Cape Times

300-yard drives all in a day’s work on one leg for Postigo

- Grant Winter

SPAIN’S big-hitting, go-for-broke 21-year-old Juan Postigo shot a remarkable three-under-par 69, balancing on his only leg (he was born without a right one), to take the first round lead in the South African Disabled Open at King David Mowbray GC yesterday.

The vast majority of leg amputees competing at this level use sophistica­ted prosthetic­s which allow them to balance, get more feel and establish a more stable, power base. Not Postigo. “I don’t like them (prosthetic­s),” he said after his five-birdie round which gives him a one-shot lead over defending champion Chad Pfeifer from the United States.

“I’m from northern Spain where Seve (Ballestero­s) came from. He was my mentor and my hero and we all know what an attacking player he was.

“Like him, I also want to attack,” said the bronzed, smiling young Spaniard who birdied all four of Mowbray’s par-5s in his round, getting up in two shots at two of them and chipping and putting at the other two to make his fours.

To shoot a 69 around a golf course is a special feat. To do it balancing on one leg is absolutely remarkable. And to able to regularly hit 300-yard drives is, quite frankly, astonishin­g.

Meanwhile Pfeifer, whose left leg was blown off when the vehicle he was driving set off a landmine in Iraq while he was on military duty there, does use a prosthetic and he shot 70 on Monday, in spite of a missed twofooter which cost him a bogey five at the 18th.

Last year he won the World Disabled Open in Portland, Oregon, and he too is a wonderful talent. “Actually, although I had a pretty decent score today I felt I was scrambling all day because the driver wasn’t 100 percent. Still, I was never in trouble and I putted well, making a couple of long putts for birdie,” said Pfeifer.

Fellow American, 47-year-old Kenny Bontz, with his Mohawk hairstyle, was home in 74 to be lying third but it was a mixed day for him – six birdies, eight bogeys, just four pars ... and only one leg.

“Not my normal round,” he said. “I’m usually super steady, and six birdies should result in an under par return.”

Like Pfeifer, Bontz plays off scratch and he is eyeing to become the first amputee to qualify for the Champions Tour in three years’ time when he turns 50.

Canada’s Josh Williams, SA Disabled Open champion in 2014, is next best on the leaderboar­d on 75 with Uitenhage’s 53-year-old Christo de Jager the leading South African on 77Round two is on Today, with the third and final round on Wednesday.

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