Cape Argus

Fired-up Frittelli the man to beat

- JACQUES VAN DER WESTHUYZEN

IF recent form is a yardstick then there’s only one man to beat at the Joburg Open starting at Randpark Golf Club today: Dylan Frittelli.

To say the 27-year-old Johannesbu­rg-born golfer is in a purple patch would be an under-statement. He is coming off his second European Tour win in Mauritius last weekend, after winning the Lyoness Open in France in June, and has come close on a number of other occasions recently.

Just a few weeks ago he was runner-up at the Turkish Open and two weeks later tied for fourth at the season-ending DP World Tour Championsh­ips in Dubai.

So with Louis Oosthuizen out this week after damaging the fingers on his right hand in a freak airport trolley incident, it’s no surprise Frittelli appears to be the hot favourite.

“Yeah, I’m very excited to be here. It’s always nice being back in your home town and being able to sleep in your own bed,” the now world No 55 yesterday.

“I’ve had a good couple of weeks and the form’s been good coming here so I’m excited to get going.”

The R16.5-million tournament is being held at Randpark for the first time and will boast a record field of 240, teeing it up on the Bushwillow and Firethorn courses for the first two rounds. Weekend play will happen only on the recently redesigned Firethorn layout.

The last time Frittelli played competitiv­ely at Randpark was 11 years ago, but he is confident he’ll be able to navigate his way around the courses over the next few days, thanks mainly to his caddie John Curtis, whose head and notebook will be crammed with knowledge gained from his walks on the courses in recent days.

Frittelli is not big on practice rounds, preferring to stay fresh for the “four days’ work”.

“It depends on the course and where I am,” he said when quizzed about his build-up to tournament­s, which is sometimes quite different to the norm.

“If I’m somewhere I haven’t played before I will go two practice rounds, like the courses this year in Europe... Abu Dhabi, the French Open, all the Rolex Series events,” he said.

“But if I’ve played the course before and know it then there’s no real need to play. For me it’s about getting my body in shape. As long as I’m striking it well, I’m happy to step up on the first tee, feeling fresh and going for it. I’ve got full faith in my caddie and the yardage book; everything else is in front of me.

“Firethorn has obviously changed a lot since I was last here, but I did play a round with one of my cousins six weeks ago, and it’s very different, while Bushwillow I’ll play blind. But my caddie will walk it and we’ll figure it out and hopefully make some birdies.”

Oosthuizen withdrew yesterday morning and instilled Frittelli as the favourite in a field including defending champion Darren Fichardt, 2016 champion Haydn Porteous, Dean Burmester, Jbe Kruger, Thomas Aiken, Erik van Rooyen and a host of promising and establishe­d players from the Sunshine, European, and Asian tours.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Dylan Frittelli
Dylan Frittelli

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa