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Schoolboy Christiaan Maas marches to victory at Copperleaf

A schoolboy from Affies in Pretoria, who participated as an amateur, beat several professional players when he won an IGT Tour tournament at the Copperleaf Club in Centurion on Wednesday.

Amateur schoolboy Christiaan Maas claimed his second IGT Tour win in just his third start as his three-under-par 69 final round of this week’s Chase To #8 Revised Stableford format event at the Els Copperleaf Club earned him eight points, to claim victory on 35 points, and seven points clear of Louis Albertse, on Wednesday.

Having led from day one when weather-enforced delays forced the round to be concluded on Tuesday before the start of the second – and while he was not affected by the delays because he’d already signed for a 67 – Maas needed a solid second round to hold onto the lead, and he produced exactly that when he carded a second-successive 67 on Tuesday.

“I didn’t feel a lot of pressure. I knew if I played like I did in the first two days I would win it. So, I just played my game,” said Maas after his win in Centurion, his second after his triumph at Services in September.

Maas was quick off the mark in the final round, going two-under-par 34 on the front nine, thanks to the four birdies he made in his first five holes. It was the double-bogey on the par-four ninth that took from his gains and he struggled to make any more birdies for the next five holes.

Finally, and in some emphatic fashion, Maas picked up two birdies one after the other, on 15 and 16. Once again, an unwelcomed bogey got onto his card, and Maas admits there were some nervy moments out there.

“On 15, Louis had a massive horseshoe for eagle. That was a bit scary. But I made a lot of clutch four-footers on the back nine and those kept me in it. I am very happy to have pulled it off,” he remarked.

Maas becomes the second member of that developmental structure, in as many weeks, to claim an IGT Tour title after South Africa’s number one amateur, Casey Jarvis, won at Wingate Park last week.

“It means I can compete with the pros and that my game is on the right track,” he said of what it means to come out victorious in a field that boasted Sunshine Tour and Big Easy Tour winners.

 

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Koos Venter

Koos Venter is an experienced journalist who started his career 35 years ago, before the days of cellphones, modern computer systems, the internet and digital cameras, as a correspondent for Nexus, the former national magazine of the Department of Correctional Services. He has since worked for various other publications in all aspects of news coverage, as a columnist and in the production side of newspapers and online publications. Since 2007 he has specialized as a sports writer, while he is also regularly used as an analyst and commentator by several radio stations.
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