Relevant offers
Golf
Charl Schwartzel's second successive round of seven-under-par 65 gave him a four-shot clubhouse lead at the Thailand Golf Championship.
The 2011 Masters winner appeared to have recovered from the rib injury that has affected his swing for much of the season and was on 14-under-par 130 after 36 bogey-free holes in the $1-million Asian Tour event.
Indian-born Swede Daniel Chopra had his second successive 67 to lie four shots behind Schwartzel before second-round play was suspended due to darkness.
Twenty-five players will return early Saturday to finish their rounds.
After a 90-minute delay due to a lightning storm, last year's runner-up Schwartzel rushed to the 18th tee box to complete his round in semi-darkness to earn a few precious extra hours in bed on Saturday.
"We were running to finish. I didn't want to come back at 5 a.m. to play one hole - (I'm) happy to have a bit of a sleep," the 28-year-old South African said.
"It has been really solid. I've put two great rounds together. I hit the ball nicely and gave myself a lot of chances.
"It is still a long way to go. It's half the job done. From my side, I just have to keep playing."
Asian Tour rookie Masanori Kobayashi of Japan briefly held the lead before signing for a five-under-par 67 to drop five shots off the lead.
Sergio Garcia was three shots further back with big-hitting Scott Hend of Australia after the Spaniard carded his second straight 69.
Garcia turned in 36 but bounced back with three birdies in the closing five holes.
"I'm in a decent position. I would like to do better for the weekend but hopefully if I get a good weekend then I might have a chance," said Garcia.
Joining him on 138 was Masters champion Bubba Watson who sank three birdies in his opening eight holes but could not keep the momentum going and settled for a two-under-par 70.
Defending champion Lee Westwood was left to lament his poor putting after carding a three-under-par 69 to fall nine shots off the lead.
"Just okay, played alright. I wasn't making anything," the world number six said.
"I've made nothing the first two days and left too many out there - missed too many short ones which is the main difference really," said the Englishman.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Vettori not sure how long body can hold up
Force may feel all of Highlanders frustration
World number one too good for Kiwi
Erakovic through to doubles final
Shaun Johnson 'hurt' but no rift with Elliott
Rain washes out opening day of second test
Penalty on fulltime costs Crusaders bonus
Marco Rojas dodges Wynton Rufer concerns
Gym-bound Jesse Ryder keeping head down
Emotional Williams bids farewell to All Blacks
Right to time to step down - Noeline Taurua
Maori All Blacks is a good fit for Colin Cooper
Anguish at fatal fire in Hokitika
Scam spread may have snared socialite
Seriously happy to upset the status quo
Paroled killer's 'risky' actions
Men jailed after gangland turf shootout near school
Oversized truck caused US bridge collapse
Rain for the north, winds for the south
Jet deployed after incident on-board flight
Daytona 675R is NZ's finest supersports bike
Shaun Johnson 'hurt' but no rift with Elliott
Force may feel all of Highlanders frustration
Rain washes out opening day of second test
Mitch Evans on podium in Monaco GP2 race
