Cara Gainer, Gabriela Ruffels share lead
Digest more
Gainer, a No. 129-ranked Englishwoman, and Ruffels, a 71st-ranked Australian, will be in the final group at the Evian Championship on Sunday.
Both Gabriela Ruffels and Cara Gainer started playing golf at age 14, the same age Jeeno Thitikul won her first event on the LET.
Their first love was tennis. Now Gainer and Ruffels are battling to be major winners in women's golf
Golf wasn't the first love of Cara Gainer or Gabriela Ruffels, who grew up wanting to be professional tennis players and came close to making it.
A trio of Australians are eyeing more major glory as Gabriela Ruffels and England’s Cara Gainer share a one-shot lead on 11-under par after the third round of the Evian Championship on Saturday.
Golf wasn't Cara Gainer's or Gabriela Ruffels's first love, but now, they lead one of the LPGA's most prestigious events in France.
Explore more
1d
Golf Digest on MSNTwo former tennis players lead Evian Championship, looking for maiden LPGA titlesRuffels was a guest of fellow Australian Todd Woodbridge—who won nine doubles titles at Wimbledon—and had a chance to watch that major before playing in this major at Evian Resort Golf Club. She was treated as a VIP.
Cara Gainer and Gabriela Ruffels, initially aspiring tennis professionals, now aim for a major win in golf. Ranked 129 and 71, they lead at the Evian Championship, sharing close ties with tennis. Their journeys reflect a shift from early tennis ambitions to significant golf achievements.
Three Australian women loom large at the top of the leaderboard at the Evian Championship, with more major glory in their sights.
Golf wasn’t the first love of Cara Gainer or Gabriela Ruffels, who grew up wanting to be professional tennis players and came close to making it. Now they’re in sight of becoming an unlikely major winner in their adopted sport.
Golf wasn't the first love of Cara Gainer or Gabriela Ruffels, who grew up wanting to be professional tennis players and came close to making it.