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Katsu becomes youngest Japan LPGA winner at 15

Katsu becomes youngest Japan LPGA winner at 15

Tokyo (AFP) - Schoolgirl Minami Katsu became the youngest winner on Japan's women's golf tour Sunday at the age of 15 years and 293 days.

Going out one stroke off the pace, the amateur player rolled in five birdies against one bogey for a round of 68 to win the Japan LPGA Vantelin Ladies Open with a total of 11-under-par 205 in the southern city of Kumamoto.

South Korean Lee Bo-Mee finished second, one shot back.

Katsu broke the Japanese record set by South Korean Kim Hyo-Joo when she won the Suntory Ladies Open in 2012 at the age of 16 years and 332 days.

"I can't believe it. This was my first professional event of the year and I had initially aimed (only) to make the cut," said the pony-tailed player, 157 centimetres (5 feet 2 inches) tall.

"My body felt as if it did not belong to me. I think I made the round without thinking anything," said Katsu, who enrolled in a high school in her home region of Kagoshima this month.

"I got so nervous on the final hole but until then I wasn't at all."

Katsu started playing golf at the urging of her grandfather Ryusaku when she was six.

She has competed in 11 Japan LPGA tournaments and her previous best finish was 12th.

Ryo Ishikawa holds the record for the youngest winner on the Japanese men's tour, taking the 2007 Munsingwear KSB Cup at the age of 15 years, 245 days.

Canadian Brooke Henderson is the world's youngest winner of a professional golf event. She won a tournament on the Canadian Women's Tour in 2012 when she was 14.

"When I was tied for the lead after the first round, they told me, 'You are probably going to win'," Katsu said.

"I didn't think it would be possible but I tried to work hard anyway. I really didn't think I would win."

Katsu said she may consider turning professional after graduating from high school. But her immediate target is the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games, at which golf will be reinstated as an Olympic sport.

"I want to take part in the Olympics and win a gold medal," she said.