Golf

Can the 18th hole win you the Nedbank Golf Challenge?

11 November 2018 - 00:00 By LIAM DEL CARME

As the third longest course in European Tour history, the demanding 7,833-yard (7.16km) Gary Player Country Club (GPC) demands a test of skill, as it does stamina.
Rather than being driven by the need to flirt with peril further down the final fairway, players understandably slip into survival mode when they arrive on the 18th tee.
Very rarely has the 18th determined the winner on the 72nd hole here, though Tiger Woods's chip to earn a spot in a play-off before losing to Nick Price in 1998 was met with thunderous approval.
GOING THE EXTRA LENGTH
Players tend to play the 18th conservatively and by adding an additional 25m for this year's Nedbank Golf Challenge (NGC) they are now compelled to drive, albeit with caution. The hole now measures 475m on the insistence of original designer and golfing high priest Gary Player.
Some leading South Africans however think the idea was ill-conceived. "I don't think it is very clever," said Charl Schwartzel bluntly not long after he birdied the 18th in his opening round in the NGC.
"I would have left it where it was. I would have taken out the bunker rather, the one on the fairway. Make the guys play more aggressive and bring the water into play. If the guy is willing enough to hit it far up there give him a nine-iron in."
That's exactly what he hit en route to birdie on that hole on the opening day after he hit a three-wood off the tee.
"He was quick to remind, however, that that move was downwind.
A CHANCE TO BIRDIE
"I hit it up the left side and had a nine iron in. If you left the tee where it was and you take the bunker out you get guys hitting three wood from the short tee a lot further up there. That's what people want to see on a Sunday. There is a danger to it because you can still make bogey if you want to be aggressive. If you pull it off you have a good chance of a birdie.
"Give him a chance to make a birdie for a more exciting finish. It is the biggest grandstand on the golf course and you make the hole long. Basically everyone is just playing for par," said the former Masters champion.
Former Open winner Louis Oosthuizen also expressed reservations about the extension.
"I don't know about the new tee on 18, if they are really going to stick with that. I hit driver and I couldn't see the green," he said after his round in the Pro Am. "It's a bit of a strange one. I thought it was a great hole with a normal tee, but you know, course is about ... yeah," said Oosthuizen.
Tournament director Ken Payet explained the rationale behind the decision before the event and expressed the hope the change would "add quite a different dimension to the way the 18th plays".
Sergio Garcia, a two-time winner here and leader after the first round, hasn't played in this event over the past few years. He didn't seem to mind the alteration.
"It's nice," said Garcia, who had reason to smile after he completed the first round in an impressive 64. "You pretty much hit it to the same spot. Instead of hitting a two-iron or five wood or something like that, now you have to hit driver or a really strong three-wood.
"You hit it just short of that right hand bunker. Obviously they are asking you to hit with more club off the tee. I think it was good."
The change, however, has left Schwartzel unimpressed. "I don't think length is always the answer."..

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