Golf | SA

Dawie van der Walt © Gallo Images

Van der Walt hopes leaders stay ahead



For Dawie van der Walt, it's a case of hoping the golfers ahead of him on the leaderboard don't slip up on Sunday morning when they complete their third rounds in the Joburg Open at the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club.

Van der Walt is the joint clubhouse-leader with Canadian Andrew Parr after his brilliant five-under-par 67 lifted him to 12-under-par overall. Late showers then brought an early end to a day which began with more than half of the field finishing their second rounds and ended with leaders Branden Grace and Richard Finch, tied on 15-under, and third-placed George Coetzee (-14) yet to complete their third rounds.

But Van der Walt, citing his preference for attacking from behind, said he would be happy if that trio remain ahead of him going into the final round.

"I don't want to be in the last group with all the people watching ... maybe third from last will be great! I'll be firing at the pins regardless. My golf seems to get better if I have to come from behind. I like to be aggressive, maybe I'm too aggressive," Van der Walt said.

Although the 28-year-old lacks a Sunshine Tour win on his resume', he has shown his ability to come from behind before, most notably when he shot a nine-under-par 63 to force a playoff in the BMG Classic at Glendower Golf Club last October. The Paarl-based golfer ultimately lost to James Kamte, but it remains the best result of his career.

The sturdy Van der Walt expects the final round to be as tough a challenge as the third round on the East Course, especially in terms of the pin-placements.

"I play here a lot and I don't know how they can make the course much tougher, they had all the hard flags out there today.

"The flag at 10 was in a place I've never seen before, on a slope. You couldn't miss anywhere left and anywhere past the pin left you with a scary putt. The fourth and 15th holes are also in the hardest places.

"It's hard to hit it close, you take a big chance if you try. If you short-side yourself, it's very difficult to make par," Van der Walt said.

Shop

Tiger Woods: How I Play Golf
'How I Play Golf' by Tiger Woods - in his own words: 'A master class with the world's greatest golfer'
R279.95
The big miss
The big miss - My Years Coaching Tiger Woods
R251.95
Think like a Caddie...Play like a Pro
Golf's Top Caddies Reveal Their Winning Strategies
R241.95


Comments

More expert analysis and opinion from Sport24
The opinions expressed by Sport24 experts and bloggers are theirs alone, and do not necessarily represent those of SuperSport

Sports Talk



Golf guest
Slow play needs solution - fast
In more peaceful times, when Tiger Woods had gone six months without losing and golf seemed to...

Reuters on Golf
Phil, Tiger - two sides of golfing coin
Rarely has the contrast between golf as an enjoyable game and torturous frustration been as evident...