for quality writing

Ken Borland



Stenson sitting pretty in high-stakes SA Open 0

Posted on January 03, 2013 by Ken

Henrik Stenson has a lot riding on this weekend’s SA Open, the Swede needing to be extremely protective of his 59thposition on the Race to Dubai European Tour order of merit. That’s because only the top 60 qualify for the season-ending World Tour Championship in Dubai next weekend, which has a prize fund of $8 million.

And so far, Stenson is doing exactly what he set out to do as he fired a seven-under-par 65 at the Serengeti Golf Estate on Friday to soar to 13-under-par overall and top spot on the leaderboard.

Fellow Swede Magnus A. Carlsson, who went out just 20 minutes later in the early-morning stillness, shot a 67 to move into second place on nine-under, while overnight leader Merrick Bremner was one-under-par through 14 holes to join him, before Serengeti showed her capricious side and thunderstorms stopped play for the day.

Stenson has his eyes firmly set on a top-three finish at the co-sanctioned event and the 7096-metre Kempton Park course certainly seems to suit his length off the tee and his precision with his irons.

“Hopefully I’ll have a good result here to secure my spot for the Race to Dubai final. It’s hard to say what I need to do to get in, but I just knew that I had to play this week if I wanted to have a chance. It’s very tight and obviously with guys playing in Hong Kong at the same time, it’s like a bit of a hornet’s nest.

“So there’s no point sitting here trying to calculate what others do. It’s better to focus on your own game and a top three here will definitely take care of that,” Stenson said.

“I think it’s a great layout and it suits my eye and my game. That’s obviously a great combination when you come to a new course.

“I’ve hit a lot of good drives and it’s nice to get the feel back with the driver and get a bit of confidence back. I’m happy with the way things are going and I’m looking forward to the weekend,” the 2008 Nedbank Golf Challenge champion added.

South Africa’s Thomas Aiken was another to shine on Friday, playing in the same three-ball as Stenson and shooting a 66 to move into contention on five-under-par overall.

Aiken was another to impress off the tee and he hit all 18 greens in regulation, but he has struggled with his putter and took 34 putts in the first round and 31 on Friday.

“I’ve been hitting the ball great and I can’t complain about the ball-striking. But I can’t buy a putt and I missed a few short ones, and if I can just get the ball rolling a bit better on the greens then anything can happen on the weekend,” Aiken said.

The best rounds were recorded in the morning at Serengeti. With thunderclouds building up by noon, she unleashed a gusting, changeable wind on the afternoon golfers and the likes of Bremner (-9), Matthew Carvell (-7), Darren Fichardt (-6), Charl Schwartzel (-6) and up-and-coming Norwegian Espen Kofstad (-5) will be glad they will get to complete their second rounds early on Saturday morning when conditions should be more placid.

Bremner is still well-placed to threaten for the title even though he is unlikely to regain the lead, trailing Stenson by four shots with just four holes to play.

Then again, the South African did birdie the last three holes of the front nine in the first round and, as Stenson showed with his spectacular eagle on Friday, the par-five eighth is reachable in two for the long-hitters, and Bremner most certainly is one of those.

Schwartzel is also in a good position heading into the weekend. He may be seven shots back, but he will resume on the 15th on Saturday morning and the closing stretch at Serengeti has proven fruitful for all the leaders.

Martin Kaymer and Branden Grace will be less pleased with their positions and both will be looking for birdies when they complete their second rounds.

Kaymer, the highest ranked player in the field, shot 70 in the first round and is two-under through 14 in the second, trailing Stenson by nine.

Grace struggled to a level-par 72 on Thursday but has improved to three-under-par through 13 holes in the second round, although he will not be amused that he bogeyed the last hole he completed before play was suspended.

The cut is currently on par and 2011 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit winner Garth Mulroy faces an anxious night as he will resume on one-over-par with five holes to play on Saturday, while Warren Abery and Dawie van der Walt resume on level-par.

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-11-17-sweden-sour-stensons-high-stakes-in-the-sa-open

Schwartzel & Sterne highly motivated for SA Open success 0

Posted on January 01, 2013 by Ken

Towards the end of a long year, there is a sense that most of the top European Tour campaigners are bringing aching bodies to the Serengeti Golf Estate in Kempton Park this week for the South African Open, but there are two local golfers who will be highly motivated to put injury-disrupted years behind them and claim the national title.

Apart from the weight of expectation placed on Charl Schwartzel by his adoring local fans, the 2011 Masters champion is putting pressure on himself to turn around a disappointing year and claim the SA Open title for the first time.Lady Luck was smiling on Schwartzel during a stellar 2011 that saw him rise into the top 10 in the world rankings, but she changed her tune this year as the 28-year-old not only struggled with his form but was then hit with injuries, including a niggling rib muscle complaint.

“I haven’t had the best of times over the last couple of months, plus having that torn intercostal meant I had a few bad habits in my swing which I’m trying to fix. I’m just not putting four good rounds together, but my game is definitely on the up; it feels good, it’s there.

“I haven’t had a great year, but it’s not over yet and it can still become a great year with a couple of wins. There are five more tournaments left this year and we all know things can change very quickly in this game. I’ve never had the opportunity to play the SA Open in Gauteng, where I’ve played most of my golf, because it’s usually been on the coast, so hopefully I can do well because it’s a title that’s missing from my CV,” Schwartzel said at Serengeti on Tuesday.

The Blair Atholl resident arrived back in Johannesburg last week and used the time to prepare thoroughly for the tournament, making it clear the SA Open was a title he had serious ambitions of winning.

“I had a break from the tour and it gave me the opportunity to prepare properly. I’ve very much prepared for this tournament as I would for a major,” he said.

The four-time Sunshine Tour Order of Merit winner will be aiming to string four good rounds together, something he has struggled with this season. His last outing was two weeks ago at the BMW Masters in Shanghai, where he finished in a tie for 16th to epitomise his season.

“In my last tournament, I went from 13th to eighth to fourth and then back to 16th after I shot level-par on the last day. After three good rounds, there was the one bad round. If I had shot 68 I could of finished fifth. Everyone can make one good score, but you have to put four together to win and I need to get more consistent,” Schwartzel said.

While Schwartzel’s high standards mean he is disappointed with a year that has put him in the top 30 of the Race to Dubai (the European Tour Order of Merit) and 33rd on the world rankings, fellow Gautenger Richard Sterne is looking to compete for titles again after what has been a highly successful return from a serious back problem.

To be 46th on the European order of merit after being off the tour for two years is an amazing achievement and indicative of Sterne’s ability, but the 31-year-old is eager to challenge and perhaps add to his 2008 SA Open title won at Pearl Valley.

“I’ve been consistent. Nothing fantastic, but I guess it’s acceptable for someone who’s been out for two years. I just haven’t really competed. I need to get my confidence back, I haven’t competed on Sunday for a long time and I miss that.

There’s a nice run of six events now in South Africa, and hopefully I can win one or two of them,” Sterne said.

While Schwartzel, new sensation Branden Grace and Sterne will lead the local charge, there are 63 overseas golfers hoping to steal the second-oldest national title in the game from the Southern African contingent.

The most notable of them, and the highest ranked player in the field, is Martin Kaymer.

The German was the number one golfer in the world for six weeks last year, but has now dropped to 32nd, one place higher than Schwartzel. With the benefit of hindsight, the 27-year-old said he would concentrate more on his bread-and-butter job as a golfer if he ever got back to the summit again.

“Obviously it’s very difficult becoming number one, but staying there is even harder. You know it’s something special and you’re proud, but to maintain it is very difficult. You have the expectations of both yourself and others – apparently you are the best golfer in the world.

“My long-term plan is to get back there and if I do, I wouldn’t accept so many invites, I would say ‘no’ more. You get the opportunity to do lots of things you dreamt about as a kid, but you lose lots of practice and private time. You’re not that happy, because you don’t have time for yourself,” Kaymer said.

Kaymer put himself back in the spotlight with his thrilling Ryder Cup heroics and he watched the highlights two weeks later.

“I knew the result, but I was still nervous. I wanted to make sure my reaction wasn’t too retarded,” the maker of the winning putt joked.

To have a golfer of his standing at the SA Open is a real plus, and Kaymer made it clear he is eager to put the title on his CV.

“I don’t come to South Africa very often, but obviously the Nedbank Golf Challenge is a great tournament in two weeks’ time, and this is a national open with a lot of history. It’s the week before the Tour Championship and there’s not much time difference between here and Dubai. Plus I haven’t won yet this year and I’ve won in Europe, America and Asia, but not in Africa,” Kaymer said.

Like the rest of the eastern half of the country, Serengeti has had plenty of rain (plus startling hail) already this summer, and the rough is going to be difficult to get out of, never mind being able to get spin.

For Grace, the estate course has a links feel which will suit the winner of this year’s Volvo Golf Champions at Fancourt and the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship down to the ground.

“The rough is up and when the greens are firmer once the tournament starts, then it will be a really good challenge. If you’re too positive, there are some holes that will bite you. The odd bounce of the ball can go your way or not your way and, with all the slopes on the greens, it gives me the same feeling as the Fancourt Links and I seem to play my best golf when there’s a links feel…” Grace said.

The key, two days before the tournament starts on Thursday, would appear to be course knowledge, with Grace having the benefit of shooting a 68 in his last competitive round at Serengeti to finish in the top 10 of last year’s SA Open.

“The greens are severe and you need to know where to miss. You can very quickly be made to look like a fool on these greens, and it’s one of those courses you can’t play enough, purely because of the greens. You need to know every slope from the fairway,” Schwartzel warned.

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-11-14-clash-of-the-titans-the-south-african-opens-two-most-determined-golfers

South Africa launch 5th & 6th Euro Tour events 0

Posted on August 28, 2012 by Ken

The Sunshine Tour announced two new co-sanctioned events with the European Tour on Tuesday, bringing to six the number of tournaments to be played in South Africa during the 2013 Race to Dubai season.
The Nelson Mandela Championship, to be staged in association with the former South Africa president’s Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund, will be held from December 6-9, while the Tshwane Open, backed by the country’s administrative capital, Pretoria, will take place from February 28 to March 3, 2013.
The Tshwane Open at the Els Club Copperleaf will have prizemoney of 1.5 million euro, meaning the winner will gain a two-year exemption on the European Tour, while the purse for the Nelson Mandela Championship has yet to be finalised, but Sunshine Tour executive director Selwyn Nathan said it would be “a minimum of one million euro”.
The Sunshine Tour also announced on Tuesday that the prizemoney for the Alfred Dunhill Championship, to be played at Leopard Creek from December 13-16, has also been increased to 1.5 million euro.
South Africa is now the country that will host the most European Tour events, with the South African Open, Africa Open and Joburg Open also being co-sanctioned events with the Sunshine Tour.
“I’m particularly excited that we have another two European Tour co-sanctioned events, as it shows the confidence one of the two major tours in the world has in us,” Nathan said. “It’s a really special day for us and we hope the stars will support these events. They show we have a face in international golf.”
Although the venue for the Nelson Mandela Championship has also yet to be finalised, Nathan confirmed that it would be held at one of two coastal courses – the Royal Durban Golf Club or Humewood in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape. The head of the Sunshine Tour said they were in the process of making sure facilities at the two courses were all in order and they would be paying particular attention to practice facilities and hospitality capability.
“We are hoping the Nelson Mandela Championship will be held for a minimum of three years and it would be wonderful if it could stay in the same place. There are also a whole bunch of opportunities with international players who are in the country already to play at Sun City the week before,” Nathan said.
The Tshwane municipality’s executive mayor, Kgosientso Ramokgopa, said his council are guaranteeing R44 million (4.18 million euro) per annum for their tournament until the Sunshine Tour can find sufficient sponsors.

“The money we are guaranteeing is an investment we are making in ensuring coverage for Tshwane all over the world and it’s a small contribution compared to the budget for the indigent programs that will provide relief to the poor,” Ramokgopa said.

The Tshwane Open, which will be held at the Els Club Copperleaf for the next three years, will bring to an end a month of co-sanctioned events in Africa, including the Africa and Joburg Opens, before the tour returns to Europe.

 

Grace wants to crack the top 50 0

Posted on January 24, 2012 by Ken


by Ken Borland 22 January 2012, 19:23

 

Branden Grace wants to crack the world’s top 50 and make it to the Masters following his extraordinary second consecutive European Tour title after his victory at the Volvo Golf Champions at the Fancourt Links on Sunday.

“One of my goals is definitely to make the top 50. I just need to keep grinding on and to get to the Masters would be indescribable,” Grace said after his dramatic playoff victory.

Grace prevailed over his fellow South Africans Ernie Els and Retief Goosen and the 23-year-old said beating them had made his victory even sweeter.

“Lying in bed last night, I was reading articles about the tournament and I saw that there were 14 major wins behind me. It was unbelievable to win a tournament of this calibre and to beat two of my idols in a playoff is awesome,” Grace said.

It was an awful missed putt on the 72nd hole of regulation play that ensured Grace would have to join them in a playoff after his par on the 18th hole left the trio tied on 12-under-par. Grace shovelled a four-foot putt wide of the hole and his misfortune was repeated by Nicolas Colsaerts, who smashed a three-foot putt past the hole moments later to drop out of contention.

“If you make that sort of putt, you’re the hero, but when I missed it, I didn’t think I’d hit a bad putt, it was just a bit low on speed. It’s just one of those things, I didn’t really think of it being on the last hole because I knew we had one left,” Grace said.

The George Golf Club representative has always featured highly in the opinions of respected South African golf judges and finally seems to be fulfilling his undoubted potential. Grace celebrated his 50th European Tour start with his maiden victory at last week’s Joburg Open and became just the sixth golfer to win their first two events back-to-back.

“I would’ve preferred to have won much earlier in my career but I’ve learnt the hard way. I’ve been on tour, I’ve lost my card but sometimes it’s not bad going backwards to go forwards. I’ve learnt my lesson and I know for a fact that I’m a better player than before,” Grace said.

An analysis of Grace’s final round 71 shows that he hit 12 out of 14 fairways and made 14 out of 18 greens in regulation and it was clear he has an affinity for the Fancourt Links.

“I really wanted to do well and perform here at home, so it’s a dream come true. It’s unbelievable to win a tournament of this calibre,” Grace said.

“Amazing” and “phenomenal” were the other words Grace used to describe his double triumph and he is the fifth South African to win back-to-back European Tour titles. Dale Hayes was the first to do it when he won the Italian and French Opens in 1978, before Els claimed the Dubai Desert Classic and Qatar Masters titles in 2005. The other two instances have been during the Sunshine Tour’s co-sanctioned summer swing, with Richard Sterne winning the Alfred Dunhill Championship and South African Open in 2009 and Charl Schwartzel triumphing in the 2010 Africa and Joburg Opens.

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Thought of the Day

    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

     

     



↑ Top