Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Sandhu grabs one-shot lead on Day 1

- Robin Bose robin.bose@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Life on tour can be cruel. Since his early days, Ajeetesh Sandhu has been vocal about the parents’ role in his progress. But, the past month, when he needed them most, they were in Chandigarh. Uniting for the Panasonic Open, Ajeetesh, the clubhouse leader by one at eight-under 64, has brought joy closer home, but the optimism is muted as golf can be unpredicta­ble.

The night before the opening round at the Delhi Golf Club, there were tight embraces and moist eyes as they met for the first time since Ajeetesh’s hot streak commenced with his first win on the Asian Tour in early October.

It is to Ajeetesh’s credit that at 29 he still credits the parents for helping him “draw boundaries early on”. One of them was that golf and education had to go handin-hand till he completed college. “That was non-negotiable,” said Ajeetesh.

The lesson of taking a step at a time has crept into strategy as well. An early morning tee-off on Thursday meant the course would play a tad longer, given the moist conditions. Shooting a low card is always the objective, but Ajeetesh did not let the thought lurk.

The birdie on the opening hole bore testimony that focus was on the next shot than the objective of

making rapid progress on the leaderboar­d.

The past few weeks have helped him mature, and that he feels holds the key to his form of late. “Winning is a validation of the effort that’s gone in and strengthen­s inner belief,” said Ajeetesh.

The shift hasn’t changed the reaction to pressure situations though. “A winner’s tag doesn’t count when you’re under the gun, the butterflie­s flutter anyway.” An instance was the bogey on the third hole, his lone blemish of the day. Though focused, the outcome will be accepted irrespecti­ve of what lies ahead as the lesson handed down is not to look back and ponder over what could have been.

This helped tide over the lean times and will aid Ajeetesh as he bids to play more regularly in Japan, a land not frequented by Indians. Jeev Milkha Singh was an exception and tales of his four wins there were instrument­al in getting Ajeetesh interested. After experienci­ng it for himself and winning on the challenge tour, he is excited about the future.

It will be tough to gain a foothold in the fiercely competitiv­e tour, but Jeev’s legacy has made it somewhat easier.

Acceptance hasn’t been a problem, but the onus will be on Ajeetesh to make the most of the opportunit­ies he gets next season. It will be one step at a time, for that’s the way he’s learnt golf.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Ajeetesh Sandhu
HT PHOTO Ajeetesh Sandhu

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