RIYADH: In-form Ben Campbell kept his hopes of a LIV Golf League 2025 roster spot alive after an impressive second-placed finish on day two of the LIV Golf Promotions event.
A flawless seven-under 64 secured his place in the 36-hole final day alongside a number of regulars on The International Series in Riyadh, with a final field of 20 now battling it out for one spot on the LIV Golf League next season.
Campbell entered the tournament in round two as International Series Morocco champion, and highest ranked player on The International Series at three, after narrowly failing to secure an outright spot on LIV Golf last week at the season-ending PIF Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers.
There, on the same Riyadh Golf Club course, he finished one shot off a three-man playoff that ultimately saw LIV Golf star Joaquin Niemann crowned tournament winner and The International Series Rankings champion.
The New Zealander proved he was over that disappointment, carding his third 64 in a row, after posting two when it mattered last weekend, to finish one shot behind Scott Vincent, the 2022 International Series Rankings winner, and comfortably earn a place in the top 20 for the final day.
Campbell, also runner-up when defending his title at the Link Hong Kong Open last month, will go into the 36-hole shootout along with fellow qualifiers from The International Series, Gunn Charoenkul of Thailand (66), Richard T Lee of Canada (67), and Lee Chieh-po of Chinese Taipei (67).
Taichi Kho of Hong Kong (67) also made it alongside Asian Tour 2024 champions Steve Lewton of England (67) and Suteepat Prateeptienchai of Thailand (67), and all 20 players will start equal with the scores being reset once again ahead of the final day.
Campbell said: “I felt like I played pretty well. I got off to a good start, made a few birdies, turned four-under, and yes, I felt like I swung it pretty well all day. A couple of things to tidy up before tomorrow, but yes, I did the job I needed to do today.
“You’re going to have 20 guys firing at flags but I still think you have got to stay patient out there. It is one of those courses if you do not have your game, as long as you get through with a few pars, you can go on a few birdie runs out there.”
Charoenkul, who carded a five-under 66 to qualify for round two before the scores were reset, admitted he was playing with freedom and “zero expectations.”
He said: “With all the winners from 2024 coming in, and the guys from the LIV Golf League, it was like a one-day event, and I must admit I didn’t expect too much.”
The Thai has the big game in his locker — especially on the final day. He carded a 10-under round on the final day of the Black Mountain Championship, the fifth event of The International Series, then shot a final-round 63 the following week at International Series Thailand and a last-day 64 at the BNI Indonesian Masters.
He said: “I have to keep believing. I’m not too confident on the greens, but the way to combat that is to hit the ball as close as possible to the flag. I did that today, and hopefully can do the same over 36 holes on the final day.”