Gregory Bourdy and Zander Lombard share the lead at the halfway stage of the Lyoness Open, as Adrian Otaegui discovered what a difference a day can make. Latest leaderboard Lyoness Open Otaegui held the overnight lead after equalling the course record with a flawless opening 64, but failed to register a single birdie on Friday at Diamond Country Club in Austria. Highlights from round 2 of the Lyoness Open in Austria The 23-year-old carded a double bogey, two bogeys and 15 pars in a disappointing 76 to finish four under par, three shots behind Bourdy and Lombard. Chris Wood is the highest ranked player in the field this week Bourdys chances of a fifth European Tour title suffered an early blow when, after starting from the 10th, he bogeyed his second hole of the day, but the world No 135 bounced back with birdies on the 14th and 15th.After a run of eight straight pars the 34-year-old then completed his round in style, tapping in for birdie on the par-three sixth after a superb tee shot and almost holing his approach from 209 yards on the ninth.We were thinking between a five or four iron and I had quite a good lie in the rough, Bourdy told Sky Sports after signing for a 69. We were thinking maybe it was going to fly a bit and its dry as well in front of the green, so I think a five iron was the best option and we saw the result. The Frenchman mixed four birdies with a sole blemish to set the clubhouse lead It was a great day. It was very tough with the wind blowing the same or harder than yesterday and we had some tough pin positions.Lombard surged into a two-shot lead thanks to four birdies in his first six holes and recovered from a bogey on the eighth with another birdie on the ninth, but had to settle for a round of 70 after dropped shots on the 12th and 13th. It was so brutal with the wind out there today, the 21-year-old said. Club selection was absolutely crucial and with the pin positions today, they were tough with the wind direction.I was really hitting great shots on the front nine with just a few misjudgements with the winds on the back nine which cost me a few shots. A little three-putt and a bad pitch and thats all it was. The rest was solid and Im very happy to be in this position for the weekend. Lompard let a two-shot advantage slip away Frances Gary Stal is a shot off the pace after adding a 71 to his opening 67, with Spains Borja Virto a shot further back on five under. Former champion Joost Luiten and Englands Richard McEvoy are alongside Otaegui on four under.Defending champion Chris Wood carded a second consecutive 71 to lie two under.Watch the Lyoness Open throughout the weekend live on Sky Sports 4 - your home of golf Also See: Lyoness Open leaders First round highlights Wood defends Lyoness title Golf live on Sky Sports Air Max 97 Shanghai Kaleidoscope . The 25-year-old McIlroy, who is from Northern Ireland, was eligible to play for either Ireland or Team GB when golf makes its return to the Olympics in Brazil for the first time since 1904. Air Max 97 Ultra 17 Red . Geovany Soto had an RBI for the Cubs. Carlos Silva gave up one run on three hits over six innings to pick up the win. Josh Willingham drove in the lone run for the Nationals, who had just four hits. http://www.outletairmax97.com/mens-nike-...923288-300.html. -- Jack Del Rio only wanted to talk about the Cowboys, not the Trojans. Air Max 97 Undefeated Fake . Browns owner Jimmy Haslam announced the move with Young on Monday during a speech at a Pro Football Hall of Fame luncheon. Nike Air Max 97 Plus Sale . The 21-year-old Canadian earned a spot in his third career ATP final on Saturday thanks to his first Top 10 victory of the new tennis season, a 6-4, 6-4 win over world no. 10 Nicolas Almagro of Spain.MONACO -- Real Madrids Champions League title defence takes shape Thursday at one of the most open draws in years. Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Chelsea -- the past four winners -- are among the eight top-seeded clubs in the 32-team draw. However, lower-ranked seeding pots loaded with big spenders returning to the Champions League after years away promise to deliver trickier than usual groups. Five-time winner Liverpool will make its first appearance since 2009 in Pot 3, decided by rankings over five years of UEFA competition results. Manchester City, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain -- champions of England, Italy and France -- are in a strong Pot 2, which also includes 2013 finalist Borussia Dortmund. Former finalists Monaco and Roma are the glamor options sharing Pot 4 with unheralded Maribor and group-stage newcomers Ludogorets and Malmo. Though Spain, England and Germany all have a full quota of four teams in the draw, they all also have a team in lowly Pot 3, with Athletic Bilbao and Bayer Leverkusen joining Liverpool. The four-team groups, which kick off Sept. 16, cannot include two teams from the same country. Madrid could start its quest for a record-extending 11th European title in a blockbuster group with PSG, Liverpool and Roma. Still, no team will beat the defending champions for star power. Madrid rode its forward line of Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth Bale and Karim Benzema to the title last season, and now has added World Cup stars James Rodriguez of Colombia and Toni Kroos of Germany. Barcelona countered buying Luis Suarez from Liverpool to join Lionel Messi and Neymar in a forward line of South American superstars. Suarez will miss three Champions League matches while serving his four-month FIFA ban for biting Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini at the World Cup, though a reunion with the Juventus player is possible later in the group stage. Bayern, the 2013 winner, is among only three national champions in the top-seeded ranks, along with Atletico Madridd and Benfica.dddddddddddd Benfica and Porto give Portugal two top-seeded teams despite combining for only one Champions League quarterfinal appearance in the past five years. Both added ranking points from good Europa League runs. Both are among 10 former European champions in a draw which counts Manchester United and AC Milan as notable absentees. Man City and PSG are still building their Champions League pedigree and rankings after spending heavily to catch more established rivals. As a result, UEFA punished both for breaching Financial Fair Play rules by limiting their squad quota of senior players to 21 instead of 25. Zenit St. Petersburg, also in Pot 2, is limited to 22 senior players. Another UEFA order means Ukrainian and Russian teams cannot play each other for security reasons. That will separate Shakhtar Donetsk in Pot 2 from CSKA Moscow in Pot 3. Shakhtar, whose expensive stadium has been damaged in the conflict in eastern Ukraine, must also play its home matches in the western city of Lviv. The 32 teams will share nearly 1 billion euros ($1.34 billion) in UEFA prize money. UEFA pays a basic 8.6 million euros ($11.5 million) fee for entering the group, plus 1 million euros ($1.34 million) per win and 500,000 euros ($670,000) per draw. Teams also get a share of television rights money. The top two teams in each group advance to the Round of 16 starting in February. The final will be played at the Olympic Stadium in Berlin on June 6 -- the latest date since the first European Cup final on June 13, 1956. ------ Seedings Pot 1: Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Chelsea, Benfica, Atletico Madrid, Arsenal, Porto. Pot 2: Schalke, Borussia Dortmund, Juventus, Paris Saint-Germain, Shakhtar Donetsk, Basel, Zenit St. Petersburg, Manchester City. Pot 3: Bayer Leverkusen, Olympiakos, CSKA Moscow, Ajax, Liverpool, Sporting Lisbon, Galatasaray, Athletic Bilbao. Pot 4: Anderlecht, Roma, APOEL, BATE Borisov, Ludogorets Razgrad, Maribor, Monaco, Malmo. ' ' '