The Star Early Edition

Bertine all teed up for a Strauss waltz at Royal Joburg

- LALI STANDER

BERTINE STRAUSS is on course for a maiden Sunshine Ladies Tour victory after taking a one shot lead in the Ladies Joburg Open at Royal Johannesbu­rg and Kensington Golf Club on yesterday.

Strauss added a three-underpar 69 to an opening 68 on the West Course to lead on seven under 137, but she is well aware of LeeAnne Pace, Kim Williams, Ashleigh Simon and Swaziland’s Nobuhle Dlamini looming large in her rearview mirror.

“It’s very tight at the top and anyone of them has the game to beat me,” said Strauss. “The key will be not to worry about what they do, but to keep control of my own game. I just need to try and post the lowest score possible and trust that it will be good enough.”

Strauss began the day a shot behind Simon, but overhauled the first round pace-setter with successive gains at the second and third holes.She gave back a shot at the fourth and eliminated a second bogey at the eighth with a birdie at nine.

The 24-year-old University of Texas graduate started the back nine one off the pace from Williams and Dlamini, but pulled clear of the pack with birdies at 15 and 18.

“The pin at the fourth was a little tricky, but I didn’t give myself a chance off the tee,” Strauss said.

“I was a little annoyed to threeputt the eighth for bogey, but I was still close to the leaders, I missed a few birdie chances down the back nine, but I picked up one at 15 and finished with a birdie.

“I got a little lucky there, actually. I was trying to go for the green in two, but I hit my three wood on the head. I hit a great hybrid into the green and still managed to make the birdie.”

Pace and Simon posted respective rounds of 70 and 71.

The pair are experience­d internatio­nal campaigner­s and multiple title holders on the Sunshine Ladies Tour and so is Williams, who had her breakthrou­gh in the Chase to the Investec Cup for Ladies at Houghton two years ago.

Dlamini, however, is still hunting a maiden win in her third season on Tour. “I really feel like I have the game to win this year,” she said after a one-bogey 69.

“The last two years have been tough as I struggled with swing changes. I played terribly in the SA Women’s Open in December, but I had the self-belief that I could turn it around at the Ladies European Tour Qualifying School and I did.

“I came back from Morocco with my card for 2016 and a very decent game. The swing feels good, the putter is working well and my confidence is back where it should be to contest with the best. It feels good to be in contention again.”

GFG Academy’s Williams collected a pair of birdies on each nine, but sacrificed shots at the first and 12th for her 70. “I was missing left and right over the first six or so holes on the front nine,” she said. “The problem at this course is that when you hit it off-line, you have serious trouble because the rough is really thick.

“Once I got my rhythm under control, the swing felt really good and I only had 27 putts, so overall I am really pleased with the way my game is building.

“It is really great that our tournament­s this season are 54-hole events, because it is far more competitiv­e and you need greater consistenc­y.”

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