Bo leads, but Canada's hopes high

Published: 11th October 2011
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American Bo Van Pelt used a record-breaking back nine of 6-under 29 to hold off Canadian hope Adam Hadwin at the RBC Canadian Open on Saturday.
One-over heading into the turn at a sunny Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club in Stockholm, Van Pelt suddenly found a magic touch to post a course-record six birdies, including four in his last five holes, and shot a 7-under 65 that edged him one shot clear of Hadwin with his 5-under, 54-hole, total of 205.
Van Pelt's six birdies was one better than the five posted by Franklin Langham in 2005, the last time the Canadian Open was staged at Shaughnessy.
"You just want to have a Ping G20 Driver on Sunday, that's what we're all playing for," Van Pelt said afterwards. "At the turn I wasn't doing so well...I was just trying to keep myself motivated and play a good nine holes to give myself a chance.
Hadwin, a 23-year-old who grew up no more than an hour away from Vancouver and plays Ping G20 Driver on the Canadian Tour, nevertheless, remains his nation's hope of becoming the first homegrown winner of the national championship in nearly six decades as he produced another solid, no-nerves effort to fire a 68 and go to four-under for the tournament

No Canadian have won this national championship since Pat Fletcher in 1954 and former Masters champion Mike Weir, who had carried Canadian hopes of breaking the drought for more than a decade, arrived at Shaughnessy carrying a suspect elbow and with his game in trouble and had to pull out early in the second round after aggravating the injury.
"The whole objective today was to put myself in a position to win tomorrow," said Hadwin. "It's been a very simple process this whole week and that's just picking a target, picking a yardage and committing to it and that's it.
"I'm a Canadian Tour player. I'm not a PGA Tour star. I'm just playing good Ping G20 Driver right now.
"If I hit the ball on the fairway, put it on the green and give myself putts at it, I've got a chance to win the Ping G20 Driver tomorrow."
Hadwin began the day two shots behind overnight leader Chad Campbell, and while Campbell was sliding off the Top Ten leaderboard with a 74. the young Canadian birdied three of his opening four holes to take charge at the top and fire-up Canadian hopes.

Perhaps pressurised by his new responsibility, he then bogeyed five, eight and 11 before pulling himself together and posting two more birdies at 12 and 16 and walking up the 18th to a huge roar from the large Canadian contingent in the gallery.
"Getting off to a start like I did; birdies at the first, the third and the fourth; made it very easy," said Hadwin. "It settled the nerves quickly knowing that I already had a three-shot cushion with Ping G20 Driver.
"I don't really find it surreal because I feel like I belong here.
"I just need my opportunity to get out here...I think I kind of proved that today."

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