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Ken Borland


Jason Palmer – one of the strangest techniques in golf 0

Posted on February 10, 2015 by Ken

Golf fans at Leopard Creek this weekend will be able to scrutinise one of the strangest techniques in the game after Englishman Jason Palmer made the cut in the Alfred Dunhill Championship on Friday.

Palmer, a European Tour rookie, played his way into the weekend, making it on the number as he shot a 73 to reach the halfway mark on one-under-par. He is already something of a talking point on tour, however, because in addition to his unorthodox swing, he also chips one-handed.

“It’s funny because when I have good weeks, I tend to hit a lot of greens and maybe only chip once or twice in a round, so when I’m playing good golf you won’t see a lot of that, but when I’m playing badly you’ll see quite a lot of it.

“I still enjoy missing greens and trying to get up-and-down with one hand. I enjoy that aspect of the game, whereas if I was doing it with two hands I’d be a nervous wreck. I’m not sure if other professionals have had similar problems to me and then worried about looking foolish if they went one-handed. I do hit the odd bad chip, but so does everybody. I just know that method is way more effective than the two-handed method, so it’s still an absolute no-brainer for me,” Palmer told the European Tour website.

While South African golfing guru Dale Hayes says a bad dose of the yips would be the only reason for Palmer’s one-handed approach and that it has no technical benefits, one has to admire someone who is willing to do it his own way and is succeeding.

“It’s very easy to coach one method and stick with that, but there is so much to golf and there are so many ways to go about playing golf that I don’t think you can criticise one method. There have been so many unique swings down the years that have proved very effective and hopefully I can prove to be another one of those,” Palmer said.

One golfer who would do well to heed his advice is South African George Coetzee, whose game appears to be in full-scale decline as he bombed to a 76 on Friday and missed the cut by three strokes. This after a year in which his world ranking has dropped to 80.

The chunky 28-year-old has added a baffling new pre-stroke routine to his game and it has not done him any good.

Coetzee is so talented that he should just back his natural game rather than making wholesale changes based on the advice of coaches.

The influence of coaches in golf is spreading, but for some golfers, it just creates more noise in their head, confusion and failure.

 

Grace plays with aplomb to stretch his lead 0

Posted on February 09, 2015 by Ken

 

It’s no laughing matter trying to follow up a 62 in the first round of a prestigious tournament like the Alfred Dunhill Championship, but Branden Grace played with great aplomb once again at Leopard Creek as he stretched his lead with a 66 on Friday.

That gave the 26-year-old a commanding five-stroke lead at the halfway mark of the European Tour co-sanctioned event and Grace said he was entirely comfortable leading from the front as he goes in search of his fifth European Tour title and his first since 2012 in the Alfred Dunhill Links at St Andrew’s.

“I’m very chuffed, it was a very good round. It’s always hard after a round like yesterday [Thursday], it’s so easy to come out and try and protect your score, but I didn’t do that, I was out the blocks quickly with birdies on 11 and 13 and I just kept the ball rolling very well,” Grace said after his round, which he began on the 10th hole.

“I have a good history when I’m leading, at the Alfred Dunhill I was quite a few ahead after two days, so I’ve done it before. I’m just going to stick to what I’m doing and stay patient. On this course, a 10-under could happen again and guys will come at you,” Grace said.

One man who was not cowed by Grace’s phenomenal start was experienced Italian Francesco Molinari, who started the second round six behind the South African but kept himself in contention with a superb seven-under-par 65 to climb to second on 11-under.

“I tried not to think about his big lead and just do my best, and it worked out very well. Five shots is obviously still a very good margin, but the greens are firming up nicely and it might be different on the weekend,” Molinari said with all the calmness that comes from a successful career that has seen him rise as high as number 14 in the world rankings and appear in two triumphant Ryder Cup campaigns for Europe.

South African Tjaart van der Walt was another to roar up the leaderboard with a five-under-par 67 taking him to 10-under overall and third place, while compatriot Shaun Norris and Denmark’s Lucas Bjerregaard both cruised to 67s as well and were tied for fourth on nine-under with Danny Willett.

Last weekend’s Sun City winner started on the easier back nine and battled to get going, playing the first eight holes in level-par. But Willett was much happier around the turn, eagling 18 after hitting a six-iron to six feet and then picking up birdies on the second, fifth and ninth holes.

Van der Walt started on the 10th tee and, having to hit a long-iron into the green he left himself 25 feet from the hole. But he made the putt with little fuss and that set the tone for a fine day on the greens as he collected five more birdies before eventually dropping a shot on the ninth, his last hole.

“The first hole was a swinging right-to-lefter and I made it, so I felt good from the first hole onwards. You’ve always got to fancy your chances and I was just happy to get out there and get a few numbers on the board early on. I played well. Leopard Creek is a long golf course for me, so I’m not going in with short-irons like some of the other guys, but when I got it on the greens I rolled the putts well, a couple went in, which kept the momentum going,” Van der Walt said.

Grace, however, continues to make hay while the sun shines and it would take something remarkable for him to be denied victory.

 

Grace doubles lead for Alfred Dunhill Championship record 0

Posted on February 09, 2015 by Ken

It was another very good day for Branden Grace as he doubled his lead after the second round of the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek with a 66 that took him to 16-under-par, a tournament record after 36 holes.

Grace led by three after his magnificent 62 on the first day and, even though he was not quite as sharp on Friday, he finished his round six ahead of fellow South African Tjaart van der Walt, whose back-to-back 67s took him to 10-under.

“I’m very chuffed, it was a very good round. It’s always hard after a round like yesterday [Thursday], but I didn’t go out and try and protect my lead, I was out the blocks quickly with birdies on 11 and 13 and I just kept the ball rolling very well,” Grace said after his round, which he began on the 10th hole.

With Nedbank Golf Challenge champion Danny Willett ‘only’ shooting a 69 to go to nine-under-par, Jake Roos struggling through his first five holes level par and Matt Ford two-over-par through five, Grace’s nearest challengers were slipping backwards. The 26-year-old could be forgiven for already breaking out the kegs in celebration and he is confident that he can get the job done and claim his fifth European Tour title and his first since 2012 in the Alfred Dunhill Links at St Andrew’s.

“I have a good history when I’m leading, at the Alfred Dunhill I was quite a few ahead after two days, so I’ve done it before. I’m just going to stick to what I’m doing and stay patient. On this course, a 10-under could happen again and guys will come at you,” Grace said.

Willett’s tee-shot at the par-three seventh was swallowed by the water to the right of the green, leading to a double-bogey, while another dropped-shot on the par-four 14th also hampered his efforts to eat into Grace’s lead.

Van der Walt, the Texas-based 40-year-old, started on the 10th and picked up four birdies going out, before birdies on the par-four third and eighth holes brought him to within five shots of the leader. But he bogeyed the par-four ninth hole to take some of the gloss off his round.

South African Shaun Norris was another to make a big move up the leaderboard with his 67, which included an eagle on the 18th, taking him to nine-under for the tournament and in a tie for third place with Willett and Lucas Bjerregaard, the Dane who also shot 67.

Charl Schwartzel, the defending champion, slid down off the green into the water on the par-three fifth, the double-bogey he recorded there being the only dropped shots of his round as he posted a 70 that left him on five-under-par, 11 off the pace.

 

http://citizen.co.za/292293/grace-sets-new-alfred-dunhill-championship-record/

Lessons to be had from 40 years ago for the Boks 1

Posted on February 09, 2015 by Ken

As the Springboks return from a less-than-stellar European tour that has emboldened the prophets of doom once more, the 40th anniversary of the infamous British Lions tour to South Africa has passed by with barely a mention.

Rugby is certainly a much-changed game from those days of 99-calls, wings throwing into the lineout and teams like the Western Transvaal Mielieboere and the South-Western Districts Volstruisboere being part of the mainstream game and playing against touring sides.

But there are still lessons and cautionary tales that can be drawn from that tour, which has been given a thorough going-over and a fresh perspective in Luke Alfred’s recently-published book, When the Lions Came to Town (Zebra Press).

The 1974 Lions tour to South Africa was meant to showcase the resilience of Springbok rugby in surviving the first shadows of isolation, to show that they were still a global power whatever the world thought of their shameful politics. It still makes me sick to the stomach to think that a leading Sunday newspaper saw fit to use a headline saying the Springboks had received a “K…erpak” in the 28-9 second Test hammering at Loftus Versfeld. Alfred reveals how the mastermind of that offensive headline is actually lauded as a progressive journalist and “anything but racist”.

But instead, in going through their 22-match tour unbeaten, winning the Tests 3-0 and drawing the fourth, the Lions showed that South African rugby was stuck in the past, gathering dust like a faded old trophy on the mantelpiece.

In many ways, the Springboks were meant to be the shop window for the National Party’s doomed social engineering project called Apartheid, but the insecurities of the nation were brutally exposed by a Lions team that not only physically dominated, but also out-thought, the South Africans and had more attacking flair, scoring 10 tries to one in the Tests.

It was, of course, a golden era for British and Irish rugby with the likes of Willie-John McBride, Ian ‘Mighty Mouse’ McLauchlan, Gareth Edwards, Phil Bennett, JJ and JPR Williams amongst the best players in the world.

It’s a delicious tour for a sportswriter to delve into, resulting as it did in seismic after-effects for South African rugby, and Alfred uncovers some extraordinary tales like centre Peter Cronje playing in the crucial third Test with a shoulder that was so badly injured that he could not lift his arm above the perpendicular; the two Lions players who commandeered a limousine outside a function and ended up taking Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith on a high-speed drive through the streets of Salisbury; and some of the ludicrous selections that the panicked Springbok management made through the series. At one stage the Test scrumhalf was chosen by all the candidates walking through a ballroom and playing out a set move … perhaps that’s why eighthman Gerrie Sonnekus was then moved to half-back!

While some accuse current Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer of metaphorically being the recipient of apples from his class favourites, at least the national team will go into next year’s World Cup with a pretty clear picture of what the best starting XV will be.

The loss of captain Jean de Villiers with an awful knee injury is obviously a major blow, but Meyer has ensured there is plenty of leadership in the team, one of the first pillars of success.

First and foremost, however, now is not the time for the sort of panic that saw the 1974 Springboks humiliated. It is, however, the time for astute planning because underestimating the Northern Hemisphere challenge is a recipe for disaster.

 

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    Galatians 5:22-23 – “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.”

    The fruit of the Spirit are elements of the character of Christ and we should have the constant desire to become more and more like Christ in thought and deed. But what seems impossible for you becomes possible through Jesus. In him, we are filled with love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.



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