It's a wetter and windier second day than the first but this does not stop the crowds turning out in force. Lee Westwood tees off from the fifth looking to continue the form that saw him card 67 on Thursday
South African Louis Oosthuizen follows up his superb opening round of 65 by carding 67 on Friday to leave him 12 under overall and top of the leaderboard
Two birdies and an eagle on the front nine for Ricky Barnes maintains his challenge on Friday after he carded a four-under 68 on Thursday
Mark Calcavecchia (seen here driving the 18th) was one of the first to finish his round on Friday. The 1989 Open winner carded a superb 67 to leave him seven under and well in the mix ahead of the weekend
Paul Casey has every reason to be smiling, despite the weather and a triple bogey at 17. Five birdies on the front nine of his second round give him a second successive 69 to take him to six under
England's Luke Donald adds a level-par 72 to his 73 on Thursday. Initially he looks like he might miss the cut on one over par but as the day progresses and the wind gets up, it begins to look like he just might make it
Northern Ireland's US Open champion Graeme McDowell cleans his driver during a wet start to his second round at the Open Championship - he cards a four-under 68 and is tied for fifth
Another former champion to revive the old magic is Tom Lehman. The American, who won the Open back in 1996, cards an impressive 68 that sees him shoot up the leaderboard
So what colour trousers would former winner John Daly be wearing for his second round? He chose a fuchsia and white paisley patterned piece. A wallflower, he isn't
Lee Westwood looks glum under an umbrella as conditions continue to deteriorate. The Worksop man hits 17 pars and one birdie in a solid round of 71 to remain in the hunt
Daly may have cut down on alcohol and fatty foods in the past few years but the colourful American shows he still has some vices in between shots - he cards a gruelling 76 for -2 overall
The weather continues to offer players problems all over the course. Vijay Singh struggles with rain on the 17th but it is increasing winds that is causing most concerns on the Fife coast
With balls starting to move on the greens, officials take the decision to suspend play due to high winds. Bubba Watson and his caddie use the hour-long break to take the weight off their feet
The suspension puts the breaks on rounds of several of the leading contenders at St Andrews, including Tiger Woods and overnight leader Rory McIlroy
McIlroy certainly gets the worst of the wind to contend with when play resumes. The 21-year-old struggles in a big way on the front nine, reaching the turn four over for his round
And McIlroy's round doesn't improve down the back nine. He follows up his course record of 63 on Thursday with an 80 on Friday as winds and tricky pin placements continue to test players to the limit
Woods, meanwhile, continues to go about his business while many others are falling apart around him. The world number one finishes with a respectable one-over 73, moving to four under overall
The suspension of play in the afternoon gradually catches up with the players in the evening as light fades dramatically. Here, Tom Watson drives into near darkness on the 16th
But the 60-year-old, who almost won the Open last year, still takes time to say goodbye to St Andrews on the famous Swilken Bridge on the 18th hole just before play ends for the night
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