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Otto and Kruger pick up the baton
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Otto and Kruger pick up the baton

The South African domination of the Maybank Malaysian Open continued early on day two with Hennie Otto and Jbe’ Kruger taking over the reins from Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen.

Jbe Kruger

While playing partners and best friends Schwartzel, the 2011 Masters Champion, and Oosthuizen, the 2010 Open Champion and runner-up last week at Augusta, stole the headlines on day one, two of their less celebrated compatriots made all the early running on the second morning at Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club.

Otto reeled off eight birdies to match Schwartzel’s opening 64 and set the clubhouse target of nine under par 135 and a short while later Kruger joined him at the top of the leaderboard following a seven under par 65.

“I think all of us (South Africans) are coming into this tournament with a little bit of form coming back,” said Kruger, who claimed his maiden title earlier this year when he won the Avantha Masters in India, an event also co-sanctioned with the Asian Tour like this week. “I spoke to Charl and  he said he was struggling in the last couple of weeks. I was struggling as well so I guess we are just coming back into form.”

Otto missed out on a practice round after thinking he would be playing in the pro-am on Wednesday but remaining on the reserve bench so his only sighting of the course prior to yesterday’s opening round was a walk round the course.

“I played the course blind yesterday because I was first reserve for the pro-am and was expecting to get into that and use it as my practice round but it didn’t happen,” he explained. “ I walked the course on Wednesday so had an idea but it is obviously a lot different when you come to play it. I had never been here before so it was a decent start and then today I felt a lot more comfortable on the greens and made the putts which is the difference.

“I have been playing well recently and we are taking small steps and gradually getting there. Most of the work that I have been doing is really on the mental side as opposed to the technical side of things and I am sticking with and trying to build on that momentum.”

Former World Number One and another of the Major Champions in the field, Martin Kaymer, is also right in the mix at seven under par alongside American David Lipsky after the pair both shot 67.

“I played really well today and gave myself a lot of birdie chances,” said the 2010 US PGA Champion. “I had a good eagle chance on three and felt like a hit a lot of good putts but maybe just over-read the greens. But I am seven under for the tournament now which is good and I feel good about the game and if I can make a few more putts I feel I can really get into the tournament.

“I will be a few shots behind after today so I will approach tomorrow a bit more aggressively. I am playing well – it is just a matter of time before I get a win again and get the results onto the scorecard. Sometimes patience is the most difficult thing in this game. “

As the afternoon session developed Oosthuizen was yet to show any signs of fatigue.

After his valiant play-off defeat to Bubba Watson on Sunday, followed by a 30-hour journey from Augusta National, the 29 year old picked up two birdies and no dropped shots over his first 11 holes.

That left him eight under, just one behind compatriots Kruger and Otto. The news was not so good for Schwartzel, however, as he played the same stretch in three over par to drop four behind.

Scotland’s Stephen Gallacher was also going well, playing the back nine in a two under 34 to join Kaymer on seven under.

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