Showing posts with label DBChampionship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DBChampionship. Show all posts

9/02/2014

Rory Finishes Fifth in Boston

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Rory McIlroy failed to covert final round contention into a title win. And as McIlroy, the world number one, closed out the Deutsche Bank championship with a 70 that ultimately left him four shots adrift in tied-fifth position, 29-year-old American Chris Kirk claimed the biggest title of his career and also moved to the top of the FedEx Cup rankings.

Kirk demonstrated a superb ability to scramble and shot a free closing round 66 for a total of 269, 15-under-par.

Another member of that US team at RCD also played his part in the final round drama, as Billy Horschel stood in the middle of the 18th fairway requiring a birdie to force a play-off and an eagle to win.

However, Horschel caught his approach shot heavy and watched in disbelief as his ball came up in the waste hazard to signal the end of his ambition.

It proved to be a costly second shot to the 18th, as Horschel bogeyed the final hole to drop back into a share of second place with Geoff Ogilvy and Russell Henley on 271.

“It is always great to play well on a big stage like that, I love being in that kind of an environment ..... playing with [McIlroy] definitely heightens my level of focus,” said Kirk. The win catapulted Kirk to the top of the FedEx Cup and also put him in line for a Ryder Cup pick from Tom Watson.

“I have said all along I would love to be a part of the team and get a pick. I have put myself in contention for one, we will just have to wait to see what happens,” said Kirk.

McIlroy – who finished with a 70 for a total of 273, 11-under – failed to get any momentum going on the front nine, where a birdie on the drivable Par 4 fourth hole was followed by back-to-back bogeys.

On the fifth, he was twice in rough and, on the difficult sixth he got too greedy from a bunker and his ball hit the lip of the bunker and came back to rest at his feet. When McIlroy birdied the seventh and eighth to move to 11-under, it appeared as if the Ulster man was ready to finally make his move. It didn’t happen.

Just as his name appeared towards the top of the leaderboard, McIlroy fell backwards with bogeys on the 10th (when in rough off the tee) and the 12th, where he missed the green with his approach shot. McIlroy had to wait until the 16th, where he hit his tee shot to 12 inches, to get back on the birdie train.

He kept the best until the end, hitting a huge 347 yards drive off the 18th tee and then hitting his approach from 180 yards to eight feet.

The birdie at least moved McIlroy to a share of fifth, sufficient to keep him in second place in the FedEx Cup standings and very much in contention for the $10 million bonus that awaits the champion after the Tour Championship.

Before heading out, McIlroy: “I think this golf course suits a longer hitter. I am comfortable around this course, there’s a big Irish community in Boston who come out to support me.”

Two players hoping to catch the eye of European captain Paul McGinley showed decent form: Ian Poulter finished with a 66 for 277, seven under, for a share of 23rd place, while Luke Donald closed with a 67 for level par 284, in tied-57th.


9/01/2014

Wonderbar McIlroy Hits 64

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Rory McIlroy stormed up the third-round leaderboard at the Deutsche Bank Championship with a flawless seven-under 64 on Sunday.

The in-form McIlroy collected seven birdies to reach 10-under-par overall, two behind leader Russell Henley.

Henley came home in 31 shots for a 65 and is one ahead of his fellow American Billy Horschel (67) heading into Monday's final round at TPC Boston in the second event of the FedEx Cup play-off series.

American Chris Kirk (64) and Australia's Jason Day (69) sit a stroke further back, alongside McIlroy, on a packed leaderboard featuring 14 players within five of the lead.

McIlroy made an excellent start with birdies at two and three before driving a 132-yard approach to nine feet at the seventh, with a nerveless putt moving him to three under for his round.

Two more excellent up and downs at the 13th and 15th left him with simple putts, while he was inches away from acing the 16th, consoling himself by tapping in for his seventh birdie of the day.

He passed up a chance to close his round with a flourish after finding the rough with his approach on his final hole, but he saved par and will now fancy his chances heading into Monday's final round.

McIlroy has won three of his last four tournaments heading into Boston, having triumphed at the Open Championship, the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and the US PGA Championship in recent weeks.

Speaking after his round, he said on Sky Sports 4: "I converted some more of the chances that I gave myself today. I was pretty frustrated coming off the golf course in the last couple of days because I felt like I left a lot of shots out there.

"Even today, I felt like I might have left a couple out there, especially on the last. But I'm happy with how I converted those chances and I'm going to need to do the same tomorrow if I'm going to win."


8/31/2014

McIlroy's Labor Day in Boston

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Rory McIlroy continued second round of the Deutsche Bank Championship showing some inconsistency as Australian Jason Day continued his form to tie American Ryan Palmer for the lead in Boston.

Despite an unexpected bogey on his final hole, Day carded a three-under-par 68 in fluctuating afternoon winds while Palmer shot a 71 in the morning at the TPC Boston.

They finished level at eight-under 134, one stroke ahead of Americans Matt Kuchar (66) and Billy Horschel (66) on a tightly-bunched leaderboard.

McIlroy, slowed by a double-bogey at the par-four 14th where his approach shot bounded 30 yards over the green into a hazard, fired a 69 to trail the leaders by five shots.

Day, the world number seven whose quest this year to win a first Major title was ruined by a thumb injury, maintained the red-hot form he displayed last week to tie for second in the first of the PGA Tour’s four FedExCup play-off events.

“To be in contention last week and (again) this week goes to show the hard work I’ve put in the last four or five weeks is definitely paying off,” Day told reporters.

Day’s round was a tale of two halves. He was five under on the front nine but two over coming home as the swirling wind made it difficult to judge club selection.

The Australian had visions of a birdie at the par-five 18th when he had an iron in his hands for his second shot, only to drop a stroke after firing his approach over the green and taking four more shots to hole out.

“I made the front nine look very easy today (and) made the back nine look very hard, but overall I’m very happy with how I’ve played the last couple of days,” Day said.

Palmer, meanwhile, says his goal over the final two rounds was to play well enough to “make it hard on Tom Watson”.

He was referring to the US Ryder Cup captain, who on Tuesday will announce his three wildcard selections to complete the 12-man team to take on holders Europe at Gleneagles in Scotland next month.

“I’m proud of the way I hung in today. I had to grind it out,” said Palmer. “It could have got away pretty fast (but I) stayed patient, stayed calm and salvaged even par.”

A total of 80 players made the cut, which fell at three-over 145, and several Americans with hopes of earning a late Ryder Cup spot bowed out early, including Brendon Todd,Kevin Na and 2012 FedExCup champion Brandt Snedeker.

The top 70 players on the FedExCup points list after the Deutsche Bank Championship advance to next week’s BMW Championship in Englewood, Colorado where the leading 30 will qualify for the Tour Championship finale in Atlanta.


8/30/2014

Rory Under Par at Deutsche


Rory McIlroy ended the first round of the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston on Friday with a round of 70, finishing one under par. A day which featured a mix of five birdies and four bogeys, left the 25-year-old Northern Irishman eight strokes adrift of leader Ryan Palmer.

After McIlroy finished his round, he playfully flicked a tee peg in the direction of Jason Day and missed. “Not the first one I’ve missed today,” quipped McIlroy, who had started off like a train with three birdies in his opening four holes only to falter coming in.

McIlroy – seeking to return to the top of the FedEx Cup standings – made an ominous early move with birdies on the 10th, where he started, from inside two feet; the 11th, where he holed a 35-footer, and the 13th where he again played a majestic approach to 18 inches. He suffered a first bogey of his round on the 17th, where he failed to get up and down from a greenside bunker.

Although McIlroy returned to three under on his round with a 10-footer for birdie on the fourth, he stumbled coming in with back-to-back bogeys on the fifth (where he found a fairway bunker) and the sixth (where he missed the green left with a poor approach shot). A tap-in birdie on the seventh was followed by a dropped shot on his finishing hole when his tee shot was pushed into the right rough.

“The golf course (is) playing tougher than the last couple of years. It’s firmer, (the) rough is up, windier. . .” said McIlroy, who has his eyes set on capturing the $10 million bonus prize on offer to the winner of the FedEx Cup play-offs. McIlroy – who won the British Open, WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and US PGA in successive tournaments in July-August – fell behind Hunter Mahan into second in FedEx the standings following the opening play-off series event last week, the Barclays.

McIlroy – who is sticking to a plan to play all four play-off events, moving on from Boston to the BMW in Colorado next week and then the Tour Championship in Atlanta – remains very much in the hunt going into the weekend in Boston, where there is a Monday finish on what is the Labor Day holiday in the United States.

Bradley, playing in front of home galleries and seeking to impress US Ryder Cup captain Tom Watson, showed his form with an opening round 65 and admitted that getting a wild card pick was very much on his mind. “Yeah, it always is . . . when I eat, when I sleep. I’m not going to say a bunch of clichés and say I’m not thinking about the Ryder Cup . . . I know (Watson) is watching.”

But another player from the European camp looking for a captain’s pick for Gleneagles also stepped up to the mark. Ian Poulter, who is outside an automatic spot, needs a wild card pick from Paul McGinley if he is to follow up on his heroics at Medinah two years ago. But, unlike Bradley, the Englishman – who opened with a fine 67 – was adamant he wasn’t thinking of the Ryder Cup. “I’m not thinking about it . . . it’s been a s**t year and I want that to turn around right now,” he said.


9/04/2012

McIlroy Overcomes TPC Boston

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Rory McIlroy overcame a three-shot deficit Monday in five holes, and then survived mistakes on the final two holes to close with a 4-under 67 and escape with a one-shot victory over Louis Oosthuizen. McIlroy's win moved him from fourth to first in the FedExCup standings.

McIlroy joined Tiger Woods as the only three-time winners on the PGA Tour this year, and with one of his wins being the PGA Championship, that might be enough for his peers to vote him player of the year. He also finally built a comfortable gap at No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Oosthuizen had a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to force a playoff, only it slid by on the right side for a 71.

Woods made an early charge to get back in the hunt, though he never got closer than three shots until a two-putt birdie on the par-5 18th gave him a 66. He finished in third place, two shots behind, and earned enough money to become the first player to surpass $100 million in PGA TOUR earnings.

Phil Mickelson also had a 66 and tied for fourth, along with Dustin Johnson, who had a 70 and likely played his way onto the Ryder Cup team. Brandt Snedeker made a strong case for a captain's pick with a 65-67 weekend to finish sixth.

Davis Love III will announce his four picks Tuesday morning in New York.

McIlroy didn't make it easy on himself. The 23-year-old from Northern Ireland had a three-shot lead with six holes to play, and only a clutch bogey putt on the 17th hole kept him from losing all of his lead.

"I had a couple of wobbles coming in, but I obviously did enough and I'm very excited to get a victory," McIlroy said.

Oosthuizen, who had to cope with pain in his right shoulder earlier in the round, came back with two birdies on the back to get within one shot. McIlroy hit a chip over the 17th green into more rough, and it looked as if he would struggle to make bogey. Oosthuizen, however, missed the green from the fairway, chipped poorly to 10 feet and missed his par putt, and Boy Wonder calmly sank his 5-foot bogey putt to stay one shot ahead.

"The 17th hole cost me," Oosthuizen said.

With McIlroy's move to the top of the FedExCup standings, he assured himself a shot at the $10 million bonus at THE TOUR Championship later this month.

It was the second time this year that Oosthuizen, who won the British Open by seven shots at St. Andrews two years ago, failed to win after leading going into the final round. McIlroy made an early charge with three straight birdies, but the turning point came on the fifth hole when Oosthuizen felt pain in his shoulder on a tee shot that sailed into the trees and led to double bogey.

The pain went away on the back, which the South African attributed to an adrenaline rush.

As always at the TPC Boston, this was quite a show on a late summer day in New England. This is the tournament that delivers duels between Woods and Vijay Singh (twice) and Woods and Mickelson. This time, all of them had fleeting hopes of winning.

McIlroy and Oosthuizen turned it into a two-man race, with Woods lurking until he couldn't convert enough putts. In the end, neither could Oosthuizen. He missed from just inside 10 feet for par on the 17th and from 12 feet on the 18th.

"I probably made all my putts yesterday," Oosthuizen said.

McIlroy becomes the youngest player with five PGA TOUR wins since Woods, who had 15 wins at age 23.

There was other drama at the Deutsche Bank Championship, though it was not nearly as compelling as the top of the leaderboard.

Charley Hoffman went from the first page of the leaderboard to an unimaginable collapse until he steadied himself at the end. Hoffman, who was 13 under after a birdie on the eighth hole, played his next nine holes in 8-over par, including a quadruple-bogey 7 on the par-3 11th. He came to the 18th needing a par to finish among the top 70 in the FedEx Cup and advance to the third playoff event next week in Indianapolis.

He went over the green in two, barely chipped onto the putting surface, and then ran his putt 12 feet by the hole. He made the putt for par, and moves on.

"I didn't expect to be playing next week," Hoffman said. "Shooting 42 on the back nine, I don't think I deserved to play next week. But I guess I've got another chance."

Others who advanced included Dicky Pride, who birdied his last two holes to get the 70th spot by one stroke over Jonas Blixt; and Chris Kirk, who stumbled at the start only to birdie four of his last five holes.

Oosthuizen had a three-shot lead at the start of the final round, though he was never expecting an easy time. McIlroy rallied to cut a six-shot deficit in half on the back nine of the third round to give himself a chance, another example why he is No. 1 in the world.

Sure enough, McIlroy came out firing.

He hit a beautiful lag from just off the green on the par-5 second hole for birdie and rolled in a 12-foot birdie on the third to get within one shot. McIlroy hit 3-wood into the front bunker on the drivable par-4 fourth, the ideal position, and his bunker shot bounced off the pin to set up a third straight birdie. Oosthuizen stayed in front when his birdie putt from 25 feet dropped in on the final turn.

The fifth hole changed everything.

Oosthuizen reached for his shoulder after a horrific snap hook off the tee. The ball dove into the woods and landed in the middle of shoulder-high bushes, leaving him no option but to take a penalty drop out of the hazard. He laid up short of the creek and two-putted for double bogey. They were tied, because McIlroy's tee shot found a clump of native grass on the edge of a bunker, and he had to chip out short of the creek and made bogey.

Oosthuizen, though, was clearly hurting. He couldn't get through his swing on the next tee shot, which sailed into the bunker and kept him from attacking the pin. That's what McIlroy did, hitting 9-iron into 3 feet for birdie and his first lead. He never gave it back.

McIlroy and Oosthuizen could barely see Woods in his bright red shirt ahead of them, but they could hear what was going on. Woods ran off four birdies over the last six holes on the front nine, but he didn't make another one until the last hole.

"I certainly had my looks," Woods said. "I drove it really well on the back nine and just didn't hit it close enough at all. The only one I stuffed there was 17, and I missed that one."



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