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Ken Borland



Even Els impressed by Grace 0

Posted on January 16, 2012 by Ken

by Ken Borland 15 January 2012, 18:00

 

Branden Grace’s impressive victory in the Joburg Open at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club on Sunday made it a wonderful fortnight for former members of the Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation.

Former British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen won last weekend’s Africa Open in East London, but Grace’s one-shot triumph in Johannesburg was a breakthrough victory for one of South Africa’s most talented youngsters.

Els himself was impressed.

“I’m very proud of him. It’s been an outstanding year for the foundation – last week it was Louis winning and now Branden. I couldn’t have asked for more.

“It’s great to see former members doing so well and their performances will definitely motivate the current members of the foundation,” Els said from his Herold’s Bay holiday home.

 

The victory will turn Grace from a bright South African prospect into an up-and-coming star of the European Tour, something that the 23-year-old has threatened to do for some time.

Grace’s last foray into Europe – in 2009 – left him rather battered and bruised but, after regaining his card at Q-School last month, he can now kick back and enjoy an exemption until the end of 2013.

“It’s awesome, after just getting my card now I have this exemption. The win is going to get me into a lot of events I never thought I’d be playing in,” Grace said after his maiden European Tour win.

What made Grace’s win even more impressive was that he achieved it by finishing with nine straight pars – pointing to a level head while all the other frontrunners were scrambling around like victims of an anthrax attack.

 

The other two members of his three-ball – George Coetsee and Richard Finch – crashed to rounds of 75 and 78 respectively.

“I played superbly today, my approach shots were amazing. I couldn’t dream of better approach shots than what I played on the last five holes,” Grace said. “I told myself first of all not to mess up and then to just keep giving myself chances.”

While Finch struggled on the greens and allowed it to be his funeral (he three-putted three times on the front nine), Grace did not let an uncooperative putter get to him.

“The opportunities were there, but I struggled to get the speed and line together. The greens were immaculate, but if you were a little bit off, you ended four feet away. I went out there today thinking the greens would be quicker, but as soon as you really want to make a putt, you hit it a bit too hard and it goes four feet past. The next one you lag a bit and it ends four feet short.

“But a big thanks to Zack [Rasego, his caddy], who told me I hadn’t hit a bad putt all day and eventually my pace came good,” Grace said.

There was an atmosphere of nervous tension at the start as Grace teed off with Coetzee and Finch just three shots behind, but the George-based golfer said he felt good, even at the turn when Jamie Elson eagled his 18th hole to close to within a shot of Grace.

“I actually thought I’d be more nervous. I didn’t really look at the leaderboard because I knew it would be up to my performance. I stuck to my game plan and kept hitting good shot after good shot,” Grace said.

Grace will now be playing in the lucrative, winners’-only Volvo Golf Champions event close to home at Fancourt starting on Thursday and is looking forward to making more of an impact in Europe now that he is older and wiser.

“It’s an unbelievable, amazing feeling, the win has been coming a long time and I really wanted to play in the Volvo.

“The last time I played in Europe, I wasn’t ready. My golf was good, but it wasn’t great. But I’ve grown so much in the last couple of years and taking a couple of steps back was maybe the best thing to happen to me,” Grace said.

Quality is the operative word 0

Posted on January 10, 2012 by Ken

South Africa took a lot of heat off themselves with their emphatic four-day victory over Sri Lanka in Cape Town, but in a way they merely added more fuel to the perceptions of the fans.

Led by Jacques Kallis, the greatest cricketer of the modern game, the Sri Lankans were blown away by 10 wickets, the quality of the performance matching the margin of victory.

And quality is the operative word.

Because that is the over-riding feature of a side that boasts the sort of talent throughout the line-up that should be the envy of the other nine Test-playing nations.

Other than perhaps an opening batsman’s berth, the number six position and the spinner, every post in the team is filled by a world-class, proven star, a challenger for a place in a World XI.

But their actual record as a team is another story.

A 208-run defeat by a Sri Lankan team that has perhaps half their talent in Durban in the previous test understandably caused immense frustration amongst the Proteas’ followers.

While captain Graeme Smith acknowledged the team’s continued failure to meet expectations at Kingsmead, he seemed surprised by the public reaction that has been partly quelled by their slick Newlands showing.

“Someone always seems to be on the chopping block, whether it’s Jacques having bad eyes or something else. But we haven’t lost too many Tests at home, we’ve just lacked a killer punch and Durban was again a big disappointment for us,” Smith said.

“That was a big wake-up call for the team because that was not the sort of performance expected of us. But there’s a lot to build on from this win and the way we won was the most important thing,” he said.

“We’ve played well at home, just not in Durban. It’s our job to turn that around. We just need to improve in Durban, but we haven’t had a great time in one-day cricket there either, so I think it’s a venue thing.”

Kallis celebrated his 150th Test in style as he plundered a career-best 224 off the Sri Lankan attack, took three for 35 to wrap up their second innings and took a South African record-equalling six catches in the match.

“Newlands is always a special place to play for me, it’s always been my favourite ground. Even as a kid, I would come here to play, even when it’s empty it’s a special place.

“To play my 150th Test here, to have the team’s victory and, from a personal point of view, to have the sort of performance you dream of – I couldn’t have asked for better,” Kallis said.

While Kallis shut up his critics in the most emphatic fashion, the vultures are still circling around wicketkeeper/batsman Mark Boucher’s head, although Smith had his back.

“There’s no problem with Boucher, it was the first time I’ve seen him drop a catch in ages. He took nearly 10 catches in Pretoria [eight in the first Test at Centurion] and everyone was raving about his performance. As a gloveman, he’s been excellent for us, ultra-reliable and I think that’s why such a fuss is being made about that one drop. When we go to England, having a reliable wicketkeeper will be crucial,” the captain said.

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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?

    How can you expect the presence of God without spending time quietly before him?

    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.

    Have you totally surrendered to God? Have you cheerfully given him everything you are and everything you have?

    If you love Christ, accept the challenges of that love: Placing Christ in the centre of your life means complete surrender to Him.

     

     

     



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