Friday, December 16, 2011

LEE WESTWOOD HALFWAY LEADER BY 11 SHOTS IN THAILAND


FROM THE ASIAN TOUR WEBSITE
Chonburi, Thailand:
England’s Lee Westwood maintained his dazzling form at the inaugural Thailand Golf Championship shooting, a superb eight-under-par 64 to extend his lead to a staggering 11 shots.
The world number three, who flirted with a 59 on Thursday before settling for a 60, produced another master class at the Amata Spring Country Club to match the Asian Tour’s 36-hole record of 20-under-par 124 held by Thailand’s Chapchai Nirat.
The 38-year-old produced eight birdies on a windy day in the US$1 million Asian Tour’s season finale but found greater satisfaction with an eight-foot par save on his last hole at the ninth which kept him bogey-free over two rounds.
At one time, early finisher Westwood was 14 shots clear of the field in the clubhouse.
Later Masters champion Charl Schwartzel of South Africa and American Michael Thompson shot matching 66s for tied second place on 135 while two-time Major winner John Daly was a further shot back in fourth position following a 73.
India’s Jeev Milkha Singh and Gaganjeet Bhullar are amongst those on 139.
Westwood, chasing his fourth title of the season and second in three weeks, is set to eclipse the largest winning margin on the Asian Tour of 13 shots held by Ernie Els of South Africa at the 2005 BMW Asian Open in China.
He was amazed how far he has forged ahead of the chasing pack. “Outrageous isn’t it?” said a delighted Westwood. “It’s still a long way to go. But at the same time, I’m looking forward to the weekend. I’m playing great and I’m feeling in total control. Every aspect of my game feels good.”
With a stiff breeze blowing over the highly rated par 72, 7,453-yard Amata Spring course, Westwood showed his class once more. He said his second round effort felt better than his opening round’s 60, which tied the Asian Tour’s 18-hole record.
“Strange really. Today almost felt better than yesterday. It was quite tough out there. The scoring is pretty tricky. 64 is a really good score. Not that 60 wasn’t a good score yesterday! I hit a lot of good shots again and hit it close. Delighted with two days’ work,” said Westwood.
“I’ll try to keep the lead irrelevant and keep on playing as I’ve been playing. The most satisfying shot of the day was making that eight or nine footer I holed at the last to keep the bogey off the card the last two days.
“I won two weeks ago at the Nedbank (South Africa). I’ve got myself into a great position here. It would be nice to win four times in a year.”
Schwartzel, who is also in good form following five straight top-10s in his last five events, fired and eagle, six birdies and two bogeys to stay a distant second behind Westwood. The slender South African conceded the field faced an uphill task in preventing the runaway leader from the inaugural Thailand Golf Championship title.
“I feel like Lee is playing his own tournament and we are playing something else. Halfway through it now, I still feel like I’ve got a very outside chance. I need to. I feel a good score out there. I can see eight or nine under if I play decent without the bogeys,” said the 27-year-old.
“I mean it’s difficult to chase 11 shots. You can’t make up in 18 holes, you need a lot of holes. We’ve got 36 holes to go and we’ve all played this game before. It’s half from over. I need a 14 under weekend to have a sniff.”
Daly, who shot three birdies against four bogeys, waved the white flag of surrender.
“Playing for second is all I can do. If you told me somebody would be 20-under after four rounds, I would have been shocked but after two? He (Westwood) is just in the zone. He is putting it so good.
"Nobody is going to catch him so I think the thing for me to do is to go out and shoot under-par in the last two days. The course is not that easy. He is making it easy but it is not that easy for us,” said the American veteran.
The halfway cut was set at 147 with 74 players progressing into the weekend rounds. Open champion Darren Clarke (76), Spanish star Sergio Garcia (71) and Japanese talent Ryo Ishikawa (77) made the cut on the number.
Walker Cup hero Michael Stewart, the rookie pro from Troon, finished 34 shots behind Westwood over 36 holes. Michael had a pair of 79s for 14-over 158.

He ran up a quadruple bogey 8 at the ninth on his way to an outward 41. He had one birdie, at the 15th, surrounded by bogeys at the fifth, 12th, 14th and short 17th.
If it's any consolation to young Michael, experienced compatriot Ross Bain also had a second-round 79 and missed the cut with a 150 total.
SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARDPar 144 (2x72) Yardage 7,453
124 Lee WESTWOOD (ENG) 60-64.
135 Charl SCHWARTZEL (RSA) 69-66, Michael THOMPSON (USA) 69-66.
138 John DALY (USA) 65-73.
139 Kenichi KUBOYA (JPN) 72-67, Simon DYSON (ENG) 69-70, Gaganjeet BHULLAR (IND) 70-69, Gregory BOURDY (FRA) 68-71, Jeev Milkha SINGH (IND) 71-68, Miles TUNNICLIFF (ENG) 70-69.
140 Prom MEESAWAT (THA) 72-68, Kwanchai TANNIN (THA) 69-71, Guido VAN DER VALK (NED) 71-69, LU Chien-soon (TPE) 69-71.
141 Daisuke MARUYAMA (JPN) 73-68, Charley HOFFMAN (USA) 71-70, Chinnarat PHADUNGSIL (THA) 72-69, Frankie MINOZA (PHI) 72-69, Thaworn WIRATCHANT (THA) 68-73.

MISSED THE CUT (147 or better qualified)
150 Ross Bain (Scotland) 71 79.
158 Michael Stewart (Scotland) 79 79.

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