NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE, England – Dale Whitnell had an eagle and five birdies for a 7-under 64 in the second round of the British Masters to move second at Close House Golf Course on Thursday.
Whitnell is 10 under par at the halfway stage, a shot behind Renato Paratore (66), on the European Tour's full return to action.
The 31-year-old Whitnell played on the 2009 Walker Cup team alongside Tommy Fleetwood but struggled to establish himself in the professional ranks and was forced to take on a courier job for 10 months to make ends meet.
A victory on the Portugal Pro Golf Tour earned him five Challenge Tour invites in 2019 and he won the KPMG Trophy last September before claiming his European Tour card from the qualifying school.
"I've been working hard on my game and this course suits me because it's a little bit fiddly in places," said Whitnell, who had not earned anything from five events in 2020 before the circuit shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic.
"The peaks and troughs of the golf profession are very interesting. You've just got to try to deal with it the best you can," Whitnell said. "I love the game, I wouldn't be here if I didn't and my amateur career speaks for itself."
Justin Harding fired a brilliant 63, the lowest round of the week so far, to sit alongside Whitnell on 10 under.
Overnight leader David Law (69), Calum Hill (66), Ashley Chesters (66) and Rasmus Hojgaard (67) are a stroke further back.
The tournament marks the start of the European Tour's "U.K. Swing," a series of six events played in England and Wales over the next six weeks devised primarily for ease of travel for players amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The venues for the six events are all within a three-hour drive of one another, scrapping the need for air travel to which players have become accustomed on the increasingly global tour. Players and caddies have been tested on arrival, will have to check for symptoms and take a temperature test daily.