Purcell leads, but Hurley and Caldwell both join him for the weekend at Galgorm

Mark McGowan
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Conor Purcell (Photo: Getty Images)

Mark McGowan

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Conor Purcell will take a three-stroke lead into the weekend of the Black Desert NI Open presented by Tom McKibbin, after impressing for the second straight day at Galgorm, but Gary Hurley and Jonathan Caldwell will also see weekend action.

Both Hurley and Caldwell were among the late starters on day two as wind and rain sharpened the already pointed teeth of the Ballymena course. Waterford man Hurley had opened with a bogey-free 67 on day one – one of very few in the field not to have a blemish on day one – and he’s still bogey-free after two rounds, though not in the way he’d have liked as a double on the seventh threatened to undo much of his good work the previous day.

He recovered admirably to birdie two of the final 10 and heads to the weekend tied for 12th at -3, six behind Purcell but just three off second.

Caldwell opened with a level-par 70, but carded one stroke more on day two. A model of consistency, he’s had just three bogeys, two birdies and 31 pars for his 36 holes, but will need more red on the board if he’s to make any sort of meaningful headway over the weekend.

A birdie at the last wasn’t enough to save Simon Thornton who was left to rue an early double as he missed the cut by the minimum, but John Murphy, Dermot McElroy, Mark Power, Alex Maguire, Ronan Mullarney and Daniel Mulligan also miss out.

Purcell fired a bogey-free five under par round of 65 in testing conditions to reach nine under par for the week, three clear of Dane Jeppe Kristian Andersen, Swede Joakim Lagergren and Wil Besseling from the Netherland’s who share second.

The 27-year-old will go into the weekend in a commanding position, with his accuracy off the tee rewarded as wind and rain hit Co. Antrim.

“I’m very pleased,” he said. “Any time you can go bogey-free it’s very nice, and especially round here. It’s quite demanding, so I did a good job.

“Me and my caddie did a great job. There were a lot of tricky wind conditions, a lot of crosswinds, but we were hitting good shots.

“I kept myself in position off the tee, and I think it didn’t feel as difficult as it probably should’ve because of that.”

Purcell has enjoyed a strong first half of the Road to Mallorca season, recording three top ten finishes in 13 starts to sit 24th in the Road to Mallorca Rankings.

With the top 20 earning promotion to the DP World Tour at the end of the year, Purcell is pleased to be in contention once more as he targets an elusive first Challenge Tour title.

“Any time you’re up there, it gives you that extra motivation to keep it going for four days,” he added. “I’ve been playing nicely this year so hopefully there’s more of the same tomorrow.

“After missing the cut last week I made sure to tell myself my game wasn’t too far away. It felt very close and it’s just about piecing it together for four rounds.

“I know golf is well supported up here, and I love playing in front of people, so I’m looking forward to the weekend.”

Pierre Pineau occupies solo fifth on five under par, with six players one shot further back in sixth including Frenchmen Oihan Guillamoundeguy and Robin Sciot-Siegrist, Dane Lucas Bjerregaard, Englishman Jack Senior, Swede Per Längfors and Welshman Toby Hunt.

The third round gets under way at 8:05am local time, with Purcell teeing off alongside Andersen and Lagergren at 12:00pm.

FULL SCORING

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