Showing posts with label McIroyRory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McIroyRory. Show all posts

4/25/2016

Bon Jour as McIlroy Commits to France

McIlroy - Getty Images
Rory McIlroy will miss the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in America this summer to play at the 100th Open de France.

The clash between the two tournaments has occurred following a re-working of the PGA Tour's 2016 calendar to accommodate the Rio Olympics in August, where golf will return again to the programme.

Moving the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational forward a month has caused friction between the European and PGA Tours.

Four-time Major winner McIlroy won the prestigious Bridgestone event in Akron two years ago, but he feels playing at Le Golf National near Paris - the host venue for the 2018 Ryder Cup - from June 30-July 3 will help his Open chances at Royal Troon.

"I feel that playing in the 100th Open de France at Le Golf National will be the best way to get ready for The Open, which is just two weeks after the French Open," McIlroy said.

"Le Golf National might not be a pure links course, but it is traditionally firm and fast and can throw up some tricky conditions during the French Open.

"It's a great test of golf and I think playing there, as well as staying in Europe, will offer the best conditions to prepare for The Open at Troon."

Northern Ireland star McIlroy has previously played twice in the French Open, in 2008 and 2010.

The world number three failed to defend the Bridgestone Invitational title he won in 2014 last August after rupturing ankle ligaments caused during a football game with friends.

McIlroy's decision will come as a huge boost for the European Tour which was annoyed by the PGA Tour moving the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational into the same week as the French Open, continental Europe's oldest national championship.

Last summer the European Tour withdrew its sanction for the WGC event.

That means the Bridgestone Invitational is not part of the 2016 European Tour international schedule, and money won in it will not count towards The Race to Dubai or for Ryder Cup points.

This year’s Dubai Duty Free Irish Open hosted by the Rory Foundation takes place at The K Club on May 19 - 22, 2016.




Related articles

2/20/2016

McIlroy Stays in Riviera Hunt

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy carded a roller-coaster 69 in the second round of the Northern Trust Open on Friday to sit just four shots off the lead going into the weekend.

Four-times major champion McIlroy, who opened with a 67 on his first PGA Tour start of the year, produced sharply contrasting nines as he mixed five birdies with three bogeys to move up the leaderboard.

"I played the front nine very well, very solid, at three-under par," said McIlroy. "The back nine was a little scrappy.

"A bogey from the middle of the fairway at 13 and then to three-putt 15 ... two unforced errors there. I can't make those going into the weekend if I want to have a chance to win."

Journeyman Jason Kokrak, best known for his power hitting, moved one shot clear after the second round in California as world number one Jordan Spieth missed the cut.

American Kokrak, whose best PGA Tour finish was a tie for second at the 2012 Frys.com Open, charged to the top of the leaderboard with a sparkling seven-under-par 64 on a sun-splashed day at Riviera Country Club.

The 30-year-old racked up eight birdies, including five in his last nine holes, and a lone bogey to post a 10-under total of 132, ending the day a stroke in front of compatriot Chez Reavie.

However, several big names were in close pursuit, including nine-times PGA Tour winner Dustin Johnson, twice Masters champion Bubba Watson and world number three McIlroy.

"You definitely can call upon past experiences," Kokrak, a double winner on the satellite Web.com Tour, told reporters. "I've put myself in that position enough times that I can go out there, stick to my game plan and just hit golf shots.

"I've putted it really well the last four or five rounds out here on tour. That's the biggest key for me. If I putt well, I'm always kind of close to the top-10, top-20."

Watson, who won the 2014 Northern Trust Open and has always relished playing Riviera, made only three birdies on Friday, and would love to see more putts drop over the weekend.

"It was just one of those days, they (putts) just didn't go in," said Watson. "Yesterday all of them went in.

"But the short putts is what I liked today. I didn't miss any inside five feet. And I didn't make any bogeys, so that would be pretty good over the weekend."

The cut fell at level-par 142 with Masters and US Open champion Spieth the biggest name to miss out after adding a 68 to his shocking opening round of 79.

"I can certainly take positives out of today's round," Spieth said after mixing eight birdies with five bogeys. "I'm not going to let this one get to me very much."


8/16/2015

Can Rory Break Records

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy requires a record nine-shot recovery to win the 97th edition at Whistling Straits and overcome Jason Day heading who leads into the final day.

5. Bob Tway
Greg Norman held the lead going into the final round of every major championship in 1986, and the PGA Championship at the Inverness Club was no exception.

But the Australian was usurped in Ohio by Bob Tway, who overturned a four-stroke deficit to clinch his only major title, before later being named PGA Player of the Year.

Tway's comeback began with Norman's double-bogey at the 11th, and ended by holing from a bunker at the last to win by two shots.

Despite trailing by just a single stroke at the start of the final round, Bradley found himself five shots off the lead with three holes remaining.

A gain at 16 followed by a 35-foot birdie on the 17th, coupled with three consecutive bogeys by Jason Dufner, forced a play-off between the Americans at the Atlanta Athletic Club in 2011.

Bradley wasted no time in the three-hole showdown, triumphing by one-shot after a birdie at the first. "I can't believe it, I feel so proud," the 25-year-old said afterwards - and rightly so.

3. Bob Rosburg
Bob Rosburg trailed Jerry Barber by six shots going into the final round at the Minneapolis Golf Club in 1959.

Despite Rosburg carding the best round of the final day with 66, Barber still looked in control with three holes to play.

Three pars would have been enough for Barber, but two bogeys meant he ended the tournament one stroke behind Rosburg.

2. Steve Elkington
Ernie Els set a three-day record at the PGA Championship in 1995 with 197, but was unable to prevent Steve Elkington from lifting the Wanamaker Trophy on the final day.

Elkington fired a final-day 64, which remains the greatest closing round by a PGA champion to date, and he was joined in a play-off by Colin Montgomerie when the Scot holed an 18-foot birdie at the last.

As if Elkington's 64 wasn’t enough, he buried a 25-foot putt for birdie on the first extra hole for victory.

1. John Mahaffey
Mahaffey's seven-shot comeback in 1978 remains the greatest in the history of the PGA Championship.

Tom Watson offered a helping hand, struggling to a final-round 73, while Mahaffey ripped through the course with a stunning 66.

A four-foot miss by Jerry Pate at the last forced a play-off, which Mahaffey won with a birdie on the second to avenge his 18-hole play-off defeat at The Open three years earlier.


8/13/2015

McIlroy Gets The Shanks


Rory McIlroy will attempt to become just the second player in the modern era to successfully defend the US PGA Championship this week, but will do so armed with a healthy new perspective.

McIlroy feared he had broken his ankle while playing football with his friends on July 4, but a ruptured ligament was serious enough to prevent him defending the Open Championship at St Andrews and WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in Akron.

The 26-year-old thought he would be unable to bring himself to watch his rivals do battle for the Claret Jug, with Jordan Spieth narrowly failing to win the third leg of an unprecedented calendar grand slam before Zach Johnson eventually triumphed in a play-off.

However, McIlroy was surprised by his reaction to events at the Old Course as he battled to get fit enough to return to competition at Whistling Straits, where he finished a shot outside the play-off in 2010.

"I honestly thought it was going to be harder than it was. I thought I was going to miss it more than I did," said McIlroy, who will play alongside Spieth and Johnson in the first two rounds.

"But if anything, having to sit those tournaments out, especially the Open Championship going back to St Andrews, which is probably my favourite venue in the world, it gave me a huge sense of perspective.

"When you're playing week in, week out and you're thinking about winning these tournaments, you get so wrapped up in what you're doing and your own little life and your own little bubble; sometimes you forget there's a bigger, wider world out there.

"No matter whether you win a golf tournament or not, people are going to get up on Monday morning and go to work and do their daily things and honestly not a lot of people care.

"Obviously it means a lot to you and people involved in golf, but in the big scheme of things, it's not life or death.

"And that's something that I can bring in with me this week, knowing that, okay, it's a big deal, but no matter what happens this week, only a very small percentage of the population really care."

McIlroy insisted he would not give up playing football and revealed he was taking two-hour walks within two weeks of the injury occurring in his "fourth or fifth game in a 10-day period", but admitted he would need to take precautionary measures for the rest of his career.

"I thought I broke it because as soon as I went over on it I heard like a snap," the four-time major winner added.

"Obviously that was the ligament that snapped. I looked down and 30 seconds later it got the size of a tennis ball, basically because all the fluid came out of the joint capsule.

"When I got the scan that night it showed that I totally ruptured one ligament and I had a grade two (tear) in the other. If that had been a total rupture then that would have required surgery.

"It was always going to be a six-eight week injury. Then it just depends on the individual. As injuries go, it could have been worse.

"The ligament that I ruptured, I don't have that any more. So I've only got two ligaments on the outside of my ankle instead of three. It's just about trying to strengthen the ankle and maintain as much integrity in it as possible. But it's really not anything to be concerned about in the long term."

Since the US PGA became a stroke play event in 1958, only Tiger Woods in 1999-2000 and 2006-2007 has won back-to-back titles.

But McIlroy will aim to convert his superb tournament record - since 2009 he is a collective 34 under par, 17 shots better than anyone else - into a third title in four years following wins at Kiawah Island in 2012 and Valhalla last year.

"I think more than anything else the golf courses that we have played in this tournament have been set up in such a way that it suits my type of game and it really rewards good driving," McIlroy added.

"I think it's usually a fair test of golf, somewhere within 10 to 15 under par usually wins. It's not like it prevents the guys from making birdies, but it still penalises you if you don't hit good shots.

"My expectation levels are the same. I've been practising for over three weeks, getting my game ready, getting my game sharp. I feel like I'm playing well. I don't see any reason why I can't bring the sort of form that I've shown in practice rounds and on the range to the tee on Thursday afternoon."


6/21/2015

McIlroy No Rub of Green

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy admitted he had doubts over his putting after squandering a number of chances to get back into contention for the US Open in the third round.

The world No 1 was again impressive from tee to green at Chambers Bay, but he needed 31 putts in a frustrating level-par 70 that left him on four over par for the tournament.

McIlroy, who has now had 96 putts over 54 holes, started confidently with the short stick as he holed a great putt for par from 15 feet at the first and nailed another from similar distance for birdie at the second.

He converted another sublime approach at the seventh, but he missed "seven good chances" on the back nine and dropped shots at the 11th and 15th before holing from 12 feet to salvage a par-five at the last.

"I missed seven good chances on the back nine, or seven makeable putts, anyway," said McIlroy, who dropped shots on the 11th and 15th. "It was just nice to see one drop at the last there. I feel like I turned a 65 into a 70 today.

"Whenever you start to miss a couple you start to get a little tentative. You start to doubt yourself. You start to doubt the greens a little bit. And then it just sort of snowballs from there. I holed a few nice ones early on, but once I missed a couple it got into my head and couldn't really get out of it."

Henrik Stenson had likened the greens to putting on broccoli after the second round, but McIlroy joked: "I don't think they're as green as broccoli. I think they're more like cauliflower.

"They are what they are, everyone has to putt on them. It's all mental. Some guys embrace it more than others, and that's really the way it is. It is disappointing that they're not in a bit better shape. But the newer greens like seven and 13, they're perfect.

"I played last Sunday and I felt like they (the USGA) brought it a little too much towards the brink then. And it's always a struggle from then to sort of rein it back little bit. I would have liked to see them keep it a little greener for the practice rounds and then gradually as the tournament progresses get a little firmer.

"That might have kept the greens in a bit better shape, but you never know. I've never been here before, but I hear that the weather isn't always like this. If there had been a little bit of moisture and had it been overcast the greens might not have gotten baked out and as bumpy as they are."

McIlroy admitted he was frustrated to four-putt the 17th and drop another shot on the 18th in his second round, but was happy to have ground out a score after missing the cut in his previous two events.


5/29/2015

McIlroy Cut in County Down

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy has missed the cut in his home event for the third year running after failing to recover from a nightmare first round at the Irish Open.

The world No 1 always faced an uphill battle to avoid a third straight cut in the event after crashing to an opening 80, with McIlroy failing to make the weekend after a second round 71 at Royal County Down GC. 

McIlroy made his first gain of the round with a lengthy putt at the seventh, before keeping his slim hopes alive with a birdie at the 12th to move back within two of the projected cut.

After a five foot par-save dribbled in at the 14th, McIlroy lost his advantage with a double-bogey at the next, sending his second shot into the rough and thinning his third past the green before three-putting from 40 feet.

Birdie chances from within 10 feet at both the 16th and 17th were dragged wide of the cup, before the tournament host gave the sell-out crowd something to cheer about by rattling in a lengthy birdie at the last.

“When the wind is like this, even when you’re giving yourself birdie chances it’s hard to take them,” McIlroy told Sky Sports 4. “I was trying out there as hard as I could, but just couldn’t get a run of holes going and any momentum.

“I was a couple under through 14 but still needed a good finish, but unfortunately I wasn’t able to do that. I left myself too much to do from yesterday and felt I played a solid round of golf today but just wasn’t enough.

“The support out here is phenomenal; it’s the third year in a row that they’re not going to get to see me play over the weekend, so it’s disappointing to say the least.”

Ryder Cup team-mates Martin Kaymer, Sergio Garcia and Victor Dubuisson also failed to reach the weekend, while American star Rickie Fowler is safely through after carding a second consecutive level par 71 of the week.


5/28/2015

McIlroy Cards Four Score

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy is in danger of missing the cut in his home event for the third year running after a nightmare first round at the Irish Open.

The world No 1 carded his worst first nine of the season, reaching the turn in 41, and never recovered as he shot a nine-over 80 - his highest round since the final round of the 2011 Masters. 

Both McIlroy and Ryder Cup team-mate Martin Kaymer failed to post a single birdie in windy conditions at Royal County Down, as playing partner Rickie Fowler opened with a level par 71 to stay within two of the early lead.

McIlroy came in to the event having missed the cut in his defence of his BMW PGA Championship title last week and despite insisting he felt refreshed after an unexpected weekend off, opened with a missed 15-foot birdie chance at the 10th and a dropped shot at the next.

The tournament host found the par-five 12th green in two but could only three-putt from long range, before things went from bad to worse with a run of four consecutive bogeys from the 15th.

After finding the bunker off the 16th tee and making another three-putt at the 18th, McIlroy eventually stopped the rot with a two-putt par for par at the first. 

The four-time major winner slipped further adrift after missing the green at the par-three fourth, adding a seventh bogey of the day at the next when a clumsy chip left him a long way from the flag.

A 12-foot birdie putt at the sixth appeared on line before slowing inches short of the cup, with McIlroy sending his tee-shot on the par-three seventh onto the wrong fairway to card another blemish. 

McIlroy bogeyed the eighth but looked set to make his first gain of the day at the par-four ninth, finding the green in two before sliding his birdie putt several feet past the cup.


4/10/2015

McIlroy Opens Masters with 71

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy made a low-key start to the Masters with a one-under-par opening round of 71.

The 25-year-old from Northern Ireland is hoping, this week, to join a select band of five golfers to have won each of the four major titles.

Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus achieved this feat before the 1970s, while Tiger Woods is the only pro to have completed all four triumphs during the last 48 years.

On day one at Augusta National, McIlroy mixed three birdies with a brace of bogeys but was not too downhearted at the end of his first circuit.

Speaking to Sky Sports analyst Tim Barter, McIlroy said: “It was OK. A solid start, could have been better but could have been worse as well.

“Put myself in some awkward positions on a few holes but I battled well and held it together.

“Made some nice putts, got some good up and downs, birdied the par fives on the back nine and one-under was a decent score.”

Asked how he felt teeing-up earlier in the day, he added: “A little nervous, very excited, just telling myself to stay as patient as possible because four days around here is a long time.

“You don’t want to get off to an anxious start and press too early. I kept making pars and was quite happy with that.

“I was conservative on the par fives but drove into the hazard on the first one at the second, which wasn’t the plan but still made a great par there.

“Then at the next par five – the eighth – put myself out of position and took my medicine and made par.

“So playing the four par-fives in two under wasn’t so bad in the end.”