• Double duty for King Louis

    Louis Oosthuizen
    Back to defend his coveted title

    Defending the South African Open and filling the role of new player host are on Louis Oosthuizen’s to-do list this week at Randpark Golf Club.

    This year’s event will be a true showcase of the brightest stars of the current and future generations of South African golf.

    Oosthuizen joined an exclusive club with his six-stroke victory at this venue in December 2018. The South African Open was played twice in 2018, in January and December, with the December edition forming part of the 2018-19 season. 

    His win made him only the fourth South African to win both The Open Championship and South African Open hosted by the City of Joburg, following Bobby Locke, Gary Player and Ernie Els.

    From 9-12 January he will join an even more exclusive club as he follows Els as the new host of the second-oldest national Open in golf, which is co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour and European Tour. 

    This year the championship will also make history when the official pro-am is hosted at Soweto Country Club for the first time, exposing a global audience to the recently refurbished course designed by Gary Player and which, in partnership with the South African Golf Development Board (SAGDB), is now helping to stimulate the growth of golf in this iconic township.

    Oosthuizen’s role is a new chapter for the golfer who is currently the highest-ranked South African in the world at No 20, and it coincides perfectly with the Sunshine Tour’s new #Gr8nessBeginsHere campaign reflecting the Tour’s status as the birthplace of golf’s next global stars.

    This year’s field does indeed boast the best of the current and future stars of South African golf. 

    Oosthuizen leads a field that includes former South African Open champion Brandon Stone as well as Branden Grace, Charl Schwartzel, Erik van Rooyen, Justin Harding, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Zander Lombard and George Coetzee.

    Wilco Nienaber, Deon Germishuys, Thriston Lawrence and Garrick Higgo are among the next generation of South African professionals who will be challenging for glory in their national Open.

    The amateur field is also incredibly strong and testimony to the structures that exist within GolfRSA to keep producing world-class golfers. The amateur field will be led by South African No 1 Jayden Schaper; Jovan Rebula, the winner of the Freddie Tait Cup in the December 2018 edition and which is awarded to the leading amateur at the end of the championship; teenage sensation Yurav Premlall, who in December 2018 made history as the youngest amateur to qualify for the South African Open at the age of 15 years and 5 months; Casey Jarvis, Martin Vorster, Samuel Simpson, Jordan Duminy, Kyle de Beer and Christo Lamprecht.

    The championship will also once again form part of The Open Qualifying Series as it takes its place among 16 events in 11 countries and across five continents that offer qualifying opportunities for the 149th Open at Royal St George’s in July this year.

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