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Steady Westwood leads up-and-down McIlroy at halfway point in Dubai

- PA Sports
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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Under instructions from caddie Billy Foster, Lee Westwood is trying something completely different this week. And so far, it is certainly working.

Risky or not, Westwood is not looking at leaderboards as he plays the Dubai World Championship. But after Friday's second round, he is two in front and on course for a $2.7 million jackpot on Sunday.

Up for grabs is not only one of the richest tournaments in European Tour history, but also the Order of Merit crown he last wore nine years ago. Win the event and he wins that, too.

In 2000, Westwood was the young pretender who dethroned Colin Montgomerie after the Scot's seven successive years at the top.

Now he is the vastly experienced professional trying to knock 20-year-old upstart Rory McIlroy out of the top spot in the last week of the yearlong marathon.

But despite having won 30 times since leaving the amateur ranks, he agreed to go along with what Foster suggested.

"Billy has kind of banned me from it this week," said Westwood after a 69 took him to 9 under par and left him the man to catch after an amazing day of twists and turn.

"I have no interest in anybody else's game," he added. "I've never done it before and it will be hard, but I will look on Sunday night."

One suspects, though, that he and Foster might just bring that forward if the situation demands it late in the final round.

"Looking at the board (he allows himself to do that once off the course), there's probably nobody more experienced than the pair of us, so hopefully that will have a massive effect," Westwood explained. "He's had a few really good bits of advice -- and if it turns out well, I'll tell you them all on Sunday evening."

Australian Robert Allenby led overnight, but he bogeyed two of the first four.

In contrast, Westwood birdied the first two and led by two. But then McIlroy -- tied for fifth overnight, three behind Allenby -- moved two in front with a dazzling front-nine 31 containing a tap-in eagle on the 572-yard seventh and three birdies.

Coming home, though, the youngster three-putted the 14th and 15th for bogeys, missing from three feet each time.

Out in front as a result of that was Padraig Harrington, but he put two balls in the water for a closing double-bogey 7.

So, with Westwood sinking a 20-foot birdie putt there minutes later, the chasing pack will have their eyes on him when play resumes at the new Greg Norman-designed Earth Course on Saturday.

McIlroy, Harrington and Allenby share second place with England's Ross McGowan, South African Louis Oosthuizen and Colombian Camilo Villegas.

Harrington's last-hole drama could have done even more damage to his hopes of a first Tour win of the year at long last, but he remembered just in time to go and retrieve his ball in the hazard by the green.

It could have been a two-shot penalty otherwise -- "it's probably the most baffling rule in golf,'' he said -- but Harrington then confessed that he did not even know the water was there.

"I'm glad it wasn't Sunday afternoon when I did it,'' stated the Dubliner. "Much better on a Friday.

"As a finishing hole we normally feel we need a strong par 4, but we've got a strong par 5 this week," he added. "Things like that are going to happen. It's a new course and we don't know fully know all the intricacies. I would have take the score going out, so I'm quite happy.''

McIlroy was trying not to dwell on his two missed short putts, although at 123rd in the putting statistics for the season he knows it is area that still requires work.

"I got off to the perfect start and I have to think I'm still in a good position,'' said the player trying to become the young Order of Merit winner since Seve Ballesteros in 1976.

His fledgling career contains only one victory so far. That was in the Dubai Desert Classic (on a different course) in February, so it would be a notable double if he can reel in Westwood.

Make that a treble. The Race to Dubai title is the new name for the money list.

German Martin Kaymer and England's Ross Fisher cannot quite be ruled out of the race yet, but at 2 under and level par, they lie 24th and 39th.

Kaymer needs a top-four finish and Fisher top-two to even have a chance, but with Westwood and McIlroy going so well, even that would probably not be enough.

Copyright 2009 PA Sport. All rights reserved.

 
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