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VOLVO CHINA OPEN RELATED STORIES

ASIAN GOLF TODAY TOP STORIES

GOLF TODAY TOP STORIES 
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Lynn leaps into halfway lead
England's
David Lynn took a leap towards the Volvo China Open title with a
five-under-par 67 for a one-stroke halfway lead on Friday.
With his lucky marker in his pocket and a dragon-head belt to mark
his appearance in the Middle Kingdom, Lynn snared nine birdies en
route to a five-under-par 67 at the Beijing Honghua International
Golf Club.
His two-day total of nine-under-par 135 was one clear of Thailand's
Prayad Marksaeng, Jose Filipe Lima of Portugal and Zimbabwean Marc
Cayeux. India's Rahil Gangjee carded a 70 for tied fifth on 138
with Scott Drummond of Scotland and overnight leader Christian Cevaer.
Defending champion Paul Casey swapped putters before his round and
returned a 68 and enters the weekend lurking four strokes off the
pace. World number 13 Henrik Stenson of Sweden was further back
on 141 after a 68 that included a calamitous quadruple bogey eight.
It has been a remarkable ride for Lynn this year as he looks to
convert his top form into a victory in the 12th Volvo China Open.
With three top-10s in hand this season, the lanky Englishman put
himself in pole position for a second career victory.
"I feel like I'm on the verge of knocking one off soon,"
said Lynn, whose round included four birdies on the bounce on his
inward nine.
He rued a bogey at his last hole after a seven iron approached plugged
in the greenside bunker but Lynn was delighted to be leading China's
national Open as he nearly didn't tee it up after an infection near
the groin caused by a mosquito bite.
"On Wednesday, I was wondering if I was going to play. I picked
up a bite back home and got here and it had been festering since
and became quite large and painful. I had to stick out my right
leg in a funny position to line up a putt and it was painful at
the top of my swing where my groin was pulling. Then after my round
on Thursday, the doctor said we needed to cut it out and he did
a good job," said Lynn, whose lone victory came at the 2004
KLM Open in the Netherlands.
Ten years after his breakthrough victory at the Volvo China Open
in Beijing, the stocky Prayad couldn't be blamed if he felt a sense
of déjà vu as he cruised into contention with a flawless
67. With all departments of his game working, the Thai rammed home
five birdies including a monster 45-footer on the seventh and ended
on eight-under-par for two rounds, which was his score back in 1996
as well.
"I'm always feeling good whenever I'm in China. My performance
has always been strong here. I won in Beijing as well last year
and this one 10 years ago, so I'm feeling good about playing well
this week," said Prayad.
With the Beijing weather warming up after an initial cold front
that greeted the players, Prayad intends to take a shot at Volvo
China Open history where no player has won the championship twice.
"I've putted well the last two days and hopefully it'll carry
on. If there are not many players ahead of me by the end of the
day, then I will have a chance. It also depends on the weather as
warmer weather will help me," said Prayad.
Gangjee gritted his teeth in frustration after a double bogey on
17 tarnished his card. He skinned his shot out of a bunker which
sailed the green and left him with an awkward lie. Two chips, a
duffed shot and a putt later, he staggered off with a six but the
Indian wasn't down.
"I thought I would feel jitter today but I wasn't. It was just
one bad shot which cost me and that's how I'll think of it. I hit
a lot of good shots and made some good putts," said Gangjee,
who won his maiden Asian Tour title in Beijing two years ago.
"It was a great round. I wasn't expecting much today but I
started really good. It's nice to be back in Beijing."
Ryder Cup star Casey is feeling confident of his chances of completing
a treble of victories in China. After a bogey on his second hole
of the day, the Englishman drained a 25 foot birdie at the next
and reeled in four more birdies.
Casey knows he must putt a lot better at the weekend after taking
30 strokes on the greens but he will not be short of putters to
choose from. "I did change the putter (today). I have another
three in the locker so I might go with a different one each day.
I'm a streaky putter, when I get going, I can be very good but the
rest of the time, it can be quiet.
The halfway cut was set at 145 with China's promising Li Chao being
the lone local player to qualify for the weekend rounds. The 25-year-old,
last year's China Tour Order of Merit winner, holed a one-foot knee-trembler
for bogey on his last hole to qualify by one shot with two 72s.
Home heroes Zhang Lian-wei, the 2003 Volvo China Open champion,
and Liang Wen-chong crashed out after a 74 and 76 respectively.
Leading second round scores
135 - David Lynn (ENG) 68-67
136 - Jose Filipe Lima (POR) 67-69, Prayad Marksaeng (THA) 69-67,
Marc Cayeux (ZIM) 71-65
138 - Rahil Gangjee (IND) 68-70, Scott Drummond (SCO) 71-67, Christian
Cevaer (FRA) 66-72
139 - Paul Casey (ENG) 71-68, Jarrod Lyle (AUS) 68-71, Simon Yates
(SCO) 69-70, Robert Coles (ENG) 70-69, Nico Van Rensburg (RSA) 75-64,
Terry Pilkadaris (AUS) 72-67, Simon Dyson (ENG) 67-72, Peter Hanson
(SWE) 67-72
140 - Barry Lane (ENG) 72-68, Hendrik Buhrmann (RSA) 72-68, Ross
Fisher (ENG) 67-73, Jose Manuel Lara (ESP) 71-69, Simon Wakefield
(ENG) 67-73
141 - Charlie Wi (KOR) 72-69, Henrik Stenson (SWE) 73-68, Gary Emerson
(ENG) 71-70, Jamie Spence (ENG) 70-71, Wang Ter-chang (TPE) 69-72,
Peter Lawrie (IRL) 71-70, Joakim Backstrom (SWE) 69-72, Jason Knutzon
(USA) 70-71, Fredrik Widmark (SWE) 73-68, Jason Dawes (AUS) 71-70,
Lu Wen-teh (TPE) 71-70, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (ESP) 67-74, Soren
Kjeldsen (DEN) 71-70, Jeev Milkha Singh (IND) 72-69, Peter Fowler
(AUS) 71-70, Marcus Fraser (AUS) 70-71
April 14, 2006
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