
REYMON Jaraula will be a marked man when he competes in the ICTSI Bacolod Golf Challenge at the Bacolod Golf and Country Club.
Photograph courtesy of PGT

SARAH Ababa celebrates after overcoming Chanelle Avaricio in the second playoff hole to rule the ICTSI Del Monte Championship in dramatic fashion on Thursday in Bukidnon.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF LPGT
Reymon Jaraula and Sarah Ababa head into this week’s ICTSI Apo Golf and Country Club Classic with momentum on their side — but under starkly different circumstances.
Their recent victories at the Del Monte Championship couldn't have been more contrasting. Jaraula authored a near-flawless performance to clinch the men’s title in emphatic fashion, while Ababa staged a dramatic late rally before emerging victorious in a pressure-packed playoff.
For Jaraula, his Del Monte triumph was nothing short of a statement. Playing on his home turf in Bukidnon, the soft-spoken pro closed out the tournament with a blistering, bogey-free 9-under-par 63 — punctuated by a last-hole eagle — to set a new course record and dismantle a strong field.
He didn’t just win; he dominated, finishing nine shots ahead of Negros Occidental leg winner Rupert Zaragosa and ending the latter’s bid for back-to-back titles. The performance was a culmination of confidence, familiarity and pure execution.
But at Apo, the narrative shifts.
“This will be a different challenge,” Jaraula said.
“The course in Del Monte is different than that in Davao. You can’t expect a lot. But I’ll just try to enjoy the game, play pressure-free, and see where it takes me.”
Unfamiliarity with the Apo layout and the potential presence of a partisan crowd adds an extra layer of difficulty. Yet, if he carries over even half of the form he showed at Del Monte, Jaraula will remain one of the men to beat in the P3.5 million eighth leg of the Philippine Golf Tour (PGT).
On the other side, Ababa pulled off one of the most stunning turnarounds in recent Ladies PGT memory. Trailing by five strokes with just nine holes to play at Del Monte, the Davao native mounted a ferocious back-nine charge.
A composed final stretch and a cold-blooded finish in the second playoff hole stunned Chanelle Avaricio, who had appeared headed for a comfortable win.
“I didn’t expect to win,” Ababa said. “Chanelle was already way ahead so when I had a chance, I grabbed it.”
Now, she returns to a course that holds both sentimental and competitive value. Apo Golf is not only her home course, it’s where she honed her game growing up — and where she clinched her third career title last year by holding off Mafy Singson.
Armed with momentum, confidence and the comfort of familiar fairways, Ababa now seeks to go back-to-back — a rare feat in the competitive LPGT circuit.
While Jaraula prepares to conquer unfamiliar territory, Ababa looks to reassert her dominance at home. Both, however, share the same objective — a second straight title to solidify their standing in this crucial stretch of the PGT and LPGT.
But standing in their way is a hungry field of contenders.
Avaricio is expected to go all out for redemption, while top players like Daniella Uy, Harmie Constantino, Tiffany Lee, Mafy Singson and Martina Miñoza are all poised to challenge. Miñoza, in particular, is coming off a strong third-place finish at Del Monte, signaling her potential breakthrough.
Princess Superal, who edged out Ababa in a sudden-death thriller at Caliraya Springs, is also returning in pursuit of more glory.