Defending
champ Vinod Kumar takes the honours in round two
Jamshedpur,
November 23, 2012: Delhi’s
Vinod Kumar produced a four-under-67 at the Golmuri Golf Course on Friday to take
the honours in round two of the 11th TATA Open. Vinod now has a
tournament total of eight-under-135. Om Prakash Chouhan of Mhow and Sri Lankan Mithun
Perera are in joint second place at six-under-137.
On
Thursday one half of the field had played its 18 holes at the par 72 Beldih
Golf Course while the golfers in the other half had completed their rounds at
the par 70 Golmuri Golf Course. On Friday both halves of the field switched
venues (those who played at Beldih on day one, played 18 holes at Golmuri on
day two and vice-versa).
The cut was declared at two-over-145.
Fifty-six professionals and one amateur made the cut.
Defending champion Vinod Kumar (68-67), who
also won on the PGTI last week, didn’t get off to a great start in round two as
he missed a one-foot birdie putt on the second hole. Vinod’s tee shot on the par-4
fourth ended up in the greenside bunker from where he made an up and down for
birdie. He followed that up with a 15 feet birdie putt on the seventh.
The 32-year-old Vinod, currently placed 11th
on the Rolex Rankings, was a little unfortunate on the ninth as his chip for
eagle from the edge of the green lipped out. He salvaged a birdie on that hole.
Kumar landed it within four feet for birdies on the 10th and 13th
as well. His lone bogey of the day came on the 17th where he missed
a chip-putt.
Vinod said, “The win last week has really
lifted my spirits and there is a lot more self-belief in me now. I was in very
good hitting form today. The only disappointment in round two was missing some
short putts. I’m equally comfortable at both the courses here (Beldih &
Golmuri) and have adapted well on both. I’m confident of repeating last year’s
performance.”
Om Prakash Chouhan (69-68) of Mhow posted a
three-under-68 at Golmuri in round two to take his total to six-under-137. Chouhan
made seven birdies against four bogeys. He made four consecutive birdies from
the 11th to the 14th.
Mithun Perera (65-72) of Sri Lanka fired an
even-par-72 at Beldih to join Chouhan in tied second place. Mithun’s round was
punctuated by four birdies and four bogeys.
The Delhi trio of Shamim Khan, Rashid Khan
and Anirudh Goyal were joined by Chandigarh’s Abhijit Singh Chadha, Amardip
Sinh Malik of Meerut, R Murthy of Bangalore and Bangladesh’s Md Zamal Hossain
Mollah in joint fourth place at four-under-139.
R Murthy’s three-under-69 was the best
score at Beldih on Friday.
Mukesh Kumar of Mhow shot the day’s best
score, a seven-under-64, at Golmuri. Mukesh’s bogey-free round placed him tied
11th at three-under-140.
Round one leader Anura Rohana of Sri Lanka
returned a six-over-78 at Beldih in round two to slip down to tied 11th
place.
Karan Taunk of Jamshedpur was the lone
amateur to make the cut. His two-day total of two-over-145 placed him tied 44th.
About Tata
Steel and Sports:
Established in 1907 as Asia's first integrated
private sector steel company, Tata Steel Group is among the top-ten global
steel companies with an annual crude steel capacity of over 26.5 million tonnes
per annum (mtpa). It is now the world's second-most geographically-diversified
steel producer, with operations in 26 countries and a commercial presence in
over 50 countries. The Tata Steel Group, with a turnover of US$ 26.13 billion
in FY 12, has over 80,000 employees across five continents and is a Fortune 500
company. The Group’s vision is to be the world’s steel industry benchmark in
“Value Creation” and “Corporate Citizenship” through the excellence of its
people, its innovative approach and overall conduct. Underpinning this vision
is a performance culture committed to aspiration targets, safety and social
responsibility, continuous improvement, openness and transparency. In 2008,
Tata Steel India became the first integrated steel plant in the world, outside
Japan, to be awarded the Deming Application Prize 2008 for excellence in Total
Quality Management. In 2012, Tata Steel became the first integrated steel
company in the world to win the Deming Grand Prize 2012 instituted by the
Japanese Union of Scientists and Engineers.
Tata Steel is the only Indian company to invest
in world-class sports facilities, create academies and maintain and manage
international level arenas. The cadets of its Tata Football Academy, the
nursery for the sport in India, as well as those of the Tata Archery Academy,
the only one of its kind for archery, have justified the faith that the Company
has in the talent and ability of its youth. Today, a significant part of the
Indian Football team, India’s best archers, some of its finest cricketers,
athletes, shooters, a Grand Master and several national and international
legends have realized their dreams as a result of the support they have
received from TATA Steel Sports Academies.
About PGTI:
Formed in 2006, Professional Golf Tour of
India (PGTI) is the recognized official body of professional golf in India.
PGTI’s objective is to promote professional golf in the country as well as give
players an opportunity to be involved in decision making for all aspects of the
game. Headed by Mr. Gautam Thapar (President), PGTI’s governing body comprises
of leading Indian golf professionals. PGTI currently has over 300 members.
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