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Fri May 18 12:05:52 SAST 2012

Lawrie masters the calm in Qatar for one-shot lead

Reuters | 04 February, 2012 16:170 Comments
Paul Lawrie of Scotland on the par five 18th hole during the second round of the Commercialbank Qatar Masters at the Doha Golf Club on February 4, 2012 in Doha, Qatar
Image by: Ross Kinnaird / Getty Images

Former British Open champion Paul Lawrie shot a steady five-under-par 67 at the Qatar Masters on Saturday to open up a one-shot lead over a stellar chasing bunch with 18 holes remaining at the wind-affected event.

Big winds on Friday forced tournament organisers to cut the tournament to a 54-hole event, and it was 1999 Open winner Lawrie who seized the initiative in vastly improved conditions.  

  The Briton, on eight-under overall (136), leads big-hitting Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts (68) by a stroke with Sweden’s Peter Hanson (69) and Argentine Ricardo Gonzalez (67) one back.  

  “I’m putting much better. I struggled for two or three seasons with the blade. I’m never going to say I got everything but I’m putting good. I feel I’m getting better as I get older,” the Scot told reporters.  

  The 43-year-old, who won the same event in 1999 before his greatest triumph at Carnoustie, incurred a one stroke penalty on the 10th green after he dropped his ball on his marker for the second week running.  

  “I’d never done it in my life — 20 years on Tour — but last week in Abu Dhabi I was lucky because my caddie saw it and said the marker never moved,” Lawrie told reporters.  

  “This time I wasn’t sure and (senior referee) Andy McFee said I had to be 100% sure.  

  “I wasn’t watching and you guys didn’t have it on the telecast, so you’ve got to take the penalty and kick on.”  

  World number 10 Jason Day is four-under overall (140) with 18th-ranked Sergio Garcia while world number three Lee Westwood and fourth-ranked Martin Kaymer are one shot further behind.  

  The round of the day came from defending champion Thomas Bjorn, who was all at sea in the first round when he shot a seven-over 79, but improved by a remarkable 14 strokes to card a seven-under 65 and amazingly make the cut.  

  “I know I can shoot numbers on this golf course. I wasn’t feeling down and out yesterday,” the Dane told the European Tour’s website.

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