Scott in contention after second round of Johnnie Walker Classic

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Feb. 29, 2008

NEW DELHI -- India's Shiv Kapur lived up to the adage "beware the sick golfer" when he fired a sparkling 7-under-par 65 for the joint halfway lead with Australia's Unho Park in the Johnnie Walker Classic on Friday.

The talented Kapur, the Asian Tour's rookie of the year in 2005, rose from his sick bed to post a blemish-free round that included one eagle and five birdies at a sun-kissed DLF Golf and Country Club.

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Adam Scott of Australia hits his second shot to the 12th hole during the second round of the Johnnie Walker Classic in New Delhi, India. (Cannon/Getty Images)

The smooth-swinging Park, searching for his maiden victory, was equally impressive in making eight birdies on the way to a 66 while another Indian, Jyoti Randhawa, charged into contention by matching his young compatriot's score for third place with Japan's Taichiro Kiyota.

World No. 5 Adam Scott of Australia stayed within striking reach after grinding out a second successive 68 to lie just two off the pace in a share of fifth place. Fijian Vijay Singh and 2006 Asian No. 1 Jeev Milkha Singh of India will enter the third round four off the lead.

Down with a virus since the start of the week, the 25-year-old Kapur showed no ill-effects of his poor health as he peppered the flags with a wonderful array of shots. He missed an 8-foot birdie chance at the last for the sole lead but was, without surprise, thrilled to jointly lead the $2.5 million Johnnie Walker Classic.

"I'm obviously pretty happy. If at the start of the day or week, if somebody told me I would be leading after two rounds, I would be laughing in their face," said Kapur.

The Indian, winner of the 2005 Volvo Masters of Asia, couldn't play a practice round at the Arnold Palmer-designed DLF course as he was too ill and has required his back to be taped up because of soreness from the viral attack.

"I'm like an injured soldier," he said. "Yeah, I can talk, I can breathe. But I got up this morning, and my back was sore. Like I said yesterday, sometimes it's better when you're sick, because you're not thinking so much about technique."

Kapur sensationally turned in 31 following three birdies and an eagle on the sixth hole when he rifled a 3-iron to 10 feet of the flag and birdied the 14th and 16th holes, the last from 30 feet. His faithful caddie, Takur, told him: "The best energy booster is a birdie, so every birdie you make will carry you through the next hole."

"It's funny how that works in golf. If you're playing well, it doesn't matter how low energy, you find a way to get through the round," said Kapur.

Park, an Asian Tour regular searching for his maiden victory, credited his superb run to Vijay, saying he watched the big Fijian at the practice range earlier in the week and picked up a valuable tip.

After missing the cut at the SAIL Open last week, the Singapore-based and Korean-born Park's confidence was in tatters. "I was struggling with my swing but since missing the cut, I've watched a few of the good players here. I was watching Vijay on his backswing and he keeps his head really still.

"He doesn't sway or slide on the backswing, and I tried to do something similar as I move a lot on my back swing. I just tried to stay more steady, and it's working," said Park.

Playing on his home course, Randhawa, Asia's No. 1 in 2002, was also proudly flying India's flag and revealed that a change in mindset helped him produce seven birdies. "It's a great round. I was not feeling all that great when I finished yesterday, and I think I decided what to do today and I stuck with it. I guess it's just expectations. You're playing in your country, and people expect you to play well. You expect to play well, and, before you know it, you play and you start scoring and seeing the leaderboard. You could be two under or three over.

"That's what I did today, I just tried to play the game. I just wanted to go out there and have fun and do the best that I could with my game. That helped. That was great," said Randhawa.

Scott, the biggest draw at the Johnnie Walker Classic, didn't produce his best golf but managed to post a number that kept him firmly in the title mix. The Australian said it was important to stay up on the leaderboard as he bids for a second title of the season.

"Yeah, it's good to get on the leaderboard early. You're always in touch with whatever that is going on out there. Around this course, it's very hard to make up a lot of shots. So being up there with the leaders is a good spot right now," said Scott, who triumphed in Qatar last month.

"Obviously at the moment I'm right in contention, so that's a good spot to be. I didn't play quite as well today as I did yesterday but still managed to have a good round."

The halfway cut was set at 2-under-par 142, with 66 players progressing into the weekend rounds. A total of 11 of 18 Indians in the field survived the cut but joint overnight leader Shamim Khan missed out after stumbling with a 76.

Leading second-round scores
Score Player Nationality Round 1 score Round 2 score
134 Shiv Kapur India 69 65
134 Unho Park Australia 68 66
135 Taichiro Kiyota Japan 68 67
135 Jyoti Randhawa India 70 65
136 Jose Manuellara Spain 69 67
136 Adam Scott Australia 68 68
136 Graeme Storm Enlgand 70 66
136 Phillip Archer England 72 64
137 Greg Chalmers Australia 68 69
137 Lin Wen-tang Taiwan 70 67
137 Adam Bland Australia 69 68
137 Richard Finch England 72 65
138 Paul Sheehan Australian 68 70
138 Jeev Milkha Singh India 68 70
138 Daniel Vancsik Argentina 67 71
138 Vijay Singh Fiji 70 68
138 Scott Strange Australia 71 67
138 Soren Hansen Denmark 69 69
139 Rahil Gangjee India 68 71
139 Michael Long New Zealand 70 69
139 Mark Brown New Zealand 71 68
139 Chris Rodgers England 72 67
139 James Kamte South Africa 68 71
139 Lee Won-joon Australia 70 69
139 Marcus Fraser Australia 71 68
139 Prayad Marksaeng Thailand 74 65
139 Arjun Singh India 69 70
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