Louis de Jager won his fifth Sunshine Tour title on Sunday when he took the Eye of Africa PGA Championship on the first play-off hole to keep his 100% record in deciding holes.
After finishing regulation play in a share of the lead on 12-under par with Trevor Fisher Jr, the pair had to wait out a storm for nearly two hours before they could play their second shots on the play-off hole. In the end, De Jager was able to win with a simple par on the par-4 18th, while Fisher made a bogey.
‘I’m glad to keep my play-off record up, and I’m proud of that,’ said De Jager. ‘During the delay, I knew what I had to do, so even though there was a lot of pressure, I was able to hit it really close to the hole and I could just tap it in.’
The victory is easily the biggest in his career, coming as it did in this 96-year-old championship, where some of the greatest names in South African golf have won. ‘It’s a big trophy to have your name on. I’m really honoured. It’s been one of my goals and it feels great to have achieved it,’ he said.
The final round proved to be a difficult one for all the main protagonists, and Daniel Greene, who at one stage at the 13th held a three-stroke lead, fell out of contention with three bogeys in the final four holes to finish third.
Fisher bogeyed the par-3 16th, but pulled back that shot with a birdie on the par-5 17th before making par on 18 and losing out in the play-off.
In response, De Jager had dragged himself into contention with successive birdies on 13 and 14, but bogeyed the 17th before forcing the play-off. ‘I was watching the leaderboard throughout the round,’ he said. ‘At one stage I was three behind. I thought I was two behind Daniel, and I made two birdies, so I thought I was tied, but I was still one behind. That helped me keep my focus and concentrate on the final few holes.
‘Today was a tricky day. Final days are always a bit tricky mentally. But I stayed steady and stuck to my processes, even on the 17th hole where I made two bad swings and it nearly cost me, but I stayed patient and at the end of the day it was just enough.
‘I had a good chance with the putt on the final hole in regulation to win. I wasn’t going to leave it short, but I hit it probably a foot too hard and it just didn’t take the break.’
It was the second victory of the 2018-19 Sunshine Tour season for De Jager, and with five other top-10s to his credit, he’s clearly the form man as the season draws to close.
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