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Rory McIlroy still in contention despite slipping down Travelers leaderboard

Rory McIlroy still in contention despite slipping down Travelers leaderboard

Rory McIlroy remains in contention at the Travelers Championship despite a one-over par 71 second round on Friday. The Holywood man began the day two shots off the lead after an opening round 64.
But he dropped three shots in his opening four holes before a bogey on the seventh came after a birdie on the sixth. Birdies followed on the tenth, 13th, and 15th holes. However, he dropped another shot on the 18th.
The world number two trails leaders Scottie Scheffler, Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood by four shots at the midway stage.
Fleetwood said he is pleased with the way he bounced back from his US Open disappointment after firing himself into contention for his first PGA Tour win at the Travelers Championship.
The English golfer lit up TPC River Highlands with a sizzling performance in the final four holes, which saw him notch two eagles and a birdie, narrowly missing another on the last hole.
A stellar round of 65 elevated Fleetwood to the top of the leaderboard, with world number one and defending champions Scheffler and two-time major winner Thomas.
Despite Fleetwood's golfing drought having stretched for nearly one and a half years, this season has seen him secure four top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour, though he stumbled last week with his first missed cut at Oakmont.
While reflecting on his recent challenges and his rebound, Fleetwood told Sky Sports: "You do quite a lot of sulking and then look at what you can do to improve. Very disappointed last week".
"I've been having a good season and I felt like my game was in a really good place going into last week.
"For whatever reason – I'll never understand the game – I played really poor but in golf there is always another week and this week is a big week.
"I came out motivated to take whatever there is to learn to make you better for the coming weeks and so far this week I'm happy with how I bounced back."
Fleetwood's round was going nowhere with one birdie and one bogey through 12 holes until he hit a superb 261-yard approach to the par-five 13th and holed his nine-footer for eagle.
He then chipped in from the front of the drivable 299-yard 15th for eagle and picked up another shot after hitting his tee shot to 12ft at the next.
At the last he managed only a 205-yard drive after his ball caught a tree but drilled a nine-wood to 11ft from 226 yards but could not close out with a birdie.
"I would have loved to have holed the putt but I'd take four after that tee shot," added Fleetwood, for whom the £2.6million first prize would boost his Ryder Cup prospects as he currently sits a place out of the top-six automatic qualifiers.

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McIlroy relieved after ball somehow skims water and stays dry at Travelers
McIlroy relieved after ball somehow skims water and stays dry at Travelers

Irish Examiner

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

McIlroy relieved after ball somehow skims water and stays dry at Travelers

No more skipping pressing conferences, Rory McIlroy was skipping the hazards to keep his Travelers Championship challenge alive on Friday after one of the more remarkable shots of his season. The Irishman sits four back from joint leaders Tommy Fleetwood, Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas after a battling second round in Connecticut. But his back-nine revival could have been significantly derailed if not for a stunning stroke of luck on the penultimate hole. He driven off target and found the right fairway bunker McIlroy took on a treacherous second with water snaking the right side of the fairway. With 156 yards to carry to the hole, McIlroy hit out of the bunker only to see his ball splash down in the lake, skipped and spin forward, somehow staying dry. He had an unlikely chance to get up and down for a par, but saw his 13-foot putt slide by. That bogey was McIlroy's fifth of the day but four birdies, three of which came after the turn, softened the damage as his gritty 71 in windy conditions at TPC River Highlands kept him on 5-under, four back from the star trio atop the leaderboard. 'The ball on 17, I was on the downslope in the bunker and I was afraid of hitting it fat and just hitting it straight into the water in front of me. I caught it a little skinny, and thankfully it skipped through, and I still made a bogey, but it probably saved me a shot by skipping out," said a relieved McIlroy. 'It was a little fortunate.' McIlroy insists he's still firmly in the hunt for a fourth victory of the season after a frustrating, fractious spell in the wake of completing the career grand slam in April. 'To get it back somewhat close to even par for the day was good. I battled well. I hit some good shots and held it together when it could have got away from me early in the round,' McIlroy said. ' 'I don't feel like I'm too far away again. The conditions today definitely bunched the entire field together, and should make for an exciting weekend.' Fleetwood is pleased with the way he bounced back from his US Open disappointment after firing himself into contention for his first PGA Tour win. The 34-year-old had a brilliant final four holes at the last Signature Event of the season with two eagles and a birdie, with another putt at the last brushing the hole. But his round of 65 put him into a share of the lead on nine under with world number one and defending champions Scheffler and two-time major winner Thomas. Fleetwood, who has not won anywhere in almost 18 months, has had four PGA Tour top-10s this season but missed his first cut of the year at Oakmont last week. "You do quite a lot of sulking and then look at what you can do to improve. Very disappointed last week," he told Sky Sports. "I've been having a good season and I felt like my game was in a really good place going into last week. "For whatever reason - I'll never understand the game - I played really poor but in golf there is always another week and this week is a big week. "I came out motivated to take whatever there is to learn to make you better for the coming weeks and so far this week I'm happy with how I bounced back." Fleetwood's round was going nowhere with one birdie and one bogey through 12 holes until he hit a superb 261-yard approach to the par-five 13th and holed his nine-footer for eagle. He then chipped in from the front of the drivable 299-yard 15th for eagle and picked up another shot after hitting his tee shot to 12ft at the next. At the last he managed only a 205-yard drive after his ball caught a tree but drilled a nine-wood to 11ft from 226 yards but could not close out with a birdie. "I would have loved to have holed the putt but I'd take four after that tee shot," added Fleetwood, for whom the £2.6million first prize would boost his Ryder Cup prospects as he currently sits a place out of the top-six automatic qualifiers. Shane Lowry laboured to a 3-over 73 where precious little was dropping for the Offaly man. After an opening 72 Lowry was chasing second-round momentum but bogeyed his third hole then found plenty of trouble after the turn bogeying three-straight holes. His lone birdie of the day came on the 15th.

Sir Alex Ferguson quickly bounces back from Man Utd axe as alternative venture secures him more than a year's earnings
Sir Alex Ferguson quickly bounces back from Man Utd axe as alternative venture secures him more than a year's earnings

The Irish Sun

time4 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Sir Alex Ferguson quickly bounces back from Man Utd axe as alternative venture secures him more than a year's earnings

SIR ALEX FERGUSON is still earning a pretty penny, despite being ruthlessly axed from his lucrative role at Manchester United. The legendary manager was the biggest casualty of 3 Sir Alex Ferguson lost his Manchester United ambassadorial role last season Credit: GETTY 3 Sir Jim Ratcliffe chopped Fergie's £2.1million-a-year job as part as sweeping club cuts Credit: ALAMY 3 But a business venture he started 42 years ago is helping keep him financially stable Credit: GETTY Fergie was axed from his multi-million-pound ambassadorial role with the club, with the sacking coming into effect at the end of the season. That decision from INEOS bigwig Ratcliffe saw the Scot wave goodbye to a whopping £2.1million a year salary. But the 83-year-old won't be strapped for cash thanks to a business venture he embarked upon over FOUR DECADES ago. Fergie 's personal company, ACF Sports Promotions Limited, recorded profits of £2.7m last year, taking its total assets to £26.9m. READ MORE ON SIR ALEX FERGUSON That figure is up from £24.2m the previous year, although it's not known if the £2.1m Ferguson received from United was paid into the account. ACF is the company that handles all of Fergie 's commercial activities, including speaking appearances. Fergie stepped down from his role as company director in 2014, handing over the reins to his son Mark. The healthy bank balance of ACF, which was set up 42 YEARS AGO , means Fergie won't have to worry about losing his ambassador's role with United. Most read in Football JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS Fergie axe comes at the right time - and he knows it By Phil Thomas IT is over a decade since he left the dugout but Sir Alex Ferguson has lost none of his sense of timing. When to sell, when to buy, when to change and ultimately when to go, Fergie has always been in a class of his own. Over the years there were countless decisions which had everyone scratching their head — but Sir Alex always knew the time was right. Some were more obvious than others. Like the night Manchester United won the Treble on the back of his substitutions. Others less so, like the summer of 1995 when terrace legends Mark Hughes, Paul Ince and Andrei Kanchelskis were sold at the peak of their powers. The whole of football thought the manager had lost his marbles. But Fergie knew better, as he chose that year to unleash his 'you win nothing with kids' Double heroes. Just as he knew best when it came to right-hand men. Brian Kidd, Steve McClaren, Archie Knox and Co — an endless list of world-class coaches who all came and went. And, of course, the biggest decision of all. Calling time on 26 years in which he had gone from the brink of the bullet to English football's greatest-ever gaffer. The majority of people are convinced Ferguson stepped down because he knew United's era of dominance was over. Maybe not the nosedive to come but certainly that an almighty rebuild was just around the corner. Another mass overhaul, yet not one he was prepared to oversee. Now another end has arrived. Not as dramatic or as out-of-nowhere, admittedly, but an end nonetheless. Next summer Fergie will leave his 12-year role as global ambassador. Many see it as the most ruthless swing of Sir Jim Ratcliffe's cost-cutting axe — and they are wrong. For while he is trying to save every penny in making United great again — how's that going, Sir Jim? — Ferguson has not suddenly and callously been told he is surplus to requirements. This decision was a two-way call. An amicable parting. Football's own conscious uncoupling, in Chris Martin and Gwyneth Paltrow lingo. And not, incidentally, a departure which means we will no longer see Fergie at Old Trafford on a matchday. That simply will not happen. He will still be there rain, wind or shine . . . Only now as a high-profile non-executive director, rather than a man with the ear — and the sway — behind the owners' biggest decisions. Like he was when urging United to re-sign Cristiano Ronaldo in 2021. Admittedly not his finest hour, rather an indication of the influence he still retained. Back then, until just before Ratcliffe and his Ineos team arrived, in fact, Ferguson had the owners' ear. Almost a hotline to the Glazer family, you could say. And those days are done. Not that Sir Alex is bereft at the thought. For a start, some of the staff sackings have enraged the Scot — long-serving photographer John Peters and kitman Alec Wylie, for example. This is not a cosy-cosy relationship with Ratcliffe being severed. If anything, it is closer to the opposite. And as Fergie the Red, in every sense The Boss — those who played under him still call him that — knows, trousering £2million or so a year in such tight times is not a good look. Fair enough, not an amount anyone would turn down in normal circumstances. Yet when many in the steerage class are losing their livelihoods, it is not something that would have sat well with him. There is also the practical side of things as well. At the end of December, Sir Alex will be 83 years old, albeit still a freakishly fit 83 years old. Yet even though the grey matter remains oh-so-sharp and the mind clear as a bell, the bones grow creakier and even Superman had to put his feet up on occasion. That does not mean you will not see shots of Fergie alongside Ratcliffe at various points — Sir Jim loves too much the associated glamour of being pictured with the greatest. But any idea of Sir Alex having an emperor's thumbs-down power has gone for good — and quite frankly that is something which suits both sides. Fergie was given the role after bringing his legendary 26-and-a-half-year reign at Old Trafford to an end in 2013. He was paid just shy of £26m for his post-managerial gig, which Ratcliffe and Co. deemed to be an unnecessary expense. Sir Alex Ferguson spotted with unlikely TV star pal at Cheltenham again as legendary Man Utd boss bags £65k winner In an interview with the BBC in March, Ratcliffe said of the cost-cutting, which has resulted in hundreds losing their jobs : "We have got a club which was in a level of financial difficulty. " Manchester United would have run out of cash by the end of this year -- by the end of 2025 -- after having me put $300m (£232.72m) in and if we buy no new players in the summer . "If we hadn't have implemented the cost programmes and restructuring that we have done over the last 12 months. "So we have to deal with all those things, and there's only so many things you can deal with at once. "We have a new management team, we have to deal with the financial restructure, then we have to move on to the squad, data analysis, and moving forward. "But we are in the process of change and it's an uncomfortable period and disruptive and I do feel sympathy with the fans. "But I am not actually surprised where we are in the league because Ruben's only got a certain size of squad he can deal with, and quite a number of those players are injured or not available to him."

'Not sugar coating anything' - Farrell laments Lions' costly errors in Argentina loss
'Not sugar coating anything' - Farrell laments Lions' costly errors in Argentina loss

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

'Not sugar coating anything' - Farrell laments Lions' costly errors in Argentina loss

Andy Farrell refused to sugar coat the British & Irish Lions' defeat to Argentina as he took full responsibility for the 28-24 loss ahead of the squad's departure for Australia. The Lions head coach admitted his side's performance in a historic first Lions game on Irish soil at a sold-out Aviva Stadium had not lived up to his expectations as Pumas fly-half Tomas Albornoz led Felipe Contepomi's Pumas to a famous maiden victory over the tourists. Tries from Bundee Aki and Ireland team-mate Tadhg Beirne either side of a penalty try off the back of a powerful Lions lineout drive were some of the highlights. But a matchday 23 missing 14 players who were involved in English and URC finals six days earlier for Bath, Leicester Tigers and the largest one-club contingent within the touring party, 10 of the dozen Leinstermen selected by Farrell, went down to defeat. Argentina prevailed in front of the remarkable sight of 51,700 supporters forming a 'Sea of Red' in Dublin more readily associated with stadia of the ilk of Loftus Versfeld or Eden Park. The Lions will fly Down Under on Saturday, heading to Perth, Western Australia ahead of a tour opener against Western Force seven days later and asked for what response he wanted from his squad, Farrell said: 'Obviously a better all-round performance. You can single out one thing but it's not just one thing, it's a compounding of quite a few bits. 'The amount of balls that we threw blindly, either to the opposition or the floor, is probably a stand-out. If you combine that with the kicking game and the aerial battle and what is disappointing is scraps on the floor from that type of battle, it always seemed to go to Argentina so there's a bit of fight and hunger from them that we can't accept. 'Then you combine stuff at the breakdown, the lineout or whatever, and it's too much. It's too much when it all comes together, it's just compounded, and there's a reason why people do get cramp or look a bit tired or are not able to capitalise on opportunities you have created, because probably subconsciously you're suppressing yourself with the compounding of errors. It obviously needs to be addressed.' Asked about his own performance as head coach, the 2023 Grand Slam-winning Ireland boss said: 'Obviously not good enough. I always take full responsibility, that's my role. It doesn't matter what department or whatever, I'm in charge of the job lot so it obviously wasn't good enough and I need to be better. 'We're not sugar-coating anything because we need to be honest because if we're not honest how do we gain trust with each other? We have to say it as it is. There are certain things we said we were going to do and we need to own that and review that properly.' Farrell urged his players to take ownership of the red jerseys of which they were now in possession. 'We've got to own that. We've got to take responsibility for that. 'We are the British & Irish Lions so we've got to own the right to take that jersey forward. It shouldn't be heavy. We've got brilliant players within our squad and they need to embrace that.'

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