Rory McIlroy struggles with driver as debutant Gerard makes fast start to US PGA
In terms of US PGA Championship shocks, nothing is likely to beat the 2024 sight of Scottie Scheffler in a prison jumpsuit in the hours preceding his second round at Valhalla. The return of this major was, however, dramatic enough.
So much for Quail Hollow as Rory's playground. Rory McIlroy, fresh from Masters glory, opened with a three-over 74. This was not in anybody's script. Luke Donald, McIlroy's Ryder Cup captain, last posted a major top 10 in 2013. Donald produced a 67 that rolled back the years and defied seasoned analysts who insisted only big hitters can master this major property.
Related: US PGA Championship 2025: day one golf updates – live
The US PGA debutant Ryan Gerard, the world No 81, surged to the top of the leaderboard at seven under par. Gerard stumbled over the closing two holes but his 66 still claimed a share of the early lead. Gerard has Australia's Cam Davis for company. When a 68 for Matt Fitzpatrick is factored in – the Yorkshireman has been searching desperately for form – this was another day of the unexpected. Only the brave will predict what happens next.
Beyond celebration of the completion of a career grand slam it may well be that McIlroy has a psychological adjustment to make in this fresh chapter of his extraordinary career. Perhaps that is looking too deeply into round one of this tournament. The Northern Irishman's fundamental issue was technical and uncharacteristic; he hit just four of 14 fairways. At a course dominated by long par fours, this will always place a golfer behind the eight ball. Other elements of McIlroy's game could not rescue him. He had, for example, 31 putts.
Things had started so promisingly for him. He comfortably birdied the 10th, his 1st, to plant himself immediately on the upper echelons of the leaderboard. This was a congested scene; at 10.30am, 13 players were tied at the top on minus three.
McIlroy three-putted from distance at the 11th and missed a short birdie attempt at the 14th. The next two holes rather typified his day; the 36-year-old pulled drives into trouble. He recovered to collect a shot at the 15th. McIlroy plus playing partners, Scheffler and Xander Schauffele, took 18 shots between them on the par-four 16th.
Amazingly, McIlroy's six was his first Quail Hollow double bogey since 2010. Grisly stuff. Bogeys to bookend McIlroy's second half meant three over par. He did not look despondent but the post-round plan to head to the practice range told a story in itself. The Masters champion needs to rediscover his mojo with driver in hand. McIlroy will be well aware that Scheffler's 69 is ominous for the remainder of the field.
Those to outscore Scheffler included Donald, whose 14 pars and four birdies looked blissfully simple. There is no prospect whatsoever of the Englishman playing for Europe at Bethpage in September but the captain is entitled to relish this prominence while it lasts. It is often forgotten that Donald once spent a year as the world's top-ranked golfer.
'Someone just told me it was the lowest first round in a major I've had since 2004,' Donald said. 'I'm here only because I'm captain of the European Ryder Cup team. I wouldn't be in this field otherwise. It's a nice invitation and a perk that the Ryder Cup captain gets. I understand that. I understand that my game isn't where it used to be and that the Ryder Cup is the focus. That really doesn't bother me one bit.'
Fitzpatrick's world ranking of 85 seems incredible given the heights he scaled when winning the 2022 US Open. The last year has been especially grim for the meticulous Fitzpatrick, meaning he was quite right to speak reflectively after his day's work.
'It has been really hard,' Fitzpatrick said of his woes. 'It doesn't matter how many times you remind yourself what you've done and the success you've had. It's hard when you step on the range or you step on the golf course and you've got an intention the shots don't match.
'This is the worst I feel like I have ever played. It's the lowest I've ever felt, for sure, going on a golf course. I didn't want to be out here at some points. I felt much more interested in football than golf. It's tough.'
Related: Scottie Scheffler berates US PGA organisers over mud balls
Gerard went to college in this state, meaning he is familiar with the venue. 'I feel very comfortable here,' he said. 'There's a lot of people here that I know and I've been fortunate enough to play this golf course a few times. All of that is fantastic and it definitely helped in the preparation.
'I've been kind of just hovering in that 15th to 30th range a lot of weeks. That's not a bad thing but I'm kind of looking to step on the gas here.'
Robert MacIntyre's 68 was notable. Ryan Fox, who won on the PGA Tour on Sunday, matched Donald's score. Phil Mickelson recounted a 'rough day' which included 79 shots with an eight at the 7th, his 16th. Brooks Koepka, once a regular feature at these events, is four over. LIV Golf has made Koepka richer. It is perfectly legitimate to ask whether it has made him any better.

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


New York Post
28 minutes ago
- New York Post
Don't count out Superman Scottie Scheffler with US Open always a breeding ground for chaos
OAKMONT, Pa. — Sometimes, even Superman struggles. Scottie Scheffler doesn't wear a cape. But the golf he's played for the past few years has been worthy of superhero status. It's been otherworldly. The gap between his No. 1 world ranking and the rest of the pack is reminiscent of the Tiger Woods era of dominance. Scheffler won seven times last season, including the Masters and the Players Championship. He entered this week's U.S. Open at Oakmont having won three times in his previous four starts, including the PGA Championship and Memorial.


NBC Sports
38 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
NOTES AND QUOTES – NBC SPORTS' COVERAGE OF THE 125TH U.S. OPEN (SECOND ROUND)
Saturday's Third Round Coverage Begins at 10 a.m. ET on USA Network and Continues on NBC and Peacock at Noon ET 'When you talk about a wide open U.S. Open, you couldn't get any more wide open than this going into the weekend.' – Brandel Chamblee on the weekend and potential weather impact 'That 63 was just a heavenly round, literally. I think it was inspired by somebody upstairs. I don't think Arnold Palmer liked it very much.' – Johnny Miller in the broadcast booth with Dan Hicks on his final round in 1973 U.S. Open win at Oakmont 'He had a little letdown...I think he was sort of like, 'Wow, I did it.' It's hard to regroup the way you were before. Tiger Woods didn't have any trouble going after everything he could get, but not everybody can do that.' – Johnny Miller on Rory McIlroy's play after clinching the career Grand Slam Mini Episodes of the GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav Post Nightly STAMFORD, Conn. – June 13, 2025 – NBC Sports presented second round coverage of the 125th U.S. Open from Oakmont Country Club on NBC and Peacock, including on-site post-round coverage on Golf Central Live From the U.S. Open on GOLF Channel. Saturday's third coverage begins at 10 a.m. ET on USA Network and continues on NBC and Peacock at noon ET. Friday's coverage included a visit to the broadcast booth by long-time NBC Sports golf analyst Johnny Miller, who won the 1973 U.S. Open at Oakmont with a final-round 63. 125th U.S. Open – First Round Leaderboard JOHNNY MILLER WITH DAN HICKS Miller on his 29 years as lead golf analyst with NBC: 'We had such a great group of guys working together for all of those years. (To Dan) I sort of ushered you in. You were my youngest brother.' Hicks: 'Yeah you did. You had to babysit me for a while especially that first U.S. Open we did together at Pebble Beach in 2000.' Miller: 'Yeah, like five minutes (laughs).' Miller on his U.S. Open win and final round 63 at Oakmont in 1973: 'Well, if you're going to win the U.S. Open, I had a pretty interesting way to do it. That 63 was just a heavenly round, literally. I think it was inspired by somebody upstairs. To hit every green and not have one putt downhill, I just hit the ball close to the hole all day long. I don't think Arnold Palmer liked it very much.' Miller on his final round 63 in 1973: 'The winds were down this morning, maybe the course was a little bit softer, but very quickly it turned from gentle to brutal. We only have a handful of players under par.' Miller on J.J. Spaun: 'That was a great putting exhibition yesterday from J.J. Spaun.' Miller on Rory McIlroy's play following the career grand slam win at the Masters: 'He had a little letdown...I think he was sort of like, 'Wow, I did it.' It's hard to regroup the way you were before. Tiger Woods didn't have any trouble going after everything he could get, but not everybody can do that.' Miller on Ben Griffin: 'He's a good looking player. It's funny – in my planner, I wrote his name. Don't ask me why, but I did right in the June section ...he's playing pretty good.' Hicks: 'Johnny Miller – partner for life.' ON CONDITIONS AT OAKMONT Mike Tirico: 'The headline guys coming in, very interesting way they played out for the first two days. Scottie Scheffler, who seems to be searching right now but also lurking as he's at four-over par. Seven shots can be made up here.' Curt Byrum: 'When they top the rough here, it doesn't help anybody. These players would rather start to see it lay over. When they top it, it stands straight up and the ball goes right to the bottom. It's like they're cutting it with a vacuum cleaner – it cuts it, then stays straight up.' Begay III on the rain at the end of the round: 'Things drastically change. You're trying to focus on keeping your glove dry, keeping your grips dry. You can see the caddies trying to keep the ball dry as much as possible before the players hit it because when that ball does get wet, the way the drivers are designed, it will skid off that face a little and go out to the right.' McGinley on the impact rain could have on the third round: 'It'll make it easier, make the fairways wider because the ball will hit now and stop. It won't be bouncing off into the rough the way it did, not as much anyway…The greens will be softer. Because of the slopes on them and the speed of them, you might see a lot of balls spinning away from the flags more and then maybe off the greens so the players are going to have counteract that…But, wet golf is not going to be nice.' Chamblee: 'This rain will take so much of the bite out of (the course). Scoring average has been around 75 the last couple of days. It wouldn't surprise me tomorrow if they get around 72 or something like that, and it wouldn't surprise me if someone came out tomorrow and shot 65 or 64…Everybody who makes the cut is going to be within ten shots of the lead. So, when you talk about a wide open U.S. Open, you couldn't get any more wide open than this going into the weekend. The complexity of this in the last hour changed 180 degrees.' ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (+4, T-23) Notah Begay III on Scheffler's swing early in the second round: 'It looks a bit more awkward than normal. Which tells me that he's just trying to keep the train on the tracks through impact and it's just not working in his favor right now.' John Wood prior to Scheffler's birdie on the 7th hole (his 16th hole of the day): 'He's showing some signs of life. It's starting to click a little bit for him.' Begay III on the 8th hole: 'I think he has found something here in the last few holes. The last few swings have been great.' Hicks: 'Just seven of 18 greens in regulation hit today. That's not a Scheffler-like line.' Brad Faxon on Scheffler on the range following his second round: 'I've never seen him this animated.' ON J.J. SPAUN (-2, 2nd) Faxon on Spaun and his coach's mindset this week: 'They're using this thought process this week, 'Are we going to respond or are we going to react?' And react is not what you want to do. You want to respond. It sounds subtle in words, but it's huge in the way you think about your shots. Everybody is getting bad lies, bad situations, and reacting to them. He's just trying to respond to them.' Kaufman on Spaun's second round: 'That's what he did yesterday: his putting and his short game led him to a bogey-free 66 and today it's been a little bit of the opposite. His ball-striking has been so solid – a lot like what we typically see with J.J. and the putter has let him down at times a little bit.' Hicks on Spaun's mindset: 'Spaun admitted when he used to see his name up on leaderboards, especially in big tournaments, he used to get a little scared. He said, 'I used to be scared to have the ball,' kind of alluding to a basketball reference but his confidence level has changed considerably.' ON BROOKS KOEPKA (+2, T-8th) Begay III on criticism Koepka received from coach Pete Cowen: 'He said that he wants to hear the truth and he doesn't want to be surround by 'yes' men. And when you get the truth and sometimes it hurts, it allows an athlete to focus on the things they need to focus on in order to improve. In a nutshell, I think he's found a nice groove and he's right in the middle of this.' ON RORY MCILROY (+6, T-45th) Sands on McIlroy's birdie on the 18th hole to finish at +6 and make the cut: 'It has been a rocky road the first couple of days, but that was a professional effort…a professional never wants to go home for the weekend.' Kisner after McIlroy threw his club on the 12th hole: 'I don't know what was worse – the club toss or the shot.' ON ADAM SCOTT (E, T-4th) McGinley: 'The golf swing hasn't changed, but this is kind of out of left field. All of his numbers are bad this year, he hasn't had a top ten…So for him to show up and drive it as well as he has, hit his irons as well as he has, and play with this kind of form, I mean he looks like a guy who can go out there, put some numbers up on the board and add to his major championship total, and nobody would have really talked about him coming into this week.' ON BEN GRIFFIN (E, T-4th) McGinley: 'Keep an eye out for this guy. Outside of Scottie Scheffler, this is the hottest player in the game.' GOLF CHANNEL PODCAST WITH REX & LAV As part of NBC Sports' comprehensive U.S. Open coverage, new daily episodes of the GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav, hosted by senior writers Rex Hoggard and Ryan Lavner, will post nightly. The podcast sees the two longtime scribes discuss and debate the latest news and hottest topics in the sport, and this week's daily mini-pods will recap each round of the U.S. Open, discuss the major storylines from the championship, and look ahead to the following day's play. Click here to listen to the latest episode on YouTube and Apple Podcasts. --NBC SPORTS--


NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Rory McIlroy, not 17th tee marker, into weekend at U.S. Open
OAKMONT, Pa. – Rory McIlroy will be sticking around for the weekend at Oakmont. The left tee marker on the 17th hole, however, won't be. McIlroy surely will receive a bill from the USGA for the damage, which occurred after McIlroy sent his drive sailing toward the front-right greenside bunker at drivable par-4 and then took his frustrations out with one swift blow using his driver. The characteristic time of the clubhead on the marker was likely below the legal limit, but it didn't matter, as the marker was split like Bruce Lee karate-chopping a 2x4. Rory juist SMASHED the tee marker on 17. That wasn't the only outburst from the 36-year-old McIlroy. Earlier on the back nine, he tomahawked a long iron down the fairway after hooking his second shot at the par-5 12th into the rough. Ironically, McIlroy saved par on both holes, then stuffed a wedge to 5 feet at the par-4 finishing hole to card a second straight 73 and make the cut by a shot at 6 over. Also somewhat ironically, McIlroy nearly ranks in the top 10 in strokes gained off the tee through 36 holes after struggling with a new driver at the PGA Championship a few weeks ago. Sure, he's losing around three-fourths of a shot on approach and is nine shots behind heading into Saturday (he'd be just three if not for three double bogeys in a five-hole span between the end of his first round and start of his second), but things could be much worse. For starters, McIlroy could've endured the last two days of his playing competitors, Shane Lowry and Justin Rose, who combined to shoot 31 over. And it's not like, you know, McIlroy didn't complete the career grand slam just two months ago at Augusta National. But while Lowry stopped to talk to the media, McIlroy, hat turned backwards, declined all interview requests for the sixth straight major round – he did conduct a press conference on Tuesday – and headed directly to the parking lot. Everyone will try again tomorrow.