Zimbabwe's de Jonge grabs Valspar Championship lead

14 March 2015 12:16

Zimbabwe's Brendon de Jonge fired four birdies in a two-under 69 on Friday to grab a one-shot lead over the chasing pack in the US PGA Tour's $5.9 million Valspar Championship.

Going after his first PGA Tour title, de Jonge's 36-hole total of six-under 136 saw him heading into the crucial weekend narrowly ahead of a clutch of more celebrated players.

World number three Henrik Stenson of Sweden and rising US star Jordan Spieth were among a group of five players sharing second on 137.

Spieth had seven birdies in a four-under 67, rolling in a 17-foot birdie putt from off the green at the 18th. Stenson had an eagle and a birdie in his 70.

Ryan Moore (68), Derek Ernst (70) and Kevin Streelman (69) were the rest in the pack.

De Jonge teed off early at the 10th on Innisbrook's Copperhead course and had the luxury of playing his first nine holes before the wind picked up.

"Got a little bit more defensive," he said of adjusting once the conditions changed, although he still grabbed birdies at two of his final three holes -- the par-four seventh and the par-four ninth.

"I made a 50-footer over there on number seven and number nine was playing straight downwind, so you could get pretty aggressive there," he said.

"I made a soft bogey on number six after driving it perfectly."

De Jonge said his tee shot at the seventh was "terrible" but he was lucky enough to have a shot into the green, then drained a 50-footer for the birdie.

"It's just a fickle course," he said. "You don't want to get too exotic. If the wind blows, it's tough."

On a crowded leaderboard, England's Ian Poulter and Americans Ricky Barnes, Sean O'Hair and Lucas Glover shared seventh on 138.

Fijian veteran Vijay Singh fired a one-under 70 for 139, where he was joined by Michael Putnam, Jason Bohn and Justin Thomas.

Overnight leader Brian Davis of England struggled to a 76 that left him tied for 28th on one-under 141.

World number four Adam Scott of Australia fired a four-over 75 and missed the cut by three strokes -- his first missed cut since the 2012 Byron Nelson Championship.

Source: AFP