Aldrich Potgieter maintained a slim grip on pole position at the halfway mark of the African Amateur Championship at Leopard Creek Country Club on Tuesday.
After a second-round 69 that featured six birdies, one bogey and a double-bogey at the tricky par-three 7th hole, Potgieter tops the leaderboard at eight under par going into moving day.
Fellow Golf RSA National squad member Fabrizio de Abreu is breathing down his neck one shot back, while Scotland’s Gregor Graham and Bryanston’s Pascal Gunther are a further two shots behind.
Dylan Kayne rounds out the top five after a 65 on day two propelled the GolfRSA National Squad member to four under.
“It was a pretty solid round today,” Potgieter said. “I made a few mistakes, and Leopard Creek will punish you for that, but the birdies are out there.”
The Southern Cape golfer has fond memories of the tournament from last year. He fired 11 birdies in a round of 65 that really announced his arrival in South Africa after his family’s relocation from Western Australia.
Armed with immense power and an aggressive gameplan, Potgieter once vowed never to change his flag-hunting style but he has relented and adopted a more mature approach.
“It was important to put the team event first and try to stretch out the lead to a comfortable one over the first two rounds,” he said.
“We want to secure the win for South Africa. I’m going to focus on keeping the ball in play. If I do that, the birdies will come and hopefully it will be another low one.”
The 54-hole team event sees the South African team of Potgieter, Kyle de Beer, Jono Broomhead and Daniel Bennett holding a comfortable 12-stroke advantage over their Scottish counterparts.
However, with three scores out of four to count, the lead is certainly not insurmountable.
Meanwhile 16-year-old De Abreu got off to a wobbly start in the pursuit of what would be the biggest title in the Junior Protea career.
A double on the par-four 11th and a bogey on the par-three 12th saw him slip to three over after three holes, but he regathered himself brilliantly for a round of 69 to sit one shot back of the lead.
“I just told myself to stay patient and trust things to come right,” he explained. “After that, I ended up making made six birdies and it turned out to be a great round in the end.
“You’ve got to stay patient at this course. Sometimes you need to aim for the middle of the green and you need to manage your misses, otherwise you could record some big numbers here.”