Rory McIlroy’s quest for a Green Jacket got off to a slow start on Thursday, as the Ulsterman made a series of “untidy” mistakes en route to a level-par 72.
It’s a round that McIlroy admits is two or three shots short of where he’d ideally like to be, although he’s not pressing the panic button and remains optimistic that he can climb the leaderboard as he goes in search of the career Grand Slam over the weekend.
“I missed a couple of tee shots left on 7 and 17 that I sort of got penalized for, like an untidy bogey on 3, a three-putt on 11,” said a frustrated McIlroy. “So just stuff like that. It’s not disastrous, but I just need to sort of tidy it all up.”
McIlroy can boast seven top-10 finishes in the past nine years at Augusta National, and on a recent scouting trip to the famous venue it was revealed that he’d got pretty hot with his putter.
Today, though, the five-time Major winner struggled to get out of first gear, trading three birdies on the front nine with a bogey and a momentum-sapping double.
“I didn’t feel like I was too far away today,” he added. “I made five birdies but just a couple too many mistakes on the card.
“Obviously you see Sam [Burns] playing beside me goes four under for the first four. You’ve got three guys at seven-under on the leaderboard. So, yeah, it’s hard to stay patient when you just want to try to get yourself in there.”
The 33-year-old has always been one to back himself in tough conditions, but with heavy rain forecast at Augusta National over the weekend, it might make his task of making up ground more difficult.
“I think when you’re chasing, it’s probably the harder the better because it plays easier for everyone,” McIlroy added. “The more difficult the course is, I think that’s probably favorable conditions for chasing a little bit or trying to catch up.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow. Hopefully we don’t get affected by it too much, and we can get out there and play 18 holes uninterrupted, I can shoot something in the mid-60s and get myself back in it.”
McIlroy surprised quite a few people when he popped a couple of ear phones in to do the ‘walk and talk’, in what has been a first for The Masters and Augusta National.
As the sport tries to engage with fans more, golf is following other sports in speaking to players during competition – and McIlroy was only too happy to share his insights with the television audience.
“I thought it would be a cool thing to do. I did it…
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