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Darren Clarke back at Royal Portrush with high hopes for McIlroy

Darren Clarke back at Royal Portrush with high hopes for McIlroy

The Guardian2 days ago
The 7am tee-time practice trio on Tuesday at Royal Portrush: Darren Clarke, Rory McIlroy, Tom McKibbin. The galleries grew and grew. The venue for the Open this week was the site of a starstruck McIlroy meeting Clarke on his 10th birthday in 1999. Clarke's foundation played a key role in the early development of McIlroy. McKibbin, as a 13-year-old playing at McIlroy's home club in Holywood, was invited by him to play in the Irish Open's pro-am in 2016. The connections are as uplifting as they are strong.
Clarke's description of seeing McIlroy win the Masters in April, completing his set of majors, is therefore understandable. 'I watched every shot,' Clarke says. 'I couldn't take my eyes off it. Rory winning there was almost like watching my two boys, Tyrone and Conor, win. I was that emotional.
'I have known Rory for so long, I know his talent and his journey. To get over the line and do it, in true Rory fashion keeping us on the edge of our seats until the very end … It was destiny for Rory to join that exalted company. I was very proud just watching it. If I gave a 0.0001% help in his journey then brilliant but it was more pride, knowing him as I do. It isn't often you will watch something and feel like you are watching your own two boys play.'
Clarke has never claimed any credit for McIlroy's achievements. That will not change. McKibbin and Shane Lowry also had involvement with Clarke's foundation. 'I was just trying to help,' he says. 'I don't seek publicity for it because that isn't why I do it. Half of my foundation is to support breast cancer research [his first wife, Heather, died of the disease in 2006], half is to help the development of junior golf in Ireland, so that is all close to my heart.'
The 56-year-old recalls not only that 1999 meeting but the early buzz around McIlroy. 'I am not saying this to be all 'I told you so' but you could see back then how good he was, how much potential he had,' Clarke says. 'Now, potential and turning into the player that he has become are two different things but the talent he showed even from that age was just incredible. He was gifted, totally gifted.'
All evidence suggests McIlroy has rediscovered his mojo after a brief post-Masters lull. Clarke knows the scenario; his life was hugely altered by lifting the Claret Jug in 2011. 'I'm not in any shape or form comparing what I did with Rory but when you search and go for so long trying to achieve your goals, sometimes it is hard to have a reset afterwards,' Clarke says. 'He has achieved what only five other people in the history of our game have, so it's no wonder there is a reset for him. The reception he will get at Portrush will be unbelievable.'
Clarke's own situation is fascinating on two fronts. He was on course to make the cut in 2019 before a nightmarish triple-bogey seven on his 36th hole. Clarke returns to the Dunluce Links, where the 9th hole has been named after him, knowing this could be his final Open. Motivation stems in part from events of six years ago.
'I was fuming,' he admits. 'All my years of experience and to do that on the last hole … I had played so nicely. It wasn't steam coming out of my ears, it was lava. The 'new me' as I get older? Bollocks to that! That irritated me a lot. It hurt me. I have never played tournaments just to make that cut but I was comfortably inside the line and to do that was beyond frustrating.'
Clarke is undecided on whether this Open will mean goodbye. He remains not only hugely competitive on the Champions Tour in the US but a prodigious worker. 'I had gone through a spell of missing the Open cut too many times in a row but last year I actually played OK without having a great weekend. This year I have been playing really nicely without putting well. So I will see, I don't know. I really haven't made my mind up. If it gets to the stage where I think I have no chance of having a semi decent week, of making the cut, then I definitely won't play.
'I love Portrush, that goes without saying. It is just a very special place for me. If this is to be my last one, there isn't a better place. I am determined to really enjoy this one. Sometimes, I have tried so hard that I haven't been able to enjoy where I am.'
Clarke was a staunch advocate of the Open's return to Portrush after a 68-year hiatus. Peter Dawson, the former chief executive of the R&A, took on the case.
'I kept chirping at Peter's ear,' Clarke says. 'I think he ended up trying to avoid me at all costs. It was a bold move on his behalf to commit to bringing the Open to Portrush. It was great the last time; this one will be even better. They could easily just have come back for one but they didn't, they committed.'
Clarke encountered the Troubles. He comprehends what it means for Northern Ireland to showcase itself now on a global sporting stage. 'Bombs and shootings became part and parcel of life,' Clarke says. 'You were always wary. I think playing golf and playing in tournaments all over Ireland from a young age got me thinking there was more going on, about what was happening back home not making any sense. We have come an awful long way from that.
'That's not at all to say other places in the world haven't had bad times but you grew up in a tough time. I was fortunate my parents gave me everything to allow me to play golf, which in turn let me see what opportunity was possible back in those days.'
The final words, and intriguing ones, are for McKibbin. 'I have spent a lot of time with Tom, we have the same coach,' Clarke says. 'He is the real deal. He just flushes the ball. He is eager, he wants to learn so much.' It feels sensible to take note.
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The Open: Rory McIlroy paired with English star as third round tee times released
The Open: Rory McIlroy paired with English star as third round tee times released

Belfast Telegraph

time12 minutes ago

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The Open: Rory McIlroy paired with English star as third round tee times released

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'Pressure on Scheffler to turn lead into Open win'
'Pressure on Scheffler to turn lead into Open win'

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'Pressure on Scheffler to turn lead into Open win'

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Matt Fitzpatrick keeps Claret Jug dream alive at Portrush as Scottie Scheffler storms into Open lead
Matt Fitzpatrick keeps Claret Jug dream alive at Portrush as Scottie Scheffler storms into Open lead

Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Matt Fitzpatrick keeps Claret Jug dream alive at Portrush as Scottie Scheffler storms into Open lead

The rain pounded hard on Portrush and that was no issue for Matt Fitzpatrick, who after 17 months of fretting and flapping resembled a man who can walk on water. All well and good if he wasn't chasing a guy that levitates. As such, there were two ways to look at the Open leaderboard with 36 holes played and 36 to go. If we were to be parochial about it, the temptation would be to zero in on a Yorkshireman in the envious position of contending for the Claret Jug going into the weekend. A round of 66, taking Fitzpatrick to nine under par, has so far made him the most compelling English candidate to end the 33-year search for Sir Nick Faldo's successor at this tournament. Alas, the 'but' is a rather big one. Huge even. Because Scottie Scheffler, the world No 1, is one shot better and playing the kind of golf that suggests his existential questions around the meaning of life are no barrier to being the best at this silly game. His round was one of the last to finish and his score of 64 was the finest we saw all day. He was immense. Can he do it on a wet Friday on a links course in Northern Ireland? It would seem he can and we should moderate our enquiries. Chasing him down will be tough, but Fitzpatrick did so in winning the 2022 US Open and has plainly found enough in his game to pose a major threat of his own. He is one of three men in a breakaway group that stands within one or two of the lead, but will take no comfort from the proximity of Brian Harman, who is at eight under and not the sort of chap to whom you wish to present a target. The latter, of course, was the champion in 2023, or as he became known, the 'Butcher of Hoylake' due to his love of hunting anything from alligators to turkeys. The American's magnificent round of 65 put him alongside the resurgent force of China's Li Haotong. Tyrrell Hatton, thriving here on a routine of Netflix and three pints of Guinness per night, is part of the cluster on five under with Bob MacIntyre. We can return to their chase in a moment. First, to Fitzpatrick, who between March 2024 and May 2025 plummeted from eight in the world to 85th. Even now he is only 59th, but after sacking his popular caddie Billy Foster in March and rediscovering how to hit a decent iron shot, he is rising fast. Recent Tour results have trended from 17th to eighth to fourth in Scotland last weekend, but he is having a great time on the links of Northern Ireland. That was most clearly shown with his ignition after the turn, when having played the front in 34, he blitzed four straight birdies. They included one of only 16 claimed all day from 156 players at the 11th. If there was a sour note, it was the three-putt that limited him to a five for par at the second, and a worse one from inside three feet at the 17th when hunting a birdie to go 10 under. That stroke horseshoed around the hole and issued a mule-kick in the guts, only for the former US Open champion to save par from 23-feet at the last. It was a stellar effort on a day when Fitzpatrick and the rest of the later starters had to navigate the heaviest of the rains. Naturally, those in the earlier waves, including Rory McIlroy, who is six off the lead on three under after a 69, might argue they had to contend with stronger winds. Swings and roundabouts. Fitzpatrick said: 'I felt like every facet of my game was on today and I felt like I really played solid. To take advantage of the opportunities I had out there was obviously really positive. 'I've given myself an opportunity to win the golf tournament, but there's still a hell of a long way to go. Obviously the aim of the game is to stay in it for as long as possible and hopefully you can pull away right at the death. I'm obviously 50 percent there. We'll see what the weekend brings.' Which feels like the right time to talk about Scheffler. His mind has been swinging all over the place this week, when he volunteered that winning has become so routine that he doesn't find it so fulfilling anymore. He suggested a victory here for a fourth major, and three-quarters of the way to a career Slam, would make him satisfied for approximately 20 minutes. He is in position to test the theory, while simultaneously silencing those of us who queried if he was ready to conquer this quirky, bumpy, original form of the game. Like Fitzpatrick, he played in the driving range, and his round was sublime. Having struggled mildly off the tee on Thursday, he hit six of the seven fairways on the front nine in his second and burned his way to four birdies, including three on the trot from the fifth. Playing the inward nine, his only blip came at the 11th, when he drove through the bend to the left-hand rough and couldn't get up-and-down from 72 yards to save par after bunting out his recovery. There are limits to what he can do, but not many – there were four birdies on that journey in. Sublime. We might say similar of Bryson DeChambeau, who shot 65, but his success comes from making the cut after the debacle of his 78 on day one. At one over, he won't win the tournament, but in making the weekend he proved his resilience. Elsewhere, the 2019 Shane Lowry carded a 70 to sit two under, but it involved a rules controversy on the 11th. Having addressed his ball in the rough, he abruptly changed plan and attempted a practise swing, with the complication that his ball then moved. It was clear to see and as he didn't return it to the original spot, he was at risk of a retrospective two-stroke penalty. MacIntyre certainly left the course with a bigger smile than his Ryder Cup team-mate after his 66. 'There's potential,' he said. 'It could be anyone's time. I'm in a good spot. I feel happy, confident, comfortable. I'm going to go out and give it my best shot all the way through Sunday afternoon 'I'm not scared. I'm not going to back away.' Among those to miss the cut were Brooks Koepka, Collin Morikawa and Cameron Smith, who plummeted to eight over with a 78. Buried lower down was his fellow Australian Adam Scott, armed the smoothest swing in golf and only able to extract a 79 from these conditions. Of lesser renown was South Africa's Shaun Norris, notable mainly for taking a sextuple-bogey 10 on the fourth.

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