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Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 16:49 EST

Late Els eagle closes the gap on Van den Berg

December 10, 2005

By Ken Borland

MALELANE, South Africa (Reuters) – Ernie Els eagled the
18th hole to close the gap on leader Ulrich van den Berg to
just two strokes after the third round of the Dunhill
Championship on Saturday.

While Van den Berg tore around the par-72 course in 65
strokes to move to 12 under par for the tournament, Els only
made a move on the last nine holes and his eagle on the
495-meter par-five closing hole lifted him into second place on
10 under.

The world number five is playing his second tournament
since knee surgery at the end of July and was delighted to be
in contention for the co-sanctioned European Tour and South
African Sunshine Tour event after a disappointing ninth place
in the Nedbank Challenge.

“After last week’s semi-disaster, it would be a dream
comeback to win my second tournament after five months off,”
Els said.

“I’ve been striking the ball quite well, but my putter was
terrible last week. So I’ve been feeling my way back in, trying
all sorts of styles to try and get better feel.

“I hit some good putts over the last five holes from 10
feet in and those are the scoring putts,” the three times major
champion added.

Standing in the way of Els’s third Dunhill Championship
triumph is 30-year-old South African Van den Berg, who has four
Sunshine Tour titles to his name, including two in the last 12
months.

Van den Berg had one dropped shot on his card, a four at
the par-three fifth hole, but picked up six birdies and an
eagle at the sixth hole.

“I’ve been playing very nicely and I was very positive
coming into the tournament,” Van den Berg told reporters.

“I have to try to block out the magnitude of what the win
would mean to me and I can’t worry about Ernie Els or Charl
Schwartzel or look at scoreboards.”

Schwartzel, last year’s Dunhill Championship winner,
struggled to a one-over-par 36 on his opening nine but picked
up three successive birdies on holes 13 to 15 to finish on
nine-under-par overall in a share of third place with fellow
South African Louis Oosthuizen (71).

Overnight leader Michiel Bothma plummeted down the field to
a tie for 27th after a six-over-par round of 78 with three
double bogeys.

The organizers have decided to bring the tee-off times for
Sunday’s final round forward by two hours and start off two
tees as lightning and heavy rain are forecast for
mid-afternoon.


Source: reuters