Mercury (Hobart)

Aussie duo not ready to pack it in

-

MARC Leishman and Cameron Smith swear Australia’s hopes of World Cup glory are not over, having braved the worst conditions they have faced in a domestic tournament.

Strong winds and heavy rain wreaked havoc on the 28 two-man teams at Metropolit­an Golf Club yesterday, but Leishman and Smith survived a horror start to the foursomes round and miraculous­ly sit just four shots off the pace.

Belgium’s Thomas Pieters and Thomas Detry fired a oneunder-par 71 and at 10 under are tied for the halfway lead at the $US7 million World Cup with Koreans Byeong Hun An and Si Woo Kim (72).

Italy (71) was among the only four teams to shoot under par on day two and they share third at eight under alongside side India (72), Malaysia (73) and England (74).

US PGA Tour star Smith said winds up to 40km/h and torrential rain combined for the worst weather he had experience­d in a home event.

“The toughest conditions I’ve played in Australia, ever,” he said. Starting yesterday in a share of the lead, Australia dropped three shots on the front nine before collapsing spectacula­rly with a doubleboge­y 6 at the par-4 10th.

Trying to save par from a greenside bunker, Leishman’s shot fell back into the trap and when Smith hit to six feet, Leishman missed the bogey putt. “I left one in a bunker which was not acceptable, you can’t make those mistakes,” Leishman said.

“The conditions were tough but I’m not making excuses. It was the same for everyone.”

Australia fell seven shots off the pace with another bogey at the par-3 12th, but rallied with three straight birdies from 14th to keep a sixth title in reach.

Ryder Cup hero Ian Poulter and fellow Englishman Tyrrell Hatton battled to a 74 and remain two shots off the lead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia