Saturday Star

Stone’s throw from throne

Schwartzel’s Anser the answer to the man with the golden putter

- GRANT WINTER

DEFENDING champion Charl Schwartzel is known as the “King of Leopard Creek” courtesy of his record four victories in the Alfred Dunhill Championsh­ip.

But as he bids this weekend to lift the trophy again and join an exclusive club of players (none other than Tiger Woods, Bernhard Langer and Tom Watson are currently the only members of the club) to win the same European Tour event on five or more occasions, there are a bunch of par-busting “birdie machines” intent on dethroning him in the third and fourth rounds today and tomorrow.

At the front of the queue is SA Open champion and Sunshine Tour Order of Merit leader Brandon Stone, who sensationa­lly eagled Leopard Creek’s treacherou­s par-five 18th hole, with its island green, with a booming drive and a peach of a six-iron to eight feet before rolling in the putt for a round of 66 to put him on 11-under-par for the tournament and at the top of the leaderboar­d.

Schwartzel signed for a fourunder-par 68 to be 10-under at the halfway mark, in joint second place with England’s Chris Hanson, who birdied the last to equal the day’s best 65.

The hugely talented Stone, coming off joint second place in last week’s Cape Town Open at Royal Cape, was plagued by back pain throughout the round yesterday and had to have physio (for the 10 minutes that is allowed) after nine holes.

“The back was a bit sore from the start and by the time I got to 18 I felt the tee-shot was the last I had in me. But I hit the best drive of the day. Charl’s got the history here but I’m one shot clear of him and my goal is to keep that lead until Sunday afternoon.”

“I don’t know what the physio did for Brandon’s back, but it seemed to do wonders for his putting,” quipped Stone’s father Kevin, who watched his son hole birdie putts at 10 and 12 although something went wrong at 13 when he missed a tiddler for par.

The eight-footer at 18 that found the back of the cup, however, more than cancelled out that one little blemish.

Stone, clearly, is the young pretender to the throne, but then there’s George Coetzee who raced to the turn on the par-35 outward loop in just 29 strokes yesterday – courtesy of six birdies – and is on nineunder 135 along with veteran Keith Horne, who made four straight birdies from the 13th en route to a 66.

Branden Grace, Thomas Aiken, Jean Hugo, France’s Benjamin Hebert and Alexander Bjork of Sweden are in the mix at eight under going into today’s third round.

Schwartzel has been magnificen­t over the years at Leopard Creek in the Alfred Dunhill Championsh­ip and in the 44 rounds he has played here, 40 have been under par and he is a cumulative 132 under par. Astonishin­gly good golf, really.

And yesterday’s doubleboge­y five at the par-three seventh hole, his 16th of the day as he started at No 10, brought to an end 43 holes here without dropping a shot – taking into account his heroics last year.

“I’m right there. Maybe I can hit it a little better and time it a bit better. Hopefully the long game will really click into place. But this game of golf is not a game of perfection, so I’ve done well with what I’ve had so far.”

Those monster putts Charl rolled in were made with a putter with a gold-coloured head and called an Anser. The Anser then was the answer to the man with the golden putter – oh, oh Charl!

 ??  ?? Brandon Stone during the second round of the Alfred Dunhill Championsh­ip at Leopard Creek in Malelane, Mpumalanga.
Brandon Stone during the second round of the Alfred Dunhill Championsh­ip at Leopard Creek in Malelane, Mpumalanga.

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