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Ken Borland



Coetzee charges past Aiken & Walters 0

Posted on February 09, 2014 by Ken

Overnight leaders Thomas Aiken and Justin Walters were overtaken by charging fellow South African George Coetzee, who sealed a long-awaited maiden European Tour victory with his three-shot triumph at the Joburg Open on Sunday.

The first nine holes at Royal Johannesburg and Kensington’s East Course were the key for Coetzee as he started the day four strokes behind Aiken and Walters, who began the final day on 17-under-par. The 27-year-old also had to contend with South Korea’s Jin Jeong on 15-under, Finland’s Roope Kakko on -14, and Scotsman Alastair Forsyth, who was level with him on 13-under-par.

Coetzee birdied the short par-five first hole and picked up further strokes on the par-four fourth and the two par-fives on the sixth and eighth.

“I knew I had to play well and the plan was to be four-under on the front nine. I got that and then thought that anything else from there would be a bonus. Two more birdies on the back nine was good enough. But if I had not gone four-under on the front nine, then I wouldn’t be sitting here,” Coetzee said at the final press conference with the crystal trophy beside him.

Having been a nearly man for so long on the European Tour with eight top-three finishes in the last three years, Coetzee shocked many when he showed no great relief at notching his breakthrough victory.

“Sitting here with the trophy is not that important, playing your best out there on the course is what matters. It’s the mindset you’ve got to have otherwise winning becomes too important.

“When I won the Telkom PGA Championship in 2011, I said it was bloody hard to achieve which actually made it very hard for myself to win again. It actually wasn’t that difficult and a couple of tournaments I’ve lost in, I actually played better than I did today,” Coetzee said.

But any inspector of Coetzee’s faultless scorecard, a brilliant six-under-par 66 to win by three after being four behind, will find it very hard to believe the Pretoria golfer did not play very well indeed.

“I just kept believing and tried to stay focused. I told myself Thomas and Justin were making birdies, so I had to keep positive and stay aggressive. I kept telling myself that anything on the greens could go in for birdie. In my last three events, I’ve had one or two bogey-free rounds in each of them, so I’m comfortable doing that. There’s a lot less to handle if you’re doing that,” he said.

It was always going to be a stiff ask overtaking both Aiken and Walters, but Coetzee was helped by his compatriots both shooting over-par on the final day.

It’s become run-of-the-mill for Aiken to shoot low on the East Course in recent years, but, after playing the first seven holes in one-under, his game started to go down the drain, possibly due to the scoreboard pressure Coetzee was exerting with his thrilling charge.

Some wonkiness off the tee and some really poor iron play were the obvious problems, leading to five bogeys from the eighth hole; birdies at 14 and 18 did not stem the bleeding as Aiken finished in a tie for fifth on 15-under after a 74.

It is one of just five over-par rounds Aiken has played in the 26 times he has gone around Royal Johannesburg and Kensington in the Joburg Open and, having been the favourite of many to win the title, he didn’t even manage to claim one of the automatic places in the British Open that were up for grabs.

Walters, the USA-based 33-year-old, finished in the three-man group tied for second on 16-under, the par-fives on the eighth and 18th proving the thorn in his side as he bogeyed both of them.

On the last tee-box, he was still in the running, needing to eagle the 504-metre par-five, just as he did on the third day, to force a playoff with Coetzee. But his tee-shot found the second fairway bunker down the right and his second, from the up-slope, was hopelessly short of the green.

One of the rounds of the day came from the 22-year-old Englishman Tyrell Hatton, who matched Coetzee with a 66 that lifted him into a share of second place, the European Tour rookie earning € 101,097, the biggest cheque of his fledgling career.

Jeong, the Australian-based winner of the Perth International towards the end of last year, was very much in contention after successive birdies on the seventh and eighth holes lifted him to 16-under, but the putter deserted him on the back nine and he could only add one more birdie, despite hitting the ball close to the flag several times.

But the real momentum was with Coetzee and he proved unstoppable, adding birdies on the par-four 10th and 15th holes.

He admitted the three on the 15th was the product of some great good fortune as he pulled his drive towards the water, but his ball hit a tree and bounced back into the fairway, from where he found the green and then the cup.

The calm and methodical way in which Coetzee seized victory on Sunday mirrors his approach to his career.

“I will take it one step at a time and just focus on the next box I want to tick. Winning a co-sanctioned event was kind of the next step – as a youngster I always said I wanted to win the junior club champs, the club medal, the senior club champs, a professional event, a Sunshine Tour winter tournament, a big Sunshine Tour event and then one of the co-sanctioned ones.”

Asked what the next box he wants to tick is, Coetzee said “It’s my box, not yours” as he preferred not to make his goals public.

There is no doubting Coetzee’s force of will, he was well-nigh unstoppable on his march to victory on Sunday and the floodgates could well open now for the highly-talented South African.

Sterne, Fisher lead; George & Charl chase 0

Posted on May 28, 2013 by Ken

Richard Sterne and Trevor Fisher Jnr shared the lead after the second round of the Joburg Open, but European Tour stars George Coetzee and Charl Schwartzel were hard on the chase at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Friday.

Fisher, after a brilliant 62 on the West Course, and Sterne, who shot a superb 65 on the tougher East Course, are both on 15-under-par, but the names of Coetzee (-12) and Schwartzel (-10) loom dangerously just below them on the leaderboard.

Sterne held a share of the overnight lead with Germany’s Maximilian Kieffer on eight-under-par and the winner of the 2008 Joburg Open immediately went to nine-under with a birdie on the par-five first hole.

Sterne’s strategy of minimising mistakes obviously paid off as he completed a second bogey-free round and collected three more birdies on the front nine and three coming in, including successive birdies on the last two holes.

“I was quite conservative, you have to be on this course, and my game didn’t feel great but I putted well and had a couple of good up-and-downs,” Sterne said.

Fisher has been a Sunshine Tour competitor since 2002 but has become one of the leading players only recently, finishing fourth and ninth on the order of merit in the last two years and being named as the 2012 Players’ Player of the Year earlier this week.

He looked ready to become a regular European Tour contender on Friday as he roared through the back nine in five-under, including three successive birdies to end his round, having earlier eagled the par-five second hole.

“I’m a late bloomer and I think I’ve matured in the last couple of years, but I need to get to the next level now,” the 33-year-old said.

“I was in a happy place out there, everything just happened for me and I sank the putts I needed to sink. I was patient, walked slow and did everything slow. You’ve got to be in the moment, you can’t think about your score … I think that’s the secret to scoring low around here: not trying to make birdies, but trying to hit good shots,” Fisher said.

Coetzee, who shot a phenomenal 64 on the East Course, was playing in the same three-ball as Sterne and he said he had fed off the success of his fellow Pretorian.

“Richie was getting a birdie every other hole so that made me want birdies too. I made some nice putts early on which gave me momentum and I hit the ball great in the stretch. I was pretty happy with my game, except for my long putts, I left a lot short,” Coetzee said.

Schwartzel, who missed the cut when defending his title last year, is cosily positioned just five shots off the lead heading into the weekend, after shooting a 65 on the West Course.

“There’s still a long way to go and Trevor Fisher is playing fantastic golf, but at least I’m still in range. My ball-striking has been 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.

Fisher, however, said he was ready to make the step up and win his first European Tour co-sanctioned event, having triumphed seven times on the regular Sunshine Tour.

“I’ve been here for 10 years and it’s been a good stepping stone to the European Tour. But I’ve stepped on a lot of stones now and it’s time to get to the top,” Fisher said.

South African Keith Horne and Chile’s Felipe Aguilar are tied with Schwartzel on 10-under, having both shot 66s on the East Course.

Kieffer could only manage a par-72 on the East Course and slipped down into a tie for 11th.

 

Defending champ Schwartzel misses cut 0

Posted on January 14, 2012 by Ken

Defending and Masters champion Charl Schwartzel missed the cut in the Joburg Open at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Saturday as Englishmen Robert Rock and Richard Finch and South African George Coetzee shared the lead after two rounds of the European and Sunshine Tour co-sanctioned event.
    Rock, Finch and Coetzee were on 11-under-par after the second round was completed on Saturday morning after thunderstorms washed out play on both the first and second afternoons, nine hours of play being lost.
    The cut was made on 65th and ties and fell on four-under-par.
    Schwartzel missed the cut by one stroke as he fired rounds of 72 and 68 to finish on three-under-par in the tournament played on two courses – the par-72 East Course and par-71 West Course.
    “It’s always guesswork when you come off a break and competitive golf is always different. But to get straight on to the point, my putting let me down. You’re not going to be doing very well on a course where you should be going for birdies if you have 34 putts. I hit 17 greens in regulation but I was just three-under, so it was not my best effort,” Schwartzel said after his second round.
    “I’m not stroking the ball properly and I don’t have that rhythm you get from playing tournament golf week in, week out. If you hit a few off-line, you start doubting yourself, which makes it worse,” Schwartzel told reporters.
    Rock claimed the lead as he shot a four-under-par 67 on the easier West Course, after he had produced the joint best round of the first day on the East Course – a seven-under-par 65.
    But Finch and Coetzee caught Rock on Saturday morning as they walked off the course with 66 and 67 respectively on the East Course.
    Coetzee fired six birdies, but his hopes of leading on his own were spoilt by a bogey on the par-four 17th.
    “I’m not happy about that bogey at the end. I was playing well and when I made that par on 16, I thought I could push for a couple more birdies. As soon as you say that, the bogey happens,” Coetzee said.
    Finch joined the leaders thanks to his third professional hole-in-one, as he aced the par-three 12th hole with a six-iron from 188 metres.
    “It was actually my second in South Africa, I made one at Humewood a few years ago during the SA Open. I made the other one at the Johnnie Walker at Gleneagles,” Finch said.

Not thinking bears fruit for Botes & Coetzee 0

Posted on January 12, 2012 by Ken

 

For two South Africans, their tactic of not thinking about shooting low bore fruit on Thursday as they positioned themselves up with the leaders after the first round of the Joburg Open at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club.

 

Desvonde Botes produced the round of the day with a fabulous seven-under-par 65 on the tougher East Course to claim second place behind leaders Damian McGrane and Jamie Elson, who both shot 63s on the West Course, which translates to eight-under-par.

 

George Coetzee went out in the morning and laid a marker with a fine round of six-under-par 65 on the par-71 West Course.

 

“I played very nicely today, bogey-free and with five birdies and an eagle at the last,” Botes said. “I just tried not to think too much about posting a score. I just concentrated on having fun and hitting every shot as good as possible.”

 

 

And the Pretoria-based Coetzee had the same mantra, although for different reasons as he was under pressure to shoot low first up on the easier West Course.

“It’s tough to start on that course because you know you have to come out the blocks quickly and score well. You’re under pressure to shoot low quickly. I just had to tell myself not to worry about the score and not try to force birdies. I had to just keep the ball in play and try and pick up birdies on the par-fives. And it worked because I didn’t have a five on my card,” Coetzee said after his bogey-free round.

 

Botes took a lot of confidence from his previous tournaments at Royal Johannesburg and Kensington, specifically on the East Course, where he became the youngest ever winner of the SA Amateur title, beating Springbok Barry Sundelson in 1991 and becoming the youngest ever winner at 16 years and five months, 20 days younger than the previous record-holder, Ernie Els.

 

“As an amateur, I used to shoot rounds of around 65 here, but that’s the first time I’ve done as well as a pro. I won the SA Amateur here in 1991, on the East Course, beating Barry Sundelson, and we play here more or less every year, it’s such a great course.

 

“I’ve always enjoyed the East Course more, but there are a lot of scoring opportunities on the West Course. I just need to keep my head and make sure I do well tomorrow as well,” Botes said.

 

For Coetzee, the key on Friday is keeping himself from getting in his own way.

 

 

“At the moment, it’s impossible for me to keep out of my own head. I’m going to see the psychologist tomorrow. Last week it bothered me a lot – I’d be on my way to a reasonably good score, but then I’d get in my own way and fall back to an average score,” Coetzee said.

 

The 25-year-old finished in a tie for 29th on 14-under at the Africa Open, after rounds of 71-68-69-70, which was reasonable but nothing spectacular in the wake of Louis Oosthuizen’s winning score of 27-under, the second-lowest in the history of the European Tour. The record-holder is Els, who won the Johnnie Walker Classic at Lake Karrinyup in 2003 with a score of 29-under-par.

 

The 37-year-old Botes will be fancying his chances of going very low in the second round as well as he ended the first round in the most spectacular fashion, with a birdie on the 17th and an eagle on the par-five 18th hole.

 

 

The momentum is certainly with the tall Hartebeestpoort golfer.

 

 

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  • Thought of the Day

    Ephesians 4:13 – “Until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God, and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.”

    The standard against which we measure our progress is nothing less than the character of Christ. It sounds presumptuous to strive for his perfection, but we must aim no lower.

    Of course, comparing what you are to what Christ is could make you pessimistic and you give up. However, intellectual and spiritual maturity doesn’t just happen – it requires time and energy to develop your full potential.

    “Never forget His love for you and that he identifies with you in your human frailty. He gives you the strength to live a godly life if you will only confess your dependence on him every moment of the day. Draw daily from the strength that he puts at your disposal for this very reason.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

     

     



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