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Carrera and Bautista Set For Sunday Sizzle at the FBC ZIM Open

The FBC ZIM Open has turned into a two-man tango, and the band hasn’t missed a beat. Mexico’s Luis Carrera and Australia’s Austin Bautista—fresh off earning their Sunshine Tour cards the hard way—now waltz into Sunday’s finale eyeballing a first-ever tour title amid the jacarandas of Royal Harare.

Carrera clings to a slim lead

Carrera pieced together a workmanlike 69 on Saturday to reach 14-under, good enough for a one-shot cushion.

The round started rougher than a porcupine’s handshake: he bogeyed the opening hole while playing partner MJ Viljoen canned an eagle from the fairway for a three-shot swing.

“MJ hit a great shot on the first and eagled, and I bogeyed so it was a three-shot swing.

But there was still a lot of golf left and a lot of other players as well, so I needed to focus on my own game, which I did. It was a good round.

I didn’t have my A game, but in the end I was happy that I was able to still play well,” said Carrera.

That cool-headed recovery echoes the 61 he fired to win Qualifying School last month—proof he can bounce faster than a range ball on cart-path concrete.

Bautista blitzes Royal Harare

If Carrera was steady, Bautista was spotless. The Aussie strung together a bogey-free 66, pin-seeking like a kid with a new Nerf gun to sit one back at 13-under. Another Sunday like that and the FBC ZIM Open trophy may need a Qantas boarding pass.

Viljoen lurks; veterans stalk

South Africa’s MJ Viljoen, eagle swagger still intact, carded 70 to reach 12-under and keeps the leaders honest.

A trio of canny campaigners—Trevor Fisher Jnr. and Hennie Otto—share fourth at nine-under. Fisher Jnr., twice a playoff bridesmaid here (2012, 2017), might feel the tournament owes him more than a dodgy exchange rate.

Sunday storylines

First-timer fireworks: Carrera and Bautista graduated Qualifying School less than a month ago; one could leave Zimbabwe with a winner’s cheque already stamped.

Course quirks: Royal Harare’s kikuyu rough can tangle irons like cable earphones—accuracy off the tee will decide the finale.

Weather watch: Forecast calls for light winds and sunshine—a green light for low scoring and high drama.

What’s at stake

Besides the shiny silverware, a victory grants a two-year exemption and enough Order of Merit points to turn a rookie season into a world ranking rocket-boost. Expect nerves, fist-pumps, and maybe the odd Feherty-style quip echoing through the msasa trees.

Whatever unfolds, the FBC ZIM Open has already served up a leaderboard hotter than a Zimbabwean midday.

Come Sunday evening, we’ll know whether Carrera clung on, Bautista blitzed past, or Viljoen crashed the party. Grab your popcorn—or at least a braai skewer—and stay tuned.

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