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Monty misses cut in Walker Classic

Colin Montgomerie missed his second successive cut at the Johnnie Walker Classic in Perth on Friday
Colin Montgomerie missed his second successive cut at the Johnnie Walker Classic in Perth on Friday

Colin Montgomerie missed a second-successive cut on Friday when he crashed to a second-round 74 in the Johnnie Walker Classic in Perth.

He needed an eagle on the par-five last at The Vines to be sure of making it through to the weekend but charged his 40-foot attempt six feet past the hole and then missed the return.

Last week Montgomerie made an early exit from the Dubai Desert Classic in the week that a divorce settlement reported to be £15million was agreed with his ex-wife Eimear.

The last time the 42-year-old missed two cuts in a row was two years ago either side of his heroics at the Ryder Cup in Detroit. The first of those came at the German Masters in the week his wife was granted a divorce.

Two-under par overnight in Australia, Montgomerie improved to four-under, but then had double bogeys on the 11th and 14th. He did birdie the 16th and 17th but, even though a third in succession might have squeezed him into the final round, he went for the eagle and was never on line with the shot back at the hole.

He was not the only big-name casualty. South African Retief Goosen missed his first European Tour cut since 2003, also finishing on level par, while New Zealander Michael Campbell bowed out at halfway for the first time since winning the US Open last June.

Ryder Cup captain Ian Woosnam missed a third successive cut this season and Nick Dougherty's failure to make it through almost certainly ends his chances of moving into the world's top 64 for the Accenture World Match Play in California in two weeks' time.

Damien McGrane, Peter Lawrie and Gary Murphy have also missed the cut and will not be involved in the remainder of the competition over the weekend.

Leader at 13-under was South Korean KJ Choi after rounds of 65 and 66. He finished day two ahead of American Kevin Stadler, son of former Masters champion Craig.

Adam Scott, joint first round leader with Stadler, slipped back to joint third with fellow Australian Richard Green on nine under while English rookie Ross Fisher and Ryder Cup star Ian Poulter are a stroke further back.

Poulter is also looking to move into the world's top 64 for the match play, the event in which he reached the semi-finals last year.

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