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Written by AKSH GUPTA
GURUGRAM: There are mornings in sport that arrive like gentle conspiracies. The light is softer, the air thinner, and everything feels, improbably, ripe for something historic.
On one of those mornings, Hitaashee Bakshi walked onto the DLF fairways and played like a player who had always belonged to these greens — calm, precise, almost in conversation with the course itself. A bogey-free 67 later, she sits atop the leaderboard at −7, and the buzz around her is electric. Could this be the beginning of an Indian home-soil revival after nine long years?

Hitaashee’s round read like a tidy, relentless poem. No stumbles, no theatrics, only purposeful strokes. The 67 was not loud; it was surgical. It carried the kind of quiet confidence that comes from routine. She told reporters she teed off at 6:40 a.m., the same hour she practices at this course throughout the year. “It felt like a normal round,” she said, and that ordinary steadiness is often the mask of the extraordinary.
There was a delicious symmetry to her day. On the 4th hole, where yesterday she had dropped a bogey, today she birdied — redemption in the very same patch of grass. Small reversals like that don’t just change numbers on a card; they rewrite a player’s narrative for the week. The shot that followed that birdie, a controlled fade that found the heart of the green, felt less like luck and more like destiny aligning itself, one measured swing at a time.
Indian golf has tasted triumph on home turf, most famously when Aditi Ashok won the Hero Women’s Indian Open in 2016. But the country has been waiting for another home champion ever since. That nine-year echo hangs heavy around DLF this week. Every good shot by an Indian player feels, in a small way, like a step closer to closing that loop. The crowd knows it, the players feel it, and Hitaashee’s name at the top of the card only fans the flames of that longing.

Zara Anand during Womens Indian Open
This leaderboard is no solitary show. It reads like a thrilling novel with multiple protagonists. Young amateur Zara Anand produced a sensational performance to sit with the leaders (T2, −6), a reminder that India’s next stars are already knocking at the door. International contenders such as Verena Gimmy (GER) are matching the heat (T2, −6), while Chiara Tamburlini and Pranavi Urs lurk close by (T4, −5). Home favourites like Vani Kapoor, who was an earlier leader, remain in the mix, and major names such as Alice Hewson, Shannon Tan, and Lisa Petterson pepper the leaderboard, ensuring the narrative is rich, global and unpredictable.
There are tournament moments that settle into memory instantly — a hole-out that hushes the crowd, a clutch par that lifts an underdog into daylight. Today’s iconic snippets: Hitaashee’s birdie on the 4th (the hole that troubled her yesterday), a flawless runaway fairway on a long par-4 that left patrons whispering “did you see that?”, and Zara Anand’s composed approach shots that read like choreography rather than chance. These are the little scenes that will be replayed at dinner tables, in clubhouses, and in highlight reels long after the leaderboard numbers fade.
Beyond birdies and bogeys is the human tilt of this tournament. Hitaashee is more than a name on a card. She’s someone who grew up at this course, from volunteer hours to rookie rounds on the Ladies European Tour, and now she’s leading a major on the very turf that shaped her. That arc, volunteer to frontrunner, local kid to leaderboard leader, is the kind of story that gives tournaments their soul.
Then there are the juxtapositions that drama loves. Diksha Dagar, normally a steady presence on the leaderboard, had a rough patch and now finds herself fighting to regroup. Tvesa Malik scraped through to make the cut and will carry the sort of underdog fire that produces miracles. The ingredients are all here — youth, experience, heartbreak, and hope.
Ask any crowd on a nervy evening: what does a home victory mean? It’s more than a trophy. It is inspiration, validation, and a beam of possibility for the next generation. If Hitaashee can translate the calm of a 6:40 a.m. tee time into the nerve of a Sunday finish, the story that began with Aditi in 2016 could find its sequel here, under the same sky, on similar turf, with a new name rising to meet the moment.
Can Hitaashee sustain the bogey-free momentum? A single loose hole can rewrite the day.
Will Zara Anand’s amateur fearlessness carry her through? Young players sometimes run hotter and colder — both are possible.
How will the international contenders respond? Players like Verena Gimmy and Chiara Tamburlini are experienced and will not yield ground easily.
Picture the sun dipping behind the DLF skyline, a small gallery lingering near the 18th green, and Hitaashee Bakshi, composed, ordinary in ritual but extraordinary in result, signing her card. The scoreboard glows with −7. The crowd claps, not just for a round, but for a possibility: that nine years of waiting could be turning into one unforgettable week. The story is still being written, and in sport, the final chapter is always the most dramatic.
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