Aboitiz-logoAmerican Nicolas Paez returned with a bogey-free four-under-par 68 to grab the clubhouse lead by one shot at the weather-disrupted US$100,000 Aboitiz Invitational on Thursday.

The 27-year-old Paez, who started the round two shots back, fired four birdies to move atop the leaderboard with a two-day total of seven-under-par 137 at the challenging Wack Wack Golf and Country Clubā€™s East course.

Countryman Blake Snyder matched his efforts of a 68 to share second place with overnight leader Jay Bayron of the Philippines, who battled to a 71, at the Aboitiz Invitational, which is the 18th leg of the Asian Development Tour (ADT) schedule this season.

Thailandā€™s Rattanon Wannasrichan signed for a 71 to sit in fourth place on 143 while Swedenā€™s Malcolm Kokocinski (72), Indonesiaā€™s George Gandranata (72), American Micah Shin (72) and David Gleeson (71) of Australia settled a further shot back in fifth.

Paez, who came through the Asian Tour Qualifying School earlier in January, was thrilled to return with a flawless round to put himself on track on a maiden ADT title.

ā€œI am just happy that I laid up on the par-three eighth and made par again! It is a very difficult hole. I made some good birdies from 10 to 15 feet which was great. Overall it was a very clean round. I was able to hit a lot of fairways and greens which was key.

ā€œThis is my first time at Wack Wack and itā€™s been enjoyable so far. You need to make good decisions to stay out of trouble out there. I am lucky enough to be in the lead but I just want to play my game and keep doing what I am doing,ā€ said Paez.

Starting from the 10, Snyder traded two birdies against a bogey to turn in 35 before nailing three straight birdies from the third on his way home.

ā€œThe highlight was definitely the three birdies in a row. I actually had the same yardages on these holes. I had a 120 yards to six feet on the third and on the fourth, I had a 120 yards to six feet again. On the fifth, I had a 120 yards to two feet. I was telling myself to just hit it to that distance,ā€ said the 24-year-old American.

ā€œI had a good game plan and I executed it nicely today. I had a nice up and down on my last hole ninth. I like to play on tight courses because itā€™s similar to the kind of courses which I grew up playing on. You have to think your way through the course,ā€ added Snyder, who claimed his breakthrough ADT win in Malaysia last August.

Bayron, who held a two-shot lead heading into the round, dropped two shots on 12 and 18 but recovered with birdies on two, four and seven to hang on to a share of the lead.

ā€œI didnā€™t start off well but I played well on my back nine today. I putted very well on the back. I sank a five-footer on seven and another 10-footer on fourth. I had a good come back on the back after dropping two shots on the front.

ā€œIt was different today compared to yesterday. It was less windy this morning but it was still very challenging out there. Iā€™ve won this tournament before so it gives me some confidence coming back to play this tournament again,ā€ said the 37-year-old Filipino, who had capped five top-10s on the ADT so far this season.

The halfway cut is projected to be eight-over-par 152.

For more information on the ADT, please visit www.asiandevelopmenttour.com.

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Leading second round scores:

137 ā€“ Nicolas PAEZ (USA) 69-68

138 ā€“ Blake SNYDER (USA) 70-68, Jay BAYRON (PHI) 67-71

143 ā€“ Rattanon WANNASRICHAN (THA) 72-71

144 ā€“ Micah Lauren SHIN (USA) 72-72, David GLEESON (AUS) 73-71, George GANDRANATA (INA) 72-72, Malcolm KOKOCINSKI (SWE) 72-72

145 ā€“ Suradit YONGCHAROENCHAI (THA) 72-73, Jobim CARLOS (PHI) 70-75, Johnson POH (SIN) 70-75

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