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Corpus clings to 4-shot lead at valley golf challenge

The Manila Times
20/11/2025 16:11:00

CARL Corpus turned what had looked like an early coronation march into a tense third-round finish in Moving Day of the ICTSI Valley Golf Challenge in Antipolo on Thursday, settling for a two-under 70 even as he stayed in command by four and within reach of a breakthrough Philippine Golf Tour victory.

Though he brushed aside pressure as the cause of his shaky windup, Corpus admitted that the late-round turbulence owed much to a combination of unfavorable pin placements and the demands of Valley Golf South’s tricky greens.

“No pressure, my approach shots are just a bit off,” said Corpus, who three-putted three times in his last seven holes. “On this course, you really have to hit it very close because it’s so hard to putt — the greens were quite slow. I didn’t have the luxury of sticking my approaches near the pin, and that cost me those three-putts.”

His bogeys on Nos. 12, 13 and 17 came after he had soared to an imposing eight-shot lead spiked by another eagle on No. 7 and a birdie on the 11th for a running 14-under total. But Corpus clarified that the miscues were not mental lapses — they were the product of targets that simply didn’t suit his natural shape.

“To be honest, I needed to make better decisions, especially since most of the pins were on the tough right side,” he said. “I’m not very comfortable with those because I hit a draw. All season I’ve struggled with that kind of placement. I’ve been working on it a lot, but sometimes it really comes down to luck.”

Despite these hurdles, the rookie remained firmly in control with a 12-under 204 aggregate.

Yet fate dealt him an unexpected twist as his closest chaser turned out to be someone he knows as well as anyone — his cousin, Aidric Chan.

Chan carded a sparkling 66, highlighted by an eagle-aided 34 on the front and a blistering four-birdie charge in the last nine holes. Now four shots back at 208, he emerged as the primary threat after early pursuers Clyde Mondilla, Arnold Villacencio and Angelo Que all faltered when they were expected to launch a serious assault.

“I’m excited to play with Carl,” said Chan. “It’s something we’ve both dreamed of since we were young — to compete at the top level together.”

Chan insisted he would carry no expectations into the final round.

“I’ll just play my game and let God’s plan work. I do better when I focus on my process and enjoy the round,” he said.

Joining the cousins in the championship flight is multititled Guido van der Valk, who birdied his last two holes for a 69 to tie Que, who shot a 70, at 210.

by The Manila Times