Maas has established himself as a rising star of the game, and he’ll be hoping to become the fourth South African winner of the Championship since 2018, following in the footsteps of countrymen Christo Lamprecht, Aldrich Potgieter and Jovan Rebula. The 21-year-old has seen first-hand what it takes to win the Amateur, having caddied for Lamprecht and Potgieter en route to victory, and is fresh from a 6th-place finish at the St Andrews Links Trophy. Add this to the 4th place he managed in a professional event at the Investec South African Open Championship earlier this year, and Maas has plenty of reason to be optimistic ahead of a week on the Kent coast.
Meanwhile, Morrison, who stands at 6ft 9ins, will be looking to build on a stellar 2024. The 20-year-old competed in The 152nd Open at Royal Troon after his triumph at the European Amateur Championship, while also putting in strong performances at The Amateur Championship and US Amateur Championship. He arrives at Royal St George’s with form for performing on the big stage.
Other contenders
2024 runner-up Dominic Clemons responded superbly to the bitter disappointment of missing out to Skov Olesen, sealing his spot at The 152nd Open a week later through Final Qualifying. However, the Englishman will be keen to go one better at The Amateur this time around, while Luke Poulter – son of Ian – will be desperate to bounce back from heartache of his own after narrowly missing out on a US Open place earlier this month.
Great Britain and Ireland Walker Cup stars Connor Graham, who at the age of 17 was the leading qualifier at The 129th Amateur Championship, and Jack Bigham, a former Boys’ Amateur Champion, will also be plotting charges when play gets underway on Monday.