
McIlroy makes amends in Portrush homecoming with first-round 70 at British Open
OK, the returning hometown hero hadn't hit his drive out-of-bounds this time. No spectator's phone had been smashed. He hadn't made a quadruple bogey, either. So, for sure, this wasn't
as bad as 2019
.
But McIlroy had just missed a par putt from 3 feet, eliciting groans from the spectators around the green who had flocked to the Dunluce Links on Thursday to welcome back their favorite son.
Was it happening again?
Not quite.
Six years after opening with a 79 and missing the cut when the British Open returned to this corner of his native Northern Ireland, McIlroy made partial amends with a 1-under 70 in his first round that at least hasn't played him out of the tournament.
'I felt like I dealt with it really well today,' McIlroy said. 'Certainly dealt with it better than I did six years ago.'
Yet it was far from perfect.
Starting with an opening shot that he pulled into wispy rough, McIlroy struggled off the tee throughout a turbulent round played in better-than-forecast conditions and to a backdrop of Rory mania.
He hit just two fairways — on Nos. 8 and 9 — all day, losing his cool at No. 17 after another drive left into deep rough.
'It was a tough enough day, especially either chopping out of the rough or out of the fairway bunkers most of the time,' McIlroy said. 'So to shoot under par was a good effort.'
Yet the locals never stopped willing him on and the cries of 'Come on, Rory' followed him around Portrush, even during a run of three bogeys in four holes from No. 11 when McIlroy's round was threatening to unravel as the wind picked up.
From being 3-under par after 10 holes, McIlroy was at even par as he faced a tough second shot at the 17th. He somehow hit it to 12 feet and holed the birdie putt.
There were throaty roars from the grandstand around No. 18 as he walked to the green for a 45-foot birdie putt that slipped by the hole. He tapped in, raised his putter and thanked his fans. They'll be back in droves on Friday morning, no doubt.
'I feel the support of an entire country out there, which is a wonderful position to be in,' he said, 'but at the same time, you don't want to let them down. So there's that little bit of added pressure.'
Especially on the first tee, which McIlroy walked onto in 2019 not quite realizing the emotions he'd soon feel playing an Open on Northern Irish turf for the first time. He handled it badly and the wind that swept in off the North Atlantic coast wound up blowing him out of the tournament.
'This time I had a better idea of what was going to be coming my way,' he said.
In 2019, McIlroy started his second round 13 strokes off the lead and
a charging 65 on Friday
wasn't enough to make the weekend.
Six years later — and now in the
exclusive career Grand Slam club
— he is three shots back and very much in the mix for a second claret jug.
McIlroy and his legion of fans will definitely take that.
'I'm surprised 4 under is leading,' he said. 'I thought someone might have gone out there and shot 6 or 7 (under) today.
'Only three back with 54 holes to go. I'm really happy with where I am.'
___
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23 minutes ago
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New York Times
41 minutes ago
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It has plenty of pace on it, aggressive, and scoots past the hole. It'll be a near-17-footer for par. Knowing him, he'll probably sink it. He doesn't. Par putt within three feet, and he makes bogey. Grimace from the Northern Irishman. JT for birdie from 30 feet... oh! Judges it beautifully but it just pauses on the very edge, six inches away. He throws his hands at the ball, Harry Potter spell-style, drawing widespread laughter from the gallery. He eyeballs it, hoping it will drop eventually. It does not. He taps it in with the slightest nudge. Tommy Fleetwood goes THREE birdies in a row! What a start from Tommy! This whole group looks in good nick so far, McIlroy's poor shots aside. Getty Images English -4, +7, Finau E (1) We're up to five of our eight players in the leading group at 4-under now on the course, as Harris English survives the difficult first with a par. Case in point — both of his playing partners for these opening two days come away with a bogey. 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Getty Images McIlroy -2, Fleetwood E, Thomas E (2) A fantastic fourth shot from McIlroy, a wonderful wedge, catches the slope of the green and takes him to seven foot, giving him a makeable shout at a par save. And he curls it right to left and in! The duality of McIlroy, and of man: both the brilliant and the bad, wrapped up in the same hole. Might have been an eagle if he'd hit the fairway! Thomas' eagle putt is well judged but rolls by. He'll have a six-footer for birdie, and makes it. Then Fleetwood from seven feet for birdie... holed! Great start for this trio so far. You can't win The Open today, but you can definitely lose it… So the cliche goes on each of these first three days. Right now, we have a projected cut of 1-over ahead of moving day — but we'll see how that changes through the day. I imagine the top of the leaderboard will start heading north of the 4-under mark soon enough. It's like a bottleneck right now. McIlroy -2, Fleetwood +1, Thomas +1 (1) Tell a lie... the ball is unplayable, and McIlroy couldn't even see it really. He takes a drop in the thick grass and a penalty stroke. The Northern Irishman will do very well to escape with a par here, and pretty well to escape with a bogey. Royal Portrush, and Rory, both giveth and taketh away. McIlroy does whip it up onto the fairway, a nice clean strike from where he was. Thomas on the green after two, Fleetwood 12 yards from the pin just off the green.