But the pair is confident that they remain in the hunt for the World Cup of Golf. The duo – like every team – battled the elements throughout Friday’s round, remarking how many spectators, some of whom had stayed in the clubhouse and surrounds, looked “dry”.
But it was certainly a day that saw Metropolitan bare its teeth.
“No chance (I’ve played in anything like that before) – I think that’s the toughest conditions I think I’ve played in in Australia, ever, for sure,” Smith said.
Leishman – who has played countless times on Melbourne’s sandbelt – admitted its condition was foreign to him as a soft weekend looms.
“I’m used to playing it very conservatively – you kind of have to go middle of the greens,” he said.
“But when it’s like this, you can almost attack a little bit more than when it’s firm. Especially in the four-ball, we’ll have to be a little bit more aggressive to make up a bit of ground.”
The Australians sit tied for eighth after a four-over day, sitting four shots behind joint leaders Belgium and Korea.
Leishman said it remained anyone’s tournament. “We only have to play good and make a few putts, and we can be tied for the lead through nine tomorrow – who knows?,” he said. “It’s only going to take a good nine holes and we’re right back in it.”
Thursday’s four-ball saw the best score turned in at 62, but Leishman said he would not be surprised if a team broke 60 on Saturday– if the wind plays to their favour.
Scores Friday after the foursomes second round of the World Cup at the par-72 Metropolitan Golf Club in Melbourne (two days of fourballs and two days of foursomes in two-man teams):
134 – Belgium (Thomas Pieters/Thomas Detry) 63-71 South Korea (An Byeong-Hun/Kim Si-woo) 62-72 136 – Italy (Andrea Pavan/Renato Paratore) 65-71, India (Anirban Lahiri/Gaganjeet Bhullar) 64-72, Malaysia (Gavin Green/Ben Leong) 63-73, England (Tyrrell Hatton/Ian Poulter) 62-74 137 – Mexico (Abraham Ancer/Roberto Diaz) 67-70 138 – Scotland (Russell Knox/Martin Laird) 67-71, Australia (Mark Leishman/Cameron Smith) 62-76 139 – France (Alexander Levy/Michael Lorenzo-Vera) 66-73, Sweden (Alexander Bjork/Joakim Lagergren) 65-74 140 – Ireland (Shane Lowry/Paul Dunne) 64-76, Denmark (Thorbjorn Olesen/Soren Kjeldsen) 63-77 141 – Canada (Adam Hadwin/Nick Taylor) 68-73, Finland (Mikko Korhonen/Mikko Ilonen) 66-75, New Zealand (Ryan Fox/Mark Brown) 65-76 142 – Spain (Adrian Otaegui/Jorge Campillo) 68-74, China (Li Haotong/Wu Ashun) 66-76, South Africa (Dylan Frittelli/Erik van Rooyen) 66-76 143 – Wales (Stuart Manley/Bradley Dredge) 70-73 145 – Thailand (Kiradech Aphibarnrat/Prom Meesawat) 67-78, United States (Kyle Stanley/Matt Kuchar) 66-79, Japan (Satoshi Kodaira/Hideto Tanihara) 66-79 147 – Venezuela (Jhonattan Vegas/Joseph Naffah) 65-82 149 – Germany (Martin Kaymer/Maximilian Kieffer) 68-81 151 – Netherlands (Joost Luiten/Daan Huizing) 69-82 153 – Greece (Peter Karmis/Alexander Tranacher) 66-87 156 – Zimbabwe (Scott Vincent/Benjamin Follett-Smith) 72-84
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