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Golf-Whitnell sinks 2 hole-in-1s in the second round of S.African Open

After making two holes-in one at the DP World Tour South African Open held at the Durban Country Club, Englishman Dale Whitnell will likely toast his success in the clubhouse.

Whitnell, who had never achieved a hole in one in tournament play before, aced both the second and the 12th holes in his second round. Both par threes. His rollercoaster round of 63 leaves him with nine under par for the tournament. He is five shots behind the clubhouse leader Shaun Norris (64), from South Africa.

The play was suspended on Friday evening due to poor lighting. Several players were still playing their second round.

Dylan Naidoo of South Africa carded an impressive 61, which included 10 birdies, including one eagle. He is now in second place and just one shot behind Norris.

According to the National Hole-in-One Registry in the United States, the odds of getting two holes-in-one on the same course are 67,000,000 to 1.

Whitnell is the 545th ranked player in the world and the second person in DP world Tour's history to achieve this feat, after Australian Andrew Dodt, who achieved it at the Nordea Masters, in 2013.

John Hudson, another Englishman, also bagged incredible aces on consecutive holes in the Martini international at Royal Norwich in 1970.

Whitnell: "I birdied my first hole and then hit an iron flush on the second. I didn't realize that it was in until the bottom of the green (down the bottom), they cheered. So that was wonderful."

"I had never been five under par through three holes before. Then I managed to get a hole in one on the 12th. It was strange.

"I had it all today. "I can't complain. I had an air shot, two double bogeys and a double bogey. I also came out nine under par."

After heavy rains on Wednesday, the course was flooded. This delayed the start of Thursday's first round.

It is expected to rain more on Sunday, which will have a knock-on impact for the 156 players. (Reporting and editing by Toby Davis, Ken Ferris, and Nick Said)

(source: Reuters)