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Jarvis named king of 2020

The 17-year-old Jarvis established himself in 2020 as one of the brightest young prospects to come out of South Africa.

State Mines Country Club’s Casey Jarvis has been named the AmateurGolf.com Men’s Player of the Year after a 2020 season of tournament wins and accomplishments unmatched by even the greats of South African golf to come before him.

The AmateurGolf.com Men’s Player of the Year is awarded based on a point system earned through performance in major amateur events throughout the course of the year.

The 17-year-old Jarvis established himself in 2020 as one of the brightest young prospects to come out of South Africa, and as a name to remember if he continues on his current trajectory.

When the year began, the GolfRSA National Squad member was 16 and poised for a breakout year after winning two amateur events toward the end of 2019.

The winning continued into 2020, and it wasn’t just the fact that he was collecting trophies that was so impressive, but it was also the scores he was shooting.

At the Free State Open, Jarvis was 18 under for 72 holes, with only one player within 13 shots of his winning total.

A week later at the Gauteng North Open, he shot 25 under to win by eight shots. Think he was comfortable playing with a lead?

In those two events, he closed with a 64 and a 63 respectively.

The next three events were the biggest amateur tournaments in Africa, with Europe’s strongest players competing with South Africa’s best.

After cooling off slightly for a T11 at the African Amateur Stroke Play Championship, Jarvis was back in record form, shooting 25 under at the South African Stroke Play Championship and beating the international  field by nine shots, this time closing with a 65.

Read: Bezuidenhout and Jarvis bag big wins in SA Open

In so doing, he broke a record that had stood for 51 years, becoming the youngest winner (at 16 years, six months and 17 days) of the championship.

“When I’m playing like this, I know I can win and I know I can win big,” said Jarvis at the time. “I just go out there, believe it and I make it happen.”

The next week, Jarvis got the double, taking the Aon SA Amateur Championship after six straight match wins, including a decisive seven and six result over James Wilson of Scotland in the championship match.

He became just the seventh player to achieve the double in 95 years, the first since 2007 and the youngest to do so.

But the local golfer wasn’t finished making history.

When Jarvis won the Freddie Tait Cup as the leading amateur in the South African Open – finishing 25th against the European Tour field – he became just the third player to win the Aon SA Amateur Championship, the SA Stroke Play Championship and the Freddie Tait Cup in a calendar year.

The others were four-time British Open champ Bobby Locke in 1935 and Neville Clarke in 1989.

Jarvis also recorded two runner-up finishes and two other top fives in 2020, and his worst finish in an amateur event was 14th.

In 38 rounds in amateur events, his stroke average was 69.03. In three European Tour events, he made two cuts.

He also won three times on the IGT Challenge Tour, a developmental tour for aspiring South African golf professionals.

It bears repeating that he turned 17 years old mid-year. He is the first player not playing college golf in the US to earn Player-of-the-Year honours since Curtis Luck of Australia in 2016.

Finishing as the runner-up in the year-long points race was British Amateur champion Joseph Long of England, with consistent high finisher Quade Cummins (Weatherford, Okla.) of the University of Oklahoma third.

Tyler Strafaci (Davie, Fla.) of Georgia Tech, who won the US Amateur, North and South Amateur (joining his grandfather as champion) and Palmetto Amateur, was fourth, while Jones Cup Invitational champion Davis Thompson (St Simons, Ga.) of the University of Georgia was fifth.

Thompson is the only player to finish in the top five in both 2019 and 2020.

Read: Jarvis secures treble

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 or Miné Fourie (journalist) minev@caxton.co.za

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