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Jaco Prinsloo. Picture: GALLO IMAGES/CARL FOURIE
Jaco Prinsloo. Picture: GALLO IMAGES/CARL FOURIE

Finding yourself is a common theme in the world at the moment. In the strangest way, Sunshine Tour professional Jaco Prinsloo’s search to develop a better version of himself took him back to a previous version of himself. And it is translating into one of his best seasons on the Sunshine Tour.   

Prinsloo heads into this week’s SunBet Challenge at Wingate Park Country Club in Tshwane with a sense that a few things are coming together quite nicely in his career.

He won twice on the Sunshine Tour in March, has finished no worse than 22nd in his last nine tournaments, is ranked third on the Sunshine Tour money list, and recently signed a deal with Openfield Marketing to represent him.

“I am aware of things looking like they’re moving in a direction,” he said on the driving range at Wingate as he prepared for Wednesday’s first round of the R1m 54-hole tournament.

“But I’m just trying to keep my head down and keep working and become as good as I can be.”

It was this search to improve that led to Prinsloo making a significant change in his career. While working with his coach on changing his swing to what they believed was something more textbook, Prinsloo realised he’d lost his competitive advantage.

“I was working on getting into certain positions in my swing, and I felt like the one thing that made me a good golfer was taken away from me. I’ve always felt what made me good is not my swing but my ball sense. So I went back to the old Jaco. I just focused on hitting the ball and playing more freely. I wasn’t going to try and swing like a robot.”

The ability to play more freely has also given Prinsloo a more free approach to thinking about his career, and he’s trying not to get too bogged down in the “what ifs” of the current pandemic and just focus on what’s in front of him.

“You know, I’d love to be playing on the Challenge Tour now, but I didn’t have a visa in place. I’d also love to be planning for a European Tour Qualifying School at the end of the season, or an Asian Tour. But none of that is happening at the moment. Instead of seeing it as missed opportunities, I’m going to focus on my goals on the Sunshine Tour. If I keep playing like I am, those opportunities will come around again.”

Prinsloo joins a quality field at Wingate this week.

Ruan Korb is back to defend his title. Jean Hugo, Hennie Otto, Adilson da Silva, Keith Horne, Trevor Fisher Jnr, Jaco van Zyl, Thriston Lawrence, Jaco Ahlers, Jayden Schaper and Neil Schietekat are all in action in Pretoria.

But Prinsloo is not focused on them and is staying true to his desire of not looking too far ahead.

“I just want to go out there, see how few shots I can hit and sign my scorecard.”

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