The self-imposed pressure Rory McIlroy puts on winning the career Grand Slam is making it tougher for him to win The Masters, says his former agent Chubby Chandler, who also feels his new role as “a mouthpiece for the PGA Tour” is damaging his chances of winning the Green Jacket.
As well as commercial commitments and fighting the PGA Tour’s corner, Chandler believes that McIlroy’s off-course roles and responsibilities may have cost him up to 10 tournament wins.
Chandler points to McIlroy’s younger years when his carefree attitude and high draw was the ideal recipe for success around Augusta National, but his increased profile and influence on the PGA Tour has hindered him in the first Major of the year.
As one of the best golfers on the planet, McIlroy is now a huge business with sponsors who could take up his time, but Chandler says it’s the self-imposed pressure to complete the Grand Slam that is holding him back.
“If you were a betting man you would probably bet against him winning. He has made winning the Grand Slam a bigger thing in his head than it actually is,” Chandler told i news. (opens in new tab)
“He is not really driven by number of wins or number of majors per se, but he seems to be driven by wanting to win the Grand Slam. It’s a massive mental block and it’s getting harder and harder. Every time he gets there he has the pressure from everyone else, but also from himself.
“If you could see into his head back in the days when he was flying around Augusta there was nothing in there other than hitting a golf ball. Now he has commitments with PGA Tour, where he has been groomed as a political figurehead, with TV, with half a dozen really big sponsors.
“And they take up time. That clutter manifests itself on the course. He needs to get away from a lot of that, and just trust his talent.”
Chandler added that McIlroy leading the PGA Tour’s charge against LIV Golf is also another adverse factor working against the four-time Major winner – including his on-course interview at The Masters, where he missed the cut.
“To me he has got carried away as mouthpiece of the PGA Tour,” Chandler added. “He is doing things he shouldn’t be doing and opening his mouth too often.
“The interview on the fairway, absolutely brilliant TV but not good for Rory McIlroy. You can’t be having a chat with a guy in the commentary box about the day and the way he is playing, or whatever, then get over a wedge and…
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