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Ken Borland



Schwartzel frustrated with his putter 0

Posted on May 28, 2013 by Ken

Charl Schwartzel was frustrated with his putter but remained in contention at the Joburg Open as he finished the second round on 10-under-par, five strokes behind leaders Trevor Fisher Jnr and Richard Sterne at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Friday.

The two-time Joburg Open champion shot a six-under-par 65 on the West Course on Friday, but with several short putts being missed, Schwartzel felt he should have been in an even stronger position.

“My putter was the problem, I’ve missed five putts from inside three feet on the last two days and that’s very frustrating. It was even more frustrating today because I hit two or three very nice long putts and that’s the hard part. On 10, I missed a putt from one-and-a-half feet, if I’d tapped it with one-hand I probably would have made it!”, Schwartzel complained.

The world number 18 was otherwise happy with the state of his game as he looks to add to the titles he won in 2010 and 2011 at the historic Linksfield course.

“My ball-striking was good, where I left off last year. So the big thing is that I’m hitting the ball well and giving myself chances. I just need to make more putts from short range,” Schwartzel said.

The 2011 Masters champion shot a solid 68 on the tougher East Course in the first round, but eight birdies and just two dropped shots on Friday saw him rise from a tie for 25th into the top four.

The “gimme” putt missed on 10 accounted for bogey there, while Schwartzel also felt aggrieved about his drop on the par-five 15th, when his approach shot hopped over the green.

“That was a mystery. Branden Grace had just hit a four-iron from five yards behind me into the middle of the green, so I wanted to hit a soft five-iron, but it went 40 metres over. I also missed a three-foot putt, to be fair,” Schwartzel said.

If Schwartzel turns it on, he’s obviously in a different league to the rest of the field and the 28-year-old feels that he is in striking range of Fisher, whose top-class 62 put him on 15-under. Sterne joined him later with a brilliant 65 on the East Course.

A missed cut last year when he was defending his title has added a steely air of determination to Schwartzel and a phenomenal run at the end of 2012 means he is playing with a lot of confidence.

http://www.sapa.org.za/secure/view.cfm?id=3645135

New stars take centre-stage at historic RJ&K 0

Posted on May 26, 2013 by Ken

The Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club is one of the oldest in the country, with golf being played on the Linksfield premises since 1909, but it’s the new crop of European Tour stars who will be taking centre-stage from Thursday when the Joburg Open starts.

Most attention will be focused on the 11:00 tee-off on the East Course as two former champions, Branden Grace and Charl Schwartzel, are paired together, with young English prospect Danny Willett completing the three-ball.

Although Schwartzel is a major winner and an international star ranked 18th in the world, he has almost become part of the furniture at the historic Johannesburg club and was the champion in 2010 and 2011. He has decided to start his 2013 season at the venue for seven South African Opens.

“There are great memories about this place, starting back from junior days. It’s the highlight of the year for me to come back and play here. I’ve always loved playing this golf course, I grew up here on the Highveld and these are the sort of courses we played. It suits my eye and my game,” Schwartzel said on Wednesday.

Schwartzel was unable to defend his title last year as he was struggling with his putting after the Christmas break and missed the cut by one stroke. But the 2011 Masters champion was in great form just before he went on holiday, ending 2012 with a fifth-place finish in the SA Open, tied third at the World Tour Championship finale in Dubai, a runners-up berth at the Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City and then successive wins at the Thailand Golf Championship and the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek.

“It was good to finish like that and it’s been one of the longest breaks I’ve ever taken – six weeks. I did some practice and I’m looking forward to getting back and competing again.

“Now it’s my time to start, I’ve got five tournaments in a row now and if I can continue where I left off, that would be great. After resting my body I feel refreshed, so now there are no excuses. I’ll try to go with the same thoughts and processes I used at the end of last year,” Schwartzel said.

Grace was the Joburg Open winner last year and it was the starting point of an incredible 2012 season that saw him win four more titles on his first full year on the European Tour.

But while Schwartzel and Grace are the headline acts, it would be foolish to ignore the challenge posed by Richard Sterne, the 2008 champion, or George Coetzee, who is surely due a European Tour triumph after seven top-three finishes in the last three years.

After his 2008 win, which came after a three-man playoff, Sterne waged a nasty battle with back problems and, after surgery, he finally seems to have shaken off the problem with a seventh-placed finish in the Alfred Dunhill Championship and then runners-up spot in last week’s Dubai Desert Classic.

“It was nice to be in contention for the whole week and to be in the last group for two rounds. It was good to play under that pressure again, even though I got a bit unlucky at the end. But I’m happy with my game and to be in position to win is all you can want. And I enjoy it here too.” Sterne said.

http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-02-07-joburg-open-schwartzels-backyard-under-siege/#.UaJQ6dI3A6w

Schwartzel laid low by freak injury 0

Posted on January 06, 2013 by Ken

For all the heroism and courage Charl Schwartzel has shown on the golf course, the 28-year-old has been laid low this year by the most freakish of injuries – a torn rib cartilage muscle that he does not even know how he damaged.

“It was a bit of misfortune when I tore my intercostal at the U.S. Open in June– I don’t even know how it happened, I basically sat down and could hardly breathe. The doctor said you can cough and it can happen,” Schwartzel said at Sun City, where he is hoping to end the year on a high by becoming the first South African to win the Nedbank Golf Challenge in five years.

Schwartzel’s year had actually been fairly successful up till then, with nine top-20 finishes in 13 events, but the injury pretty much ruined the rest of his year and the three-time Sunshine Tour Order of Merit winner is only now starting to get his game back on an even keel.

“My golf had been pretty good before that, but the injury put a halt to that. Then I came back two or three weeks early because I wanted to play in the Open, but I created some bad habits in my swing to play around the injury. That led to a lot of inconsistency and frustration,” he explained.

The 2011 Masters champion played in the SA Open at Serengeti two weeks ago and said he was still struggling to string together the four good rounds he needed to actually win a tournament. Schwartzel tied for fifth in the national open after shooting a disappointing 74 in the third round, but he went to town last week in Dubai, rounds of 68-67-67-68 leaving him in a tie for third  in the lucrative World Tour Championship.

But he still believes it is too early to say he is now back to his best and he is not talking up his chances of winning at Sun City.

“For the last month-and-a-half I’ve been pain-free and I’m getting the swing back to where it was. But it’s been a long process coming back from that injury and I’m not expecting anything this week. If I have a good week and play the way I know I can, then I’m easily capable of winning. But it’s too early to say what’s going to happen, even though things are definitely turning,” Schwartzel said.

Although Schwartzel always projects a relaxed, easy-going demeanour, there is no doubt he is not in the Pilanesberg for a holiday.

“I don’t care who you are, it’s never nice not to play well, so you’re always going to give it your best shot and see if you can win. There’s always a bit of extra pressure on the South Africans as well because most of the crowd want to see one of their own win. You don’t feel like letting everyone down, you want to play well and it just puts a little bit more pressure on you,” Schwartzel admitted.

In terms of the Gary Player Country Club course, Schwartzel agreed with popular opinion among the rest of the field that if you sprayed it off the tee, the narrow fairways and thick rough would be the death knell for your chances.

But he also had a word of warning about the bunkers.

“The course is good, but I think it is probably the worst I have seen the bunkers though. I think the bunkers are really inconsistent and you will see a few guys get lucky and a few guys get plugged lies. But other than that, the course is in good shape and the greens are always good.

“The fairways are a bit narrower, the rough is a bit longer and so I think the winning score will be a little higher than in the past,” Schwartzel said.

Home favourites downplay their chances 0

Posted on January 05, 2013 by Ken

 

A South African has not won the Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City in five years, but the two firm home favourites, Louis Oosthuizen and Charl Schwartzel, both downplayed their chances at the Gary Player Country Club on Wednesday.

Schwartzel is the more familiar with the great course at Sun City and will be making his fourth appearance when the $5-million tournament tees off on Thursday.

But the 28-year-old’s form disappeared after a freak rib muscle tear in June and is only just showing signs of reappearing, leaving Schwartzel unsure of his chances.

Oosthuizen, meanwhile, began the year with victory in the African Open and added the Malaysian Open crown in April, but has failed to win since then, even a run of five successive top-10 finishes in recent weeks not entirely cheering him up.

The 30-year-old has also had to weather the disappointment of two playoff losses this year, including the heartbreak of just missing out on the Masters title won by Bubba Watson at Augusta.

Ranked number seven in the world, Oosthuizen is one of the hottest golfers on the planet right now, but he was surprisingly downbeat about his chances at Sun City.

“It’s been frustrating because I feel I’ve been playing better than my finishes. I guess I’m satisfied with the year overall, but disappointed that I lost twice in playoffs. I just haven’t been putting myself in good positions come Sunday.

“I always say I want three wins a season, I’ve got two, so to win here this weekend would end the year on a high,” Oosthuizen said on Wednesday.

Oosthuizen, whose previous appearance in the NGC was a last-place finish in 2010, expects two-time defending champion Lee Westwood to be his biggest obstacle, particularly since the Englishman can call his driver into service on most holes.

“I forgot how narrow the fairways are and how thick the kikuyu is. The rough is really thick all around the fairways and greens, because of the recent rain, so you have to drive straight or you’re going to struggle. The greens are running pure but the rain has made them a bit slow and you just have to adapt to the speed,” Oosthuizen said after his pro-am round on Wednesday.

“So you have to think that Lee Westwood’s name is going to be right up there. He has an amazing record around this course, he’s a world-class player and one of the best ball-strikers in the game.

“He drives the ball so straight and he has great iron play, so he gives himself so many opportunities for birdies. He’s able to take driver on a lot of holes where the rest of us take three-wood, that’s how confident he is with that club,” Oosthuizen said.

Schwartzel, born and raised in Gauteng, said he was actually not entirely comfortable on the 7162-metre Gary Player Country Club course.

“It’s always a fantastic week here and I’ve always loved the golf course, but it’s not really suited to my game. I’m a fader of the ball and you mostly see holes moving left-to-right here with the fairway slopes. So you need to draw the ball here to do well,” Schwartzel said.

The 2011 Masters champion’s main problem this year has been the changes to his swing caused by the rib injury he suffered at the U.S. Open.

“It was a bit of misfortune when I tore my intercostal – I don’t even know how it happened, I basically sat down and could hardly breathe – and it halted my pretty good form up till then.

“I came back two or three weeks early because I wanted to play in the Open, but I created some bad habits in my swing to play around the injury. That led to a lot of inconsistency and frustration.

“But for the last month-and-a-half, I’ve been pain-free and I’m getting the swing back to where it was. But it’s been a long process coming back from that injury and I’m not expecting anything this week. If I have a good week and play the way I know I can, then I’m easily capable of winning. But it’s too early to say what’s going to happen, even though things are definitely turning,” Schwartzel said.

Justin Rose was, like Schwartzel, born in Johannesburg, but the Englishman is now at home in all the great cities of the world having won four titles in America, five in Europe, two in South Africa and one each in Japan and Australia.

With the minimum of fuss, he has risen to number four in the world rankings – the best in the NGC field – and his recent form includes a brilliant 62, the low round of the tournament, in the final round of last weekend’s World Tour Championship in Dubai, where he finished second to world number one Rory McIlroy.

Westwood, Schwartzel and Oosthuizen will all have maximum respect for Rose and his ability to claim the spoils at Sun City, while they will also no doubt see former world number one Martin Kaymer as a threat.

Belgium’s Nicolas Colsaerts is likely to be a crowd favourite, with the spectators getting to see just how far he does smite the ball, but he will have to marry consistent accuracy to his tremendous power in order to win the title.

There is a third South African in the field in Garth Mulroy, who qualified by virtue of winning the 2011 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit, but it is difficult to see the world number 201 having the game to beat the rest of the field which also includes resurgent 1999 Open champion Paul Lawrie.

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-11-29-nedbank-golf-challenge-preview-oosthuizen-and-schwartzel-edging-closer-to-form

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    Galatians 5:25 – “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep walking in step with the Spirit.”

    There is only one Christ and all things that are preached in his name must conform to his character. We can only know Christ’s character through an intimate and personal relationship with him.

    How would Christ respond in situations in which you find yourself? Would he be underhanded? Would he be unforgiving and cause broken relationships?

    “The value of your faith and the depth of your spiritual experience can only be measured by their practical application in your daily life. You can spend hours at mass crusades; have the ability to pray in public; quote endlessly from the Word; but if you have not had a personal encounter with the living Christ your outward acts count for nothing.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

     

     



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