
Rory McIlroy admits he was ‘pissed off' over driver fail leak at US PGA
Silence, sometimes, can be golden. Or not. In
Rory McIlroy's
case, his decision to remain media shy for the entirety of the recent
US PGA Championship
, through all four rounds at Quail Hollow, came with a myriad of reasons which – finally – he explained ahead of the RBC Canadian Open in Ontario.
Of course, the case of how McIlroy's TaylorMade driver's failed characteristic time (CT) test prior to the opening round was leaked, while that of Scottie Scheffler's failed test wasn't, proved the primary thorn in the world number two's side and why he opted to keep his thoughts to himself.
In describing the PGA week as 'weird' for a variety of reasons, he provided day-by-day explanations for not talking to any media – written, radio or television – following any round.
Day one. 'I didn't play well the first day, so I wanted to go practice.'
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Day two. 'We finished late. I wanted to go back and see Poppy before she went to bed.'
Also, that day, the news of his driver failing the CT test broke. 'I didn't really want to speak on that,' he admitted.
Come Saturday, another reason for not talking. 'I was supposed to tee off at 8.20 in the morning. I didn't tee off until almost 2.0 in the afternoon, another late finish, was just tired, wanted to go home.'
Then, Sunday's final round. Again, quiet.
Rory McIlroy speaks to the media ahead of the start of the RBC Canadian Open. Photograph:'I just wanted to get on the plane and go back to Florida. Yeah, look, and also the driver stuff, there was – I was a little pissed off because I knew that Scottie's driver had failed on Monday, but my name was the one that was leaked. It was supposed to stay confidential. Two members of the media were the ones that leaked it.
'Again, I didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted, either, because there's a lot of people that – I'm trying to protect Scottie. I don't want to mention his name. I'm trying to protect TaylorMade. I'm trying to protect the USGA, PGA of America, myself. I just didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted at the time.
'With Scottie's stuff, that's not my information to share. I knew that that had happened, but that's not on me to share that, and I felt that process is supposed to be kept confidential, and it wasn't for whatever reason. That's why I was pretty annoyed at that,' expanded McIlroy on his rationale for keeping away from media, as – under the rules and regulations of the PGA of America and the PGA Tour – he was entitled to do.
He added: 'I've been beating this drum for a long time. If they want to make it mandatory, that's fine, but in our rules it says that it's not, and until the day that that's maybe written into the regulations, you're going to have guys skip from time to time, and that's well within our rights ... just some days you don't feel like talking.'
McIlroy – a three-time winner on the PGA Tour with his Masters success in April completing the career Grand Slam and joining the AT&T Pebble Beach pro-am and The Players on his season's roll of honour – is back playing in Canada for the first time since Quail Hollow in a quest for a third Canadian Open title.
His previous two wins, though, came at different venues and, like the majority of the field, the TPC Toronto layout is a new one for this week's tour stop.
'There's a little bit of room off the tee, the fairways are quite generous, but if you miss them, the rough is pretty penal. The greens are tricky, undulating, really got to hit it into the right sections,' said McIlroy. 'I think it could be a good test by the end of the week if there's no rain and it firms up a little bit and they can tuck the pins away.'
McIlroy is one of three Irish players in the field in Toronto ahead of next week's US Open at Oakmont, with Shane Lowry – the third best ranked player in the field after McIlroy and Ludvig Aberg based off the world rankings – and Séamus Power also chasing the title which was won last year by Robert MacIntyre.
Lowdown
Purse:
$9.8 million/€8.65 million ($1.76 million to the winner/€1.55 million).
Where:
Caledon, Ontario.
The course:
TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course) – 7,389 yards, par 70 – is designed by Ian Andrew and is playing host to the tournament for the first time after undergoing significant renovation through 2023 and 2024 to prepare for the PGA Tour event. The course is a public facility. It is seen as a second shot golf course with an emphasis on approach play to greens well protected by strategic bunkering.
The field:
No Scottie Scheffler this week as he rests up ahead of next week's US Open so it is Rory McIlroy's turn to sprinkle the star dust in his quest for a third Canadian Open title. McIlroy and Ryder Cup team-mate Ludvig Aberg are the only two players from the world's top-10 in the field as many take a break ahead of Oakmont.
Quote-Unquote:
'The last two weeks have been pretty good for me, I'm starting to see a light at the end of the tunnel. It's not been kind of easy sailing for me this year. It's been a little bit of trying to fix certain things. But now I feel like we're on the right path and the game's starting to kind of merge together.' – defending champion
Robert MacIntyre
on turning his game around. The Scot is playing for the fifth straight week on tour and has four top-10s so far this season.
Irish in the field:
McIlroy is grouped with Aberg and Luke Clanton, making his pro debut, as part of the early wave (off the 10th, 12.40pm Irish time); Shane Lowry is in a three-ball with MacIntyre and Corey Conners, the top ranked Canadian off the world rankings (off the 1st at 5.55pm Irish time); while Séamus Power is grouped with Peter Malnati and Rafael Campos (off the 1st at 6.06pm). Aside from his tournament ambitions, Power will also be chasing one of three spots available for those not already exempt for the 153rd Open at Royal Portrush.
Betting:
McIlroy is looking for a third win at the tournament (at a third different venue) and, playing for the first time since the US PGA, is market leader at 4-1 with Aberg next at 12-1 and Shane Lowry alongside Corey Conners at 20s. However, better value may lie elsewhere: Nick Taylor is coming off a top-5 at the Memorial and looks decently priced at 40-1 each-way, while Erik van Rooyen's performance in the US Open qualifying would suggest the Springbok has found some form and is worth a look each-way at 80-1.
On TV:
Live on Sky Sports (early round coverage from 5pm).
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Irish Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Shane Lowry three shots off Canadian Open lead as Rory McIlroy falters
Rory McIlroy faces a battle to make the cut today at the Canadian Open as Offaly's Shane Lowry remains three shots off the lead after an impressive first round. Seamus Power was forced to withdraw from the event after nine holes, with the Waterford man suffering from a recurring back injury. Thorbjørn Olesen and Cristobal Del Solar are setting the early pace at TPC Toronto, both shooting a 61 to go nine under par in the first round. The Holywood man is getting to grips with a new driver ahead of the US Open next week, shooting one over thanks to two late bogeys to finish off the round. The first tournament since his disappointing showing in the PGA Championship, he will need to familiarise himself with his new equipment if he is to succeed here. He told ASAP Sports that: "I actually felt like I played OK." "There was a couple of shots in there, it was my first outing with a new driver, and I felt like that went pretty well. I hit some drives that I liked and that I liked to see, so that was encouraging." "The one I had been playing with previously, when I missed with it, I was a little bit left. Then my miss with this one is a little bit right. It's just trying to figure that out and manage it a little bit," "It's a nice feeling to get up the middle of the fairway and fully release it and know it's not going to go left on you." He remains outside the top 100 with a few shots to make up if he is to make the cut. Shane Lowry is right in the mix, shooting six-under to tie for fifth in the early stages. He bookended his round with birdies, with five more coming his way interrupted by a bogey on the 13th after a wayward drive. McIlroy tees off at 5:55pm, with Ludwig Aberg and Luke Clanton in his group, while Lowry gets going alongside Robert MacIntyre and Corey Conners at 12:40pm.


Irish Examiner
19 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Lowry makes hay with a sparkling 64 for fast start at Canadian Open
Shane Lowry made the most of drying Thursday ground as he surged towards the top of the leaderboard with a productive afternoon's work on the opening day of the RBC Canadian Open. In stark contrast to close friend Rory McIlroy who had the misfortune to head out in very inhospitable conditions early on the opening day at TPC Toronto, Lowry enjoyed his lie in and then got up and running from the get-go after teeing off in the afternoon wave. The Offaly man opened and closed with birdies and found five more, offset by just a single bogey, as his deeply satisfying 6-under 64 put him into a share of fifth place. He wasn't the only one of the late starters to tear up a track which proved defenceless in the drying stillness. McIlroy, having laboured to a 1-over 71 much earlier, must have cursed his fortune. How scoreable did it get? Chilean Cristóbal del Solar, the world's No.316, looked on course to become just the 15th player in PGA Tour history to go sub-60, a 59 very much on the cards until a late wobble. Remarkably, he was still among four players who went lower than then North Course's post-renovation record of 64, Dane Thorbjorn Olsen matching Del Solar with a 9-under 61 for a share of the day one lead. For Lowry, more than 300 places higher in the global rankings, there are big challenges and prizes rapidly approaching over the horizon. Next week's US Open is at Oakmont, where he finished second in 2016, followed by an Open in Portrush where he claimed his major moment in 2019. That's what made Thursday's fast start so satisfying. The sole bogey came courtesy of a wild drive on the par-4 13th but otherwise he was a model of consistency, all parts of the game clicking in nicely. There was almost a highlight reel ace at the 200-yard par-3 11th when a sparkling iron from 200 yards was lasered in to four inches. So much of Lowry's game has been working well this season. Sluggish Sundays have frustrated him, as has a cool putter but Thursday's birdies came from the following distances: 9ft, 8.6ft, 20.8ft, 4.9ft, 15.1ft, the four-inch kick-in and on the final hole an eight-incher after his eagle effort came up just short. Lowry played alongside defending Canadian Open champion and Ryder Cup teammate Robert MacIntyre, the big Scot enjoying the company as he shot a blemish-free 5-under 65. McIlroy's reset remained a work in progress as his return from a three-week break didn't go to plan with his new TaylorMade driver showing some positive signs but a few concerning ones too. The Masters champion shot a frustrating 1-over 71 at TPC Toronto to leave him with work to do when he returns on Friday afternoon, closing with back-to-back bogeys to undo some great recovery work midway through his round. In that stretch McIlroy arguably looked as fluid as he has since Augusta but the costly finish left an aftertaste. 'I actually felt like I played okay. There was a couple of shots in there, it was my first outing with a new driver, and I felt like that went pretty well. I hit some drives that I liked and that I liked to see, so that was encouraging,' he said afterwards. "I hit some good iron shots. Missed a couple of greens and didn't get them up-and-down, especially those last couple holes. Overall, I'm actually pretty happy with how I played. Obviously need to go a little bit lower tomorrow and over the weekend to have a chance. Overall I'm still trying to work on some things, but yeah, I'm okay with where everything is.' McIlroy had travelled north to one of his favourite stops on tour looking for something of a fresh start after his post-career grand slam glow turned gloomy with a difficult week at the PGA Championship in Quail Hollow last month. But with the gruelling test of Oakmont to come next week, McIlroy wasn't sharpening much at all early in Thursday's round. After the course was given an overnight soaking of rain, the soggy start was matched by a stodgy scorecard as McIlroy found himself 2-over through his first eight holes. Starting on the 10th, it was an overshot iron on the 12th and a three-putt on the 17th which put him in an early hole. A birdie four on the long 18th helped to get things moving around the turn and McIlroy added two more in quick succession to get himself back in the red. However that momentum slowed as the putter cooled and an errant drive found tricky rough on the 8th resulting in another bogey after he failed to chop out of more thick stuff wth his third. The mood darkened again when on his final hole he took on a fairway bunker and lost, the drive plugging and a closing bogey leaving him at +1 well outside the top 100 by the end of the day. Some post-lunch range work was on the cards as the weather turned. 'Weather permitting, if it holds off, I'll go hit some balls. It's hard with the driver, like with the one I had been playing with previously, when I missed with it, I was a little bit left.' McIlroy added. "Then my miss with this one is a little bit right. It's just trying to figure that out and manage it a little bit. It's a nice feeling to get up the middle of the fairway and fully release it and know it's not going to go left on you. Yeah, a little bit of practice this afternoon and get ready for tomorrow.' There was one more disappointing Irish postscript when Seamus Power was forced to withdraw shortly after the turn as injury cut his challenge short.


RTÉ News
19 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Shane Lowry starts well as McIlroy stutters at Canadian Open
Shane Lowry carded an impressive 64 to lie three shots off the lead after the opening round of the RBC Canadian Open, but it was a somewhat stuttering start from Rory McIlroy who is seeking a third win in the event. Lowry, the 2019 runner-up, posted seven birdies, with his only dropped shot of the day coming on 13. He is in a tie for fifth alongside Rasmus Højgaard and American Trey Mullinax on six under. Leading the way on nine under are Dane Thorbjørn Olesen and Cristobal Del Solar from Chile Two-time champion Rory McIlroy was far from his best when posting a one-over 71 McIlroy, starting on the back nine at TPC Toronto, began with a couple of pars but made bogey on 12. Another dropped shot came on 17 as he failed to hole a 20-foot put for par, this after finding the rough. His response was to make birdies at the next three holes, which included rolling in an 11-foot putt at the second. McIlroy then followed a run of five pars with bogeys on the closing two holes. Seamus Power withdrew from the event after nine holes.