Schwartzel and Madsen set to renew rivalry at Alfred Dunhill Championship

South African was unhappy with several of the hole locations on the back nine

Charl Schwartzel of South Africa: joint leader with  Dane Morten Orum Madsen after second round. Photograph: Getty Images
Charl Schwartzel of South Africa: joint leader with Dane Morten Orum Madsen after second round. Photograph: Getty Images

Defending champion Charl Schwartzel and Dane Morten Orum Madsen look set to renew last week’s South African Open rivalry after ending Friday’s second round of the Alfred Dunhill Championship as joint leaders.

Former US Masters champion Schwartzel, who last year romped home by 12 strokes for the third-largest winning margin in European Tour history, returned a second successive 68 for an eight-under-par total of 136 at Leopard Creek on the border of the Kruger Park.

Pin problems
Despite not dropping a shot today, Schwartzel was unhappy with several of the hole locations on the back nine, the former Masters champion having to play at a 90 degree angle away from the pin on the par-three 12th, where the severe slope helped Argentina's Emiliano Grillo win a BMW earlier in the day for a hole-in-one.

“There were a few pin positions that were very, very iffy, 13 and 14 in particular,” Schwartzel said. “They have gone too close to the limit. Maybe they put them out in the dark.”

Madsen, who played alongside Schwartzel in winning the South African title last Sunday, overcame two double bogeys to finish with three birdies in the last five holes for a one-under 71 for his round.

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Ryder Cup players Ross Fisher of England and Soren Hansen of Denmark both produced the best rounds of the day, seven-under-par 65s, on the picturesque course, putting them one off the lead on 137.

Finch errors
South African Tyrone van Aswegen and Englishman Richard Finch were a further shot back although Finch, who lost his tour card last year and is playing by invitation, might have been further up the leaderboard.

He was the early frontrunner yesterday but two bogeys and then a double bogey on his last three holes saw him finish with a 70.

Double major winner John Daly missed the cut as he continued his comeback from an elbow tendon injury in only his second tournament since surgery in July. The American’s three-over 73 left him on 147 for the first two rounds, three shots above the cut.