DP World Tour : Soudal Open Tee Times Leaderboard
Costly bogey's at the 17th and 18th have cost Aaron Cockerill his place on the weekend at this weeks Soudal Open in Belgium.

At -4 for the event standing on the par5 17th he drove it into the trees and had to chip out, then he did the same on the 18th both resulting in bogey's.
His 69 71 -2 has fallen just below the -3 cut line.
Next week is the Austrian Alpine Open, where at Category 18, he is listed in the field.
Bryan Angus
FINAL EDIT>>>26/05/22
Zander Lombard produced late magic on day two of the Soudal Open to head into the weekend in a share of the lead with Tom Vaillant at Rinkven International Golf Club.
The South African, who held a one stroke lead after the opening round in Belgium, holed a long-range birdie putt from 31 feet at the last to join the Frenchman at the top of the leaderboard after 36 holes.
He began his round on the back nine with a birdie at the 11th, adding back-to-back birdies at the 16th and 17th holes to make the turn in 32. More birdies at the first and fifth came either side of a bogey at the third before a final moment of magic on the last hole of the day.
"It was tricky today, being late in the field. The greens got a bit trampled, and it was really a hot day today, so it started getting a bit firm and a bit more bouncy. I think this weekend's conditions are going to be really tricky.
I just want to have a lot of chances tomorrow, keep hitting the fairways and the greens. It sounds very simple and bland, but that's good golf; it's pretty boring.
I've been pretty aggressive off the tee. My woods are kind of my strong points this week, so I'm leaning on them and trusting on them, and hopefully they behave this weekend.
Vaillant produced a second consecutive bogey‑free round to set the early target, following up an opening 65 with a superb -7 64,
The Frenchman, who also delivered two bogey‑free rounds at the Estrella Damm Catalunya Championship a fortnight ago, credited consistency for the composed performance that moved him to the top of the leaderboard.
“It was very solid," he said.
"I think it’s my fourth bogey‑free round in the last six, so it was pretty good. I’m playing well, I’m enjoying it out there, back in Europe finally, so it feels good."
He arrived in Belgium encouraged by a T6 finish at the Volvo Championship earlier in the season and a strong closing 69 in Barcelona, and he has carried that form seamlessly into this week.
The pair sit three strokes clear of a group of five players, made up of Jacob Skov Olesen, Casey Jarvis, Richard Sterne, Jorge Campillo and Ben Schmidt.
Elsewhere, Belgium's Nicolas Colsaerts said an emotional farewell in front of friends and family on the 18th green, missing the cut in his final start by two strokes but ending his career grateful.
After 505 events, a Ryder Cup and three DP World Tour titles, he ended his career grouped with great friends in Marcel Siem and Alexander Levy playing in front of home fans.
I just hope that people will understand what it means to the majority of us who do this for a living, to have good times, but also navigate bad times. And this is why there's tears. It a lot to take. My wife Rachel has been holding down the fort at home for almost 10 years now. It really means the world.
"I really gave it a great run. It was a little bit like the Colsaerts of old on the front nine. I started to believe again, and I forgot what it felt like, when the putt for eagle on six went in, it's probably the biggest roar that I've heard in a couple of years, and it was absolutely amazing. It's just a shame that I couldn't really cap it off with playing the weekend, but I gave it a good run. In Colsaerts style, I was up and down all day, which has been a story of my life.
"Thank you to everyone that has followed, that has clicked on my name, that has clapped wherever that would have been around the world, we've been everywhere. I have had a lot of fun doing this. All good things come to an end. I don't have the gas anymore, but I've had an absolute blast, so don't feel bad for me. Just keep going to the golf course. It’s a wonderful game. It drives you nuts at times, but, you know, that's why we come back every weekend to play."
europeantour.com
Bryan Angus (edit)