Advertisement


Norwegian star wins in South Africa to creep closer to earning first Masters invite

2250515156

Luke Walker

December 07, 2025
Save for later

Kristoffer Reitan started the final round of the Nedbank Golf Challenge Sunday with a five shot lead. He’d quickly find that it wasn’t insurmountable.

The 27-year-old from Norway was looking for his second DP World Tour victory. But he made three bogeys in the first seven holes at Gary Player Country Club in Sun City, South Africa, and suddenly the final result was wide open. He promptly birdied the next two holes, then played the final nine holes in one over par to shoot even-par 72 and top Jayden Schaper and Dan Bradbury by only one shot. Bogey on the 15th hole gave him only a one-shot lead, which he held.

It's been a breakthrough year for Reitan. He won his first DP World Tour title in May at the Soudal Open in Belgium and he also earned PGA Tour membership through the Race to Dubai standings. He started the year ranked 425 in the world. Now, the Nedbank victory will certainly move him up quite a bit from his 59th position.

The top 50 at the end of the year will earn invites into the Masters and it’s expected that he will remain comfortably inside the marker. He has only playing in the U.S. Open and British Open one time apiece. It would be his first trip to Augusta National.

"I don't know what I'm feeling right now,” Reitan said. “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 midseason 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.”

Sunday was an impressive day for Scandinavian golf as Reitan and Denmark’s Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen both won DP World Tour titles. Neergaard-Petersen was able to win the Australian Open when he got up and down on the final hole and Cameron Smith missed a short par putt that would’ve sent that championship into a playoff.

“I'm over the moon for Rasmus. He's been playing so well,” Reitan said. “He's an amazing player and he's come close a few times and obviously he won three times on the HotelPlanner Tour. I'm really pleased to see him get his first win on the DP World Tour."