McIlroy in pole position

Golf: Rory McIlroy remained on course for victory over Anders Hansen as their second round match at the WGC Match Play Championship…

Golf:Rory McIlroy remained on course for victory over Anders Hansen as their second round match at the WGC Match Play Championship in Tucson entered the closing stages. For the second day running McIlroy was in the penultimate game and the second seed was three ahead with four to play.

One small step for some was a giant leap for Lee Westwood today as he finally made the last 16 at the 12th attempt. Needing to win the title on Sunday to regain the world number one spot from the already-departed Luke Donald, the 38-year-old third seed beat Robert Karlsson 3&2 in the second round at Dove Mountain near Tucson.

Westwood, six under par in defeating Nicolas Colsaerts, won four of the first six holes, but had to go far further than seemed likely when he moved five clear at the 10th. Without a bogey in his first 27 holes, he suddenly made a mess of the long 11th and then saw the Ryder Cup Swede chip in for eagle at the 583-yard 13th.

Westwood was in the desert scrub again off the tee at the driveable 15th and Karlsson did not even have to putt to be only two down. But a par on the short next was good enough when Karlsson failed to get up and down from sand and Westwood then had to wait to see if it was three-time winner Tiger Woods he faced for a place in the quarter-finals.

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For the second day running Woods was involved in a tight encounter. After edging out Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano on the final green from one down with four to go Woods trailed fellow American Nick Watney by one with two to play. Not that Westwood would consider Watney an easier opponent. He is the player who has knocked him out the last two years.

Scots Paul Lawrie and Martin Laird, meanwhile, set up a clash against each other. Lawrie followed up his first-round victory over England’s Justin Rose by taking out 20-year-old Japanese star Ryo Ishikawa, again on the final green. Laird, meanwhile, got the better of 18-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero 2&1 — and had no fewer than eight birdies in the process.

“I needed all of them. That was a great match,” said the United States-based Laird. “That’s as good as I’ve played in a while.”

A quarter-finalist on his debut in the event 12 years ago — he was Open champion at the time, of course — Lawrie is making his first appearance since 2003. Winner of the Qatar Masters earlier this month and on course for a return to the Ryder Cup side after a 13-year gap, the 43-year-old from Aberdeen was one ahead on three separate occasions before he finally got into a two-up lead when Ishikawa bogeyed the ninth.

His opponent refused to let him get away, though, and Lawrie’s bogey on the 17th meant it went the distance. Ishikawa had a 15-foot chance to take it into extra holes, but missed.

Robert Rock failed to repeat his performance against world number eight Adam Scott, going down 3&2 to American Mark Wilson. Biggest win of the week so far came from American Dustin Johnson, who after coming from three down to defeat Ryder Cup team-mate Jim Furyk thumped Italian Francesco Molinari 7&5.

Steve Stricker, another of the home contingent and winner in Australia in 2001, was in danger of going out to South African Louis Oosthuizen on his 45th birthday. Stricker, behind for much of the day, sank a 20-foot birdie putt on the last and then saw the 2010 Open champion miss from 13 feet.

Ernie Els, having hammered Donald 5&4, was on the receiving end of the same scoreline against Swede Peter Hanson — a big blow to his hopes of qualifying for The Masters in April. Els will remain outside the world’s top 50, but has until the end of next month to get there and earn a place at Augusta.