• Dlamini too good for DiData field

    Nobuhle Dlamini
    Take that!

    On a tense and dramatic Sunday at Fancourt, Nobuhle Dlamini drained a 32-foot uphill birdie putt at the final hole of the Outeniqua Course to seal a Sunshine Ladies Tour hat-trick with a two-shot victory at the DiData Pro-Am.

    Just a few minutes earlier, the big-hitting Swazi golfer tapped in for a well-timed four at the par-five 17th to take a one-shot lead.

    The birdie-birdie finish for a five-under-par 67 earned Dlamini a R70 000 payday on a winning total of two-under 214.

    ‘I had to really stop myself from running around on the green when that last putt dropped,’ said the delighted Dlamini, who banked an additional R30K for partnering amateur Francis Tremearne to victory in the Betterball Team Competition.

    ‘I was so excited, but Brittney (Fay-Berger) still had to putt. I played the 17th hole exactly as I planned and I wanted to get the birdie at 18 to have a bit of a cushion. Britt and I both hit good tee shots up the 18th fairway, but her approach took a huge bounce off the back.

    ‘You don’t want to hit it past the flag and leave yourself a slippery and fast downhill putt, so I told my caddie I’m going to hit it seven foot short. It came up a lot shorter, but it was the right call. I had a one-shot lead. At worst, I’d be in a play-off. The moment I stroked the ball it looked good.’

    Dlamini posted rounds of 76 and 71 over the first two days at George Golf Club, and was four shots behind joint leaders Monique Smit and Bertine Faber when the action moved to Fancourt.

    Smit gave the local crowd reason to cheer with a birdie start, Faber matched her birdie with one of her own at the second, and Dlamini kept pace with her first birdie at the second.

    While Smit and Faber slowly faded out of contention, Kim Williams made a run for the lead with birdies at two, seven and 10. The three-time Sunshine Ladies Tour winner led the field on three-under for most of the day, but Dlamini put the field and Williams on notice with a run of birdies from seven.

    ‘I just holed a bunch of really good putts,’ said the 27-year-old Dlamini.

    ‘I missed very few fairways and I hit my irons and wedges really good. I bogeyed 11, but I birdied 14 to stay within two shots of Kim. As I walked to the 17th tee, I saw Kim was in trouble and I figured she might drop a shot at shot.’

    ‘I hit three-wood down the middle, but I just missed the green with my approach. I chipped it give, though, and that gave me a one-shot lead after Kim made a double at 16.’

    Dlamini had a short but tense wait to know for certain. ‘Ivanna (Samu) or Lejan (Lethwaite) were level-par and if one of them made an eagle, it would be a play-off,’ Dlamini said. ‘It was a bit tense, because everyone was coming to congratulate me, but I don’t count my chickens before they hatch. Only after they finished on level-par I let that winning feeling flow over me.’

    Dlamini battled with a knee injury at the start of the sixth Sunshine Ladies Tour season, and posted an unmemorable top-20 finish in the Canon Sunshine Ladies Tour Open, but the form that took her to the winner’s circle twice last year showed up during the Serengeti Team Championship.

    ‘I saw a physiotherapist after Irene and I was back to full strength and striking the ball really well at Serengeti. I felt I was playing well enough to win, and after the three birdies on the front, I knew I could win if I kept patient and stuck to the game plan.

    ‘This is one of my absolutely favourite events and I look forward coming to Fancourt every year. I am extremely proud to join the list of Dimension Data winners. I only got into the one Ladies European Tour event and I decided to stay in South Africa. Next week I’m going trophy hunting in the SA Women’s Masters, and I can’t wait to defend my SuperSport Ladies Challenge title the Wild Coast in two weeks.’

    Samu and Lewthwaite both closed with rounds of 69 to tie for second.

    Williams carded a 73 with a double-bogey finish and tied for fourth on two-over with GolfRSA Elite Squad amateur Kajal Mistry, who also registered a 73.

    Final leaderboard:

    214 – Nobuhle Dlamini (SWZ) 76 71 67

    216 – Lejan Lewthwaite 73 74 69, Ivanna Samu 74 73 69

    218 – Kim Williams 75 70 73, Kajal Mistry AMA 71 74 73

    219 – Gabrielle Macdonald (SCO) 76 68 75, Bertine Faber 73 70 76

    220 – Sophie Lamb (ENG) 73 73 74, Lauren Taylor (ENG) 75 70 75, Monique Smit 75 68 77

    221 – Pasqualle Coffa (NED) 74 70 77

    222 – Shawnelle de Lange 75 73 74, Lora Assad 77 71 74, Anne-Lise Caudal (FRA) 73 75 74

    223 – Sarah Bouch AMA 78 73 72

    224 – Clara Pietri (SUI) 76 75 73, Hannah Arnold (USA) 76 75 73, Marion Duvernay (FRA) 71 77 76, Brittney-Fay Berger 74 73 77

    225 – Catherine Lau 78 73 74, Kiran Matharu (ENG) 78 72 75, Flora Peuch (FRA) 77 72 76, Casandra Hall 76 72 77

    226 – Niina Liias (FIN) 72 81 73, Laure Sibille (FRA) 77 75 74, Rachel Rossel (SUI) 79 72 75

    227 – Tandi Mc Callum 77 75 75, Zethu Myeki AMA 75 74 78

    229 – Millie Saroha (IND) 76 77 76, Sofia Ljungqvist (SWE) 76 77 76, Kelsey Nicholas 76 76 77, Emilie Piquot (FRA) 73 74 82

    230 – Rachael Goodall (ENG) 73 77 80

    231 – Lara Weinstein 78 75 78

    Photo: Carl Fourie/Sunshine Tour/Gallo Images

    Article written by

    ×