Rory McIlroy will have to wait until at least July 21 to get his next crack at lifting Major No. 5 after losing the US Open in agonising fashion to Bryson DeChambeau at Pinehurst.
He might wish The Open at Royal Troon was starting tomorrow, though, so he could set about banishing the demons of another heartbreaking near miss. The Northern Irishman has been close in the game’s biggest events since he won the 2014 PGA Championship but it’s unlikely any will sting with quite so much venom.
He had a gilt-edged chance to clinch the 150th Open at St Andrews, another at last year’s US Open, but on both those occasions he at least had the consolation that someone else came out and won them.
He could have done more, perhaps been more aggressive, holed a couple more putts, but the play of Cameron Smith and Wyndham Clark on those respective Sundays couldn’t be argued with.
In stark contrast, on this Sunday, McIlroy blew it. He hadn’t missed a putt inside three feet all season until he lipped out from 2ft 6in on the 16th and his misery was compounded by another short miss on 18.
😱 😱 😱 😱RORY MISSES ON 18.Bryson can win the U.S. Open with a par on 18. pic.twitter.com/lSk0ZzzZK2June 16, 2024
Preceding that, he bogeyed the 15th, leaving him picking up the pieces of three dropped shots in his final four. All he could do was watch as DeChambeau did what he could not and mopped up a tiddler for a second US Open.
Agony was written on his face; heaven knows how he was feeling inside.
It’s been said many times but this felt like it, the end of a decade-long pursuit to bag a long overdue fifth Major.
He began three shots adrift but did what he has failed to do on so many of these occasions and holed some putts to seize some early momentum.
A 20-footer on the first got him immediately within two. A horror break on the 5th cost him a bogey but he bounced back admirably.
Birdies from 14 feet, 26 feet, 22 feet and 5 feet in the space of five holes vaulted him to eight-under and into a two-shot lead with five to go.
And while McIlroy was imposing his will on Pinehurst No. 2, DeChambeau was falling into so many of Donald Ross’ traps.
The American cut an agitated figure almost from the first tee shot as he wrestled with a misfiring driver. To his credit, though, he hung in, and that is…
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