DP World Tour : Nedbank Golf Challenge Leaderboard Tee Times Results
Kristoffer Reitan held off playing partners Jayden Schaper and Dan Bradbury on a nerve-shredding final day of the 2026 Nedbank Golf Challenge in honour of Gary Player to secure his second DP World Tour title.
Reitan began the day with a commanding five-shot lead but left the door wide open for the chasing pack as he struggled for consistency and fought his nerves.
The Norwegian mixed four birdies with three bogeys on the front nine to hold a four-shot lead at the turn but, as he parred the first five holes of the back nine, Schaper and Bradbury closed the gap to two.
Reitan piled further pressure on himself as he bogeyed the 15th to sit just one clear but managed to hang in there, parring his way home to close out a wire-to-wire victory by one shot.
His level-par 72 saw Reitan finish the tournament on -17 under par, one clear of home favourite Schaper and Englishman Bradbury at -16 to add a second DP World Tour crown to the one he won at the Soudal Open in May.
He has only been out of university for just 2 1/2 years, a remarkable achievement.
He said: "I don't know what I'm feeling right now. I had a lot of nerves today.
"But to get it over the line in the end is a better feeling than I can describe.
"I'm trying my best to deal with nervousness, fear. It's really, really difficult. I've managed to do that really well ever since mid-season last year.
"It just keeps getting increasingly more difficult, but I'm glad to have dealt with it in a good way and get this over the line. That means so much. I'm so pleased.
"I've been feeling nervous all week, to be honest, but it just kept getting increasingly more. And today was a different story.
"I'm just really glad to get it over the line and to get the courage to hit the shots that I needed to hit down the stretch here especially."
Reitan has enjoyed a stellar 2025, earning dual membership with the PGA TOUR after a season in which he won his maiden DP World Tour title in Belgium.
He added: "I'm very proud of myself. Very proud of my whole team as well. I'm very demanding and they help me out the best that they can. Just ask my caddie!
"But yeah, I'm definitely proud of myself and I'm happy to be able to say that."
EDIT >>> Reitan won over $1,200,000 for this event, once billed as the first million dollar winner's cheque in the world, and called by the organizers "Africa's Major"
Meanwhile earlier in the day Denmark's Neergaard-Petersen won Australia's national championship with a cheque for just over $300,000, which is what the 5th place paid in Sun City.
The prestige of both events is enormous, the money is not even close, which may be part of the reason that Rory McIlroy signed on to play the Australian Open for two years.
europeantour.com
Bryan Angus (edit)
