Marion Ricordeau Explained

Marion Ricordeau
Birth Date:21 August 1986
Birth Place:Laon, Aisne, France
Height:5 ft 7 in
Partner:Iñigo Ceballos
Yearpro:2011
Extour:LPGA Tour
Ladies European Tour
Symetra Tour
LET Access Series
Prowins:6
Anainspiration:DNP
Lpga:CUT: 2016
Wusopen:DNP
Wbritopen:CUT: 2014, 2015
Evian:CUT: 2017

Marion Ricordeau (born 21 August 1986) is a former French professional golfer who played on the Ladies European Tour and LPGA Tour. She was runner-up at the 2014 Xiamen Open International.

Early life and amateur career

Originally from Laon in Picardy, Ricordeau discovered golf at the age of 12 on the Ailette course in Cerny-en-Laonnois and started playing seriously from the age of 17.

In June 2008, while studying in Toulouse, she became French university champion. Three months later, she was crowned world university champion at the World University Golf Championship in Sun City, South Africa, beating American Katie Tewell and Swiss Caroline Rominger. She was runner-up at the 2009 Copa Sotogrande two strokes behind Marieke Nivard.[1]

Representing France, she won the bronze together with Lucie André and Valentine Derrey at the 2009 European Ladies' Team Championship, after beating a Spanish team with Carlota Ciganda in the consolation match.

Professional career

Ricordeau turned professional in 2011 and joined the Ladies European Tour, but was unable to keep her card at the end of the season. In 2012, she played on the LET Access Series where she won the Terre Blanche Ladies Open and finished second in the Order of Merit, earning promotion back to the LET. From 2013 to 2016, she managed to finish in the top 100 on the LET, finishing a career best 22nd in 2014 thanks to a second place at the Xiamen Open International, 3 strokes behind Ssu-Chia Cheng.[2]

At the end of 2015, she won a right to play on the LPGA Tour by finishing tied for 26th in the qualifying tournament. The results in 2016 (4 cuts in 14 tournaments, 143rd in the ranking) did not allow her to keep her card at the end of the season.[3]

Ricordeau then played the Symetra Tour, where she finished runner-up at the PHC Classic and ranked 31st in 2017, and 95th in 2018. She decided to end her career after the 2018 Lacoste Ladies Open de France, where she sat in solo second place a stroke behind Nanna Koerstz Madsen ahead of the final round, but a disappointing 74 saw her finish tied 15th, six stroke behind winner Caroline Hedwall.[4]

After retiring from tour, Ricordeau regained her amateur status and teamed up with her husband and former caddy Iñigo Ceballos to manage a golf course.[5]

Amateur wins

Source:[6]

Professional wins (6)

LET Access Series wins (1)

LET Access Series playoff record (0–1)

Banesto Golf Tour wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning
score
Margin
of victory
Runner-up
123 Jul 2011Banesto Tour Asturias1343 strokes
212 Oct 2012Banesto Tour Cantabria141 Playoff María Hernández

ALPG Tour wins (1)

Other wins (2)

Results in LPGA majors

Results not in chronological order.

Tournament 2014 2015 2016 2017
Women's PGA ChampionshipCUT
The Evian ChampionshipCUT
Women's British OpenCUTCUT
Note: Ricordeau did not play in the ANA Inspiration or the U.S. Women's Open.CUT = missed the half-way cut

Team appearances

Amateur

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2009 European Nations Championship . World Amateur Golf Ranking . 27 April 2023.
  2. Web site: Xiamen Open . Ladies European Tour . 2 August 2023.
  3. Web site: Marion Ricordeau Bio . LPGA Tour . 2 August 2023.
  4. Web site: 2018 Lacoste Ladies Open de France . Ladies European Tour . 2 August 2023.
  5. Web site: Marion Ricordeau: Quand vous jouez sur le LPGA, vous avez l'impression d'être une princesse . 21 July 2020 . swing-feminin.com . fr.
  6. Web site: Marion Ricordeau . WAGR . 2 August 2023.
  7. Web site: O'Hagan . Paul . Carly Booth wins Dinard Ladies Open . 16 April 2012 . GolfMontly . 2 August 2023.