Life-changing Alfred Dunhill Championship win for Strydom
“To sink the winning putt on such a prestigious green as this 18th is amazing for me. Walking onto this island green is always special. It’s something I always wanted to achieve. My dad has also always wanted me to win one of these.”
Ockie Strydom wins the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek Country Club. Picture: Tyrone Winfield/Sunshine Tour/Gallo Images
Ockie Strydom claimed a life-changing maiden victory on the DP World Tour when he won the Alfred Dunhill Championship by two shots at Leopard Creek on Sunday.
Strydom closed with a 69 to win on 18 under par. Adrian Otaegui took second place on 16 under par with a final round of 68, while Laurie Canter finished third on 15 under par with a 64.
“To sink the winning putt on such a prestigious green as this 18th is amazing for me. Walking onto this island green is always special. It’s something I always wanted to achieve. My dad has also always wanted me to win one of these,” said a delighted Strydom, who before this had 19 runner-up finishes in his career.
“It feels good. I’ve finally done it. To do it on Leopard Creek as well is something special.”
This is by far the biggest victory of his career and significantly changes his plans for the coming season.
“This changes my life. It’s two years on the DP World Tour now. It will be tough with the wife at home and the kids, but in the long run it will be better for them as well.”
Strydom was tied for the lead with Scott Jamieson on 15 under going into the final round. The South African was locked in a battle for the lead on Sunday, and after a double bogey on the par-four ninth he dropped back into the chasing pack.
A number of other players were also making their presence felt at the top of the leaderboard. Canter came through the field and signed for a closing 64 including four straight birdies over the turn. Otaegui, MJ Daffue and Louis Oosthuizen were also all jostling into a threatening position.
But Strydom held his nerve and then produced a scoring burst of four birdies in his first five holes on the back nine that pulled him three shots clear of the field on 18 under par and walking down the last. Otaegui birdied the last while Strydom parred, but the final result was already beyond question.
“It was hard work and a lot of mental toughness that I needed to work on. Jaris my caddie kept me in the game out there. But I’ve also been in this situation quite a lot and I know how to manage it. The double on nine cost me and immediately I made those birdies thereafter. Then I knew I could just play my own game again. To have a three-shot lead playing the 18th calmed the nerves quite a bit.”
Scores:
270 – Ockie Strydom 68 70 63 69
272 – Adrian Otaegui 70 69 65 68
273 – Laurie Canter 68 69 72 64
274 – Aaron Cockerill 70 65 70 69, Branden Grace 67 70 67 70, Oliver Bekker 69 66 68 71
275 – Louis Oosthuizen 70 66 71 68, Dean Burmester 65 70 68 72
276 – David Ravetto 67 67 73 69, MJ Daffue 69 66 72 69
277 – Nathan Kimsey 70 64 74 69, Scott Jamieson 68 63 70 76
278 – Tom McKibbin 68 73 71 66, George Coetzee 73 68 67 70, Joost Luiten 69 70 69 70, Dylan Frittelli 70 66 68 74
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