Manawatu Standard

Wilkinson vaults up leaderboar­d

- ROBERT VAN ROYEN

It’s not the prettiest looking New Zealand Open leaderboar­d if you’re a Kiwi golf fan, but at least Harry Bateman and Tim Wilkinson are flying the NZ flag heading into the weekend at Arrowtown.

On a day when defending champion Michael Hendry and topranked Kiwi Ryan Fox missed the cut (seven-under), Bateman is tied for fifth at 12-under the card and trails Australian leader Terry Pilkadaris by three shots. Wilkinson is a further shot back and holds a share of ninth.

Bateman turned in and up-anddown day yesterday, having mixed seven birdies and an eagle with a double bogey and bogey for his five-under 67 at The Hills.

Competing in just his second tournament on home soil in the

past 11 years, 39-year-old Wilkinson drilled seven birdies - five of them on the back nine (he started on the 10th tee) – and an eagle to card a smooth seven-under 65 with two rounds to play.

Wilkinson, who doesn’t have a full PGA Tour card this year, and Bateman are the only New Zealanders in the top 20 of the $1.2 million tournament. Jared Pender and Nick Voke, who are both nineunder, are tied for 26th.

‘‘Considerin­g I feel like I’ve played pretty well, but not as well as I’d have liked, not as well as I’ve hit in the last couple of months,’’ Wilkinson said when asked if he was content with his position.

He rued a couple of soft bogeys down the stretch, including one to wrap up his second round, but remained mostly positive considerin­g he’s 27-under par since the second round of last week’s NZPGA Championsh­ip in Palmerston North.

After starting the day tied for 41st, he certainly has more to smile about than Fox (six-under) and Hendry (four-under). Fox flirted with the cut all day and appeared to be safe after making an eagle on the 17th at Millbrook. However, he undid the good work by bogeying the par-three 18th.

Victorian Pilkadaris backed up his 64 at Millbrook on Thursday with an eight-under 64 at The Hills. He took the outright lead from fellow Aussies Callan O’reilly and Daniel Nisbet after chipping in for birdie on the par-four 8th, the penultimat­e hole of his round.

‘‘I short-sighted myself on eight, I was trying to draw it in and I didn’t hit a good shot. I just bumped it into the bank and it rolled in and I thought ‘it’s your day, it’s your day’,’’ said Pilkadaris, who hasn’t won a tournament in 13 years.

Newcastle’s O’reilly produced the round of the tournament yesteray, smoking a course record (11-under 61) at The Hills.

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