Sandelin
moves into halfway lead Jarmo
Sandelin was measured for his Ryder Cup uniform a fortnight ago - and after the
second round of the German Open it looks like being time well spent. The
32-year-old Swede fired a superb 64 for an 11 under total of 133 to forge a one-shot
lead over South African Roger Wessels at the top of the leaderboard. Victory
at the Sporting Club Berlin and the winners cheque of £120,000 would seal
his place in the European side to defend the trophy in America in September, and
even a top 10 finish should be enough to make him a definite member of Mark James'
side. And although
the lanky right-hander is not taking anything for granted he is looking forward
to making his cup debut at Brookline. "It
would be really nice to qualify and be able to relax a bit. I'm very close to
one of my dreams and two good rounds and I would be there," said Sandelin,
who won the Spanish Open in April to take him to fifth in the current points table. "The
Ryder Cup is the main team event we have. Golf is an individual sport and it's
great to play in a team against the best players in the world and have your continent
behind you. "When
you're a junior you look up to all those guys playing in the Ryder Cup and dream
that one day if you work hard enough and are lucky at the right time you can get
there. "I
like matchplay between two guys, the fight. It's different from playing a 72 hole
event because most of the time you don't see the guy who is leading. "It's
good in matchplay to put pressure directly on the guy you're playing against that
and he can see that. I look forward to it." The
pressure of playing in an event that was labelled the 'War on the Shore' in 1991
clearly holds no fears for Sandelin for whom the death of his mother earlier this
year has brought things into perspective. "There
will be nerves of course but I get nervous in the last round of ordinary tournaments
and hopefully my game is good enough now to handle the pressure," he added. "In
golf there is always pressure on different levels but I don't think anything out
there could hurt me more than losing my mum (who died in February). I just think
about her so there is no pressure in the world that I would be intimidated by." Wessels
fired a second successive 67 to be only one adrift of Sandelin with Holland's
Robert Jan Derksen and Australian Geoff Oglivy a shot further back. "It's
the seventh cut I've made in a row but I haven't managed any fireworks at the
weekend yet and I'm feeling a bit impatient," said Wessels, who has yet to
win a European Tour title. "Hopefully
it's not far away, I've been hitting it exceptionally well and the greens are
fantastic so if you pick the line it goes in." Overnight
leader Gary Evans, who smashed the course record with a 62 in the first round,
could only manage a 75 to finish seven under in a group also containing compatriot
David Carter. "The
first round came right out of the blue and today I just didn't play that well,"
the 30-year-old Evans said. "I
had eight more putts than on Thursday but if you'd offered me seven under for
two rounds before the start of the week I'd have taken it." Meanwhile
Denmark's Soren Hansen enjoyed a highly profitable day with a hole in one on the
189-yard 17th, his six iron shot earning him a BMW Z3 cabriolet worth around £25,000.
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