By Sportsmail Reporter
Last updated at 4:31 PM on 7th January 2012
Overnight pacesetter Louis Oosthuizen birdied three of the final four holes to retain a share of the lead on a topsy-turvy day on the Africa Open leaderboard in East London.
Defending champion Oosthuizen started his round with three straight birdies but could not match the pace of Friday, when he vaulted into the lead with a stunning 62.
A bogey at the 11th saw him falling into the clutches of the chasing pack before a late recovery gave the former Open champion a six-under 67 to be 21 under for the tournament.
Going strong: Louis Oosthuizen fired a 69 in his third round
That left him in a tie with countryman Tjaart van der Walt, who fired a round of 65.
Afterwards, Oosthuizen was left to reflect on the mistake on the 11th that cost him the overall lead.
'It was an elementary mistake really,' he said on europeantour.com.
'Those little chip-outs seem easy, and I made the basic error of leaving it short of a tree for my approach to the green.'
Van der Walt birdied the opening four holes and, despite bogeying the eighth when he took a penalty, made the turn at five under par before three more birdies, including at the 18th, saw him take the outright lead before Oosthuizen completed his late fightback.
Van der Walt, who is yet to win a tournament in a 15-year career, remained bullish in his battle with bigger names at the top of the leaderboard.
In contention: The experienced Retief Goosen is just one shot off the pace
'At the end of the day the golf ball doesn't know that they are major champions,' he said.
'I've played at the highest level, I've never won majors or big events, so who knows what can happen.
'I do feel as if I am controlling the golf ball as well as I have in a long time. Not just tee to green, but on the greens as well. And that's a good sign for me.
'I'm entitled to forget the one bad shot I hit all day [on the eighth]. I hit a bad tee shot, but luckily for me I was able to get a good drop on line of sight. I managed to get it on the green and almost made the putt.'
He was not the only man to enjoy at least a brief spell above Oosthuizen before the day was complete.
England's Danny Willett was enjoying an outstanding day with five birdies on the opening nine and four more on the way back giving him the lead before a bogey on the ninth.
He went round in 65 to sit joint fourth, one shot behind double US Open champion Retief Goosen, whose drama-free 66 left him on 20 under par.
Richard Sterne enjoyed the best round of the day with an eagle on the 11th highlighting his scorecard as he signed for a nine-under 64 to move up to fifth place, four shots behind the leaders.
Thomas Aiken, who led after an opening round of 64, endured a rough day and fell into a tie for ninth place as he could only manage a round of 72.
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