equal position, -17, with the co-player, the Japanese world fighter Nasa Hataoka, before the final hole.

Sagström went out in two kinds of lead before just Hataoka but started daring with bogeys on holes two and five and dropped the lead, to retrieve it again and then drop it during the long dramatic day which offered great reversals. Before the last day, she was chased by four, five and six on the world rankings.

With the victory, Sagström is the twelfth Swedish woman to win on the LPGA Tour.