Ian Poulter is betting on chasing down Henrik Stenson, while Tiger Woods rues missing out on 'something really special' at the Turkish Airlines Open

 

Kevin Garside
Friday 08 November 2013 18:59 GMT
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Ian Poulter of England looks on after he hits his tee shot the 16th hole during the second round of the Turkish Airlines Open at The Montgomerie Maxx Royal Course
Ian Poulter of England looks on after he hits his tee shot the 16th hole during the second round of the Turkish Airlines Open at The Montgomerie Maxx Royal Course (GETTY IMAGES)

In between cries of “get real” and “get in there” the essence of Ian Poulter is revealed. The cleanest striker of a golf ball Poulter is not, but on the greens he punches like Mike Tyson in his prime and on his day he is never out of the running. Today was just such a day.

A second successive 66 gave Poulter a share of the halfway lead on 12 under par at the Turkish Airlines Open in a group that also includes the irrepressible Henrik Stenson. A visiting dignitary from the United States, one Tiger Woods, is a stroke further back after shooting a course-record 63. Woods missed four birdie putts from inside 10 feet, substantiating his claim that he might have posted “something really special”.

Something special is the 59 he might have hit and which has never been recorded this side of the Atlantic. “If you look at the round, I missed four putts that I really should have made. Other than that it was a really good day,” Woods said. The understatement comes as standard.

Woods should have had Poulter’s aim. The par-three 16th was Poulter all over: farthest from the pin off the tee and first in the hole from 40 feet. Get in there, indeed. Playing partner Lee Westwood was gun-barrel straight all day and finished four shots adrift of Poulter. We have heard that story before. “Get real,” Poulter howled as his tee shot at 16 drifted left on the breeze. The putt never looked like missing. “I got it going on line and it dropped right in the middle of the hole,” he said.

Stenson is playing virtually one-handed with his injured right wrist severely curtailing practice. Yet on he soldiers through the discomfort towards a Race to Dubai finale he is favoured to win. Poulter is more than €500,000 adrift, but with three times that sum accruing to the winner here and next week at the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai, the Englishman, who has halved the deficit to Stenson in the past two weeks, is not only refusing to concede defeat, he is backing himself to reel in his man.

“I told him I’m going to chase him down because he was so far in front,” Poulter said. “I like to make these silly things and he said he’d like to take the bet on. I said I need some odds. He gave me 10-1 so I had a little 100 bucks. I also said that if I do manage to pass you we will have a nice night out and he will have to pour my drinks for the evening. I think 1,000 bucks isn’t an issue to him but pouring my drinks all night might be a big problem.”

Poulter is not wrong. “If he catches me I can only pour them with my left, so he’s going to have to hold the glass himself,” Stenson said. “I can’t go full-out with my practice. Even if I wanted to hit balls after the round it’s not going to happen.”

Only 10 players in the 78-man field go into the weekend over par. The climate reverted to the eastern Mediterranean November norm with temperatures reaching the mid-20s. A course softened by the first-day rain rolled over accordingly.

Returning at 8am to finish a first round that had eight holes to complete, US Open champion Justin Rose began with a bogey to drift to level par, eight off the clubhouse lead. It was his only dropped shot in 26 holes. Rose recovered to post a second-round 66 and join Westwood on eight under.

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