
Rory McIlroy thinks Philadelphia Cricket Club would be better with shorter-flying balls
With rain working its way through the northeast and mid-Atlantic area, Philadelphia Cricket Club's Wissahickon Course – which on the scorecard measures 7,119 yards, par 70 this week – is playing as long as it can. The A.W. Tillinghast layout, which opened in 1922, is a classic track from the Golden Age of golf.
Thursday, Rory McIlroy shot a 66 in the opening round of the Truist Championship and Friday he followed it up with a 67 before being asked if the conditions gave him a better sense of how the course was meant to be played, before modern technology and equipment allowed pros to overpower shorter venues.
"Yeah, absolutely. It's a little more strategic," McIlroy said. "I think there's a lot of debate about it, but if the golf ball just went a little shorter, this course would be awesome. Not that it isn't awesome anyway, but right now, for the distances we hit it, it's probably 500 or 600 yards too short."
In the not-too-distant future, McIlroy might get his wish.
In December, 2023, the USGA and R&A jointly announced that they plan to change how golf balls will be tested for conformity to reduce the effects of distance in the sport. The plan, which as of now is slated to begin in 2028, is to test balls using a robot that swings at a faster speed (125 mph) and that hits the ball on a higher launch angle with less spin. Shots will still not be allowed to exceed the Overall Distance Standard (ODS) of 317 yards of combined carry distance and roll (with a 3-yard tolerance), the changes could make many of today's balls non-conforming and force golfers to play shorter-distance balls.
"Yeah, it would be amazing to be able to play courses like this the way the architect wanted you to play them. So, yeah, it gives you a better appreciation when you play them in these conditions for sure," McIlroy said.
As Golfweek reported in March, the PGA Tour has quietly tested reduced-distance golf balls with several of its players, including 2023 British Open champion Brian Harman.
'I hit it a lot shorter,' Harman said. "The farther you hit it, the less you are affected by the first version of the golf ball. It's the first version but that was the finding.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
9 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Young in driver's seat at Wyndham Championship
Cameron Young is on the cusp of earning his first PGA Tour win at the Wyndham Championship, where he displayed brilliance during Round 3 at Sedgefield Country Club.


USA Today
38 minutes ago
- USA Today
Cameron Young, still seeking first win, cruises to 54-hole lead at the Wyndham Championship
GREENSBORO, N.C. – Cameron Young did his best to win the Wyndham Championship on Saturday. He finished off a second-round 62 with two birdies in his final four holes in the morning and then carded four straight birdies on the front nine to build as much as an eight-stroke lead. He cooled off a bit but still shot a third-round 65 at Sedgefield Country Club to improve to 20-under 190 and carry a five-stroke lead over Nico Echavarria into Sunday. It marks Young's first 54-hole lead or co-lead on Tour, and equals the largest 54-hole lead in Wyndham Championship history. Young, who played his college golf at nearby Wake Forest University, is winless on the PGA Tour in 94 starts and has finished runner-up seven times during his career, the most on Tour without a win since 1983. Does he feel like he has a monkey on his back that he's attempting to rid himself of on Sunday? 'Not really. If you had asked me two years ago I'd probably say yes, but if you go back through, I finished second a bunch, I've gotten beat a lot. I've played some good golf on Sunday in really all those cases,' he said. 'So that's all I'm trying to do tomorrow. I'm starting in a nice spot, so I'm just looking to try to beat second place by as many as I can. That's been my mindset from the first tee on Thursday and that's what I'm going to try to do tomorrow.' Young, who is 14 under on the front nine this week, is leading the field in Strokes Gained: Putting and scrambling. He's also second in SG: Off the Tee and SG: Tee to Green. Talk about a recipe for success. The 28-year-old said he decided to return to playing a draw, his preferred ball flight when he was younger, and it's working through the first 54 holes. 'I might have heeled a driver that has gone left to right, but I think every other shot has been right to left,' he said. 'I had the inclination to try to like see what it felt like to hit something straighter today and just didn't. Yeah, safe to say I'll probably be doing that tomorrow, see what it gets me.' Echavarria, 30, is the only player within eight strokes of the lead heading into the final round. The Colombian said he looked at the leaderboard at the turn and was trailing by seven or eight strokes and thought, 'That's not normal.' Young's birdie streak began at No. 3 and included a 33-foot putt that just fell over the front lip at the fourth. He made his lone bogey of the day – and just second for the week – at No. 14 but bounced back with birdies at Nos. 15 and 17. Echavarria, a two-time Tour winner, ranks second to Young in SG: Putting this week. He reeled off five birdies on the back nine, including a 6-footer at the last. Despite trailing by five, he said he likes his chances. 'Because I've been there before and I like being in this position, I like being in the final group,' he explained. 'I'm not going to hide tomorrow. Yeah, we play tournaments to win. When I'm in the final group on Sunday, that's why I put so much work into it.' Earlier this year, Tommy Fleetwood, who along with Young, would rank as the top current players never to win on Tour, squandered his chance to close out the Travelers Championship as Keegan Bradley tracked him down and pipped him with a birdie at the last. 'Until he does it, it's that unrealized dream that I'm sure he's had since he young age,' PGA Tour Radio's Mark McCumber said of Young. 'He's wise enough to know that if he blinks or tries to protect anything there are guys that can shoot 61, 62 here.' Indeed, he is. Young said as much and promised to keep the gas pedal down on Sunday. 'I know that there is an 8, a 9, a 10 under out there and I'd like to be the one to shoot it as opposed to someone in second or third place tomorrow,' he said.
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
FedEx Cup bubble: Here's who's in, who's out after three rounds at the Wyndham Championship
GREENSBORO, N.C. – The drama is building at the 2025 Wyndham Championship in the tournament within the tournament – namely who will secure a spot in the FedEx Cup playoffs, which begin next week at the first of three events at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis. Matti Schmid began the week as the "bubble boy" at No. 70 and is projected to jump five spots after posting 8-under 202, which is T-13. His plan for the final round? "Just go out there and try to do my best. It would mean a lot to get into the Playoffs, but I think I would have plenty more chances to do that, but it's a goal of mine to get through for sure," he said. Only the top 70 advance and with one round to go, here's who is in and who's out with 18 holes left in the PGA Tour regular season. Who's in? Chris Kirk Kirk has made the biggest move this week. He is projected to improve from No. 73 to No. 59. He shot 67 and jumped to a three-way tie for third at 12-under 198. Davis Thompson Thompson started the week in 78th place and has vaulted 10 spots to No. 68. He sits T-7 but is less than 5 points on the right side of the cutoff so he's still in a precarious position and will need a solid round on Sunday to book his ticket to Memphis. Gary Woodland Woodland shot even-par 70 and enters the final round T-9 at 9-under 201. He's the 'bubble boy,' and is less than a point – 0.180 to be exact – ahead of No. 71 so he's got work still to do. What will the pressure be like in the final round? 'To be honest with you, not crazy. I know my game's in a good spot. I know if I go out and play like I can, I'll be fine and I'll rely on that,' he said. 'I've been on the bubble on Tour a lot over my career. Some of those were for top-30 and that was probably a little bit easier fighting to get into playoffs.' Woodland got emotional talking about what making the playoffs would mean to him when interviewed on CBS by Amanda Balionis but was more stoic with the press. 'I haven't had really a big opportunity to try to get in the Playoffs the last three or four years, so I'll enjoy tomorrow,' he said. Who's out? Erik Van Rooyen The South African started the week at No. 64 but he withdrew citing a back injury. He's currently No. 71 but my the slimmest of margins so there's a good chance he will hang on to a spot. Expect him to be hitting refresh a bunch on the PGA Tour leaderboard app on Sunday. Cam Davis The Aussie started the week at No. 67 but has been bumped to No. 72. He's currently T-36 so he can still help his chances on Sunday and sits less than 4 points out of the top 70. Ben An The South Korean entered the week at No. 69 but missed the cut this week. He's in 74th place and his chances of sneaking into the top 70 are slim to none. Hanging on by a thread Patrick Rodgers The Indiana native, who started the week at No. 68, birdied nine of his final 15 holes and five of his last six to make the 36-hole cut, snapping a streak of six straight missed cuts. His 63 earned him a weekend tee time. He shot 71 on Saturday and sits T-29 but he's still six points on the right side of the cutline and has improved one spot to No. 67. Emiliano Grillo The Argentine started the week at No. 66 and despite surviving the cut has slipped three places in the season-long standings. He's at 4-under and T-48 heading into the final round and is less than 1 point ahead of No. 70. Down but not out (yet) Nicolai Hojgaard The Dane started the week at No. 71 in the FedEx Cup and has dropped to No. 73. He survived the cut on the number and shot 1-under 69 on Saturday. He sits at 4-under 206 and T-48. He's 36 points back so he'll need a low one on Sunday to have a chance. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: FedEx Cup standings update after third round of Wyndham Championship