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7 strokes ahead, Aditi Ashok bogeys chance to win gold

Hangzhou, October 1 Aditi Ashok’s fortunes changed on the final day as she carded a horrendous 5-over 77 to sign off with a silver medal for India’s first medal in women’s golf at the Asian Games here today. You’re never...
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Hangzhou, October 1

Aditi Ashok’s fortunes changed on the final day as she carded a horrendous 5-over 77 to sign off with a silver medal for India’s first medal in women’s golf at the Asian Games here today.

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You’re never totally happy unless you win. I’m sure someday I’ll look back and think it was a good week but silver is not better than gold won today. Aditi Ashok

Coming into the final day with a commanding 7-stroke lead, Aditi saw the advantage evaporate as she stumbled upon four bogeys and a double-bogey against a lone birdie to slip to the second position. The frontrunner for gold after three days, Aditi’s slump also saw the team slip from first to fourth and end without a medal. “It wasn’t a good day. I played bad. There’s no way around saying it. But overall if I look at my four-day score it’s pretty good. Seventeen under; at the start of the week I would have taken that. You’re never totally happy unless you win. I’m sure someday I’ll look back and think it was a good week but silver is not better than gold,” said Aditi.

India’s other two players, Pranavi Urs (75) and Avani Prashanth (76), also had a rough day in the final round. Pranavi finished 13th and Avani was T-18.

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In the men’s section, Anirban Lahiri (65-67-74-68) was T-12, while SSP Chawrasia (67-72-68-75) dropped to T-28. Khalin Joshi (70-69-69-73) was T-27 and Shubhankar Sharma (68-69-76-73) was 32nd.

The Indian men ended seventh as South Korea took gold. Thailand were second and Hong Kong third.

It was a difficult day for scoring as only six players shot under-par and only two went into the 60s in the women’s competition.

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