Showing posts with label The Honda Classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Honda Classic. Show all posts

3/05/2016

McIlroy Back in Mix After 65

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Rory McIlroy hailed a "big improvement" in his putting during a superb round of 65 that lifted him into contention in the Cadillac Championship at Doral.

The Northern Irishman has switched to a "crosshanded" putting method after missing the cut at the Honda Classic.

The 26-year-old needed just 25 putts in a seven-under round to go eight under - two shots behind leader Adam Scott.

"I did some work on the putting green last night and it paid off today," said world number three McIlroy.

"It's great to see putts like that go in. Those are the one I have not been holing over the last few months and today I saw a big improvement.

"I saw Adam had got to 10 under so I did not want to be too far behind going into the weekend."

McIlroy carded eight birdies and a bogey in his second round and is tied for second with defending champion Dustin Johnson, who hit a bogey-free 64.

Scott, who last week won his first title in nearly two years, hit a six-under 66 to lead the field.

England's Danny Willett carded a 69 to go fourth on seven under, a stroke ahead of Charley Hoffman (70) and Bubba Watson (69) of the United States and two in front of compatriot Paul Casey (68) and another American, Phil Mickelson (72).

Shane Lowry will have been disappointed to finish with a closing bogey to sign for a 73 and a level par total. Starting on the 10th, he turned in one over but a birdie on the eighth, his 17th, was undone on the par-three ninth.

Graeme McDowell signed for a 71 to his opening 74 to be one over at the halfway stage.

3/04/2016

McIlroy Fails to Tame Blue Monster

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Rory McIlroy refused to blame his new putting technique for a disappointing opening round in the WGC-Cadillac Championship after the new approach initially promised to pay instant dividends.

After missing the cut in the Honda Classic last week, McIlroy changed to a “crosshanded” putting method – with his left hand below the right on the grip – and vowed to stick with it regardless of the short-term outcome, with his bid to complete the career Grand Slam at the Masters just five weeks away.

The early signs were promising as McIlroy carded five birdies in his first 10 holes on the famed ‘Blue Monster’ course alongside world number one Jordan Spieth and US PGA champion Jason Day.

But the 26-year-old then three-putted the eighth – his penultimate hole – for par and found water with his tee shot on the ninth, the resulting double bogey meaning he had to settle for an opening 71, five shots behind clubhouse leaders Marcus Fraser and Scott Piercy.

McIlroy had jokingly threatened to throw his putter in the water on the eighth, a reference to last year’s incident when his three iron was despatched to a watery grave on the same hole in frustration at an errant shot.

“One club in the water here is enough, I think,” the Northern Irishman joked.

Asked about taking 33 putts and holing just one outside 10 feet (a 14-footer on the 17th), McIlroy told reporters: “My speed wasn’t too good on the greens. I was leaving a lot of putts short.

“But I guess that’s to be expected. It’s the first day competitively with a bit of a new grip. But I felt like it was pretty good.”

Piercy was seven under par after 11 holes but eventually carded a 66 after a bogey on the last when his ball plugged in a grass bank on the edge of a lake, while Fraser also reached seven under before dropping his only shot of the day on the eighth.

It was nevertheless a superb effort from the 37-year-old Australian, who won in Malaysia a fortnight ago and was 15th in the Perth International last week before making the 11,000-mile journey to Miami.

Phil Mickelson, who has not won since claiming his fifth Major title in the 2013 British Open at Muirfield, was a shot off the lead, with Danny Willett, Jason Dufner, Charley Hoffman and Honda Classic winner Adam Scott all on four under.

“I hit a lot of good shots, I was really pleased with the way the round went,” Mickelson told Sky Sports. “I probably let a few shots go early on, but I hit a lot of good shots, I was patient with the round and on my second nine I was able to make some birdies and capitalise on some of the shots.”

Spieth carded five birdies and two bogeys to finish three under, with world number two Day faring the worst of the marquee group with a level-par 72.

Asked about playing alongside Day and McIlroy, Spieth said: “We had fun and for a while there were feeding off each other, turning in two, two and three under.

“It was nice to try and get into a rhythm together because the last few weeks have been a little rough on all three of us.

“I’ve been doing quite a bit of work. I don’t feel great about the way I am striking the ball. I’m working really hard trying to develop patience through my swing and get into my right side. I have been transitioning a little quick and that leads to a shorter swing and more inconsistent ball striking.”

Shane Lowry recovered from two bogeys in his opening seven holes to turn his round around and sign for a round of 71. 

Although he suffered a bogey on the 11th after his tee shot found the left rough, Lowry’s approach play on the 17th – where he was left with a tap-in – brought him back to one under and a safe par on the treacherous 18th.

Graeme McDowell shot an opening 74 with a lot of ground to make up on Friday.


3/02/2016

McIlroy Makes Major Chang to Putting Grip[

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Rory McIlroy has made a major change to his putting technique and after missing the cut in the Honda Classic last week, he posted a video on social media of himself practising putting with his left hand below his right on the grip.

At Doral the world number three confirmed on Wednesday that he intends to use the “crosshanded” method in competition, starting with this week’s WGC-Cadillac Championship.

“It’s a drill I’ve been doing for a while because I feel like my left hand controls my putting stroke and I felt over the past few weeks my right hand was becoming a little bit too dominant,” McIlroy, who used the method in his first full season as a professional in 2008, said in his pre-tournament press conference.

“It’s one of those things where the drill started to feel a little bit better than the real thing, so I’m just going to stick with it. I feel like it’s something I’m going to stick with, regardless of what the outcome is tomorrow, or this week or next week.

“I really do feel like it helps me put a stroke on it that I want to. It’s a great feeling. I feel like it gives my putting stroke a bit more of a better rhythm, as well, a better flow.”

McIlroy is currently ranked 68th on the European Tour with an average of 29.3 putts per round, but eighth in putts per green in regulation with an average of 1.698.

The 26-year-old started the season by finishing third in Abu Dhabi and sixth in Dubai, but slipped to a tie for 20th in the Northern Trust Open after sharing the lead with 17 holes to play, before missing the cut in the Honda Classic for the second year in succession.

McIlroy blamed “silly mental errors” for his back-to-back rounds of 72 at PGA National, adding: “There was a lot of good in there. I made more birdies the first two days than Rickie (Fowler) did and Rickie’s leading the tournament.

“So if I can limit my mistakes and not make these silly mental errors and just play a little more . . . I don’t know if it’s smartly or conservatively or just take an extra couple of seconds just to think about what you really need to do.

“I’m a very instinctive player so I step up and I hit it and sometimes that can work for me if everything is going with me and I have momentum, but also if I am battling and grinding that can work against me. It’s trying to find a balance.”

McIlroy welcomed the “kick in the backside” his performance at PGA National provided 12 months ago but went on to hit the headlines for the wrong reasons at Doral after throwing his three-iron into a lake during his second round.

World number two Jason Day, who will play alongside McIlroy and world number one Jordan Spieth in the first two rounds, has also made a slow start to the season after a three-month break around the birth of his second child.

But the US PGA champion was in confident mood after seeking advice from the sidelined Tiger Woods in an hour-long phone call last week.

“It was a good call,” Day told his pre-tournament press conference. “If you’re going to pick a guy’s brain, he’s the guy. I can’t count how many times he said effort and mindset and everything, (it) had to do a lot with the mind.

“Once I improve the mental game for myself, this is the last piece of the puzzle for me, I believe, and I think I’ll be able to go out there and just kind of kill it.

“Every time that I talk to him, it’s mindset, mental toughness, effort. It didn’t matter how bad it was; if it was a course that he did not like, he was just going to flat out execute you. It did not matter.

“That’s that killer instinct that I need to get back like I had at the second half of last year, get back and take it into this year and go through with it.”

5/29/2015

Harrington Up and Down Friday

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Padraig Harrington continued to do everything in his power to ensure his prediction of a home winner came true as the Irish Open resumed at a windswept Royal County Down on Friday.

Former champion Harrington predicted on Wednesday that an Irish player would lift the trophy on Sunday, with world number one Rory McIlroy seemingly the most likely contender.

But while McIlroy faced an uphill battle to avoid a third straight cut in the event after crashing to an opening 80, Harrington claimed a share of the overnight lead with Germany's Max Kieffer with an opening 67.

And after starting his second round on the back nine with a run of six pars, Harrington picked up his first birdie of the day on the 16th to move into the outright lead on five under par.

However depsiet reaching the tun in 34 a double bogey on his 12th started atough runm for hiome that eneded in 4 over poar - signing for a second round 73.

There was simialr news for 2009 Three irish Open winner Shane Lowry who broke his putter as a run of three bogeys in four holes dropped him to four over par.

That was one shot outside the current projected cut, although that seemed certain to rise as more players took to the course, with McIlroy scheduled to start his second round at 1pm.

Harrington holed from 15 feet for birdie on the 17th to extend his lead and missed from just six feet for an eagle on the par-five first, but the tap-in birdie took him further ahead of the chasing pack.

At seven under par the 43-year-old, whose victory in the Honda Classic in March was his first on a major tour since the 2008 US PGA, was three ahead of Kieffer, who had started with two pars, with 2002 winner Soren Hansen, Austria's Bernd Wiesberger and France's Alexander Levy all two under.

Lowry bogeyed the 17th but successfully two-putted the 18th with a wedge to reach the turn in 40, his putter understood to have been damaged after he missed a short putt on the 12th.

Lowry shrugged off his equipment problems to birdie the first and second and improve to three over par, but Harrington's serene progress had come to a grinding halt in the match ahead.

A bogey on the second was followed by a double bogey on the third and another dropped shot on the fourth, leaving the two-time Open champion three under par and one shot behind new leader Wiesberger.

Wiesberger had finished the back nine with birdies on the 16th and 17th and an eagle on the 18th, and then saw playing partner Andy Sullivan hole out with a two iron from 259 yards on the par-five first for an albatross.


5/28/2015

Harrington and Kieffer Lead

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Padraig Harrington took advantage of marginally easier conditions in the afternoon to share the first round lead with fellow late starter Max Kieffer at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Hosted by the Rory Foundation.

Former winner Harrington carded a four under par 67 at Royal County Down, which was only matched by German Kieffer in the final group.

Harrington, who won the Honda Classic in March on the US PGA Tour, is looking to end a winless stretch on The European Tour that goes back to the 2008 US PGA Championship.

The 43 year old from Dublin was one over par after ten holes before carding five birdies in the next six to finish level with Kieffer and one shot ahead of former Ryder Cup team-mate Søren Hansen.

"After nine or ten holes I thought to myself 'C'mon, we've got to hit a good shot, no need to be afraid,'" said Harrington, who lasted just two holes at Wentworth last week before pulling out with a shoulder injury, but received intensive treatment and narrowly missed out on qualifying for the US Open Championship four days later.

"I know from experience now that I'm in a position where there's many ways of competing in this tournament. I've two options; play great from now on and try and get away from the field or play average and fight it out on Sunday afternoon."

Kieffer had an eagle on the long 12th and reached five under at one stage only to bogey the eighth – his penultimate hole.

“I played good, and I think the key was today to hole some putts,” said the 24 year old, who is still searching for a maiden European Tour title two years after beng pipped in a marathon play-off for the Open de Espaa by Raphal Jacquelin.

“I had two three-putts from off the green on the front nine, but then I made two long putts after that, so that really like kept the momentum up. That was really nice.

“It's a long week. It's a tough golf course. Some of the best players in the world, they struggle to shoot par around here, so it's going to be an interesting next three days, I think.”

McIlroy carded nine bogeys and no birdies in an opening 80 as only seven of the 78 morning starters broke par.

"It was not quite as difficult as I made it look," McIlroy admitted with a wry smile after an opening round played in cold, blustery conditions and the occasional rain shower.

"I was hitting it well on the range, keeping it down and hitting half shots, but the wind was not up that much on the course and I was caught between trying to play two ways. That led to missing greens, which led to lots of eight to 12 foot putts for par, which led to missing all of them."

McIlroy has pledged to donate all of his prize money this week to his charitable foundation, while his association with the event ensured a top-class field and a sell-out crowd of 20,000 each day.

"It's disappointing because I want to go out there and play well, not just for myself but for a lot of other people," McIlroy added. "I'll just have to pick myself up and go out there tomorrow and shoot a good one. I want to give the fans something to cheer about and not just get sympathy claps as I got coming off the ninth green.

"My goal will be to make some birdies, make my first birdie of the tournament at some point. I've missed the cut the last two years so I don't want to make it three in a row. I want to at least go out there tomorrow and fight for it, try to claw my way back towards the cut line and if I can sneak in there, that'll be great."

Playing alongside McIlroy, Rickie Fowler carded an opening 71 in his first outing since winning the Players Championship at Sawgrass, while Luke Donald went one better with a 70.

Donald dropped out of the Official World Golf Ranking's top 60 on Monday to miss out on qualifying for the US Open, but could claim one of three places up for grabs in The Open at St Andrews by finishing in the top ten here.

"I'm trying not to think about that too much, I'm just trying to play a solid tournament and get some consistency," the former World Number One said.


5/21/2015

Harrington Withdraws from Wentworth

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Padraig Harrington has pulled out of this week's BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth because of a shoulder injury.

Three-time major winner Harrington withdrew from the European Tour's flagship tournament after playing just two holes of his first round. The Dubliner also withdrew from Wednesday's pro-am competition.

The 43-year-old, who has returned to the top 100 in the world rankings this year, could now be doubtful for next week's Irish Open at Royal County Down.

The world number 83 had indicated before his round on Thursday that his withdrawal was "definitely a possibility", despite receiving physiotherapy treatment.

"It is like frozen shoulder. I am struggling to lift my arm," explained the Irishman, who won the PGA Tour's Honda Classic in early March

The Florida triumph was his first win on either the PGA Tour or European Tour since his 2008 USPGA victory at Oakland Hill.

His withdrawal from the Wentworth event marks the first time he has pulled out of a tournament because of injury in his 20-year career.

The Irishman said that he felt the problem while in the gym in Tuesday but had opted to continue his fitness session.

"I probably should have stopped doing the exercises," he added.

"I didn't feel so bad and I hit shots afterwards but it has really stiffened up overnight."



3/22/2015

McIlroy Slips as Stenson Charges

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Rory McIlroy’s bid to go into the Masters with a second victory of the season under his belt suffered a major blow after a poor finish to his third round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

In his last competitive outing before trying to complete the career grand slam at Augusta next month, McIlroy was within a shot of the lead when he carded his fourth birdie of the day on the 13th at Bay Hill.

However, the world number one then bogeyed the next three holes and had to settle for a round of 71 and nine under, seven shots behind Ryder Cup team-mate Henrik Stensonon 16 under.

McIlroy had birdied five holes in a row from the second during his second round – having started on the 10th – but could only pick up one shot over the same stretch on Saturday, missing from 11 feet for an eagle on the par-five sixth and having to settle for a birdie four.

The four-time Major winner chipped in from the back of the ninth green for his second birdie of the day and looked to be moving through the gears when he also picked up shots on the 12th and 13th.

But the 25-year-old then bogeyed the 14th after coming up short of the green with his tee shot and dropped another shot on the next, three-putting from 30 feet after an excellent escape from the trees to the right of the fairway.

McIlroy then duffed a chip from right of the 16th green and compounded the error with another three-putt, in stark contrast to Stenson who holed from 20 feet for eagle on the par five after previous birdies on the sixth, ninth and 15th.

“I’m frustrated. I birdied 12 and 13 and got right into the thick of things and then to give three shots back in quick succession was not really the plan,” said McIlroy.

“I’m disappointed with the way I finished but I played well for the most part. I need to try to get off to a good start tomorrow, shoot a good score and see where that leaves me.

“There’s a lot of quality players above me. I would need to get off to a very fast start (to win). 30 or 31 on the front nine it’s possible; just try to start better and go from there.”

Four birdies in five holes wasn’t enough to see Pádraig Harrington move into contention as the Honda Classic also had three bogeys in a one-under 71 that sees him go into the final round on six under.