11/15/2012

Lethargic Rory Off Hong Kong Pace

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Rory McIlroy says he felt 'mentally lethargic' during his opening round at the Hong Kong Open where his three-over-par 73 left him nine strokes off the pace.

The Ulsterman posted just a single bogey at Fanling where, in overcast and windy conditions, he ended the day outside the top 90.

The 23-year-old admits that he may have been lacking a little motivation after securing top spot in this season's Race to Dubai standings thanks to a top-three finish in Singapore last week.

He said: "I suppose after last week, and winning the Race to Dubai title, it was always going to be a bit of a let-down.

"I feel as though I am playing well enough but I just need to get my head and the golf to match up and I'll be OK.

"I just lacked a bit of energy out there, I felt a bit lethargic and mentally more than physically - if I am being honest.

"I bogeyed the first but then just got more frustrated as the round went on.

"I felt like I was hitting some decent shots and just not really converting any chances for birdies and I just let it go a little bit."

The early leader is world No 506 Spaniard Javier Colomo whose 64 required just 29 strokes for his second nine holes.

Tied-for-second is Colomo's 48-year-old compatriot Miguel Angel Jimenez who is a single shot adrift - and level with Aussie Andrew Dodt.

Jimenez, a two-time winner in Hong Kong, smirked: "I am like a good bottle of Rioja because I just get better and better with age.

"I'm putting very well and it's a pity I missed a fairway on the ninth and then on the last got a big flyer.

"It's an old-fashioned course - not very long but you need to be very precise."



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11/14/2012

What a Difference Two Years Makes..

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Just two years ago Lee Westwood launched a Twitter rant against the PGA Tour after it named Rickie Fowler as rookie of the year ahead of Rory McIlroy. 

On that December day in 2010 Lee tweeted: "Sorry 140 letters is not going to be enough for this rant! Just seen Ricky Fowler has been given rookie of the year! Yes he's had a good year but Rory McIlroy 3rd in 2 majors and an absolute demolition of the field at quail hollow! Oh yes and on the winning Ryder cup team! Please! Is this yet another case of protectionism by the pgatour or are they so desperate to win something! Wouldn't have something to do with Rory not joining the tour next year? Maybe the PGA tour just employs the same voting process as Fifa! Come on, fairs fair!" 

The PGA news at that time coming in the wake, let it be said, of an announcement by Rory McIlroy that he would play full-time on the European Tour in 2011, and just commit to 11 or 12 tournaments in the U.S. that year. Despite a string invitation for the PGA Tour.

A decision made when McIlroy was with ISM management and at a time he considered Northern Ireland as home, the place where his family and then girlfriend were based. The choice made even more dramatic when it included missing the 2010 Players Championship at Sawgrass – an unusual thing to do in the mind of most players. 

Now, two years on, it is difficult to imagine what Westwood will tweet given that Rory is no longer part of the same ISM stable, yet in the mix for the PGA Tour player of the year, has been awarded a similar title from the PGA of America; topped the money list on both sides of the Atlantic; holds the 2012 Harry Vardon Trophy;  garnered two major titles in all; has extended his winning record in the Ryder Cup to two out of two, and also joined the mega stars with a new contract with Nike imminent and now part of the best paid sporting athletes in the world. All achieved in just 24 months. 

Amidst that that change the 23 year old has also moved to the United States to live near his friend and stable-mate at Horizon Sports, 2010 US Open Champing,Graeme McDowell, with  a new look personal life as well as Rory now dates WTA Tennis star, Caroline Wozniacki 

It says a lot too for McIlroy that alongside him on the fairways remains JP Fitzgerald, who in 2011 came under much scrutiny on the final day at The Masters in Augusta when his boss blew a four-stroke lead - when victory was within reach. That criticism coming for not reining in McIlroy’s natural aggressive instincts, and saw him walk off the 10th green with a triple-bogey seven – after crashing his drive into a tree. Indeed, further criticism followed at the US PGA Championship in the August when McIlroy picked up a wrist injury on the opening day having struck a tree root, after his drive on the par-four third ended up in the trees. 

Rather than play out sideways, Rory chose to fully take the shot on with the club making heavy contact with the root, causing him to drop his club in agony – and fall out of contention. Despite that McIlroy never contemplated letting his bagman go, regardless of the flak Fitzgerald took for his part in the player's demise, saying at the time 

"There was no point in me saying, 'JP didn't do a great job there, I'm going to get someone else'," he said in the Independent. "JP has been on my bag since the middle of 2008, when I was 200th in the world and he's helped bring me to where I am now. 

"Here's a guy who has been with me for all five of my wins on Tour. He's been with me through some tough play-off losses. He's been with me through everything. 

"I've a great relationship with JP. He's become one of my closest friends over the past two and a half years. It's a combination that works very well. I firmly believe if it ain't broke, don't fix it." 

As history recalls McIlroy bounced back from his Masters disappointment, winning his first major at Congressional Country Club by eight shots and Fitzgerald is well on his way to joining those elite rich caddies, such as Steve Williams.

However earlier this year those heady days at Congressional were starting to seem dreamlike and perhaps a one off, as McIlroy missed a number of cuts, including Sawgrass, and a run of 13 top-five finishes in 15 events coming to a sudden end. The hiccup was then exacerbated at the BMW PGA Championship in Wentworth where the world number one carded rounds of 74, 79 to end nine shots over, only three weeks before his US Open title defence. Which was become his fourth missed cut at The Olympic Club and a talented player looking only a shadow of the same golfer who had skipped around Congressional for a record 16 under par finish. 

Not dissimilar to the figure cast at Royal Portrush for the Irish Open in July, where McIlroy made the cut but could finish no better than tenth. 

Then a few weeks later McIlroy out of the blue validated for any doubters his ability with an eight-shot win at the U.S. Open,  blasting the field at Kiawah Island in the PGA Championship. With the talent from Holywood, Northern Ireland not onlky adding to his major count but also  becoming the youngest player since Seve Ballesteros to win two majors as Tiger Woods was about four months older than McIlroy when he won his second major. 

Now the talk is will Rory match or exceed the Jack Nicklaus and Woods records. 

What a difference two years can make.


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Hoey Withdraws from HK Open

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Michael Hoey has withdrawn from the Hong Kong Open because of an ear infection.

Hoey, who played at last week's Singapore Open, had hoped the problem would clear up in time for him to compete at the Fanling course.

However, world number one Rory McIlroy, having already won the Race to Dubai, is back at one of his favourite venues aiming for his fifth win of the season.

McIlroy is the defending champion and has fond memories of Hong Kong.

"I have had some great experiences as a player, taking part in one of the best ever play-offs against Lin Wen-tang in 2008 and then finally putting my name on the trophy last year," said the 23-year-old from Northern Ireland.

"I was not feeling well on the Saturday and went into the final round three behind but shot a 65, holing a bunker shot at the last, to win by two."

The Hong Kong tournament will see the final places in the Race to Dubai money list decided.

England's Paul Casey is among those competing in Hong Kong in an attempt to leap into the top 60 and secure a place at next week's season-ending TP World Tour Championship.

Casey is currently 74th and is joined in this week's field by another former European Ryder Cup star, David Howell who is 61st.

The final positions on Sunday will also decide which players retain their European Tour cards for 2013, with the top 119 players on the money list keeping their privileges for at least another season.



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11/13/2012

McIlroy Wins PGA Player Honour

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Rory McIlroy, who was confirmed as European Number One on Sunday after building an unassailable lead in The Race to Dubai, has already started collecting honours after winnng the PGA of America Player of the Year and Vardon Trophy.

McIlroy, whose record-breaking US PGA Championship triumph was the highlight of four victories this season, cruised to the PGA of America’s premier season-ending awards for excellence by a Tour professional.

McIlroy, 23, became the fourth youngest US PGA Champion on August 12 with a record eight-stroke triumph at The Ocean Course in Kiawah Island, South Carloina. He went on to capture both the season money earnings and adjusted scoring average titles. He finished with 100 points, while Tiger Woods – a three-time winner this season – finished runner-up with 66 points. Woods is the all-time leader in both season-ending awards, having captured ten PGA Player of the Year awards and eight Vardon Trophies since 1997.

The PGA Player of the Year was first presented in 1948, and the Vardon Trophy originated in 1937.

McIlroy earned 60 victory points for his victories in the Honda Classic, PGA Championship, Deutsche Bank Championship and the BMW Championship, and gained 20 points for the money earnings title and 20 more for adjusted scoring with a 68.87 average based upon the award minimum required 60 rounds. Woods earned 30 points for victories at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the Memorial Tournament and the AT&T National, and 18 points each for the season money list and season scoring average.

However, Woods was ineligible for the Vardon Trophy after withdrawing in the final round of the WGC-Cadillac Championship on March 11. The incomplete round resulted in a .10 penalty to his adjusted scoring average (from 68.90 to 69.00).

Jason Dufner and Masters Champion Bubba Watson tied for third with 50 overall points, followed by TOUR Champion Brandt Snedeker with 36, and Matt Kuchar with 34.

The PGA of America has honoured the game’s best players with the PGA Player of the Year Award since 1948. The award is presented to the top touring professional based on a point system for tournament wins, official money standings, and scoring averages. Points are tabulated from January 1, through the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic, which concluded on November 11.

Since 1937, the Vardon Trophy, named by The PGA of America in honour of famed British golfer Harry Vardon, is awarded annually to the touring professional with the lowest adjusted scoring average. It is based on a minimum of 60 rounds, with no incomplete rounds, in events co-sponsored or designated by the PGA TOUR.

The adjusted score is computed from the average score of the field at each event.

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11/11/2012

Rory Claims Harry Vardon Trophy

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Rory McIlroy was a contented man after claiming the Harry Vardon trophy by topping the European Tour's money list for the first time.

A 30-foot eagle putt on the final green at the Barclays Singapore Open made the 23-year-old world No 1 the youngest money list winner since Sandy Lyle in 1980.

But it was only when 19-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero also eagled the same hole more than two hours later that McIlroy could crack open the champagne.

Already with the PGA Tour title in the bag, McIlroy emulated the double achieved by Luke Donald last season when Manassero beat South African Louis Oosthuizen with a 12-foot putt at the third play-off hole.

If Oosthuizen had won he could still have caught McIlroy, but instead Manassero became the first player to win three times on the circuit before the age of 20. Not even Seve Ballesteros managed that.

McIlroy stormed through to third place with a closing six-under-par 65. "It really is hugely satisfying to finally become the European number one, especially after finishing second two of the last three years," he said.

"It has always been one of my goals ever since securing my Tour card five years ago, but then to also end the year as both European and PGA Tour number one is just amazing.

"I feel so proud and humbled to join so many fabulous names in Europe who have won the Order of Merit.

"To be able to accomplish this goal with still two events remaining means that I can head to my UBS Hong Kong Open defence and the DP World Championship Dubai without that added pressure and just really enjoy my golf.

"Winning a second major championship already made it a fabulous season, but then to follow Luke Donald in becoming number one in both Europe and the States is the icing on the cake after a fabulous season.

"I set myself a number of ambitious goals at the start of the year, and to have ticked so many of the boxes feels great."

"A lot of hard work went into this and I am really proud of what I've achieved in 2012. I would like to give special thanks to the team around me for all the support they have given me throughout the year.

"I've still got two events remaining this year and the goal is still to try and win at least once more before the end of the year. Beyond that I'm looking forward to a good break over the winter!

"I've got a healthy lead in the world rankings, but with so many very good players on both sides of the Atlantic it will not be a time to be resting on my laurels. My goal is to push on in the new year.

"Monty (Colin Montgomerie) won eight Order of Merits in his prime and I have won one, so there is plenty of ground to make up.

"Also Jack Nicklaus won 18 Majors and I now have my name on two, so targeting the majors will still be my main focus next season."

Tournament winner Manassero said: "It's been an extremely long day. The adrenaline kept me going and fortunately the key, I think, it was starting really well this morning after coming back on the course. I started with some birdies in a row which was very good."

Much has been expected from the Italian following the records he set when he burst on the scene several years ago: youngest British Amateur winner ( aged 16), youngest golfer to play in the Masters and make the cut (16), youngest European Tour winner (17).

Still a teenager, Manassero admitted that his third year on tour has been a struggle. He has not been back to the Masters since his debut and he failed to qualify for this year's Open Championship. His last title had come last April at the Malaysian Open.

"It's been very frustrating at times," he said. "I had to be more clear in my mind thinking that I started my career really well, but it's very early. I've got many years. This is the time in which I really need to step my game up, make technical changes and adjusting myself.

"I didn't have some great results for something like a year, a little ups and downs. Obviously, it was frustrating."

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