Horne and Fisher upstage world No2 at SA Open

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JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - JANUARY 12: Keith Horne during Round 1 of the 2017 BMW SA Open Championship at Glendower Golf Club on January 12, 2017 in Johannesburg, South Africa. (EDITORS NOTE: For free editorial use. Not available for sale. No commercial usage.) (Photo by Luke Walker/Sunshine Tour/Gallo Images)

South Africans Keith Horne and Trevor Fisher Jnr managed to upstage Rory McIlroy on Thursday in the opening round of the BMW SA Open proudly hosted by the City of Ekurhuleni at Glendower Golf Club – but only just.

The duo each carded six-under-par 66 to have a one-stroke edge over the world number two, with four other players on five-under-par 67 with McIlroy – South Africans Thomas Aiken, Dean Burmester and Jbé Kruger, and England’s Jordan L Smith.

‘I hit my irons beautifully today and I putted well,’ said Horne (pictured above). ‘My putting hasn’t been great and today was nice. I made two relatively long putts today which for me is very good and the rest of them were just sort of four-footers, so it was a good day overall as far as my putting, my irons and my short-game were concerned.

‘I really struggled with the driver today and I think if I’m going to be in contention on the weekend, I am going to have to sort out my game off the tee box,’ he added.

‘It was the best I’ve hit the ball in two years,’ said Fisher. ‘I hit some bad shots but I hit some good shots too, and the ball really went where I wanted it to go with the good shots. With my bad shots, I mistime it, but, in general I was quite happy with the way I hit it. I can still improve it a bit.’

For McIlroy, it was a question of putting on an exhibition for the thousands of fans who turned up early on a working – and school – day to watch him. ‘Teeing off early this morning and seeing the tee and each side of the fairways lined with people is always nice,’ he said. ‘It’s nice to play in front of crowds like that and it’s great that they are so enthusiastic and getting up out of bed at that time of the morning. It’s a pleasure to play in front of them and hopefully they can continue to come out the next three days.’

His round was somewhat spoiled by a pair of bogeys on four and five – he started on the 10th – after he had got it to five-under through 12. But he pulled things back with birdies on six and eight. ‘I felt like I gave myself a lot of chances on our front nine – the back nine,’ he said. ‘You know, that four-under could have been probably six or seven but look, it was a really good way to start. It was a bit scrappy in places around the last few holes but yeah, five-under-par is a good way to start to start this tournament.

‘There were a couple of putts that I felt I were good and hit them on a good line. They were lacking a little bit of speed so I tried to get a little bit aggressive as the round went on. I holed a few nice ones but the ones that I missed I feel a little more speed was needed than anything else. But I’ve been working hard on my putting; I feel like from August last year to today it’s come on leaps and bounds and I hope it can only improve.’

Fisher was out in the morning while the buzz around McIlroy was at its height, and he thrived on it. ‘The pressure is nice, and the crowds are nice, so you sort of get into your bubble and zone,’ he said. ‘It’s nice to have people out here watching – a lot more than usual – and it makes you focus a bit harder and I’m trying to use it to my advantage.’

Horne was working his way to the first tee when McIlroy finished, and that got his competive juices flowing. ‘The crowds were more like Sunday crowds than Thursday crowds,’ he said, ‘but it’s great to have that kind of support.’

The pair will be up against a determined McIlroy. ‘I had some really good drives on the front nine, the first nine holes and so that was encouraging,’ he said. ‘I made a couple of sloppy swings coming in but that’s something that hopefully I can work on and try to eradicate for tomorrow.’

Scores:
66 – Trevor Fisher Jnr, Keith Horne
67 – Thomas Aiken, Rory McIlroy, Dean Burmester, Jordan L Smith, Jbe´ Kruger
68 – Mark Foster, Jens Fahrbring, Alexander Bjork, Darren Fichardt, Oliver Fisher
69 – Brett Rumford, Simon Dyson, Richard S Johnson, Daniel Brooks, Ulrich van den Berg, Colin Nel, Sebastian Soderberg, Shaun Norris, Justin Walters, Laurie Canter, Jeff Winther, Graeme Storm, Joel Stalter, Steven Tiley
70 – James Kamte, George Coetzee, Niclas Fasth, David Drysdale, Darren Clarke, Titch Moore, Jean Hugo, Paul Waring, Romain Langasque, Neil Schietekat, Sir Nick Faldo, Justin Harding, James Morrison, Peter Uihlein, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Michael Hollick
71 – Dylan Frittelli, Dawie Van der Walt, Alexander Knappe, Chris Hanson, Paul Maddy, Kyle McClatchie, Edoardo Molinari, Jaco Van Zyl, Adrian Otaegui, Garth Mulroy, Bernd Ritthammer
72 – Tjaart van der Walt, Haydn Porteous, Rourke van der Spuy, Tom Lewis, Jacques Blaauw, Ross McGowan, Ruan de Smidt, Erik van Rooyen, CJ du Plessis, Pep Angles, Mikko Korhonen, Andrew Georgiou, Pontus Widegren, Richard Bland, Marcel Siem, Peter Karmis, James Kingston, Jaco Ahlers, Lucas Bjerregaard, Thomas Detry, Damien Perrier, Ockie Strydom, Stefan Engell Andersen
73 – Steven Ferreira, Hennie du Plessis, Jamie Rutherford, Chris Swanepoel, Jamie Donaldson, Rafa Echenique, Adilson Da Silva, Vaughn Groenewald, Espen Kofstad, Danie van Tonder, Ricardo Gonzalez, Matthieu Pavon, Jonathan Agren, Jacques Kruyswijk, Tyrone Ferreira, Gary King, Christiaan Basson, Madalitso Muthiya, Jovan Rebula, Derick Petersen
74 – Andrew McLardy, Ernie Els, Brandon Stone, Lyle Rowe, Niclas Johansson, Marcus Armitage, Heinrich Bruiners, Johan van der Wath, Sebastian Heisele, Bryce Easton, Marco Steyn, Doug McGuigan, John Parry, Anthony Michael, Theunis Bezuidenhout
75 – Philip Geerts, Merrick Bremner, Anton Karlsson, Morten Orum Madsen, Max Orrin, Carlos Pigem, Nathan Kimsey, Darin de Smidt, Hennie Otto, Marc Cayeux, Matthew Nixon, Jean-Paul Strydom, Ashley Chesters, Daniel Greene, Lindani Ndwandwe
76 – Alex Haindl, Scott Vincent, Zander Lombard, Sam Walker, Makhetha Mazibuko, Eddie Pepperell, Oliver Bekker
77 – David Horsey, Dylan Naidoo, Trevor Dodds, Andrew Curlewis, Louis de Jager, Charlie Bolling
78 – Callum Mowat, Andy Sullivan, Matthew Southgate, Lee Slattery, Duncan Stewart, Joubert van Eeden, JC Ritchie
79 – Craig Ross, Scott Henry, Chris Paisley, Nino Bertasio, Christofer Blomstrand, Toby Tree
80 – Retief Goosen, Rhys West
81 – Sipho Bujela, Juran Dreyer

Kyle Mc Clatchie-5

Meanwhile South Africa’s Youth Olympian golfer Kyle McClatchie (pictured above) beat the nerves with an impressive show of composure to lead the nine-strong amateur delegation on day one.

The 19-year-old from Ekurhuleni crafted a handy one-under-par 71 at the championship layout of Glendower Golf Club on Thursday to grab a share of 43rd.

It came as no surprise to the golf pundits who follow the local amateur game in South Africa to see the Golf RSA National Squad member finish alongside the likes of 2010 Ryder Cup player Eduardo Molinari, 14-time Sunshine Tour champion and Rio Olympian Jaco van Zyl and former Freddie Tait Trophy winner Dylan Frittelli.

Not only was McClatchie – who represented the country in golf’s debut at the Youth Olympics in Nanjing, China back in 2014 – the most-improved male amateur in South Africa in 2016, but in addition to four victories on the amateur circuit, he claimed a runner-up finish on the Big Easy Tour and victory on the IGT Tour.

Errant tee shots at the 10th and 11th may have seen a lesser man crumble, but McClatchie reversed the bogey-bogey start with birdies at 12 and 13 to get his campaign back on track.

‘I was quite surprised that I was nervous at the start, but nothing quite prepares you for that moment on the first tee, especially not with such a big crowd watching,’ he stated.

‘Two bad tee shots led to two bogeys, but I settled down nicely after the birdies and from there it was just another day on the golf course. You automatically adjust to the atmosphere and the crowds as you go along and I’ll be a lot more at ease in the second round.’

McClatchie boxed a 15-footer for birdie to huge grandstand applause at the 18th and added further gains at the second and eighth to go to three under.

‘Unfortunately all the good work came undone at the ninth, my last hole,’ he said. ‘I hit three-wood off the tee, but it wasn’t the right club. The tee shot veered left and finished in the trees and I had to chip out sideways. My approach went too long and I ended up three-putting for a double bogey.’

McClatchie described his debut in the second oldest national championship as ‘everything I thought it would be and more.’

‘When I holed the birdie putt at 18 and the crowd exploded, it really brought the magnitude of this championship home for me. It was so incredible to have my dad (Ryan) on the bag to share the experience with me.

‘We’ll go through the highs and lows tonight and we’ll come back ready to fight. I’ve made a good start to build on and the goal now is to make the weekend and then put myself in a position to challenge for the Freddie Tait Trophy on Sunday.’

Tournament host Ernie Els’ nephew Jovan Rebula opened with a one-over-par 73, with South Africa’s number one ranked Marco Steyn and qualifier Theunis Bezuidenhout a further shot back.

Darin de Smidt and Philip Geerts posted a pair of 75’s, Dylan Naidoo returned a 77, reigning Sanlam SA Amateur champion Craig Ross from Scotland registered a 79 and Juran Dreyer, who won the pre-qualifier at Irene Country Club, signed for an 81.

Picture of McClatchie courtesy of Ernest Blignault