For Rory McIlroy, Travelers the 'perfect sort of chaser' to grueling U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy skipped last year's Travelers Championship, still licking his wounds from a devastating defeat at Pinehurst. McIlroy's T-19 at Oakmont wasn't nearly as debilitating, and so McIlroy, encouraged by the way he drove the ball, poured himself a glass of wine on Sunday night, used Monday to reset and then jetted off to Cromwell, Connecticut, for the friendly, birdie-making confines of TPC River Highlands and the final signature event of the season.
'The weeks after major championships in these events, sometimes when you're in contention and you're trying to win them, it can feel quite difficult to go play the next week,' McIlroy said Tuesday. 'After a week like I had at Oakmont last week, where you're not quite in the mix but you might feel you find something in your game, you're excited to come back and play again…
'This is the perfect sort of chaser for what Oakmont was last week.'
McIlroy entered last week's U.S. Open in a rut, struggling with a new driver after his old one failed its test ahead of the PGA Championship. McIlroy tied for 47th at Quail Hollow and then missed the cut by 12 shots in Canada, where he lost strokes in all four facets, including nearly three shots per round on approach.
He arrived at Oakmont visibly irritated, and after a 6-over 41 second nine on Thursday to shoot 74, McIlroy's emotions boiled over during a second-round 72, where he tomahawked a long-iron and smashed a tee marker to pieces with his driver. After giving a pre-championship press conference, McIlroy declined all media the first two competition days, then acquiesced following another 74 on Saturday, only to tell reporters, 'It's more a frustration with you guys,' while later adding, 'I feel like I've earned the right to do whatever I want to do.'
But somewhere along the way, McIlroy found a feeling, through a repeatability of shots, to end the championship atop the field in strokes gained off the tee. And before he exited Oakmont on Sunday, he seemed noticeably more upbeat in front of the media.
'It's close,' McIlroy said on Sunday afternoon after a closing 67. 'Physically, I feel like my game's there. It's just mentally getting myself in the right frame of mind to get the best out of myself.'
McIlroy's upcoming schedule includes moving into a new home in London, then playing back-to-back weeks at the Genesis Scottish Open and Open Championship at Royal Portrush in his native Northern Ireland, where he suffered heartbreak in 2019 by missing the weekend.
On Sunday, McIlroy recalled a moment from that Friday at Portrush, where he hit an approach shot on the back nine and the crowd roared when the ball hit the green, sending McIlroy to the verge of tears.
'Just that support and that love from your own people … I was unprepared for that,' McIlroy said. 'I need to just get myself in the right frame of mind to feel those feelings again.'
This week, at TPC River Highlands (and not New York City's High Line like last year), will continue that quest to get right.
In five career Travelers starts, McIlroy has never finished outside the top 20. He tied for seventh in his last trip to TPC River Highlands, two years ago.
'If you short-sided yourself last week at Oakmont, it's like automatic bogey, if not more,' McIlroy said. 'Sometimes when I go back to Europe or come to a tournament like this, you have to remind yourself, no, you can go at the pin.
'You can actually fire at the pins here.'
Fire away, Rors.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Scheffler, McIlroy looking forward to Travelers
George Savaricas catches up with Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy at the Travelers Championship to discuss how they feel on the heels of the U.S. Open and more ahead of the final signature event of the season.

Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
US Open champion JJ Spaun tries to clear his head and get back to work at Travelers
CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — This isn't the first time J.J. Spaun has come to the Travelers Championship after a life-changing moment. Two years ago, his daughter Violet was born on a Monday and he didn't show up to the TPC River Highlands until the night before the opening round. He might be even more wiped now. That's what winning a U.S. Open can do. 'Violet's birthday is Thursday,' Spaun said while reminiscing. But then he stopped and his eyes widened slightly. 'Tomorrow. I don't even know what day it is.' It's been quite the whirlwind, and the U.S. Open champion wouldn't trade it. The Los Angeles Dodgers — the team script is on his yardage book — are trying to arrange for him to throw out the first pitch. Shortstop Mookie Betts, who played the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am with Spaun a few years back, congratulated him. Text messages came in from U.S. Open champions Curtis Strange and Hale Irwin. Spaun slept three hours early Monday before it was off to New York, where he had a full day of media on Tuesday and then was driven to the TPC River Highlands. He slept eight hours, about as much as the previous two nights combined. 'It's been pretty hectic but also very fun,' Spaun said Wednesday. 'It's been nice to be given the opportunity to express my feelings, my emotions. A lot of people want to hear from me. I was really grateful to have the opportunity to tell everyone about it. So I enjoyed it.' And now it's back to work, which should be a fun time for the 72-man field, at least those who had to slog through 5 1/2-inch rough soaked by rain at Oakmont for a grueling week. The Travelers Championship, the last of the $20 million signature events, is a happier occasion where the scoring is easier, even though the TPC River Highlands can still punish bad shots. The rough is still plenty thick, just not quite as dense as it was at Oakmont. And players are not hitting into putting surfaces where the golf ball never seems to stop rolling. Still, it's a welcome relief. 'It's more just kind of getting back into the swing of things of, 'All right, actually I have a 7-iron in my hand, but I don't have to be quite as careful,' I guess,' Jordan Spieth said. 'It's no gimme golf course, especially if we're going to see windy conditions. 'The short answer is, yeah, it's kind of nice,' he said. 'It would be hard to play something like that (Oakmont) every single week. But at the same time, you get a lot of risk-reward on the back nine here, which can yield 3-, 4-, 5 under rounds, but you can also get in big-time trouble.' For Spaun, it's moving forward just four days after his dynamic finish. He was in a five-way tie for the lead on the back nine and pulled ahead with a driver onto the 17th green for a two-putt birdie and a 65-foot birdie putt for a magical finish in his two-shot victory. 'I definitely need to keep the hunger there,' Spaun said. 'I think I will have the hunger just because I want to continue to prove myself, but not prove myself to anybody other than myself. I feel like my biggest barrier throughout my entire career is just trying not to be so hard on myself and not ruining any sort of confidence that I've built from all these experiences on my journey as a golfer. 'As long as I keep that up, I think I'll continue to play well,' he said. 'And obviously winning the U.S. Open is going to be a huge boost to that inner ego, I guess you could say, to keep that self-belief alive and burning.' Scottie Scheffler had no trouble last year when he went from winning the Masters to winning the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town. Rory McIlroy won the British Open in 2014, had two weeks off and then won a World Golf Championship at Firestone and a PGA Championship in consecutive weeks. 'I think after winning a major championship, like the first time you come back out to the course is a bit of a circus sometimes just with all the people,' Scheffler said. 'J.J. just achieved a lifetime goal and dream of his. It's definitely different coming to the golf course, for sure. There's a lot more people, a lot more stuff to sign, a lot of stuff that goes on. 'It's all good things. It's all stuff that's fun.' Keegan Bradley won his first major in 2011 as a PGA Tour rookie, had a week off and then missed the cut in his next two tournaments. 'I remember coming home and going out to dinner with my friends and walking into the restaurant. I could feel that people knew who I was. I had never felt that,' Bradley said. 'The thing I told J.J. was I hope he really enjoys this.' ___ AP golf:


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
How did Jordan Spieth relax after the U.S. Open? 'I had a few beers'
How did Jordan Spieth relax after the U.S. Open? 'I had a few beers' Oakmont Country Club isn't for the faint of heart, let alone in U.S. Open competition. The famed course outside of Pittsburgh tested the best players in the world last week, leaving them battered and bruised and ready to get out of town. Only J.J. Spaun, the tournament's winner, finished under par for the week, and he did it by birdieing his final two holes. Jordan Spieth has survived the grind of the U.S. Golf Association's national championship before, taking home the title in 2015 at Chambers Bay. It's one of three major championships on his resume, so he knows how to win on the biggest stages. But he also knows the grind it demands. At this week's Travelers Championship, a tournament Spieth won in 2017 after holing out a bunker shot to beat Daniel Berger in a playoff, Spieth was asked how he resets mentally and physically after such a taxing week. And his answer was a reminder that, though his golf skills are much better than the average human, Spieth is still one of the boys. "I had a few beers Sunday," Spieth said. "I went to -- we were waiting on the Schefflers to come over here, and he was after the delay. So I went to Buffalo Wild Wings with (caddie) Michael (Greller). I didn't exactly eat or drink the way I normally do there. "Most of the time, it's very, very good, but sometimes post-U.S. Open, I just needed to throw a few back. Then by yesterday, I was good. Still young enough that that doesn't really bother me the next day." Spieth finished T-23 at Oakmont, his eighth top-25 finish in 15 starts this season. After a grueling 72 holes, and in the midst of a busy stretch, Spieth decided the best way to relax was some chicken wings and a few brewskis, even if that's not his normal routine between tournaments. "I feel like, off of last week, it was a pretty tough walk -- this is my 10th out of 12 weeks as well, so my legs were a little clumsy the last two days," Spieth said. "I woke up this morning and feel ready and fresh, and that's kind of what you're looking for. If you can get there by Wednesday morning or sooner after hitting a couple training sessions and kind of getting everything on the recovery side going, then we're good to go."