Showing posts with label WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. Show all posts

7/22/2016

McIlroy Needs Major Putt

European Tour 
Former world number one Rory McIlroy sits in fourth place in the latest official world golf rankings. The Northern Ireland man sandwiched below Jason Day, Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth, and just ahead of European Tour member and Open winner Henrik Stenson. Despite having won the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open in May the Holywood golfer last wins were in 2015 at the DP World Tour, WGC Cadillac Match Play and Omega Dubai Desert Classic the latter venue that gave him his first professional career win in 2009. The next came at Quail Hollow when he took his first PGA Title at the age of 21 and the first player since Tiger Woods to win on the PGA Tour at that tender age. The next season his ascent to top came when at Congressional he won his first major as the youngest player since Bobby Jones in 1923. 

By 2014 McIlroy had four major titles to his credit and looked at emulating Woods winning record of 14 majors in his career. Two years hence the momentum seems to have wilted somewhat. And as Woods faces the inevitable reality of the sunset of his career, or at least never returning to the dominance he once held in the game, McIlroy faces his own battle to return to world number one. Also get back on the major trail that at one time looked a feat within his grasp to equal Tiger Woods. However, the past few years have generated some new names in those top ranks that have made those records much trickier for Rory. Or indeed holding the aspiration of winning the grand slam in one season almost seem impossible. 

The arrival of Jordan Spieth started the turbulence in 2015 when the Texan won all around him only to see that momentum fade this year. The almost perennial nearly man Jason Day finally came good in 2015 despite some close calls prior. Failures that almost drove he Australian to consider giving up the game given his wilting self-belief. Fortunately for the game Day reversed all that at the PGA Championship at Whistling Straights. The epic win followed by the Barclay and BMW Championship in the same season reviving confidence that led to the Aussie replacing Spieth as world Number 1 this year.

McIlroy’s tribulations are not unique as Spieth can vouch this season where his indestructible form has eked away. Not least at Augusta when leading the Masters, his defence of the title unravelled bizarrely at the twelfth hole after a string of bogeys already had reduced his lead. Not unlike McIlroy in 2011 the collapse was very public and uncomfortable for all concerned and a place from where Spieth has yet to emerge. In the case of McIlroy, he overcame it all within months when he clinched the US Open with a record score at Congressional. The context of which he built on to until his injury playing football with friends denied him the defence of The Open title he so convincingly seized at Hoylake in 2014. 

His return this year to the event at Royal Troon only showed some sparks on the final day. But insufficient to even contend on the final day. Where another nearly man Henrik Stenson demolished championship course with a round of 63 on the final day when pin positions are usually deemed inaccessible. Particularly on the perilous back nine at Royal Troon. Even more admirable an achievement when being chased and pressed by Phil Mickelson. This year though McIlroy was not in that final race in this major, nor was he at Oakmont where he missed the cut and Irish interests were represented by Shane Lowry in the end. Or the Players Championship where he finished 12th. 

An unlikely season for McIlroy and his quest for majors or indeed emulating Woods record all the more difficult. What Royal Troon has also shown that the hunger in the likes of Stenson has now been triggered, as it has for Dustin Johnson who for so many years was another nearly man. Indeed, in the top ten there are enough names to put the fear in anyone’s golf bag as each one could - on their day - destroy any field. Not to mention some of the younger talents racing up the field eager to earn their prize money and win these elusive major titles. Which for a number of years were littered with Irish names; Padraig Harrington, Graeme McDowell, McIlroy and Darren Clarke. Currently that momentum has wavered. Albeit Lowry came very close last month in the US Open - suggesting his day is getting closer.

The shift in McIlroy’s putting grip in June highlighted some issues on his mind and shifting from his left hand grip back too conventional at Oakmont was a search for some improvements. The PGA Tour stats though show him 60 in the putting ranking and well behind the top three that included Day, Mickelson, Speith and even Jamie Donaldson. As numbers don’t lie it is clear that it is a part of McIlroy’s armoury which leaves him exposed on the course. Even with his number one place in drives there is a much better putting brigade hat are well ahead of him – no matter how easily he goes from tee to green. 

In Scotland there were a significant number of missed putts that were coming from a talented golfer not convinced himself that he is on terms with his putter. So it needs urgent attention if this year is to see a major win given the PGA Championship at Baltrusol Golf Clubs is the last remaining event in that class. In fairness though the season thus far has one win, and with a top finish everywhere he has played - part for the US Open. Although all good results well below the expectations McIlroy would have set himself back in January. 



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5/04/2016

McIlroy Out of BMW PGA Championship

Rory McIlroy 
Rory McIlroy will miss the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth this month in a further blow to the European Tour's flagship event.

McIlroy is defending his title in the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow this week and will then contest the Players Championship, followed by the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open, an event hosted by his own foundation.

That means the BMW PGA Championship, which he won in 2014, would have been a fourth tournament in a row and the world number three had previously indicated he was not keen on such a schedule following the ankle injury he suffered in 2015.

"The reason I took three weeks off after Augusta was that I'm not going to have more than a week off until after the Ryder Cup. Until October it's going to be very busy," McIlroy said.

"I'm playing here, next week at the Players, the Irish Open and then it's basically week on, week off from there. Memorial, week off, US Open, week off, French Open, week off, Open, week off, PGA, week off, Olympics, week off, Fed Ex Cup, Ryder Cup.

"There's a little bit of travel in there as well so it's a busy stretch coming up and you can't play every week. You want to feel as fresh as you can for every tournament that you play so I feel it's the best way for me to approach it."

The good news for the European Tour is that McIlroy is playing the 100th Open de France instead of the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in Akron, which he won in 2014.

A re-working of the PGA Tour's 2016 calendar to accommodate golf's return to the Olympics saw the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational brought forward to the end of June, bringing it into direct conflict with the French Open at Le Golf National, venue for the 2018 Ryder Cup.

The European Tour responded by withdrawing its sanction of the WGC event just two days after Shane Lowry won it last August, meaning money won in Akron will not count for Ryder Cup points or towards the Race to Dubai.

The French Open will also offer increased prize money and extra Ryder Cup qualifying points, as well as counting as two of the five tournaments outside majors and WGC events which players now need to play to fulfil their membership. 

Speaking ahead of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai last November, European Tour chief executive Keith Pelley said he wanted to see the BMW PGA Championship offering more prize money than its current "unacceptable" €5 million.

"A lot of people talk about Wentworth as being a flagship event," Pelley said. "Wentworth is €5.1 million. The other event in the US that week is $6 million. That's unacceptable. Wentworth needs to be $8-$10 million dollars.

"The important thing for me at Wentworth is what they do to the West Course. From everything that I have heard, there is significant investment. We are continuing at Wentworth until at least 2018 and if the West Course becomes exactly what they believe it will, and we can increase the prize purse, then perhaps it can be a flagship event going forward.

"Our flagship event right here is the DP World Tour Championship, which is eight million dollars plus a bonus prize."


9/24/2015

GMAC Seeks Porsche Success

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Graeme McDowell will look to resurrect his season this week as the Porsche European Open returns to the schedule for the first time since 2009.

McDowell's only top 10 of the year to date came in the Dubai Desert Classic in February and the former world No 4 has fallen to 67th in the rankings.

The 36-year-old has not played competitively since missing the cut in the PGA Championship but has been working hard on his game before getting his campaign for a fifth consecutive Ryder Cup appearance under way at Golf Resort Bad Griesbach.

"I always love coming back to Germany and the European Open is a prestigious event," said the former US Open champion, who was third in this event at the London Club in 2008. "There are some great names on the trophy.

"I'm very happy to be here and I'm looking to resurrect my season; this week is as important for me as any of the past few months have been. I'm starting my 2016 campaign this week and my Ryder Cup campaign. I want to drive myself forward and get myself where I feel I belong.

"Golf is a tough game sometimes and it has felt more difficult this year for me than it has in the past. But it makes you appreciate the good times in the past and I'm looking forward to good times ahead.

"Since Whistling Straits I took two weeks off and didn't touch any clubs and spent some time with the family. Then I've been working pretty hard for three weeks now.

"I've just been resetting and practising and trying to get this ship back on path. I'm playing here, Dunhill [Alfred Dunhill Links Championship], British Masters, Hong Kong and Turkey and hopefully HSBC-Champions."

Home favourite and course designer Bernhard Langer is in the field, along with fellow former Masters champion Charl Schwartzel, Ryder Cup hero Jamie Donaldson and American Hunter Mahan.

"It is nice to test myself against the younger players every once in a while," the 58-year-old Langer said. "It's not my goal to play on the European Tour in the long run as I'm very happy on the Champions Tour. I've done the European Tour and PGA Tour for many years and I've done my time.

"I am proud to have this event on a course I designed. We used to play the German Open on a course I designed in Stuttgart so to have this event on another is fantastic."

Fellow German Max Kieffer is looking to make the cut in his 22nd consecutive stroke play event, which would be the longest active streak on the European Tour.

"I'm playing very consistently. I don't really know why," Kieffer said. "It's great. There have been three or five times this year when I've felt like I'm not hitting it well on the range, but every day I wake up I feel I can play good golf. That's what you want for your form, to feel consistent."


8/17/2015

McIlroy Happy With Comeback

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Rory McIlroy was pleased with his comeback at the US PGA Championship despite not being able to defend his title at Whistling Straits.

Coming into the tournament, the 26 year old had not played a competitive round since a closing 66 at the US Open Championship at Chambers Bay after suffering ankle ligament damage whilst playing football with friends in early July.

But he finished 17th in Wisconsin after rounds of 71-71-68-69 and is confident he will be back to his best soon.

"I feel like I did well," he said "Obviously coming back after the lay-off, not hitting a competitive shot in two months, shooting nine under was a decent effort.

"I didn't see 19 under winning this week. I thought something between ten and 15 but it just shows you how high the standard is these days.

"But first week, coming back, I thought I did pretty well."

He added: "The ankle is fine. We came up with a plan that after this week I could take a couple of weeks off just in case anything did happen or there were any setbacks.

"It feels fine, but I'm just going to take a couple of weeks off and not need a strap or anything to play. And then after that I've got another week off, so by the time I'm in the middle of September, there will be no issues and hopefully I can give it a good run in the FedEx Cup.

"I felt like I gave it a good run this week and the ankle is in good shape.

"Overnight the ankle did swell a bit, but once I got it moving and compressed it a bit, it was fine. It probably won't look like a normal ankle for two or three months, but there is no pain in it, which is the main thing."

The Northern Irishman began his round on Sunday with five pars but made a sensational up and down from the rough to make birdie on the sixth and followed that with another on the seventh.

Another gain was made on the tenth and, despite dropping a shot on the 13th, McIlroy picked up another on the 16th and feels his game will come back together as he plays more often.

"I just need to sharpen up," he said. "I feel like ball striking-wise, tee to green, it's there. And it's sort of been there all year. If anything, just around the greens (I've got to be) being more efficient, really. When I give myself opportunities inside, wedges in my hand, I've got to take advantage of those.

"And today is a prime example, it's my fourth day of competitive playing, getting those two balls up and down on 17 and 18, that's something just playing a bit more and just having experience with certain shots and certain lies.

"That all just comes with playing a bit more."


8/15/2015

Rory Furious on Friday


Rory McIlroy reflected on a day of missed opportunities after settling for a second consecutive 71 at the 97th PGA Championship, while Jordan Spieth went four shots better at the halfway stage.

The defending champion was determined to take advantage of the benign early conditions at Whistling Straits and make strides up the leaderboard, but he managed only pars at his first six holes before finally getting a birdie putt to drop at the 16th.

McIlroy was then furious with himself for scrapping his way to a double-bogey six at the 18th, but he got both shots back with one shot at the long second as he chipped in for a galvanising eagle.

He holed from eight feet for birdie at the sixth, but he bogeyed the next after pulling his tee shot in greenside rough before McIlroy parred in to remain two under for the tournament.

On a day when Japan's Hiroshi Iwata equalled the lowest score in major history with a 63 and playing partner Jordan Spieth shot 67, McIlroy admitted his short-game was not up to scratch following his seven-week lay-off with an ankle injury.

"I felt like tee to green I hit the ball pretty well, I'm probably just not as sharp with the short game as I would like to be," the world No 1 said. "It was good to get the two shots back that I dropped on 18 and I gave myself good chances on the third and fifth, but did not take them.

"There's plenty of chances out there and if I can convert a few hopefully there is a low score in me.

"I felt like I played better than what the score reflected, so I'm a little bit annoyed. I felt like I should have got that ball up and down on seven and then I had a great chance on eight for birdie and didn't take that. A couple of days in a row where I haven't finished the round of golf the way I wanted to.

"I don't know if it's rust or I just didn't putt well, so maybe just work on that a little bit before I tee off tomorrow and it would be great to hole a few more putts, because I feel like I'm giving myself plenty of chances.

"Probably one of the most surprising things about yesterday is how quickly I got back into the mindset of tournament golf and being aggressive. That hasn't really been an issue, it's just being a bit more efficient, whenever you give yourself chances, take them, and be able to get it up and down when you put yourself out of position."

McIlroy now has his work cut out to hang onto his world No 1 ranking ahead of Spieth, who enjoyed a run of four birdies in six holes mid-round as he moved smoothly to six under for the tournament.

The highlight of Spieth's round was a superb bunker escape that found the hole for an unlikely birdie at the 18th, and he was delighted with another good day's work in his bid to become only the third player in history to win three majors in a year.

"We are freerolling now," Spieth joked after making the cut in the tournament for the first time at the third attempt. "I'm just happy to be back in contention and position. If I'd had a bit of a lull today it would have been too hard to make up.

"With a couple of chip-ins for the week and really smart course management and good speed control, we have been able to hold ourselves in there. But in order to keep shooting the rounds like today, I'm going to need to drive the ball a little bit better and make a few more putts, which are really the two keys for me this weekend, because it's just going to get more challenging with pin locations and firmness of greens."

On his holed bunker shot for birdie at 18, Spieth's 16th chip-in of the season, he added: "It's arguably the best of the year given the position it was in. It was a great spark to get things going, get a little confidence, a little pep in my step.

"I feel good. I've got a chance to win a major championship. Just thinking about that gets you enough adrenaline that there won't be any issues. I noticed last year for the first time I felt fatigue and felt like I had overworked and kind of burned out the end of the year, as we had to go through the four play-off events without a break and then into the Ryder Cup.

"This year I've done a better job of when I take time off, when you limit the practice coming back, how to prepare. As far as mentally in this position, the way the year's gone, I approach each event as if it's the only event of the year when I stand on the first tee. That gets me through it.

"I'm sure at the end of this year, it will be nice to sit back and hang the clubs up for a couple weeks, but until then we have got a lot to play for."


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."


8/12/2015

McIlroy Praises Lowry Steel

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Rory McIlroy praised the "ballsy" performance of his friend Shane Lowry at the weekend in Akron after the Offaly man claimed victory at the Bridgestone Invitational at the weekend.

Showing nerves of steel to hold off the challenge of three Major winners to secure the biggest win of his career and a cheque for €1.45m, McIlroy was watching on was impressed by the resolve shown by his fellow Irish golfer.

"Shane's victory was fantastic," he said. "I played 18 on Sunday morning and came back to the house we are renting to watch it.

"Once he got into the lead, he hit a couple of wonder shots- that shot on 10, which was incredible. And he holed some big par putt putts down the stretch

"I texted him and said it was a pretty ballsy victory. And yes, he could be in the Olympics too, depending on how everything goes the next 52 weeks."

McIlroy has spent the past few days practising on the Wisconsin course, having been sidelined since early July when he suffered a rupture of his left ankle ligaments during a game of football with friends.

"If anything, my ankle feels even better when I swing hard," he told the Daily Mail.

The 26-year-old's injury ruled him out of the Scottish Open and the defence of his Open and WGC-Bridgestone Invitational titles, but he has been playing since the Monday that Zach Johnson inherited his Open crown.

"I've played a lot of golf since then, just finding the middle of the clubface again," he said. "And I've been chipping and putting basically since it happened, with my protective boot on...

"I did think about coming back last week at the Bridgestone but Steve (McGregor, his fitness coach) held me back. He thought it important for me to basically play a tournament behind closed doors and after I completed that successfully, it felt the right time to come.

"I'm ready to play and I expect to do well."

The four-time major winner has been paired with Jordan Spieth and Zach Johnson for the first two rounds on Thursday and Friday.

He has not played a competitive round since a closing 66 in the US Open at Chambers Bay on June 21.

"Obviously it's important to remain world number one, I've made that clear. It's been a year since I got it back," 

"But it's just about playing well and winning tournaments and that's my main focus this week."

In his absence McIlroy has seen others such as Lowry make progress and he was quick to praise the 28-year-old for his victory in Bridgestone - even if he is now another rival.