McDowell stays in control at Sheshan
Graeme McDowell remains in command at the halfway stage of the £5.4 milllion WGC-HSBC Champions event in Shanghai after hitting a second successive 67.
McDowell didn’t drop a shot as he hit five birdies to move to 10 under in Shanghai, three strokes ahead of Ian Poulter, who birdied four of his last five holes to match his Ryder Cup team-mate’s second-round score.
“It would be very special [to win]. The WGC’s are a special tier of events, there’s no doubt about that and this has always been one I had my eye on,” said McDowell. “This one and Doral [venue for the WGC-Cadillac Championship] are the two golf courses I feel I perform well on.
“But this is a world-class field. They are bunching up behind me and I have to get out there tomorrow and keep the pedal down and position myself for Sunday and give myself a sniff on the back nine.”
Asked to explain his remarkable scoring at Sheshan, McDowell added: “I think it’s the fact you don’t have to hit it a long way, you have to be accurate and I like these greens. I read them well here, this course is always so well presented and I just enjoy playing it.
“I didn’t play as well as I did yesterday. I missed a lot more fairways, which is a big key on this golf course. You must find fairways to have a chance out there. I got lucky a couple of times and I made some good saves.
“It wasn’t my best ball-striking round but I hung in there and I’m right where I want to be going into the weekend.”
In contrast, Poulter was delighted with his performance in his second tournament with new Titleist clubs as he looked to put an injury-plagued campaign behind him.
“It was great. I played very, very solid,” said Poulter, who has slipped to 44th in the world rankings. “Probably the best I’ve played all year, which is very exciting.
“It was a little frustrating the first 13 holes that I was missing chances, but four birdies in the last five holes, chances started to go in at the end, and I’m very happy.
“I played with Graeme in the last round last year and he likes this golf course and played well, and I’ve had success around here as well. So if you’re within six shots, then you’ve got a great chance on Sunday.”
Bubba Watson birdied the last five in his 67 to move to six under alongside Japan’s Hiroshi Iwata, whose 65 was the best score of the week so far.
World No.2 Adam Scott had closed to within one of McDowell with four birdies in his first six holes, but ran up a quadruple-bogey nine on the eighth after a wild hook into the trees ended in an unplayable position and his fifth shot was stymied by a large rock in front of the green.
The former Masters champion also double-bogeyed the ninth and dropped another shot on the 11th, but eagled the 14th and birdied the 16th in an eventful 72 that left him eight off the lead on two under.
WGC – HSBC Champions leaderboard
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.