After nearly a year out of the game, South African Richard Sterne is set  to make his return from injury at this week's Africa Open. 
                                
Sterne, a five-time European Tour winner, is planning on easing  himself back into competitive golf, and his first goal is to come  through this week at East London GC unscathed. 
"My last competitive round was at the Telkom PGA Championship in  February last year, so I don't mind admitting that I'm a little  nervous," Sterne told Business Day. "I've played five lots of nine holes  in the last three weeks, but today was the first time I played 18 holes  in nearly a year. It went surprisingly well, so I'm cautiously  optimistic for the week ahead." 
At one stage in his career, after winning the 2008 Joburg Open,  Alfred Dunhill Championship and South African Open, Sterne was flying as  high as 29th in the world golf rankings, but persistent back injuries  eventually forced him out of the game completely. 
"I have three bulging discs in various places in my back and I  was diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis, a form of arthritis," he  said.  
"Unfortunately, there is no overnight cure for this type of  injury and the recovery process is a long one. At the start I wasn't  patient enough and didn't give the therapy a proper chance to work, so  within a week or two I'd be on the crutches list again. 
"The bulging discs caused me a lot of pain, even referral pain in  my ribs and really limited my movement. I got very stiff in my upper  body and couldn't rotate more than an inch either way. The spondylitis  didn't help the cause. 
"In this sport you have to practise several hours a day, six days  a week for several weeks on end to stay in top form. I've stuck out the  therapy and gym work for the last 11 months and I finally got onto  medication for the ankylosing spondylitis. I feel better than ever and  I'm ready to compete." 
Though his main focus will merely be getting through 72 holes of  the tournament, Sterne will still be trying his best to be genuinely  competitive. He holds the course record at East 
London GC, a 61, so he  knows he is capable of playing very well there. 
"It is early days, so I'm not over-confident but the record is  still unchallenged and I hope I'm the one to equal or better it," he  said. 
"I just love this course. I played inter-provincial here in 1997  and the South African Amateur, where I did quite well, so the course  definitely has some good memories. It's a thinking man's course. I enjoy  the fact that you have to play a lot of feel shots around this track.  
"The wind does blow here and that eliminates quite a few of the  players. I think the course suits my eye very well and that's why it's  so exciting to come back at this venue." 
Sterne is currently only able to compete on the European Tour on a medical exemption, a situation he is keen to address. 
"I can't say that I'm not bothered with how I play this week," he said.  
"I want to come out here and do well; I kind of expect myself to  do well. I might be a bit hard on myself, but that's the bottom line. I  feel like I'm playing quite well, so if I can have a couple of solid  rounds, come Sunday I might be in with a chance," he added.
 
 
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