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Rory McIlroy reveals reason for struggles after Masters win as he targets victory in The Open at Portrush

Rory McIlroy reveals reason for struggles after Masters win as he targets victory in The Open at Portrush

The Irish Sun13 hours ago
Rory McIlroy feels he can scamper to a sixth Major triumph at the Open - after finally getting a break from the 'hamster wheel' of professional golf.
McIlroy believes the reason it took him so long to recapture his competitive vibe after his
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Rory McIlroy is feeling more refreshed after his two-week golf break
Credit: Sportsfile
The USPGA and the US Open followed hard on the heels of Augusta, where
And he says it was only when he took two weeks off following last month's Travelers
Championship
that he was able to appreciate what he had achieved.
He explained: 'Yeah, I think everyone could see over the last couple of months how I struggled with resetting my goals, after I've done something that I've told everyone that I wanted to do.
'I probably just didn't give myself enough time to let it all sink in. But that's the nature of professional golf.
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"They do a very good job of keeping you on the hamster wheel, and you feel like it's hard to get off at times.
'But it's been an amazing year. The fact that I'm here at Portrush with the green jacket, having completed that lifelong dream.
'Now I want to do my best this week to enjoy everything that comes my way and enjoy the reaction of the fans and enjoy being in front of them and playing in front of them.
'But at the same time, I want to win this golf tournament, and I feel like I'm very capable of doing that.'
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McIlroy proved he is not ready to simply bask in the glory of becoming only the sixth player ever to win all four Majors as he launched himself into his Open preparations yesterday.
He was still on the course at the Scottish Open until nearly 7pm on Sunday - and was back in action just 12 hours later to play his first practice round at Portrush.
Rory McIlroy explains haircut at Scottish Open
He added: 'We didn't get into the hotel here until around 1am, and I only had four hours
sleep
before it was time to get ready for my practice round. So I'm looking forward to taking a nap after this.
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'The last couple of Majors, at the PGA and the US Open, the practice rounds took so long. And I feel like there are fifty people inside the ropes all the time. I feel like I just can't get good work done, good preparation.
'I didn't come up here ahead of time to try to get a couple of practice rounds in, and I've only played the two competitive rounds here at the 2019 Open since they made the changes to the course.
'So I just wanted to get out early, sort of beat the rush, beat the crowd, and do my work with not a lot of people around.
"That was the reason that I was out so early today. It worked out well. I feel like I got a productive day of work in.'
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Bryson DeChambeau focuses on links test over Rory McIlroy rivalry as he arrives in Portrush
Bryson DeChambeau focuses on links test over Rory McIlroy rivalry as he arrives in Portrush

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Bryson DeChambeau focuses on links test over Rory McIlroy rivalry as he arrives in Portrush

The room expected a more aggressive energy field from Bryson DeChambeau in his first interview after arriving on Irish soil. His rivalry with Rory McIlroy has refused to die and recently he said he'd love nothing more than to beat him 'especially in front of his own crowd'. McIlroy mused this week on creativity versus power as the best way to get the ball around the links course at Royal Portrush, with those looking into McIlroy's mind reading it as DeChambeau's muscular game perhaps relying too heavily on science rather than the more nuanced 'artistry' required to win. While McIlroy won The Open in 2014 at Royal Liverpool, DeChambeau's best effort to win the oldest championship in the world was a T8 in 2022 at St Andrews. READ MORE Either way, for those hoping for a taste of golf as a blood sport two days before the first players tee off, DeChambeau was a let-down with his willing Californian smile and an open, shoot-the-breeze kind of charm. 'Great question,' he even quipped to one inquiry. 'Just have fun this week and be strategic. I'm trying to ride the wind,' he said. 'A heavy wind is a great way to describe it. It's thick.' There were no snide remarks or concealed digs, no reprisals or escalation of the rivalry. The drama of Portrush was what grabbed him. The LIV Tour player, one of 19 in The Open field, is not used to playing links golf and has been troubled by trying to develop a game that suits a punishing course where it is expected to blow. [ No flies on us as we look forward to new views of the Open Opens in new window ] Yesterday it was modest at 21km/h, although Met Office warned of potential disruption around the local area between 11am and 5pm. Play was halted twice due to a threat of lightning on Monday. 'You're feeling the wind, how much it's coming into you and if it's off the left or right a lot more than normal,' said DeChambeau. 'Okay, how do I feel? How do I turn this into the wind? If you're going to try to ride the wind one time, how do I control and make sure it doesn't go into a crazy place? Because once the ball goes into that wind, it's sayonara. That thing can go forever offline. It will turn east sometimes. 'You know, it's one of those situations where you're in the environment and you go, all right, this feels like a 15-mile-an-hour wind, and all of a sudden it plays like a 30-mile-an-hour wind, and you're like, what the heck?' Bryson DeChambeau during a press conference ahead of the Open Championship at Royal Portrush. He plans to 'have fun this week and be strategic'. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA DeChambeau will open his championship with England's Justin Rose and Scotland's Bob MacIntyre. It is a fact of life on the LIV tour that the players do not have the opportunity to play on links courses and was an issue Joh Rahm brought up last year, bemoaning the fact that without playing on the coastal courses, their chances of winning an Open significantly decline. The 31-year-old also arrived at Portrush with a personality makeover since his last visit in 2019, when he missed the cut. His venture into 'fun' YouTube events and behind-the-scenes footage have softened the image to his 1.5 million subscribers of the beefcake who simply beats the bejaysus out of a golf ball. 'I think people see a different side of me on YouTube, where I can have fun, I can enjoy, I try to relate to others as much as I possibly can has been fun to show,' he said. 'For me, I always go back to what footprint can I leave now? I'm not going to be here forever. I'm not going to win every tournament. 'Yeah, am I going to get frustrated playing bad golf? Yeah. Am I going to want to still sign autographs? Yeah, because I care about the game.' But the golfer, who plays for a LIV team called Crushers, is far from retiring the hot-blooded image. Has no intention of going soft. 'I'll walk through the fire rather than run away from it,' he said. 'I'm still the fiery, want to go, competitive go-getter that I've always been.'

‘I just want to have my best result in a Major and go from there': Tom McKibbin on his hopes for the Open
‘I just want to have my best result in a Major and go from there': Tom McKibbin on his hopes for the Open

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

‘I just want to have my best result in a Major and go from there': Tom McKibbin on his hopes for the Open

The lad strolled the fairways without a care in the world or so it seemed. Tom McKibbin was in good company, for sure. Darren Clarke, the elder, and Rory McIlroy , the master, completed a threeball that crossed the generation game with stories to tale and yet more to create. For McKibbin, this 153rd Open on the Dunluce championship links at Royal Portrush is yet another opportunity to progress a career that has seen him, even at 22 years of age, win on the DP World Tour before making the move to LIV Golf where he has settled in well, his fourth place finish in Valderrama last weekend following up a fifth-place finish in Dallas to show some good form at just the right time. McKibbin is from Belfast and, like McIlroy, learned his craft at Holywood Golf Club, but has also been a member of Royal Portrush for the past 10 years. Wisely he has tapped into Clarke's knowledge of the links in the build-up. Clarke was the one who suggested playing some practice rounds in advance of The Open. McKibbin did not need to be asked twice. READ MORE 'I work with a coach that coaches Darren as well and we had always been planning to get a little bit of a training camp for a couple of days together. He was at home, I was at home, so it made sense to go come up for a couple days and get out on the course while it was nice and quiet. I got to pick his brains for two days,' McKibbin said. This is only McKibbin's second appearance in The Open – he made the cut last year at Royal Troon – and only a fourth appearance in the Majors (he also made the cut at last year's US Open and this year's US PGA). He has looked at home in this elite company. 'I played three of them before, and I've played nicely. I think if I can just keep getting better at every one of them ... I definitely want to try and finish the highest that I have out of the four. But my game feels good. Hopefully I can continue the nice sort of form that I've had over the last couple of events and wherever that is at the end of the week I know that I'll have given it my best.' Strange as it may seem, given his fine amateur career, McKibbin – for one reason or another – was never around to play in the North of Ireland Championship on the course. His only competitive appearance was in the British Boys. And when the 2019 Open was staged here, McKibbin only watched on television as he was in Ohio competing in the US Junior Championships. Tom McKibbin: 'It's nice to see my game translate into some nice scores.' Photograph: Ben Brady/INPHO 'Once they announced it was going to come back, it was a big, big goal of mine to get back here and get playing in it,' McKibbin said. His route to the here and now has been a quick one after turning professional in 2021 at 18. McKibbin's win in the Porsche European Open in 2023 showcased his talent and he earned his exemption into this Open through his ranking on last season's DP World Tour order of merit, which enabled him to put it in his schedule from the get-go without the need to look at any other qualifying routes. 'My game feels good. It was very nice at the start of the year, and then towards the middle things just weren't going my way. I felt like I was playing quite nicely, but I couldn't really get the score together. The last couple of weeks have been nice. I finished fifth in Dallas and then fourth last week on two very challenging golf courses, so it's nice to see my game, how it felt like it was playing, translate into some nice scores and post a couple of nice finishes.' Of the challenge ahead on a course he knows well, McKibbin said: 'It's a very good golf course, very demanding off the tee. It's quite strategic. There's bunkers in play no matter what club you decide to take off the tee. The greens are very slopey for links golf, especially with how slow they are [running at 10 on the stimp]. It's hard to see the breaks. I think very demanding. 'I mean, we played early today, and I'm not sure if this is normally the wind at this time or that time of the morning, because it seemed to be the opposite direction that I've normally used to play it in. I'm not sure if that's just a freak day or that changes sort of morning, day, afternoon, but that made it, the first five or six holes, definitely a little bit trickier. I think it's going to be a great test. As I said, there's bunkers everywhere, some patchy rough that can be quite challenging, just off the fairway.' No doubt there will be a sense of expectation once he heads to the first tee given the welcome that he can expect from the galleries. The support shown in the practice days has given a hint of what is yet to come his way. What of his own expectations? 'It's something that's so hard to say. I mean, with the weather and conditions links golf can bring, it's very hard to set expectations or whatever. You sort of have to just go with the flow really, take what you're given and go out there and try and handle that the best you can. I just want to have my best result in a Major and go from there.'

Inside the feud between golf rivals Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau as pair fight for The Open at Royal Portrush
Inside the feud between golf rivals Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau as pair fight for The Open at Royal Portrush

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Inside the feud between golf rivals Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau as pair fight for The Open at Royal Portrush

THE simmering feud between golf rivals Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau is about to be turned up at this week's Open. The superstars from opposite sides of the Atlantic are set to collide on the course at Royal Portrush. Advertisement 5 Bryson DeChambeau is gunning for the Claret Jug Credit: Reuters 5 Rory McIlroy is one of the favourites for The Open Credit: Shutterstock Editorial And with the Ryder Cup in New York fast approaching this autumn , there will be more fireworks to come. The rivalry has yet to explode into all-out animosity. But there is a growing sense of tension between the two protagonists - USA v Europe; the PGA Tour v LIV Golf; the artist v the scientist. The friction first became apparent during the US Open last year, when McIlroy's dramatic collapse over the closing holes opened the door for DeChambeau to win. The man from Northern Ireland reportedly left the course without stopping to congratulate DeChambeau, only doing so on Instagram a day later. Advertisement read more in golf Things soured even further in December last year, when they met in Las Vegas for the Showdown, which saw McIlroy team up with PGA Tour , to take on DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka from LIV. The pair met on the range before the event and McIlroy told a TV crew: 'I'd like to go up against Bryson and try to get him back for what he did to me at the US Open.' And DeChambeau replied: 'Well, to be fair, you kinda did it to yourself.' McIlroy is thought to have been upset by the quip, which was considered cruel. Advertisement Most read in Golf BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK The duo then played alongside together in the last pairing of the final round of the Masters in April this year. McIlroy famously won in a play-off over history . DeChambeau later gave a sparky response when asked how Rory had coped, saying: 'No idea, he didn't talk to me once all day.' Advertisement McIlroy later fired back: 'I don't know what he was expecting. We're trying to win the Masters. I'm not going to try to be his best mate out there.' Rory McIlroy explains haircut at Scottish Open Their rivalry is not yet up there with Ali v Frazier, but it is not going away. The two are both among the richest and most successful stars of their sport. McIlroy's Masters triumph completed the Grand Slam of all four majors and took him to 44 professional wins, including five major championships. Advertisement DeChambeau has managed 14 professional victories, which includes two major titles. 5 McIlroy filed for divorce after seven years with Erica Credit: Getty Images - Getty 5 McIlroy won the Masters after a whirlwind 12 months that saw him call off his divorce from wife Erica Stoll Credit: Getty As a result of their achievements on the course, McIlroy's net worth is estimated to £260m, while DeChambeau has around £145m. Advertisement McIlroy owns multiple luxurious properties the world, including a Florida mansion, a house in La Quinta, California mansion, an estate in Northern Ireland , and apartments in New York and Dubai . He also has a new mansion being custom made on the exclusive Wentworth estate in Surrey . Inside Rory McIlroy's whirlwind love life RORY MCILROY enjoyed a high-profile romance with former tennis world number one Caroline Wozniacki before their split in 2014. The following year, the golf ace began dating Erica Stoll, who he had first met on the PGA Tour in 2011. Erica often interacted with players through her role as the PGA's manager of championship volunteer operations. She even prevented McIlroy from missing his tee time at the 2012 Ryder Cup after some confusion over the time zone. The incident began a firm friendship between the pair, four years before their relationship turned romantic. McIlroy and Erica were spotted on a string of dates in Rochester, New York, in the early days of their relationship. Just eight months later, the couple got engaged in Paris and walked down the aisle at Ashford Castle in Ireland in 2017. The pair then welcomed daughter Poppy into the world three years later. Throughout their time together, McIlroy and Erica have kept their relationship to themselves, with the golfer keen to protect his family from the cameras during filming of Netflix's Full Swing documentary series. However, after seven years of marriage, McIlroy filed for divorce from Erica. The reasons for the divorce were not disclosed, but the Northern Irishman submitted documents to a court in Florida. However, a few weeks later, performed a U-turn on their decision to divorce. McIlroy told the outlet: "Thankfully, we have resolved our differences and look forward to a new beginning.' DeChambeau recently sold his swanky mansion in Texas to move into another in the same area. He is rumoured to be dating Lilia Schneider, a college golfer from ndianapolis. They have been pictured sharing a buggy at a LIV event. Advertisement DeChambeau had previously dated another college golfer, Hunter Nugent, but she revealed that they had parted in 2022 and that Schneider was now with the American. He also used to date swimwear line with La Isla for a 'large cup' bikini wearer. 5 Sophia Phalen Bertolami launched a range of bikinis Credit: Instagram @sophiaandstella McIlroy's love life is equally complicated. Advertisement Last year his marriage to wife Erica Stoll looked to be over as they prepared to divorce , before a surprise change of heart and Before that, he spent three years with Danish tennis beauty In 2014, McIlroy was romantically linked with Meghan Markle, before she married Prince Harry. The pair flirted in a video shared on social media, as he helped her take part in the Ice Bucket Challenge, a viral trend adopted by many celebs to raise money for ALS. Advertisement Who are golf's most famous Wags? The world's top golfers enjoy an incredible lifestyle - and their Wags lead thrilling lives of their own. Here are some of the most high-profile beauties... This The A Master golfer raced home from his most recent triumph to be by his wife's side as she gave birth to their first child. An athlete who A Playing off a handicap of three, this This A

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