Business Day

Amateurs take giant stride towards pro careers in SA Open

- LALI STANDER

If you are tuning in to the SA Open Championsh­ip from Thursday, keep an eye out for the six amateurs who will be teeing it up at Blair Atholl Golf and Equestrian Estate.

While none of them is likely to win, for these young men playing their national open alongside the cream of the DP World (formerly the European Tour) and Sunshine Tours is a huge step on their paths to becoming profession­al golfers.

It is a means to measure themselves against some of the world’s top profession­als — and to learn that while they may be the country’s best amateurs there is still some way to go before they are the finished article, if such a notion exists in a sport that does not do perfect.

All six amateurs are GolfRSA national squad members. Five of them were invited to compete — the reward for a year of excellence. The sixth amateur, and the youngest competitor in the SA Open field this year, Janko van der Merwe, had to do it the hard way and beat more than 300 hopefuls across three qualifying tournament­s to secure his spot in the 156-strong starting line-up.

Under the guidance of CEO Grant Hepburn, his strong team at GolfRSA and a select group of industry profession­als, including sports psychologi­st Theo Bezuidenho­ut, fitness and nutrition expert Gavin Groves, and the players’ own swing coaches, these young men have been preparing for life in the paid ranks.

Each of the six is a special talent. Kyle de Beer is reigning SA amateur champion, while Aldrich Potgieter is the British amateur champ. Yurav Premlall, the youngest amateur (15 years and five months) to qualify for and make the cut in the history of the National Open, came full circle when he won the Freddie Tait Cup as the leading amateur in last year’s SA Open.

Jono Broomhead, the 2022 SA strokeplay champion, became the second South African to win a qualifier for the Amateur Championsh­ip. Christiaan Maas, the 2021 SA amateur champion, is reigning Brabazon Trophy holder.

Janko van der Merwe, who shot 68 to qualify at ERPM Golf Club, is only 16 years old. The Magalies Park youngster is not only the reigning Nomads SA boys’ U-17 champion and SA’s No 1-ranked U-17 player, but he showed nerves of steel to finish in the top 10 in his internatio­nal debut in the Italian U-16 Open a few months ago.

They will all be gunning for the Freddie Tait Cup, which has been awarded to the leading amateur in the SA Open since 1929 and features an elite list of past winners including Bobby Locke, Denis Hutchinson, Dale Hayes, Tony Johnstone, Ernie Els, Hennie Otto, Trevor Immelman, Brandon Grace and Brandon Stone — golfers who etched their names on the Freddie Tait Cup and went on to lift the ultimate trophy.

Given the depth of the field and length of the course — the world’s third-longest — it would be a huge ask for one of these fine amateurs to win the SA Open, but it’s not unthinkabl­e. Jayden Schaper threatened it in January 2020 before settling for a tie for sixth at Randpark, Jean Hugo came close at Stellenbos­ch Golf Club in 1999 and Ernie Els finished just four shots off the leader in the 1989 SA Open at Glendower Golf Club.

Yet one needs to go all the way back to 1959 to find the last amateur to lift the SA Open title. That honour belongs to the wonderful Hutchinson, who triumphed at Royal Johannesbu­rg & Kensington Golf Club. So, while the rest of the field this week challenge for their share of R25m prize pot, the amateur six-pack will be playing for battlegrou­nd experience and pride. And the chance to stand next to the champion on Sunday afternoon, holding the Freddie Tait Cup aloft.

Much is made of the SA Open being the second-oldest championsh­ip in golf. There is much history and tradition in the event and throughout history, the best SA players have made a point of returning to our shores to support it.

Yet there was a spell a few years ago when it was tough work to convince our best players to come home and compete in their national open.

From the looks of the 2022 field, it appears the tide may be turning again, even if it is aided by some of the LIV players needing somewhere to gain some world ranking points.

Charl Schwartzel is back as a LIV Tour winner and hoping to claim the title that got away from him in 2015, as is Branden Grace, winner of the SA Open in January 2020, while PGA Tour players Dylan Frittelli, MJ Daffue and Erik van Rooyen have made the long trip south in search of a first national open title.

George Coetzee, Dean Burmester, Brandon Stone and Hennie du Plessis are among many big game players in the field that also includes a good crop of overseas players looking to get their season off to a flying start.

Not so secretly, I’m hoping that they don’t succeed because nothing beats a SA winner of the SA Open.

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