Scottish Daily Mail

At last Willett is a cut above the rest!

- DEREK LAWRENSON Golf Correspond­ent at Wentworth

DANNY Willett has excruciati­ng memories of the last time he played in the BMW PGA Championsh­ip. ‘i’d just had a vasectomy and i’m not going to lie to you, it was painful walking,’ he said.

At least he only had to walk for two days before suffering his second — ahem — cut of the week.

Now look at him. eighteen months on, there’s a positive bounce in his stride. the 2016 Masters champion played the first five holes in a remarkable five under par on his way to a 65 and a tie for the halfway lead with Spaniard Jon Rahm.

the Yorkshirem­an wasn’t the only one in confession­al mode. the knee injury that threatened Justin Rose’s participat­ion this week? He coyly admitted it happened while on his manager Paul McDonnell’s stag-do in the south of France. Before anyone runs away with the wrong idea, however, Rose was quick to explain that no drink had been taken. ‘Honest truth is, half an hour after arriving there, not even a beer in hand, i’d been having a swim and slipped on the edge,’ he insisted.

A beer will certainly be in hand tomorrow evening if the old saying about the injured golfer comes true and Rose lifts a trophy that has been on his bucket list for as long as he can remember. ‘i’ve still got so many memorable memories of coming down here as a schoolboy, watching idols like Seve, Norman, Faldo and Olazabal, and then going home eager to practise what i’d learned,’ he said, following a 68 that has left him just two adrift.

Rose is a big fan of the new September date that has attracted the strongest field in years and, as ever, gave an eloquent explanatio­n as to why. ‘When it was in May it was between two majors, next to the Memorial event in Ohio which is close to my heart, and i always felt that a transatlan­tic trip on top of that wasn’t ideal,’ he said. ‘Now, instead of worrying whether i can add it to my schedule i can focus on it, which is as it should be for europe’s flagship tournament.’

Certainly, a classic weekend in the history of the storied event appears in store, with a leaderboar­d that would grace any major and record crowds expected.

Don’t rule out the first American winner since Arnold Palmer triumphed in 1975. Billy Horschel is four back following a 65 with tony Finau a further shot adrift.

Meanwhile, brilliant Norwegian newcomer Viktor Hovland is five behind following a 69 — his 19th successive round, would you believe, in the 60s.

One shot further back is Richie Ramsay, who added a handy 68 to his opening 71 to lie one ahead of fellow Scot Russell Knox.

Compatriot Robert Macintyre, the man who finished second to Paul Casey in Hamburg, is eight shots off the pace after a levelpar 72.

Scott Jamieson struggled to follow up his first-day 68 and came home in 77 blows.

As for the biggest crowd puller of all, Rory Mcilroy rallied late on to repair some of the damage of his opening 76 with a 69 to make the halfway cut.

He’ll be out early today. expect fireworks.

 ??  ?? Tip top: Willett leads on 11 under along with Jon Rahm of Spain
Tip top: Willett leads on 11 under along with Jon Rahm of Spain
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom