WPGT 2026 Leg 10: Ridhima Dilawari leads with bogey-free 68 in Kolar
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Ridhima Dilawari carded a flawless 4-under 68 to hold a one-shot lead after the first round of the 10th leg of the Women's Pro Golf Tour (WPGT) 2026 at Zion Hills Golf Course in Kolar, Karnataka on Wednesday, 15 July 2026. The round, entirely bogey-free, puts Dilawari — already a three-time winner in the first six events of the season — firmly in contention for a fourth title.
How Ridhima Built Her Lead
Dilawari opened with a birdie on the first hole and then settled into a steady run of pars across the next eight. She picked up further birdies on the 10th, 13th, and 14th holes before closing with four consecutive pars to sign for her 68. The discipline to avoid a single dropped shot across 18 holes sets her apart on a course that punished even the best in the field.
The Chasing Pack at 3-Under
Three players share second place at 3-under 69, each with a realistic chance of overtaking Dilawari in the second round. Vani Kapoor, who clinched the ninth leg last week and is chasing back-to-back titles, produced seven birdies but was undone by two bogeys and a double bogey. Amandeep Drall, an experienced campaigner who mounted a strong title challenge last week, carded five birdies but dropped shots on consecutive holes — the seventh and eighth. Vidhatri Urs, who remarkably won three events in a row in 2024, her debut professional year, returned six birdies against three bogeys for her 69.
Mid-Field Standings After Round One
Saanvi Somu, who has been pressing for her first WPGT win — both as an amateur and since turning professional — sits alone in fifth at 1-under 71, with one bogey on the front nine offset by two birdies on the back. Ananya Datar and Kashika Misra are tied sixth at even-par 72, while Mannat Brar and Riya Jadon share eighth at 1-over 73.
A group of six players — Prakruthi Sastry, Jasmine Shekar, Shagun Narain, Neha Tripathi, and amateurs Ananthi Vivek and Ananyaa Sood — are tied 10th at 2-over 74. Notably, Ananthi Vivek plays at Zion Hills and trains with coach Tarun Sardesai on the same course, a home-ground advantage that could prove useful across the remaining rounds.
Among the more established names, Tvesa Malik carded a 75 to sit tied 16th alongside young Lavanya Jadon, leaving both with significant ground to recover.
Bigger Picture: Dilawari's LET Ambitions
Dilawari's dominant display is part of a broader goal — she is working to secure a place back on the Ladies European Tour (LET) and build form ahead of the Women's Indian Open, an LET-sanctioned event scheduled later in 2026. Her recent results had been modest — a tied-eighth and a tied-ninth in the last two legs — making this bogey-free round a timely confidence boost. Vani Kapoor, meanwhile, enters the second round as the defending champion of the previous leg and the five-time winner of the 2025 season, carrying considerable weight of expectation.
What to Watch in Round Two
With just one shot separating Dilawari from three players, the second round promises a tight contest. Kapoor's ability to cut out the unforced errors that cost her on Wednesday, Drall's consistency through the middle holes, and Urs's capacity to convert her birdie opportunities will all be decisive. Somu, if she can replicate her back-nine sharpness from round one, could also push into the top three before the tournament reaches its conclusion.