logo
Rory McIlroy's $995 Uber ride may be the ticket to a $4.5 million payday at Players

Rory McIlroy's $995 Uber ride may be the ticket to a $4.5 million payday at Players

USA Today14-03-2025

Rory McIlroy's $995 Uber ride may be the ticket to a $4.5 million payday at Players
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – When in doubt, call Uber.
Last Saturday, McIlroy treated his clubs to a $995 Uber ride to Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando – hope it was Uber Black – so that McIlroy could swap in his old reliable sticks for the latest and greatest from TaylorMade that he had played for the first three days. Those same clubs are in action again this week and have helped McIlroy produced rounds of 67 and 68 at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, two off the lead and good for T-4 through 36 holes at the 2025 Players Championship.
McIlroy explained why he changed his wedges last week on the eve of the Arnold Palmer Invitational and how it resulted in a switch to a standard TaylorMade Qi35 and matching fairway woods. But the experiment was short-lived. Trailing by seven strokes heading into the final round, McIlroy regretted the club switch and told his manager that he wanted to go back to old faithful, the TaylorMade Qi10, that he had used to great effect in winning the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am last month.
There was just one problem: the clubs McIlroy wanted were back home in South Florida, nearly 200 miles, or 2 ½ hours, away. Allow McIlroy's putting coach, Brad Faxon, to detail what happened next.
'He had them Ubered from his house on Saturday night, which is pretty extraordinary to have those shipped up,' said Faxon, who works as a TV analyst on Sky Sports.
Asked how much the Uber cost, McIlroy said, 'No idea. Not my department.'
But his longtime manager, Sean O'Flaherty, checked his phone and confirmed that the ride cost $665 plus a $330 tip. The clubs arrived about 9:30 p.m., and were back in the bag for the final round.
McIlroy shot even-par 72 on Sunday and finished T-15 at Arnie's Place. After the round he talked about the club switch but buried the lede.
'Sort of going back to what I'm comfortable with,' said McIlroy, who noted he would stick with his current mix of clubs through the Masters. 'I tried new woods for the first three days, didn't quite work out the way I wanted it to. So, yeah, I went back to my old stuff today.'
He continued: 'I led Strokes Gained: Off the Tee in both Pebble and Torrey, so it was a really good idea to change,' he said with a facetious laugh. 'Then, [Saturday], I lost strokes off the tee, which is the first time I've done that in a long time. Yeah, just went back to what was familiar.'
Ahead of the Players, he was asked about the club change again.
'You're always looking for a little edge, and for me it was like, OK, if I can find something that goes 300, that would be great, just for — not just for what's coming — for a lot of golf courses we go to nowadays, it seems like fairways pinch in at like 310, 320 (yards), which is just awkward enough for me to hit driver. But then if I hit 3-wood 285, 290, I feel like I'm not quite pushing it up there as far as I can. If I have to hit 7-iron into a green instead of 8-iron, I'll deal with it,' he said. 'Some years you vibe with a new piece of equipment a little easier. Like that Qi10 that I'm using that they brought out last year, it was like love at first sight. I was like, this thing is amazing. I think when you feel like that about a golf club, it's very hard to change into something else. It ebbs and flows. Some years it's easier than others.'
McIlroy hit just four fairways on Thursday and just one on the inward nine. He managed to recover and shoot 67 but according to stats guru Justin Ray, it tied for the lowest score by a player to hit four or fewer fairways in a round at the Players. McIlroy headed to the range after the round and left with a feel of what he wanted to do.
'Hit it way better off the tee and that was very encouraging to see,' he said. 'I hit more fairways in six holes today than I did in 18 yesterday. Yeah, got it in play much better and then from there was able to give myself some opportunities and obviously make some birdies early. Couldn't quite continue that on to the back nine, but it was much better off the tee.'
Asked to explain the fix, he said, 'I was just getting a little underneath it, just getting a little too much sort of side bend coming down, sort of in transition. So just trying to keep my right side a little higher and just try to cover it a little bit more was really the thought.'
That swing thought and a $995 Uber ride have McIlroy, the 2019 Players champion, in the thick of another trophy hunt at TPC Sawgrass.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

$43 Million PGA Tour Golfer Joins Rory McIlroy in Unfortunate News Entering the Weekend
$43 Million PGA Tour Golfer Joins Rory McIlroy in Unfortunate News Entering the Weekend

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

$43 Million PGA Tour Golfer Joins Rory McIlroy in Unfortunate News Entering the Weekend

$43 Million PGA Tour Golfer Joins Rory McIlroy in Unfortunate News Entering the Weekend originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The 2025 RBC Canadian Open at TPC Toronto is in full swing, and it's already shaping up to be one of the most dramatic events on the PGA Tour calendar. After two rounds of play, it's Cameron Champ, a late addition to the field, who finds himself on top. With an opening round of 62 followed by a smooth 66, Champ holds a two-stroke lead and remains the only bogey-free player through 36 holes. Advertisement Behind him are Andrew Putnam and a strong chasing pack including Victor Perez, Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen and Shane Lowry. But while some are soaring, others are heading home early. The weekend field has been trimmed, and four big names won't be around, Rory McIlroy, Max Homa, Luke Clanton, and David Ford all missed the cut. Max Homa walks the ninth fairway during the third round of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf ClubAdam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images In PGA Tour events, the cut is used to reduce the field after two rounds, allowing only the top scorers (typically the top 65 and ties) to compete in the weekend rounds. Max Homa, who came heartbreakingly close, finished one shot short of the cutline at 2-under. His missed 13-foot birdie putt on the 18th sealed his early exit. It's a rare misstep for the 34-year-old, who has earned over $43 million in career prize money and is one of the Tour's top competitors. As for McIlroy, the missed cut is particularly shocking. This is the first time he's failed to make a weekend since The Open Championship last July. His second-round 78 included a disastrous quadruple-bogey on the 5th hole and a double on the 11th. Advertisement 'I think there's still learnings that you have to take from a day like today,' McIlroy admitted. He now faces an unexpected break ahead of the U.S. Open at Oakmont. Related: Last-Minute Addition Leads PGA Tour's RBC Canadian Open This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 7, 2025, where it first appeared.

Rory McIlroy knows his form is a problem heading into US Open
Rory McIlroy knows his form is a problem heading into US Open

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rory McIlroy knows his form is a problem heading into US Open

Rory McIlroy admitted he is concerned about his form ahead of next week's US Open after missing the cut at the RBC Canadian Open. The Masters champion shot a dismal second-round 78 on Friday, carding a quadruple bogey, a double and four other bogeys in an eight-over-par round that left him languishing 21 shots behind halfway leader Cameron Champ, who finished on 12 under. Advertisement It is the first time the world number two has missed the cut since the Open at Royal Troon last July. McIlroy's round continued his troubled build-up to next week's US Open at Oakmont having been forced to switch to a different driver after his previous model was deemed non-conforming in a random test on the eve of last month's US PGA Championship, in which he finished joint-47th. Rory McIlroy missed the cut in Canada (Nathan Denette/AP) 'Of course it concerns me. You don't want to shoot high scores like the one I did today,' McIlroy said on the PGA website. 'Still I felt like I came here obviously with a new driver thinking that sort of was going to be good and solve some of the problems off the tee, but it didn't. Advertisement 'Obviously going to Oakmont next week, what you need to do more than anything else there is hit fairways. Still sort of searching for the sort of missing piece off the tee. 'Obviously for me, when I get that part of the game clicking, then everything falls into place for me. Right now that isn't. Yeah, that's a concern going into next week.' McIlroy was already facing an uphill battle after shooting one over par on Thursday and his day began to unravel after taking an eight on the par-four fifth. That occurred after he fired his second shot out of bounds from the rough and was forced to take a further penalty after playing a provisional. He then missed the green with his fifth shot and needed three more to find the hole. Advertisement Things got worse from there with further bogeys at the eighth and 10th before he double-bogeyed the 11th and then dropped more shots at the 13th and 17th. There was at least some relief with birdies on the 15th and at the last, but McIlroy is preparing for a 'lot of practice' over the weekend. He added: 'I think there's still learnings that you have to take from a day like today. 'Even though the last two days didn't go the way I wanted them to, there's still things I can take from it and still things I can learn. 'I'm going to have to do a lot of practice, a lot of work over the weekend at home and try to at least have a better idea of where my game is going into next week.' Advertisement Elsewhere, Irishman Shane Lowry's two-under-par 68 took him to eight under and a share of seventh place along with six other players. Andrew Putnam climbed to second on 10 under, while Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen was tied third on nine under with Canadians Richard Lee and Nick Taylor. Justin Rose, beaten by McIlroy in a play-off at the Masters in April, also missed the cut after finishing one under following a round of 74.

Tottenham Wins Europa League and Qualifies for Champions League with $130 Million Boost
Tottenham Wins Europa League and Qualifies for Champions League with $130 Million Boost

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tottenham Wins Europa League and Qualifies for Champions League with $130 Million Boost

Tottenham Hotspur's hardly-electrifying Europa League victory today against Manchester United in Bilbao has ignited north London with jubilation, ending a 17-year trophy drought and securing a golden ticket to the 2025-26 UEFA Champions League. This triumph, unlocks a staggering $130 million revenue boost. As fans revel in this historic moment, the fact remains, Spurs are the lowest-placed team ever to qualify for Europe's elite competition - per Opta. Advertisement This victory marks Tottenham's first major honor since the 2008 League Cup, a milestone verified by Tottenham's own historical archives. The Europa League title, a 15kg silver trophy, is Spurs' first European silverware since the 1984 UEFA Cup, as confirmed by Sky Sports and Opta. For manager Ange Postecoglou, this fulfills his bold claim of always winning in his second season. Financially, the win is transformative. UEFA's prize money data shows Tottenham earned $35.4 million from their Europa League campaign, with an additional $28.1 million guaranteed for Champions League qualification. Combined with matchday revenues from the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, averaging $7.6 million per game, and potential broadcast bonuses, Opta estimates a $130 million windfall for 2025-26. Champions League qualification could mean $130,000,000 payday for SpursGetty Images In the Premier League, Tottenham's 17th-place standing as of May 21, 2025, confirmed by makes their Champions League qualification extraordinary. Historically, no team finishing lower than 14th in their domestic league has won a major European trophy, per Opta's records. Spurs now hold the record as the lowest-placed team to qualify for the Champions League via the Europa League, surpassing West Ham's 14th-place Conference League win in 2023. Advertisement This triumph reshapes Tottenham's future. The Champions League berth enhances their transfer market appeal, crucial given their $279.3 million net transfer debt, as reported by The Athletic. Postecoglou's job security, once questioned, now seems bolstered, with fans on X celebrating his tactical shift to a defensive masterclass. However, challenges loom. Sky Sports notes that balancing Champions League and Premier League demands could strain Spurs' squad, especially after a dismal domestic campaign. Yet, for now, Tottenham basks in glory, their improbable journey rewriting history and fueling dreams of European dominance. Next: Man United's Billion-Dollar Game Why Losing to Spurs Could Bankrupt Them

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store