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Montgomerie vaults up leaderboard with 65
Briton Colin Montgomerie shot a flawless six-under-par 65 to grab a share of the lead with Peter Lonard of Australia after the second round of the Heineken Classic at Royal Melbourne on Friday.
Montgomerie followed up his opening round of 68 to reach the halfway stage at nine-under-par 133 as the wet and windy conditions that drenched the course on the first gave way to perfect blue skies and sunshine.
Lonard, winner of the Australian Open and Australian PGA titles in November and December, joined Montgomerie at the top of the leaderboard with a 68 that featured an eagle three at the second.
South African Trevor Immelman, joint overnight leader with Lonard and Englishman Steve Webster, fired a 69 to finish just one shot off the pace, level with 23-year-old Australian Jarrod Lyle.
Lyle, who was diagnosed with leukaemia as a teenager but made a full recovery, made a flying start to his his round, collecting four birdies and an eagle to turn in 30.
He twice got to 10-under with birdies on the back nine but two late bogeys saw him end the day at eight-under, and suddenly in contention to win his first big title.
"Nothing is as frightening as what I've been through...certainly not being in the hunt in a golf tournament," Lyle told reporters.
Sweden's Henrik Stenson and Australian pair Craig Parry and James Nitties finished the day at seven-under, just two shots off the pace, but the most ominous move was made by defending champion Ernie Els.
The South African world number three is chasing his fourth straight win in Australia's richest golf tournament. He shot one-over in the opening round but stormed back into contention with a 64 on Friday, four short of the course-record 60 he set last year.
Els carded eight birdies and had just one blemish in his round to join a group of five players at six-under though he was still not happy. Another nine players, including first round leader Webster, finished the day a further shot back.
"I was a little bit scrappy," Els said. "I'm still not aggressive enough on my approach shots.
"Some of the flags were very accessible today. The greens are still nice and soft, so I really should have been giving myself more chances."
Montgomerie, playing the back nine first, went out in a respectable one-under 34 but picked up five shots to come home in a sizzling 31.
The 41-year-old won the Australian Masters at his last visit to Melbourne in 2001 and while his form has slipped in recent years, the big Scot said he was starting to turn the corner.
"I came here playing well, I was second in Singapore last week and I've continued to do so," Montgomerie said.
"If I hit the fairways and I hit the greens then all I have to do is hole four or five putts."
The highlight of Lonard's round was his approach to the second. He tapped in for an eagle and while he also managed three birdies in his round, two bogeys saw him settle for a 68.
"I hit one decent shot all day," was Lonard's blunt assessment. "The rest wasn't great, but I suppose I still hit a lot of greens."
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