Close battle anticipated as inaugural DGC Open set to tee off

Gary Player
South African golf icon Gary Player gets a feel of the Lodhi Course at the Delhi Golf Club ahead of the inaugural edition of The DGC Open presented by Mastercard.

By Rahul Banerji

The inaugural DGC Open presented by Mastercard tees off on Thursday morning at the fabled Delhi Golf Club with a host of contenders in serious contention for the top prize.

A field of 138 including six amateurs will do battle over the next four days at the $ 500,000 event, the fourth on the Asian Tour schedule for 2022.

Although the Delhi Golf Club has staged international events since 1964, the Open will be the first on the course newly- renovated by golf icon Gary Player, who is here for the occasion.

Player, 86, winner of 165 international titles, including nine Majors, will ceremonially tee-off the tournament at the venue he has expressed great satisfaction with

“I am very happy with the way the DGC has taken care of it. I wish all the players the very best,” the South African legend said.

Apart from a whole lot of youngsters, a long and distinguished list of past Asian Tour winners are in the field. 

Top contenders

Shiv Kapur
Mastercard brand ambassador Shiv Kapur in action during Wednesday’s DGC Open Pro-Am.

Amongst the top contenders for the $90,000 top prize will be Mastercard brand ambassador Shiv Kapur, Gaganjeet Bhullar and South Africa’s Ian Snyman.

While Kapur had a Top-10 in Singapore recently, Bhullar and Snyman had Top-5 finishes at the International Series Thailand in Hua Hin earlier this month.

Snyman is also the leading Asian Tour member here at sixth place on the Asian Tour’s Order of Merit.

Bhullar’s eight-under par 64. at the Black Mountain Golf Club was only bettered by event winner Sihwan Kim of the United States who shot a final round 63 in a 26-under aggregate.

Said Bhullar, “I have many fond memories of this course and it feels good to be back here at the Delhi Golf Club. I have played so much amateur and junior golf and have also won here a few times.”

Amazing layout

“The new layout is absolutely amazing. The greens have a very professional look and there are a lot of undulating greens.

“It makes you think off the tee and makes you think when you are hitting the second shot as well. Today I played nine holes with Gary Player and it was a great honour to play with him and pick his brains.

“I have been playing well. I had a top-5 finish at Thailand and am feeling good about myself,” said the Kapurthala golfer, who opened his season in Thailand three weeks ago. 

Gaganjeet Bhullar
Kapurthala’s Gaganjeet Bhullar is bringing some good form into The DGC Open.

The tournament also opens the door for a solid Indian challenge. 

The last time the Asian Tour was at the Delhi Golf Club in October 2018, Khalin Joshi walked away the winner of the Panasonic Open India.

Though his international career has not moved along expected lines since he will be keen to turn the clock back at one of his favourite tracks.

“I have been playing here since my junior days and I love the course,” Joshi said recently. “It is a great challenge and I have had some success and good moments, including the Asian Tour win.”

Some history

Since the reworking of the DGC’s Lodhi Course by Gary Player Design two years ago, Viraj Madappa has won the only professional event held at the historic venue, the Tata Steel PGTI MP Cup last October.

“I love the DGC and now even more so,” said Madappa.

Last week, at the PGTI Players Championship on his home course, the Tollygunge Club, Madappa finished second by one shot to Yuvraj Singh Sandhu on a fiery final day, lending further weight to his status as one of the pre-event favourites.

Other young stars to watch out for include Sandhu, the PGTI Order of Merit leader Kshitij Naveed Kaul who won the Chattogram Open two weeks ago, Karandeep Kochhar and Chikkarangappa S.

“I am in good shape and looking forward to this week”, said Yuvraj Sandhu.

“An Asian Tour event is happening in India after a long time at one of my favourite golf courses. I am pretty excited and pretty nervous at the same time as carrying form is tough.

Confidence high

DGC Open trophy
What the 138-strong field will be playing for, The DGC Open trophy.

“I am feeling confident and I have to keep trusting and believing in myself. It is one of those weeks. The course is playing really good and hopefully, I can get good four rounds together”, added Kochhar.

The overseas contingent at the tournament includes the 2019 Classic Golf & Country Club International Championship winner Rory Hie of Indonesia who quietly fancies his chances at The DGC Open.

He said, “I feel my game has been pretty consistent although I haven’t got the results that I wanted to. Hopefully, things start to turn around here in India for me. 

“In the past, I have struggled around the greens here. It is a unique design but now Gary Player has made a lot of significant changes and made the course a lot more international, I guess.”

“The slopes now really reward a good shot. So overall, the course changes are really great. You need to keep it in play and putt well. Putting and driving will be the key this week”, added Hie.

Also read: Golf legend Gary Player unveils DGC Open trophy, lauds Lahiri


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