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‘It resonated with a lot of people': Rory McIlroy reflects on his Masters win, prepares for Zurich

‘It resonated with a lot of people': Rory McIlroy reflects on his Masters win, prepares for Zurich

Yahoo05-05-2025

Rory McIlroy is barely a week and a half from the defining victory of his professional life, and he's still riding the shock waves and coasting on the glory of a green jacket.
'It's not every day you get to fulfill one of your lifelong goals and dreams,' he said Wednesday, 'and I've just really tried to enjoy everything that comes along with that.'
The Masters win stands as one of the most notable in recent golf history, and to McIlroy, who spent more than 10 years trying to win a major and a lifetime trying to win the Masters, that's because it wasn't just about golf.
'I think people can see themselves in the struggle at times, and everything that you sort of try to put into getting the best out of yourself in that journey,' he said. 'I think people watching someone finally get it done, something they've been trying to do for a decade-plus, I think it resonated with a lot of people.'
Although he's now got a fancy new jacket, he's also still got a day job, and that brought him to New Orleans this weekend for the Zurich Classic. He and Ryder Cup teammate/best pal Shane Lowry are the defending champions at the pairs event, and they're hoping to replicate the success that had them singing 'Don't Stop Believin'' karaoke last year:
This is not a drill. Rory McIlroy singing Don't Stop Believing pic.twitter.com/y5PkEDoqo4
— Brody Miller (@BrodyAMiller) April 28, 2024
'This tournament last year was a really cool moment for both of us. I think it probably injected a little bit of joy back into golf for me in some way, which I think is really, really important, not to lose that,' McIlroy said. 'I had a great year last year, and I think this tournament was sort of the catalyst to the really good golf that I played for the rest of the year.'
Last year's event brought out 116,000 fans to TPC Louisiana, and this year's version is likely to match that number since McIlroy is in the field … and stayed in the tournament despite winning the Masters.
Lowry laughed about that, saying he remembered standing on the 15th at Augusta National on Sunday, watching the leaderboard and remarking to his caddie that the Zurich date might be in doubt. 'If things didn't go his way, I don't think he'd want to be here,' Lowry said, 'and I thought if things did go his way, he'd want to be somewhere else. But I'm happy he's here.'
'That was one of the things Shane said to me that night, like, 'Are you still wanting to come and play Zurich?'' McIlroy said. 'I said, absolutely. We're defending a title. We had so much fun last year here. Obviously, it's important for me to honor that commitment.'
Both recalled their Sunday at Augusta. Lowry had been in contention, but played himself out of the tournament with an ugly Sunday 81.
'Honestly, it was one of the weirdest days ever for me because you're out there trying to win the Masters yourself,' he remembered, 'but then when one of your close friends does it, you have no choice but to be happy for him because it is a great occasion. I think it's a great occasion for golf, for everybody in golf.'
'I do think that the whole day on Sunday at Augusta, I don't think I'll have to ever play a harder round of golf in my life,' McIlroy said. 'I certainly don't want to be placed back on that 15th tee box on that Sunday afternoon.'
After he survived that 15th — and a few more challenges besides that — McIlroy finally claimed the green jacket. Since then, he's heard from two presidents and a range of sports and cultural figures, flown across the ocean, and now must figure out what to do with the rest of his golf life.
'I think Rory's goals are, who cares anymore?' Lowry joked, throwing up his hands. 'He can take it easy for a while.'
'I care,' McIlroy insisted, and no one doubts that. Still, for the first time in more than a decade, the pressure is off … at least until the next major rolls around, and the talk of a 2025 grand slam ramps up.

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Book Review: All-Time Golf Greats Via Michael Arkush's ‘The Golf 100'
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Book Review: All-Time Golf Greats Via Michael Arkush's ‘The Golf 100'

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It couldn't have been for a lack of talent, but maybe it was for a lack of the proper mind necessary to win the biggest tournaments. Think about what Nantz has observed about Couples, while also contemplating Gary McCord's view that 'you have to have a lot of nasty in you to win the majors.' McCord was talking about Davis Love (#76) who 'only' has one major victory on his resume (the 1997 PGA Championship), but one senses McCord would say the same about Couples. Arkush is plainly apologetic with his routine what-might-have-been comments about golf's greatest players, but realistically they're a feature of the book exactly because they help the reader understand just how mentally challenging golf is, arguably quite a bit more than baseball. The bet is that Will would agree. Baseball is about occasional errors on the field, along with misses and outs at bat, but baseball players have backups, they have relievers, they have other players who can essentially bail them out. Not so in golf. 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Johnny Miller (#47) is to this day thought by those in the know to have played the best round of golf ever (the final round of the 1973 U.S. Open), Lanny Wadkins (#56) describes him as 'the best player I ever saw,' but he finished with two major wins. Still, in Miller we perhaps find clues as to why greatness isn't always sustained, nor does it keep repeating itself in ways that it at times does in team sports. In Miller's words to Arkush, 'I was just content.' Does success beget relative mediocrity in golf? The question just leads to more questions. It wasn't too long ago that Jordan Spieth (#59) was seemingly unbeatable as the 2nd youngest person (after Jack Nicklaus, no less) to win three different majors before the age of 24. No doubt there have been injuries, but it seems even by Spieth's own admission to come back to the mind. As he explained his fall from the top of the PGA perch to Arkush, 'Once you reach your end goal of something, maybe there's a little bit of a letdown.' It seems like a reasonable explanation, that reaching the top drives the very satisfaction that knocks you back down, but the explanation is unsatisfactory. That's because the work required to get to the top points to the kind of person who wouldn't suddenly rest on laurels. In other words, the reason you (you being the typical person) will never be Garcia, Spieth, or Rory McIlroy (#25) is because you would never put in the effort to become any of the three. About McIlroy, Arkush writes that 'no twenty-first-century golfer, however much it kills me to admit it, has been a bigger disappointment.' Once again, so many disappointments among the 100 greatest golfers of all time. How could that be in a sport populated by players who revere the players of the past more than in any other sport, and who for venerating them, understand intimately the constant about golf's greats that is 'promise unfulfilled'? To be clear, this review doesn't presume to answer the question, and Arkush doesn't himself. That's not a knock, it's just a comment that's pregnant with questions. What is it about a sport that, in Arkush's words, 'promises nothing and often delivers a lot less'? Well, what? To read about how so many of the greats should have won more, but also how some of the greats nearly finished without a major (Couples, 1992, Masters), is to keep searching and wondering. Professional golfers are said to lean Republican. Is that because golf is golf, or is it because golf is golf? As in does golf generally attract a more 'conservative' kind of person comfortable in golf clubs, or precisely because golf promises nothings does it unearth in its professional a conservative mindset that decries handouts from the Commanding Heights exactly because golfers get none? Dustin Johnson (#44) told Arkush that he hopes to be fishing 'with a gold beer' when he's 64. Too laid back, too unlike the greats? 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Writing about the presumed mentally crippling aspects of golf (including satisfaction), it's easy to get away from the purpose of the book. Arkush's ranking is 'spirited,' which is an explicit admission from him that his Top 100 wouldn't resemble that of others. Take Scottie Scheffler alone. He's not listed in the Top 100. Which requires another digression. Explaining how he ranked the players, Arkush is clear that 'one aspect of a player's career would be valued more than any other: how he or she performed in the game's biggest events.' Arkush explains further that the 'majors feature the strongest fields and, more often than not, are staged on the most demanding courses.' Arkush awarded 2,000 points for each major win, 500 for second, 250 for third, etc. Back to Scheffler, major #3 happened just last Sunday. From this, the seemingly obvious explanation for the omission was the latter. 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In roughly three pages per golfer, Arkush brings them to life. In 1971, and long after John McDermott (#100) had won two U.S. Opens, he was kicked out of the clubhouse at Merion Golf Club (where the U.S. Open was taking place no less!) after no one noticed who the poorly dressed old man was. Arnold Palmer luckily did, and proceeded to right the wrong. Ken Venturi (#93) was increasingly drowning himself in drink until a bartender told him he was 'wasting his life.' Venture told him 'I will not have another drink until I win again.' Venturi won the 1964 U.S. Open. Larry Nelson (#89) won two PGAs and one U.S. Open despite having never played a round of golf as of age 21. Julius Boros (#53) was an accountant for a Connecticut trucking company before he found his way onto the Tour. On the other hand, Ray Floyd (#29) seemed to enjoy betting on horses more than golf. 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Harold Hilton (#30) smoked as many as 50 cigarettes on days he played golf, Peter Thomson (#55) would supplement his golf income by writing about the tournaments played in for newspapers, and Babe Didrikson Zaharias (#18) was in the estimation of Arkush the greatest athlete of the 20th century. What of Phil Mickelson? He's in so many ways a riddle wrapped in an enigma, or however Churchill put it. Six majors and over fifty PGA wins, but to Arkush he was, and realistically is, 'another all-time great who underachieved.' The list of professionals who can lay claim to six majors is vanishingly small, not to mention no less than six second place U.S. Open finishes. What a resume?! Yet what's strange and understandable at the same time is that if the oddities that took place at the various U.S. Opens (Winged Foot most notably) can be forgotten, what Arkush most seems to be saying is that even forgetting those, someone with Mickelson's talent still should have won many more. Except for what keeps coming up in this most interesting of books. Leaving aside #1 and #2, there's realistically no one in this most mysterious of sports that shouldn't have done better. And that of course includes #1 and #2. Mickelson was the definition of 'can't miss,' but at #13 it should be said he was 'can't miss' who didn't miss. This would especially be true with other rankings not compiled by Arkush and that might grade on a curve of sorts. Figure that Mickelson starred, and starred for a long time in a sport that's so globalized, so well-funded, and that has so many flash-in-the-pan stars who, perhaps due to contentedness, can't maintain the greatness. Yet Mickelson did. It's not just six majors, but six majors beginning in 2004, and ending (?) in 2021. No doubt Arkush understands all of the above, and much better than this reviewer. 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Washington Post

time3 hours ago

  • Washington Post

Rory McIlroy gets a US Open tune-up in Canada. Bryson DeChambeau and LIV are in Virginia

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