Miguel Angel Jiminez on course to become Tour’s oldest winner

MIGUEL Angel Jimenez has hopes of becoming the European Tour’s oldest-ever winner this weekend – thanks to the circuit’s youngest-ever winner throwing the Andalucian Open wide open.

Eighteen-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero held a three-stroke lead after his course record-equalling opening round of 64 at Aloha, but managed only a 73 on his return.

Tournament promoter Jimenez, who has had to dip into his own pocket to help provide the £830,000 prize money, is now in joint second place after a 68.

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Having turned 48 in January, the Ryder Cup star would be 39 days older than record holder Des Smyth if he grabs his 19th Tour title tomrrow.

Surprise halfway leader is his fellow Spaniard, Eduardo de la Riva, ranked only 610th in the world and not even a member of the circuit. The 29-year-old from Barcelona, one of eight players given places in the event from the Spanish Order of Merit, is eight under par after rounds of 67 and 69. He has been to qualifying school nine times and only once made it through, a decade ago. But last October he had his best-ever finish of third at the Madrid Masters.

Jimenez, at 51st the highest-ranked player in the field, is one behind, along with Manassero, Irishman Damien McGrane and another of the home contingent, Pablo Larrazabal.

Of the Scots in the field, Alastair Forsyth is best placed at three-under-par, one ahead of David Drysdale and two ahead of Richie Ramsay. The quartet of Gary Orr, Stephen Gallacher, George Murray and Marc Warren are all on level-par, but Colin Montgomerie, Craig Lee, Peter Whiteford and Steven O’Hara all missed the cut.