After Matt Fitzpatrick’s pitiful defence of his Andalucia Masters title, not even making the weekend, favourite backers will be praying a similar fate does not befall Rory McIlroy when the FedEx Cup champion makes his new-season Stateside bow in the CJ Cup in South Carolina.
It was Rory’s come-from-behind victory last year when the tournament was played in Las Vegas that kick-started a wonderfully consistent campaign that ended so gloriously at the Tour Championship.
Nine shots behind going into the weekend, McIlroy staged one of his now-regular through-the-field charges to edge home by a shot from Collin Morikawa with a phenomenal 25-under total and he must be disappointed the Cup has left Las Vegas and headed east to the Congaree course at Ridgeland.
The Tom Fazio layout, a 7655-yard par 72, has been around just five years and hosted last year’s Palmetto tournament won by the young South African left-hander Garrick Higgo, fresh from a quickfire Canaries double on the European circuit and making only his second PGA Tour start.
Congaree looks a serious test as 11-under won the day, Higgo’s total just seeing off a logjam of pursuers – England’s Tyrrell Hatton was one of six sharing second place. Surprisingly for a course of well-above-average length, eight of the first ten home did not figure high on the driving distance stats.
This is a much superior cast with six of the world’s top ten, headed by No.1 Scottie Scheffler, in the half-size line-up – for the second week running it’s a field of 78 with no cut.
Even allowing for the presence of Scheffler, Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth and Morikawa, there’s every likelihood of a European winner, either McIlroy who has gone 2-4-4 on the DP World Tour scene since that FedEx takeaway or Jon Rahm who played golf from a different planet when turning the Spanish Open, weak though it was, into a rout.
Now he has got his game back in order after the disruption to routine that his new baby…
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