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Ken Borland



Sterne & Kieffer share the lead 0

Posted on May 27, 2013 by Ken

South Africa’s Richard Sterne and Germany’s Maximilian Kieffer signed for eight-under-par 63s on the West Course to lead the Joburg Open after the first round of the Sunshine Tour/European Tour co-sanctioned event at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Thursday.

Sterne, the 2008 champion, continued to prove that he is over the back problems that plagued him for two years as he produced a flawless round with six birdies and an eagle.

Kieffer, the 22-year-old who hails from former world number one Martin Kaymer’s home city of Dusseldorf, is a rookie on the European Tour after finishing 14th in the 2012 Challenge Tour, but he putted superbly to collect five birdies on the front nine and three coming in.

There were five golfers within the top 11 who opened the tournament on the tougher East Course, with Durbanite Bryce Easton leading the way with a seven-under-par 65 on the par-72 layout, while compatriots Jake Redman, Trevor Fisher Junior, Allan Versfeld and Tyrone Ferreira were on six-under.

American Peter Uihlein, the world’s number one amateur in 2010, Sweden’s Joakim Lagergren and South Africans Tyrone Mordt and MJ Daffue were the other golfers on six-under, having all played the par-71 West Course.

Espen Kofstad, the 2012 Challenge Tour order of merit winner, was tied for the lead on eight-under-par as he reached the 18th hole on the West Course, but found trouble off the tee and on the green to post a triple-bogey seven and slide back into a tie for 12th on five-under.

Sterne’s eagle came on the par-five 507-metre ninth hole when he chipped in from just short of the green and the Pretoria product said the key to his round was minimising mistakes.

“Some days it feels good and everything just kind of happens. Golf is strange – you’ve got to hit the right kind of shots at the right time.

I’ve been minimising the mistakes and I hit 17 greens [in regulation] today, so I was never really in trouble at all,” Sterne said.

Fisher, voted the Sunshine Tour’s Players’ Player of the Year earlier this week, had the most topsy-turvy round of the frontrunners, with eight birdies and two bogeys and he admitted afterwards that he was struggling with nerves and the sense of expectation that came with the award.

For Easton, the highlight of his superb round was a hole-in-one on the par-three 12th hole, the first of his career, and worth about R100 000 of free accommodation from the Hilton Hotel for the 25-year-old.

Easton, who won twice on the Sunshine Tour last year, said he was looking for more consistency in the co-sanctioned events.

“I want to play more consistently and compete more in these bigger events. Last year I had a couple of wins, but I didn’t play so well in these co-sanctioned tournaments,” Easton said.

Two-time champion Charl Schwartzel was purring along nicely on the East Course as he posted a four-under-par 68, leaving him tied for 25th alongside George Coetzee, who played the West Course.

But defending champion Branden Grace, playing in the same three-ball as Schwartzel, could only manage a level-par 72.

Self-effacing Easton steals the limelight 0

Posted on May 27, 2013 by Ken

Bryce Easton’s highly noticeable yellow floppy hat is at odds with his modest self-effacing personality, but the 25-year-old thrust himself into the limelight with a seven-under-par 65, that included a hole-in-one, on the tougher East Course in the opening round of the Joburg Open at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Thursday.

Easton’s brilliant round left him one stroke behind the early lead of eight-under-par set by 2008 champion Richard Sterne on the easier West Course, and was one of the main talking points of the morning.

But the lanky Durbanite was still surprised by all the fuss.

“Why do the media want to talk to me? Surely they’re waiting for Charl Schwartzel and Branden Grace?” he said.

While Easton did not drop a stroke and holed his tee-shot on the 167-metre par-three 12th, he said he was not entirely satisfied with his round, having erred too many times for his liking with the driver.

“I missed a few fairways so I still need to figure out the driver a bit, I have some work to do this afternoon. But it’s nice to have a round where you don’t hit the ball so well but you still score well.

Golf’s a funny game, sometimes you hit the ball flush and you don’t score so well,” Easton said.

Easton took a seven-iron on the 12th hole and the ace meant he went away with a million bonus points from the Hilton Hotel group, sponsored by Investec, which translates to about R100 000 of free accommodation.

“It’s my first hole-in-one and you obviously don’t think about it when you’re playing the hole. But then the ball goes in and it takes you a couple of seconds to realise it’s disappeared. It was an awesome feeling and the million Hilton points is a nice bonus,” he said.

It was a great day in the office for the two-time winner on the 2012 Sunshine Tour and there is always the expectation of going lower on the West course at Royal Johannesburg and Kensington. But Easton  will not be taking anything for granted.

“I know the West course a bit better, before today I’d only played a single practice round on the East, but you never know how things will go.”

With 2012 having been a breakthrough year for the 2011 rookie, Easton was asked whether he was targeting the European Tour co-sanctioned events this year.

“Yes, I want to play more consistently and compete more in these bigger events. Last year I had a couple of wins, but I didn’t play so well in these co-sanctioned tournaments,” Easton said.

Having won the Sun City Challenge, eagling the last hole to force a playoff, and the Zebula leg of the Vodacom Origins of Golf two weeks later in 2012, Easton is clearly a golfer whose talent is beginning to bloom.

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

Respect for Englishman who finished 2nd 0

Posted on January 16, 2012 by Ken

by Ken Borland 15 January 2012, 17:55

 

Jamie Elson failed to chase down the home town favourite, but he nevertheless earned huge respect for the scintillating 63 he fired in the final round of the Joburg Open at Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Sunday.

Elson’s brilliant nine-under-par round on the tough East Course saw him vault to within one shot of eventual winner Branden Grace, and the Englishman said it was the mental side of his game that had made all the difference.

“For some reason I felt really relaxed today. It’s funny because I’m normally quite anxious and yesterday I was so edgy out there. I can’t put my finger on why I felt so different today, it must be something that worked in my mental preparation, but I just had this calmness about me,” Elson said.

Elson eagled the 504-metre par-five 18th hole, changing the leaderboard dramatically as he shot up to 16-under-par, just one stroke behind Grace, who showed remarkable composure to keep it that way through his last nine holes.

“To close like that was quite something, it was just one of those days when everything went right for me. I took driver off the tee and leaked it right. I actually thought it was in the bunker. But I caught a decent lie in the rough and had a great yardage for my hybrid, which my caddie calls my ‘magic-stick’.

“It just came out perfectly and pitched on the front of the green, and the reaction of the crowd told me it was pretty close to going in,” Elson said.

As it turned out, Elson’s heroics did not leave Grace much room to move, although the man who sank a 40-foot birdie putt to just earn his tour card never thought he would come that close to winning.

“We just have to see what happens now but I hope I get top five because that will get me into Abu Dhabi in two weeks,” Elson said after his round, more than two hours before Grace finished only one stroke ahead.

So Abu Dhabi is where Elson is headed (he finished fourth there last year), although it could so easily have been Fancourt, where all the previous year’s European Tour winners will line up in the lucrative Volvo Golf Champions tournament from Thursday.

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    Revelation 3:15 – “I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other.”

    How can you expect blessings without obeying?

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    Be sincere in your commitment to Him; be willing to sacrifice time so that you can grow spiritually; be disciplined in prayer and Bible study; worship God in spirit and truth.

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