Buhai’s birdie gives her the lead at Sunshine Tour Classic

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  • Post published:February 23, 2017

Edenvale golfer Ashleigh Buhai boxed a 15-footer for birdie at her last hole of a long day at Glendower Golf Club to take the 36-hole lead in the Canon Sunshine Ladies Tour Classic.

After the first round was washed out due to the deluge of rain that hit the club, two rounds were played on Wednesday. Buhai signed for two-under-par 70s in both the morning and afternoon.

She ‘divorced’ her old caddie – new husband Dave – and is using Mpola Wilkinson, a local Glendower bagman, this week. She was pleased with their teamwork out on the course.

‘I hit it really well all day with three birdies and a bogey in both rounds,’ said Buhai, who won the Cape Town Open at Royal Cape on this summer’s Sunshine Ladies Tour, is lying third in the Chase to the Investec Cup for Ladies.

‘I missed a bunch of birdie putts, though. One of just about four and half feet at my penultimate hole of the day, the par-5 eighth, when I started the second round at the 10th. It was a bit of a disappointment, but to finish with a birdie to take the lead was a sweet way to finish. The course was in excellent condition considering all the rain we’ve had.’

The Royal Johannesburg & Kensington golfer leads by one from a fistful of golfers, including Centurion pair Kim Williams (71-70) and Carrie Park (72-69), Randpark’s Tandi von Ruben (71-70) and Chase to the Investec Cup for Ladies leader Kiran Matharu from England (71-70).

Park admitted that it had been a long day.

‘The energy was there to pull my cart 36 holes, though, and I actually got stronger in the afternoon to shoot five birdies on my way to that 69,’ said Korea-born Park, who broke through for her maiden pro win in the South African Women’s Masters at Rondebosch.

‘I think I only missed two or three fairways all day and I made five birdies this afternoon. Very happy with my day.’

Williams, who won the season-opening SuperSport Ladies Challenge at Huddle Park, said she aimed for percentage golf on the long layout.

‘The course is still very wet from all the rain on Tuesday and it was playing long, so I played percentage golf to keep it together,’ said the assistant professional from Centurion Country Club. ‘I struggled a bit on the greens as they were faster than you’d expect, but it’s great to be in contention again,’ said Williams.

Von Ruben, also pulling her own cart, is having a good summer and hit some splendid shots in her two rounds, although a three-putt from nowhere at the par-4 18th was one blemish in a four-birdie outward loop in the afternoon.

‘The greens got a bit bumpy in the afternoon with all the traffic but it was a good day, and hopefully reward for all the hard work I did back at Randpark in the three months leading up to the start of the Sunshine Ladies Tour,’ said the former SA Women’s Open champion.

It’s a jam-packed leaderboard with Serengeti’s Garcia, winner of last week’s Dimension-Data tournament at George and Fancourt, lurking just two off the pace on 142 (72-70) alongside Sweden’s Sofia Ljungqvist (70-72) and France’s Valentine Derrey, winner of the 2014 Turkish Ladies Open on the Ladies European Tour, and who is making her Sunshine Ladies Tour debut this week.

And the dark horse to watch in Thursday’s final round could be Matharu, who leads the points rankings from Nicole Garcia and Buhai.

A second trophy finish following her wire-to-wire triumph in the Ladies Tshwane Open last month would be the perfect gift to herself on her 28th birthday on Monday.

Picture of Buhai courtesy of Sunshine Ladies Tour

Second Round Leaderboard
140 – Ashleigh Buhai 70 70
141 – Kim Williams 71 70, Carrie Park (KOR) 72 69, Tandi von Ruben 71 70, Kiran Matharu (ENG) 71 70
142 – Nicole Garcia 72 70, Sofia Ljungqvist (SWE) 70 72, Valentine Derrey (FRA) 72 70
144 – Nobuhle Dlamini (SWZ) 71 73
145 – Rachel Raastad (NOR) 74 71, Ivanna Samu 72 73, Anna Sventrup (SWE) 71 74, Kylie Henry (SCO) 71 74
146 – Bonita Bredenhann (NAM) 71 75, Sophie Giquel-Bettan (FRA) 77 69
147 – Michelle Leigh 72 75, Laurette Maritz 76 71, Hanna Roos (SWE) 75 72, Rebecca Hudson (ENG) 72 75, Lauren Taylor (ENG) 73 74
148 – Stacy Bregman 77 71
149 – Symone Henriques AMA 82 67
150 – Sarah Bouch AMA 75 75, Eleonora Galletti AMA 73 77
151 – Laura Sedda (ITA) 76 75, Lora Assad 76 75, Morgana Robbertze 77 74
152 – Monja Richards 77 75, Lejan Lewthwaite 78 74, Casandra Hall AMA 77 75, Cecilie Lundgreen (NOR) 76 76, Alana van Greuning 73 79
153 – Lindi Coetzee AMA 79 74, Melissa Eaton 76 77, Alexandra Lennartsson (SWE) 78 75, Bertine Strauss 76 77, Kajal Mistry AMA 80 73
154 – Frankie Bosman AMA 81 73, Ethel Ruthenberg AMA 80 74, Flavia Namakula (UGA) 77 77, Catherine Lau AMA 79 75, Maria Roos (SWE) 79 75, Johanna Bjork (SWE) 75 79
156 – Siviwe Duma 75 81, Caitlyn Macnab AMA 78 78, Clara Pietri (SUI) 76 80
157 – Nicole Becker 75 82, Tijana Kraljevic 84 73
158 – Chiara Contomathios AMA 80 78
159 – Emma Westin (SWE) 81 78
160 – Mae Cornforth 77 83
161 – Kelsey Nicholas AMA 81 80
162 – Marguerite Pienaar 77 85
163 – Lynette Fourie AMA 83 80, Yolanda Duma 82 81, Kirsty Fisher (SCO) 82 81
Missed the cut:-
168 – Crizelda van Niekerk 81 87
171 – Laura Welch (CAN) 82 89
RTD – Mandy Adamson