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AAP
Murray Wenzel

Smith in PGA nightmare as Lee, Scott shootout looms

Cameron Smith had a second round to forget at the Australian PGA Championship in Brisbane. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Cameron Smith has fought back tears describing his worst day as a pro golfer, the local favourite shooting a seven-over 78 to miss the cut in his Australian PGA Championship defence.

While Min Woo Lee and Adam Scott are primed for a title shootout, the three-time event champion Smith will have the weekend off to ponder what went wrong in Brisbane.

He started 10 shots off the lead on Friday at Royal Queensland but slid further behind.

A double bogey at 10 and bogeys on the final two holes lowered him to nine over for the tournament, well behind the one-under cut line and 21 shots behind leader Lee (12 under) in equal-148th place.

The former world No.2 said he couldn't remember a worse day on the golf course as a pro.

"Yeah, no words. S***," Smith said while choking back tears.

"I've performed under pressure before and it's not acceptable, a bit upsetting actually.

"I know what I'm doing, it's just going out there and committing to something is another thing."

Cameron Smith.
Cameron Smith missed the cut after shooting a second-round 78 at Royal Queensland. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Smith missed putts, sprayed drives, found bunkers and again left irons short, the 2022 British Open champion shaking his head at what's believed to be his worst round in tournament golf.

Good showings in Brisbane and at Sydney's Australian Open next week were crucial for Smith, who as a LIV Golf member has limited chances to boost his ranking and earn selection for next year's Paris Olympic Games.

Smith finished second in the LIV Golf season that concluded a month ago and was also runner-up in his only other appearance since, at this month's Hong Kong Open.

"I hope I can get it together for next week and put on a better show than that," he said, before spending the next 15 minutes signing autographs and posing for photos with fans.

Meanwhile, Lee (66) and Scott (65) traded birdies to move clear at 12 and 11 under respectively. 

"It's golf, that happens and next week I'm sure he's going to bounce back, it's what good players do," Lee said of his out-of-sorts playing partner.

"With family and friends, in his hometown ... a few drinks and loosen up for next week."

John Lyras carded a round of 67, backing up his opening-day 65 to be outright third at 10 under.

An ace on the 17th party hole helped Curtis Luck (67) to eight under and a share for fourth with Lucas Herbert (68) and overnight leader Joel Moscatel Naschshon (71).

Min Woo Lee.
Min Woo Lee carded a 66 to be 12 under at the halfway point of the Australian PGA Championship. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Lee matched his Thursday haul of four birdies on the front nine to claim an outright lead at 11 under before a bogey on the 10th.

Scott had an eagle putt on the seventh hole roll narrowly by and then an iron approach for eagle bounce out of the ninth cup.

But the 2013 Masters champion birdied both of those and made two more long birdie putts, before a birdie on the 10th took him to 10 under and equal-first.

It continued on the 12th, Scott's drive to the 292m par four hitting the flag and bouncing out, before his eagle putt also rimmed out.

Adam Scott.
Former winner Adam Scott shot a six-under 65 in round two in Brisbane. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

Scott still made birdie to claim an outright lead for the first time, but Lee answered with clutch putts down the stretch to edge ahead again.

Earlier, Herbert revived his campaign with six birdies after quickly dropping three shots to finish eight under and Cameron John (65) matched Scott's round to be seven under.

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