Udayan Mane's Hole-in-One Powers Him to 6-Shot Lead in South Africa

Udayan Mane delivered a spectacular bogey-free round of 64, featuring an eagle and a hole-in-one, to reach 15-under par at the IGPL Invitational South Africa. His brilliant performance gives him a commanding six-shot lead over a trio tied for second place: Manav Shah, Pukhraj Singh Gill, and Gaganjeet Bhullar. Despite Mane's dominance, his team, Atri Mumbai, trails Green Fuels Hyderabad in the team competition due to strong collective performances from the latter's squad. With one round remaining, the chasing pack hopes for a low final score and a stumble from the in-form leader to create a dramatic finish.

Key Points: Udayan Mane Leads IGPL South Africa by 6 Shots After Flawless 64

  • Flawless 64 with a hole-in-one
  • Leads by six strokes at 15-under
  • Chasing first IGPL victory
  • Trio tied for second at 9-under
  • Green Fuels Hyderabad leads team event
4 min read

Udayan Mane lands an ace in flawless round of 64 to lead by 6 in IGPL South Africa

Olympian Udayan Mane fires a bogey-free 64 with a hole-in-one to seize a commanding six-stroke lead at the IGPL Invitational in Johannesburg.

"Mane is now six shots ahead of the field as he seeks his maiden IGPL title."

Johannesburg, April 17

Udayan Mane, who shot a flawless 7-under 65 on the first day, went one better on the second as he added an 8-under 64 that included a hole-in-one in the second round at the IGPL Invitational South Africa.

Playing at the iconic Royal Johannesburg's West Course, Olympian Mane was bogey-free for the second day in a row and moved to 15-under and was the only player in double digits under par, according to a release.

Mane is now six shots ahead of the field as he seeks his maiden IGPL title. Trailing Mane in tied second place is a highly motivated trio of Manav Shah (65-70), Pukhraj Singh Gill (66-69) and Gaganjeet Bhullar (67-68). Yet each of them knows that making up six shots on the focused and in-form Mane will be a tough task.

Local South African star Musiwalo Nethunzwi (69-67) was sole fifth, while rookie pro Danish Verma (70-67) and another South African golfer, Alessio Graziani (72-65) were tied for sixth place.

One of the three first-day leaders, Milind Soni, suffered a mid-round lapse with a bogey-double bogey show on the 11th and the 12th and carded 73 as he dropped to Tied-eighth alongside Raghav Chugh (69-69) and Karandeep Kochhar (67-71) at 6-under total.

Last week's runner-up, Veer Ganapathy (70-70) was tied 11th with Harshjeet Singh Sethie (70-70), Varun Parikh (70-70) and left-handed Kartik Sharma (69-71), a 4-under total.

The scoring has been rather low with 27 players at par or better after 36 holes, and there is one more round to go in the event.

Mannat Brar (74-69) was the best-placed woman player at T-21, as Vidhatri Urs (72-72) slipped to T-25.

Beginning the second day on the Par-5 first, Mane opened with an eagle and then shot a hole-in-one on the Par-3 fifth as he went to 4-under in very quick time. Two two-shot gains in a matter of five holes took Mane way ahead.

Another gain on the ninth saw him turn in 5-under. Three more birdies on the back nine gave him a superb 8-under card that carried him to 15-under.

Mane is coming off a third place in Mauritius, and his game has been looking sharp. A natural long-hitter, the big-built Mane is also reaping the benefits of a much sharper short game.

Manav Shah, who contended in the opening event in Chandigarh, seemed to be carrying on from where he left off with a 65 on the first day. He birdied the first, fourth and the seventh to go 3-under for the front nine, and when he added a fourth birdie, it seemed he might give Mane a run. But three dropped shots in four holes with uncharacteristic errors saw him fall before a closing bogey provided some relief. Yet with a 70 in the second round and a total of 9-under, he finds himself six back.

Gill was 4-under for the front nine, but two bogeys on the back nine pulled him back. He closed with a birdie on the 18th, which played as one of the easiest holes on the day.

Bhullar is always a threat in any event. More so in recent times in IGPL. Winner of three events, he has already won once in 2026. After a 67 on Day 1, he added a 68 to stay in the frame. He knows he is six behind, but as he added, his course also gives low scores. So, a low score from Bhullar and an error two from Mane could open the contest and add to the excitement.

Mane's hole-in-one was the first of the event, and it caused quite an excitement. But before the day was out, Ranjit Singh landed an ace on the Par-3 16th later in the day. Ranjit (69-73), however, was back in T-17th place at 2-under total.

Last week's winner, Sachin Baisoya, had a rough day. He dropped back-to-back bogeys early on the third and the fourth and later double-bogeyed the 10th. He ended with a 2-over 74 card and was T-17, but is capable of hauling himself into the Top 10 with a good final round.

In the team competition, despite Mane's superb efforts, Green Fuels Hyderabad were on top with fine performances by all four players -Shah, Verma, Graziani, and Soni. With the top two cards counting each day, Green Fuels were 18-under and 10 shots ahead of Atri Mumbai, who have Mane in their team. The third-place team is Honer Gurugram, spearheaded by Pukhraj Singh Gill.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
So proud to see Indian golfers dominating internationally! Mane, Shah, Bhullar, Gill... such a strong field. It's great for the sport's growth in India. The team competition is interesting too - Hyderabad leading even without the individual leader.
D
David E
As a golf fan, that's just incredible scoring. 15-under through 36 holes on that course is world-class. The depth of Indian golf is really impressive now. Hoping for a tight finish, but Mane looks unstoppable.
R
Rohit P
The article is great, but I wish there was more detail on the hole-in-one! Which club did he use? What was the yardage? That's the most exciting part for us fans. Still, kudos to Mane for a flawless round. 👏
S
Sarah B
It's wonderful to see Mannat Brar and Vidhatri Urs holding their own in a strong field. More coverage of our women golfers, please! They are doing fantastic work and deserve equal spotlight.
V
Vikram M
A six-shot lead is huge, but in golf, anything can happen. Remember Anirban Lahiri losing a big lead a few years back? Mane needs to stay aggressive and not just protect. Excited for the final round!
K

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