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- 'As a result of that naivety, I almost died': South African golfer's tumultuous journey to The Open</p>
<p>Jack Bantock, CNNJuly 19, 2025 at 1:14 AM</p>
<p>Christiaan Bezuidenhout in the first round of the 153rd Open Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club. - Oisin Keniry/R&A/Getty Images</p>
<p>Blustering weather and a punishing coastal links course have combined to serve up the ultimate test for the game's best golfers at this week's Open Championship.</p>
<p>And while world No. 68 Christiaan Bezuidenhout may not boast a ranking to rival Scottie Scheffler or Rory McIlroy, he is as well equipped as any in the field to stay the course.</p>
<p>A strong start has put the South African in the mix heading into the weekend of the 153rd edition of the major at Royal Portrush, Northern Ireland, a far cry from the beginning of the 31-year-old's own life.</p>
<p>At the age of two, while playing with friends in the street, Bezuidenhout drank from a bottle of Coke that had been emptied and replaced with rat poison.</p>
<p>"As a result of that naivety, I almost died," he wrote in a blog for the European Tour in 2019.</p>
<p>"The hospital had to pump my whole stomach to get rid of all the poison, but the poison affected the whole nervous system in my body."</p>
<p>One long-term consequence was the development of a stutter, which in turn led to childhood battles with anxiety and depression as Bezuidenhout – growing up in the small farming town of Delmas, 58 miles east of Johannesburg – withdrew from "anything and everyone."</p>
<p>"I was bullied a lot at a young age. That took a lot to overcome that," he told CNN Sports' Don Riddell last year.</p>
<p>"Growing up in South Africa, nobody knew about stuttering … Still, nobody talks about it, nobody reads about it, nobody hears about it, and that's definitely something I'd like to change.</p>
<p>"It's not going to go away, it's not going to get better, so it's just accepting the fact that this is who I am and this is the way I speak," he added. "I've encouraged a lot of people that also stutter to just accept it, just embrace it. It makes you unique."</p>
<p>His blossoming talent for golf provided an "escape" and saw junior trophies accumulate, but that too brought its challenges. Seeking to combat the "dread" of public speaking necessitated by winning a tournament, a 14-year-old Bezuidenhout was prescribed beta-blockers to tackle anxiety.</p>
<p>He used the medication throughout his amateur career across the next seven years, but while competing in the Amateur Championship at Royal Portrush in 2014, Bezuidenhout was told he had failed a drugs test and had been suspended for two years as a result.</p>
<p>Bezuidenhout, seen here during day two of The 153rd Open Championship, swallowed rat poison accidentally as a two-year-old. - Warren Little/Getty Images</p>
<p>The 20-year-old had declared to tournament organizers in advance that he was taking beta-blockers for his stutter. While the sanction was later reduced to nine months after an appeal, Bezuidenhout was left "inconsolable."</p>
<p>"The worst part of it all were all the stories that came out from people in the golf industry and supposed close friends back home," he wrote.</p>
<p>"I was accused of using it to better my performances, which really hurt me and my family. A lot of nasty things were said and I was known as the guy banned from golf for a drug-related incident.</p>
<p>"I was aware of how labels like that are hard to shake off and I reached a very low point in my life."</p>
<p>A storied history</p>
<p>Yet since coming back and turning professional in 2015, Bezuidenhout's trajectory has been overwhelmingly upwards, culminating in a superb opening round four-under 67 that earned him an early share of the lead.</p>
<p>"I've been putting a lot of work in on my swing," he told reporters on his return to the clubhouse Thursday.</p>
<p>"I've been going through some swing changes and stuff – it's nice to see that paying off."</p>
<p>Christiaan Bezuidenhout is competing in his sixth consecutive Open Championship. - Stuart Franklin/R&A/Getty Images</p>
<p>He arrived on the Causeway Coast a three-time European Tour winner, his place in the field for a 20th career major start comfortably secured by his participation in the PGA Tour's season-ending Tour Championship.</p>
<p>Though still chasing a first win on the sport's top circuit, he has, bizarrely, cashed a winner's check, which he received for his runner-up finish at the American Express last year as victor Nick Dunlap was unable to claim prize money due to his amateur status.</p>
<p>Bezuidenhout is pacing to challenge his career-best major performance, a tied-12th finish at the US Open last month, despite a second round two-over 73 on Friday that saw him lose ground on the leading pack.</p>
<p>A weekend charge could add to his country's storied history at The Open, with South African golfers lifting the Claret Jug 10 times, though not on the two previous occasions that Portrush hosted the major.</p>
<p>Bobby Locke won four times during a dominant stretch in the 1950s, before Gary Player notched three victories of his own. A 28-year barren run ensued before Ernie Els triumphed in 2002, "The Big Easy" adding another in 2012 after compatriot Louis Oosthuizen had powered to glory at St. Andrews two years prior.</p>
<p>Winning for Els – a "friend" and "mentor" Bezuidenhout told CNN – is a source of motivation every time he tees up.</p>
<p>"His records on the PGA Tour and in majors speaks for itself, but he's just a really, really good guy off the course as well," Bezuidenhout said.</p>
<p>"I would love to win on the PGA Tour … (and) I know he would like that as well because he basically set my career up from a young age."</p>
<p>It will require a huge effort to lift the Claret Jug come Sunday, but Bezuidenhout prides himself on not shirking from a battle.</p>
<p>"There's definitely a lot of fight in me on the golf course," he told CNN Sports. "I think that came from the way I grew up being bullied.</p>
<p>"There's been a lot of sacrifices over the years, a lot of hard work, a lot of tears, a lot of ups and downs, but that's life. I really enjoy this journey that I'm on."</p>
<p>CNN's Ben Church contributed to this report.</p>
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