1/17/2015

McIlroy's Day Moves Wrong Way

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Rory McIlroy admitted he felt like "punching himself" after a dreadful performance on the greens left him eight shots off the lead after the third round of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship.

The world No 1 was just two behind leader Martin Kaymer at the halfway stage but, as the German crafted a sublime bogey-free 65, McIlroy laboured to a 71 despite excelling from tee to green.

McIlroy missed only two fairways and hit 17 greens in regulation, but he struggled to contain his frustration as a succession of birdie chances failed to find the target.

The Northern Irishman, twice a runner-up in Abu Dhabi, did manage to convert excellent approaches at the sixth and 12th holes, but hopes of a grandstand finish effectively ended with a bogey at 13.

After another chance grazed the lip on the final green, McIlroy’s tap-in for par was his 34th shot with the putter as he closed on 12 under par.

A clearly-deflated McIlroy told Sky Sports 4: "I feel like punching myself. I'm very disappointed, I just didn't putt well – yesterday or today.

"I'm going to have to do something a bit better on the greens to shoot a good number and finish the tournament off well"

"I hit the ball just as well as I did yesterday and gave myself so many chances but I didn't convert any. I was very wasteful today. It looks like I'm playing for second place tomorrow.

"From tee to green I've never felt more comfortable. I'm driving the ball great. It's just a matter of capitalising on the chances you give yourself and I didn't do that today.

"I tried to stay as patient as possible but it was very frustrating. I started the ball on line for the most part but struggled with the speed as well, so it's a combination of that.

"You're always trying to improve and get better and I'm going to have to do something a bit better on the greens to shoot a good number and finish the tournament off well.

"I am now trying to win the other tournament. Martin's playing in something a little different than everyone else. I think I'm two behind Thomas Pieters and I will try and catch him. It's obviously very unrealistic that I'm going to catch Martin."

In contrast, McIlroy’s Ryder Cup team-mate Victor Dubuisson reflected on a fine day’s work after the Frenchman vaulted up the leaderboard with an eight-under 64 – the low round of the day.

Dubuisson had been hampered by a back injury in the latter part of 2014, but he appeared to be swinging freely in Abu Dhabi as he rolled in eight birdie putts and kept a bogey off his card to move to 11 under.

But while he was delighted with his performance, Dubuisson still trails runaway leader Kaymer by nine shots and he knows he needs something special over the final 18 holes.

"It was a good day, I played really well. I holed some good putts compared with the other days. I'm very happy about the score," Dubuisson said. "But I think I'll need to shoot 10 under tomorrow to have a chance."

The world No 19 rose to worldwide prominence with his run to the final of last year’s WGC-Accenture World Match Play, and he also played a starring role in Europe’s Ryder Cup victory at Gleneagles in September.

But Dubuisson is keeping his expectations realistic for the coming year, insisting he has not followed McIlroy’s lead in compiling a list of targets for the season.

"I just want to do better for myself, I don't feel any more pressure," the 24-year-old added. "Golf is a sport where you can have two or three bad years and then come back. It's very difficult to keep the same level every year so I'm just trying to do my best on every round, every event.

"It's difficult to write, 'this year my target is to win two majors' because I haven't even won one. I haven't won a PGA Tour event, so first I try to keep consistent in my game, maybe win one or two events."


Kaymer Has Rory in Rear View

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Martin Kaymer will take a one-shot lead into the weekend of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship as Rory McIlroy remained in touch with the German after a spectacular hole-in-one on the second day.

Kaymer kept a bogey off his card as he added a classy 67 to his opening 64 to set the early clubhouse target at 13 under, and that proved enough to earn him the halfway lead after Thomas Pieters bogeyed his final hole.

But it was McIlroy who provided the highlight of the second round when he celebrated his first ace in professional competition – a perfectly struck nine-iron finding the bottom of the cup at the 177-yard 15th that lifted him to within three of the lead.

The world No 1 struggled on the greens for much of the day, but he rolled in a clutch par putt from 12 feet at the 17th and holed from similar range at the last for a closing birdie – his fifth of the round – to cap a six-under 66.

McIlroy had started his day with a pair of birdies just as Kaymer was putting the finishing touches to his second round, and the US Open champion headed off to lunch having extended his overnight lead to five shots.

Highlights and reaction from the second day of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship.

Kaymer, who has won three of the previous nine events in Abu Dhabi, started at the 10th and soon got into his stride with birdies at 12 and 13 before another at the 18th completed a back-nine 33.

He started the front nine with an unlikely birdie as he holed his escape from a greenside bunker, but a cold putter then halted his momentum until he got one to drop at the eighth before closing with a cast-iron par.

But Kaymer insisted afterwards that he was happy with his performance despite letting a few opportunities slip on the greens, and he was particularly pleased with his game from tee to green.

"I guess the greens, I can read them very well and my stroke always feels well when I come here," Kaymer told Sky Sports 4. "Again, today, I didn't miss many fairways, which gives you the opportunity to go for a lot of flags.

"To be honest I really believe the golf course plays two or three shots tougher in the morning than in the afternoon, because once you miss the fairway, you're in that thick, wet grass and then it's almost impossible to get home in two on the par fours.

"So therefore, I was very happy to shoot five under today."

McIlroy was denied a place in Saturday’s final pairing by Pieters, who carded an excellent 67 despite not making a birdie at any of the four par-fives.

The young Belgian matched Kaymer’s back-nine 33 and three birdies over the next six holes pulled him level with the leader until his blotted his card at the ninth to close on 12 under.

England’s James Morrison earned himself a place alongside McIlroy in the third round after he birdied the final two holes to complete a six-birdie 67 that elevated him to nine under par.

Morrison shares fourth place with Peter Uihlein, who kept a bogey off his card in a solid 68, while Frenchman Alexander Levy (70) and Australian veteran Richard Green (68) are a short further adrift.

Further down the field, star American attraction Rickie Fowler scraped into the weekend with nothing to spare on two under after labouring to a 75 which was blighted by an ugly triple-bogey eight at the long eighth.

Justin Rose also made the cut on the number after managing four birdies in a workmanlike 69, but his Ryder Cup team-mate Henrik Stenson was unable to avoid a weekend off.

The world No 2 made a gallant attempt to bounce back from Thursday’s torrid 76, but his five-birdie 68 merely lifted him back to level par for the tournament, while defending champion Pablo Larrazabal’s 72 was one too many to make the weekend.