Saturday Star

Aiken’s birdie blitz puts him in the mix

- GRANT WINTER

SWEDEN’S Alexander Bjork and Scot Scott Jamieson share the halfway lead in the Tshwane Open on 10-under-par 132, but as Thomas Aiken addressed his golf ball on the tee at Pretoria Country Club’s 323-metre par-four seventh hole yesterday, the adrenalin was pumping hard through his veins.

The reason for the South African’s heightened state of mind was that he was well aware that he needed three closing birdies to shoot a magical 59, one of the greatest feats in golf.

“Breaking 60 for the first time in my career was definitely on my mind,” said the 33-year-old, who had started his day at the 10th hole, and was a remarkable nine-under-par through 15 holes, thanks to nine birdies and not a single dropped shot up to that point.

“You don’t get too many opportunit­ies to shoot 59 in your career, so I was determined to go for it,” he said, in the knowledge that the seventh, short parthree eighth and par-five ninth are all “birdie-able” holes at Pretoria CC.

But, so fired up was he, that he hit his putt for birdie on the seventh green too aggressive­ly and then missed the lessthan-comfortabl­e-length return to make bogey. He did birdie No 8, his deuce there set up by a peach of a tee-shot, and did well to par the ninth in spite of hitting his second shot into the water beside the green.

So, no 59, but he did sign for a fabulous 62 which technicall­y is a course record since the par this week is 71, unlike in previous years when it was 70 – as was the case in 2015 when Jacques Blaauw breezed his way to a 61.

In any event, Aiken’s birdie blitz puts him right back in the mix in this R16,5-million event following a disappoint­ing 72 on day one.

The three-time winner on the European Tour and 12-time champion on the Sunshine Tour is eight under for the tournament, on 134 alongside compatriot Peter Karmis, and just two back of Bjork (65-67) and Jamieson (67-65) on 132.

England’s James Morrison, a late finisher, is lying just one off the lead on 133, following rounds of 67 and 66.

“It helps when the putts go in like they did today,” said Aiken. “Yesterday nothing would drop and I got frustrated and started hitting poor shots. That three-putt at seven? Well, I had to give it a chance and I wasn’t going to be short.

“This course, incidental­ly, may be fairly short but the rough is brutal and I haven’t seen fairways as tight as this, except for Riviera (in America).”

Aiken has on the bag 52-year-old veteran South African caddie Basil van Rooyen, who has looped for, among others, Gary Player, Ernie Els, Retief Goosen, Nick Faldo, Mark McNulty and David Frost – in his many years on tour.

Bjork said he had a little bit of trouble judging distances yesterday. “I guess it was because one, we were playing at altitude (when the ball goes further than normal) and, two , it was quite cold this morning (the ball doesn’t go as far).

“Anyway, I played well with six birdies and I’m in a perfect position going into the weekend,” added the Swede, who is playing the Tshwane Open for the first time and has his father Mikael caddying for him this week.

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