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One stroke behind, Khalin Joshi eyes breakout win

Khalin Joshi learnt his golf at the Karnataka Golf Association and Shubhankar Sharma has a fair bit of experience of playing here on the Professional Golf Tour of India before graduating to bigger tours.

Updated on: Aug 11, 2018 08:41 PM IST
Hindustan Times, Bengaluru | By
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Before they teed off in different parts of the world this week — Shubhankar Sharma at the PGA Championship and Khalin Joshi at the Take Solutions Masters, the two had a chat. Khalin learnt his golf at the Karnataka Golf Association and Shubhankar has a fair bit of experience of playing here on the Professional Golf Tour of India before graduating to bigger tours.

Khalin Joshi of India looks on after playing a shot during the penultimate day of Take Solutions Masters, Asian Tour Championship held at the Karnataka Golf Association in Bangalore on August 11, 2018. (AFP)
Khalin Joshi of India looks on after playing a shot during the penultimate day of Take Solutions Masters, Asian Tour Championship held at the Karnataka Golf Association in Bangalore on August 11, 2018. (AFP)

The conversation helped Khalin, who turned 26 on Saturday and finished a shot off the lead on Saturday, chalk up a plan for the week. The two pros agreed that 20-under would be enough for a win. At 13-under 200, Khalin is eying another round of seven-under 64 to be in line for the title on Sunday.

But here’s where assumptions end. Amid expectations of a maiden win on the Asian Tour on his home course, Khalin is aware that with 18 holes to play, a lot can happen. Two runner-up finishes in three years on the Asian Tour point to that. One of them came here last year. Khalin did what he had to, post a decent score, but beyond that there was little he could control.

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This is a lesson borne out of the T5 finish at the Maybank Championship earlier this year, which Shubhankar won. Among the deepest-field events he has figured in, Khalin was in the hunt on the final day till the 13th. A birdie would have tied for the lead, but fell back with a bogey.

On Saturday, the temptation to birdie the 18th and tie for the lead with Miguel Carballo was alluring, but Khalin knew better. Landing his approach shot 285 yards to the pin, he could have pressed on, but chose to lay up and played for par.

Wiser, there can’t be a better setting for Khalin to usher in a win on the global stage. As far as his game goes, most of the boxes have been ticked. If a dash of inspiration is required, all he needs to do is look up to his father, who has been quietly following him this week.

Leaderboard

199: Miguel Carballo (66, 66, 67)

200: Khalin Joshi (67, 69, 64); Danthai Boonma (66, 61, 73)

201: Viraj Madappa (70, 65, 66); Chikkarangappa (69, 64, 68)

202: Miguel Tabuena (69, 68, 65); Maverick Antcliff (67, 65, 70); SSP Chawrasia (69, 65, 68); Honey Baisoya (70, 66, 66); Scott Vincent (66, 71, 65)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Robin Bose

Robin Bose has more than two decades of experience as a sports reporter. He specialises in writing on golf.

Stay updated with the latest sports news, including latest headlines and updates from the Olympics 2024, where Indian athletes will compete for glory in Paris. Catch all the action from tennis Grand Slam tournaments, follow your favourite football teams and players with the latest match results, and get the latest on international hockey tournaments and series.
Stay updated with the latest sports news, including latest headlines and updates from the Olympics 2024, where Indian athletes will compete for glory in Paris. Catch all the action from tennis Grand Slam tournaments, follow your favourite football teams and players with the latest match results, and get the latest on international hockey tournaments and series.
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