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Ken Borland



Haas & Colsaerts lead … but just by 2 0

Posted on January 07, 2013 by Ken

American Bill Haas and Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts shared the first-round lead at the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Thursday, but they were far from a dominant position as eight of the 12-man field finished the day within two strokes of the pair.

Haas and Colsaerts both shot two-under-par 70s to head the leaderboard, with Louis Oosthuizen, Paul Lawrie and defending champion Lee Westwood just a stroke back.

Five other golfers were level-par after the first round, including former world number one Martin Kaymer and South African Charl Schwartzel.

On a cloudless, boiling hot day in the Pilanesberg, the 12-man field struggled in tough conditions, with a shifting breeze and the thickness of the rough causing much uncertainty.

Oosthuizen, the highest-ranked South African golfer in the world, claimed the early lead after he rebounded from a one-over-par outward nine, featuring three bogeys and two birdies, with a solid two-under 34 coming in, for a 71 overall.

But Haas, a Sun City rookie, stormed to four-under-par through 15 holes before slipping back to a 70 after dropped shots on the par-three 16th and par-four 18th holes.

Colsaerts, playing in the two-ball after Haas, produced the most consistent round of the day with just a single bogey, at the daunting par-four eighth hole.

The long-hitting Ryder Cup hero, also making his debut in the NGC, said it was hard work making allowance for the wind as well as altitude and the thickness of the semi-rough.

“The wind was a bit difficult to read. It always seemed to be coming off the side,” Colsaerts said.

“And with the effects of altitude and different grass to what we’re used to in the rough, it was very easy to get your yardage calculations wrong.”

The 30-year-old Colsaerts is one of the most entertaining golfers in the field, given his length off the tee, but he said he felt compelled to rein himself in because of the testing conditions.

“I didn’t use a very aggressive game plan, even with the driver when I used it. I think I played like everyone else, hitting the same spots, because you were better off hitting an iron from the fairway than a lob-wedge out of the kikuyu rough.

“I probably played close to my best in terms of management off the tee.”

Haas had the chance to separate himself from the rest of the field, but the American, whose father Jay is playing in the Champions Challenge on the same course, was satisfied with his round.

“I’d done well to get to four-under. There was a bit of breeze out there, the wind showed its teeth today, and, after missing a short putt on 16, I was happy to make a 10-footer for bogey on the last,” Haas said.

“I didn’t win it today, but I’m not out of it either.”

England’s Justin Rose, one of the pre-tournament favourites, will have to put pressure on the leaders from afar after he struggled to a one-over-par 73. The world number four birdied the two par-fives around the turn, but then picked up three successive bogeys from the 11th to 13th holes.

– http://www.sapa.org.za/secure/view.cfm?id=3610564&year=2012&srce=search&s=0&Criteria=Haas&Indexes=Head%2CBody&CategoryCodes=&AgeMax=3m&SearchYears=&FromYear=&FromMonth=1&ToYear=2013&ToMonth=12&StartDate=%7Bts+%272012-10-07+13%3A05%3A34%27%7D&StopDate=%7Bts+%272013-01-08+13%3A05%3A34%27%7D&debug=False&wf_startrow=41

Colsaerts again on top 0

Posted on January 21, 2012 by Ken

Belgium’s Nicolas Colsaerts shot a four-under-par 69 on Saturday to again find himself at the top of the leaderboard after the third round of the Volvo Golf Champions at the Fancourt Links.
    Colsaerts fired a course-record 64 in the first round of the two million euro event to claim a four-shot lead, but then struggled to a 76 in the second round to slip six shots behind South African Branden Grace.
    But on a day on which only 10 of the 35 golfers were under-par, Colsaerts’ impressive round, capped by an eagle-three on the 18th hole, vaulted him back into a tie for first place with Grace on 10-under.
    Grace shot a two-over-par 75 in the tricky weather conditions, marked by a blustery wind and steady rain for most of the day, while fellow South Africans Retief Goosen and Charl Schwartzel are on nine-under-par.
    European Ryder Cup captain Jose’-Maria Olazabal coaxed a one-under-par 72 out of the course to lie alone in fifth place on eight-under.
    Masters champion Schwartzel made the biggest move on the third day with a five-under-par 68. The world number nine eagled the par-five ninth hole to go out in just 32 strokes, but his hot run petered out on the back nine, which he completed in one-under-par.
    The long-hitting Colsaerts capitalised on some daring drives down the tight Fancourt fairways as he shrugged off a bogey on the first hole with birdies on the fourth, sixth and ninth holes. He was level-par on the back nine before his spectacular eagle on the 502-metre last hole.
    “I hit an enormous drive on 18, leaving me 190 to the flag, and then hit an eight-iron on to the green. It was nice to make that putt after a drive like that,” Colsaerts told reporters after his round.
    “The last few holes suit my long-driving skills so I go with my strengths. If I hit a good one, I can get half-a-shot on the field and that’s quite an advantage,” he said.
    The scorecards of most of the golfers were filled with drop shots and there were two quadruple-bogeys – by Pablo Martin, who shot a 17-over-par 90, and Kenneth Ferrie – and five triple-bogeys.
    Schwartzel said he was not surprised that the scoring had ballooned on Saturday.
    “You can’t come here and play one practice round and think you’re going to conquer the course. You need to know it really well because a lot of the slopes you can use to your benefit, but a lot of them can bite you.
    “The first two days were pretty easy because we weren’t hitting long clubs into the greens. But today was a lot tougher out there, the wind and misty rain made it difficult. I was hitting four-irons into the wind where normally I’d be hitting a seven-iron. That’s how short the ball is going, the fairways are also a lot softer, and it’s very difficult hitting long-irons into these greens. You need to be wide awake and commit to whatever shot you’re playing because the margins are not big out there,” Schwartzel said
    Schwartzel has been battling a cold putter and he once again complained about his performance on the green.
    “All my birdies were basically tap-ins. The ball just hasn’t been going in the hole otherwise. It feels like I’m hitting good putts, but I’m not starting them on-line and when I do, I’m just reading them wrong,” Schwartzel said.

Colsaerts streaks ahead of field 0

Posted on January 19, 2012 by Ken

Nicolas Colsaerts blasted a nine-under-par 64 to streak four shots ahead of the rest of the field after the first round of the winners-only Volvo Golf Champions at the Fancourt Links on Thursday.
    Young British prospect Tom Lewis and South Africans Thomas Aiken and Branden Grace were tied in second place after shooting five-under-par 68s.
    Briton David Horsey, Holland’s Joost Luiten, former British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen and Ireland’s Padraig Harrington were a further stroke back on four-under.
    Colsaerts is renowned for his length off the tee, but it was the Belgian’s brilliant iron play and clinical putting that took him to his course-record score, that included birdies on all four par-threes.
    “I’ve never birdied all the par-threes on a course before and you don’t see that on a scorecard that often. You’re not really looking for birdies on the par-threes, I’m thinking more that I can reach most of the par-fives in two, so it was a bonus,” Colsaerts told a news conference after his round.
    The 29-year-old had four successive birdies around the turn and then closed with four birdies in a row for a seven-under-par 30 on the back nine.
    “I’m very happy, to have the course record on a course like this is quite a thing. I’ve heard about this place for a long time, after the President’s Cup was played here and it being the number one course in South Africa,” Colsaerts said.
    “I just seemed to hole out all day, every birdie was from close range and I took every chance from six-to-eight feet. I was hitting my irons very close and, after you’ve done that three or four times, you just keep firing at the pins. I kept hitting the fairways as well and it was probably one of the best rounds I’ve played, if not the best,” the China Open champion said.
    The opening day could even have been better for the 21-year-old Lewis as his 68 included a double-bogey seven on the 16th hole – a tough, narrow par-five.
    Spanish Open champion Aiken fired six birdies – four of those on the front nine – and just one bogey, while Grace, the winner of last week’s Joburg Open, rode the momentum of an eagle-three at the ninth hole to come home in four-under-par 33.
    World number nine Charl Schwartzel, the highest-ranked golfer in the two million euro event, was towards the back of the field after a two-over-par 75, while the hopes of home town favourite Ernie Els were boosted by birdies on the last three holes that lifted him to a 71.
    The three-time major winner, who spends the festive season in nearby Herold’s Bay and knows Fancourt intimately, said he was hoping the wind would pick up for the rest of the tournament.
    “Obviously guys played really good, but today was as easy as you’re going to find it. This course has got a lot of teeth and it has not shown it yet. When the wind comes up, it’s a huge difference, this course is a totally different animal,” Els said.

No quarter given by Colsaerts 0

Posted on January 19, 2012 by Ken

by Ken Borland 19 January 2012, 15:20

 

A quarter of the Fancourt Links is made up of par-threes and Nicolas Colsaerts birdied them all on his way to a commanding four-shot lead in the first round of the Volvo Golf Champions on Thursday.

Colsaerts is known for his no-holds-barred driving off the tee, but his brilliant nine-under-par 64 was actually set apart by his superb iron-play and clinical putting as he birdied the par-three second, eighth, 11th and 17th holes.

“I’ve never birdied all the par-threes on a course before and you don’t see that on a scorecard that often. You’re not really looking for birdies on the par-threes, I’m thinking more that I can reach most of the par-fives in two, so it was a bonus,” Colsaerts said after shattering the Fancourt Links course record.

The Belgian was level-par through seven holes after bogeying the par-four sixth hole after a three-putt, but Colsaerts, playing his first competitive round at Fancourt, began to work out the intricacies of the course as he finished the front nine with successive birdies. His final stretch was nothing short of magnificent as he closed with four straight birdies – 3-4-2-4.

“I’m very happy, to have the course record on a course like this is quite a thing. I’ve heard about this place for a long time, after the President’s Cup was played here and it being the number one course in South Africa,” Colsaerts said.

Although the wind played a relatively minor part for Fancourt, Colsaerts said he still had to be watchful.

“It was moving a little bit, it switched at times. It was pretty calm at the start but then there was a bit more wind after the ninth. You still had to look at it. I hope it stays like this because the course will be pretty difficult if the wind gets up,” Colsaerts, who was in the fourth two-ball off the first tee at 10am, said.

Apart from the irritating three-putt on the sixth, the only time the 29-year-old was semi-concerned was on the short par-four 14th hole, when he found the fairway bunker. Colsaerts chipped out to just short of the green and then made his up-and-down for par.

The world number 76 seems to have a thing for Volvo-sponsored tournaments, having won the Volvo China Open in April and then reaching the semifinals of the Volvo World Matchplay Championships in Andalucia before losing to Ian Poulter.

“I like to think I’m having a love affair with Volvo, but there are still three rounds to go!” Colsaerts laughed. “But the Matchplay – beating Goosen, McIlroy, Vegas and McDowell – was when I really understood that I can be a top-class golfer.”

The quality of his golf on Thursday was immaculate and the big-hitting lover of house music was still enjoying the feeling when he spoke to the media.

“I just seemed to hole out all day, every birdie was from close range and I took every chance from six-to-eight feet. I was hitting my irons very close and, after you’ve done that three or four times, you just keep firing at the pins. I kept hitting the fairways as well and it was probably one of the best rounds I’ve played, if not the best,” Colsaerts said.

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    John 14:20 – “On that day you will realise that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you.”

    All the effort and striving in the world, all the good works and great sacrifices, will not help you to become like Christ unless the presence of the living Christ is to be found in your heart and mind.

    Jesus needs to be the source, and not our own strength, that enables us to grow spiritually in strength, beauty and truth.

    Unless the presence of Christ is a living reality in your heart, you will not be able to reflect his personality in your life.

    You need an intensely personal, more intimate relationship with Christ, in which you allow him to reveal himself through your life.

     

     



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