Moralee is best amateur at BMW SA Open
'It was really amazing to watch Brandon Stone win the championship and to stand next to him at the prize-giving'
WHEN Dainfern junior Cameron Moralee lifted the Freddie Tait Cup as the leading amateur in the BMW South African Open hosted by Ekurhuleni at Glendower Golf Club on Sunday, he immediately paid tribute to tournament host and ambassador, Ernie Els, for inspiring him.
“The Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation (EEFF) has done so much for young golfers and I was incredibly honoured when I was selected to join the EEFF this year,” Moralee said.
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“It was an incredible experience for me to meet Ernie and to have him here at the SA Open this week was amazing. I’m really pleased that I could show Ernie that his belief in me is justified. Holding this trophy is the proudest moment of my career.”
Moralee was always going to be the recipient of the prestigious trophy since he was the only player in the nine-strong amateur contingent to make the 36-hole cut, but he finished the tournament in style with four birdies in his last six holes to close with a 74 for a two-over-par 290 aggregate.
His attachment to the Els family goes even further than the Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation, as he often plays with Ernie’s nephew, Jovan Rebula, for Southern Cape.
Together, the pair helped Southern Cape to victory in the A division at the SA U/19 interprovincial at Worcester Golf Club in December.
“Winning the Junior IPT was great but to win the Freddie Tait is extra special,” he said.
“It was really amazing to watch Brandon Stone win the championship and to stand next to him at the prize-giving. He won the Freddie Tait Cup in 2011 and look what he has achieved. He has really inspired me to reach for the stars.”
Moralee got into the world’s second oldest national open by earning a coveted spot in one of the three qualifiers.
He shot 67 at Kempton Park to finish in a six-way tie and then holed a birdie putt in the ensuing play-off to secure one of just four spots on offer.
“My biggest reward was seeing my dad’s face light up when I boxed that birdie putt,” he recalled Sunday.
The former KeNako Academy player, who played his way into the newly-formed Golf RSA National Squad, has just finished matric and is in line to attend Oklahoma State University later this year.
“I’ll be trying for a degree but it’ll have to be in sports management,” he said with a chuckle.
“I don’t want anything too academic. I’m one of those guys who prefers to go putt than to go study!”
