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Rory McIlroy in worrying admission ahead of US Open

Rory McIlroy in worrying admission ahead of US Open

Rory McIlroy says he has to 'get his stuff together' as he looks to shake off his Masters hangover at the US Open this week.
The world number two completed an 11-year quest to win all four majors when he triumphed at Augusta National in April but his form has suffered since.
He tied for 47th at the PGA Championship last month, where he suffered drama when his driver was found to be non-conforming, while he missed the cut at the Canadian Open last week as his struggles off the tee continued.
The Northern Irishman has cut himself some slack given his monumental achievement at the Masters.
However, ahead of the US Open at unforgiving Oakmont this week, he knows he has to get his head back in the game.
Asked if he knew how tough it would be to regain his motivation, he said: 'I didn't know. Look, you dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don't think about what comes next.
'I think I've always been a player who struggles to play after a big event, after I win whatever tournament.
'I always struggle to show up with motivation the next week because you've just accomplished something and you want to enjoy it and you want to sort of relish the fact that you've achieved a goal.
'I think chasing a certain goal for the better part of a decade and a half, I think I'm allowed a little bit of time to relax a little bit.
'I think it's trying to have a little bit of amnesia and forget about what happened six weeks ago. Then just trying to find the motivation to go back out there and work as hard as I've been working.
'But at the same time, you have to enjoy what you've just accomplished. I certainly feel like I'm still doing that and I will continue to do that.
'At some point, you have to realise that there's a little bit more golf left to play this season: here, Portrush (the Open), Ryder Cup, so those are obviously the three big things that I'm sort of looking at for the rest of the year.
'I sort of need to get my stuff together here and get back to the process of what I'd been doing for that seven months from October last year until April this year.'
After missing the cut in Toronto last week, McIlroy said he had 'concerns' about his driving coming into a tournament where hitting the fairways will be key to success.
The 2011 US Open champion, who has finished second in the tournament in each of the last two years, spent the weekend practising with a new driver and says he is feeling more confident.
'I feel like, as the last few weeks go, I think I learnt a lot on Thursday and Friday last week and did a good bit of practice at home and feel like I'm in a better place with everything going into this week,' he said.
Asked what information he had gleaned, he quipped: 'I learned that I wasn't using the right driver.'

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Birdie at the last sees Rory McIlroy make the US Open cut
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Birdie at the last sees Rory McIlroy make the US Open cut

Rory McIlroy will be around for the weekend at the US Open after just making the cut on six under after a round of 72. The Masters champion made a birdie at the last to guarantee his involvement in the final two rounds at the Oakmont Country Club. That said, it was a frustrating day for McIlroy and it all got too much for him on the 12th. After miscuing his second shot on the par-five, 647-yard hole, he threw his club in the air. And then on the 17th he smashed one of the tee markers after his disappointing drive. A couple of double bogeys early on had the 2011 champion under real pressure but he settled down and made birdie at nine. There was a dropped shot on 11, but birdies on 15 and that saver at the last ensures McIlroy will have the chance to post a round in the 60s as he aims for a high finish. Birdie for the weekend 🐦 @McIlroyRory converts to make it inside the projected cutline @USOpenGolf. — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 13, 2025 Shane Lowry had day to forget. A round of 78 to add to his opening 79 left him at 17 over. Sam Burns is the at the halfway point after taming Oakmont. The 2023 Ryder Cup player carded a brilliant five-under-par 65 to move to three under. He was one shot behind overnight leader JJ Spaun, who began his round at lunchtime on Friday. The brutal Oakmont course, with punishing rough and treacherous greens, has chewed up and spat out some of the world's best players so far, but Burns was able to thrive. Starting at two over after Thursday's opening round, he produced a blemish-free 31 with four birdies to make the turn at two under. He dropped a shot at the first hole, his 10th of the day, but recovered with birdies at the second and fourth before draining a 22-foot putt to save par. "I didn't really think of much of a score. The golf course is really too difficult to try to figure out what's a good score and what's not," Burns said. "You're really just shot by shot and trying to play each hole the best you can. "There's obviously a lot of golf left on a very tough golf course, so I think really this afternoon just getting rest and getting ready. "I'm looking forward to the weekend. It's a 72-hole golf tournament, and if you can get a round under par out here, no matter if it's one under, you'll take it." First-round leader JJ Spaun followed the eighth bogey-free round at Oakmont in US Open history with six bogeys on Friday, but he managed a two over 72 and settled into second place at two under for the championship. Brooks Koepka was sitting at two under overnight but dropped down to two over after a difficult second nine holes saw him hit five bogeys. Jon Rahm was another player who endured a torrid time, especially on the greens, as he tumbled down the leaderboard after a five-over-par 75. "Honestly, I'm too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any perspective," the Spaniard said. 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Rory McIlroy scraps his way to making cut at US Open
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The script turned nasty for the two pals, as Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry – who'd started this 125th US Open with genuine ambitions – were cast as fall guys, forced to find an escape route out of an examination that asked one tough question after another. McIlroy survived. Lowry didn't. Frustration was evident in their behaviour as the pressure mounted, hole by hole, shot by shot. In McIlroy's case, it was a club throw down on the 12th hole after an iron approach to the Par 5 turned so that the ball nestled into the gnarly rough. The two-handed toss of the 3-iron some 20 yards down the fairway left nobody watching in any doubt as to his utter frustration. READ MORE On the 17th, it surfaced again when he smashed his 3-wood into the tee marker after pushing his shot into a greenside bunker, short-siding himself. There was a pair of them in it, sharing the frustration of the game; and the course! For Lowry, his frazzled mind played tricks on him. On the 14th green, he inexplicably bent down to pick up his ball without marking, a one stroke penalty for his actions turning what was a bogey into a double-bogey. Not that it truly mattered at that juncture, as Lowry's fate was well and truly sealed by then after a start to his round that saw him go bogey-double bogey-bogey-bogey in his opening four holes. Shane Lowry of Ireland reacts to a bunker shot on the second hole during the second round of the US Open. Photograph:Somehow, McIlroy found a way to survive into the weekend. The task proved beyond Lowry. McIlroy ensured he would be around for the weekend – some nine shots behind 36-holes leader Sam Burns – after signing for a second round 72 for six-over-par 146, a shot inside the cutline. McIlroy showed his class when it matted on the Par 4 18th, standing on the tee box on the cutline, he unleashed a drive of 372 yards down the middle of the fairway and hit an approach in to five feet for a birdie. He calmly rolled in the putt, and gave a sigh of relief. It hadn't started so well. McIlroy could hardly afford to put a foot wrong in his bid to, firstly, make the cut, and, secondly, to try to play his way back into the championship. Rory McIlroy throws his club on the 12th hole during the second round of the US Open. Photograph:The misstep, though, came right from the off: his driver, so often the foundation in a season that has already claimed him three titles – the Pebble Beach pro-am, The Players and the Masters – was disobedient from the get-go, finding a fairway bunker down the left of the first hole as McIlroy started the second round with a double-bogey six. If that misdemeanour put McIlroy on the back foot from the off, worse was to follow. Another double-bogey six followed in quickstep time, on the third hole. This time, McIlroy's drive found a fairway bunker down the right. Having started his round four-over from an opening round 74, the world number two's challenge to survive had doubled before he knew it. A birdie from 30 feet on the ninth hole at least gave McIlroy some hope as he turned for home, only for another tee shot on the 11th to sneak into a fairway bunker down the left which led to another bogey. The club toss on 12 graphically showcased his frustration, where he would par the Par 5. Finally, McIlroy saw some light, as a 20-footer for birdie on the 15th brought him to 7-over for the championship (onto the cut line). Survival at least within reach. And he closed the deal magnificently on the final hole to get into the weekend's final two rounds and the chance to play pursuit of Burns and those ahead. Lowry, though, will have to wait until a return to Royal Portrush for next month's 153rd Open after a thoroughly disappointing return to Oakmont where he was runner-up in 2016. This time, a 78 second round to add to his opening 79 left him cast well adrift on 17-over-par 157.

Rory McIlroy overcomes club throwing and tee marker smashing tantrums to make US Open cut but Shane Lowry bows out
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