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'Excited' McIlroy takes Portrush crowd on Open thrill ride

'Excited' McIlroy takes Portrush crowd on Open thrill ride

Yahooa day ago
The emotional rollercoaster Rory McIlroy took the vast, sun-beaten Royal Portrush crowd on during the third round of the Open Championship is best encapsulated by one particularly madcap 30-minute spell early in his back nine.
By then, McIlroy's patience had already been stretched by a sequence of six successive pars after a hot start.
Then, on the 11th, he encountered the "most weird, ridiculous thing I've ever seen". Having flailed his drive way right on 11, McIlroy was left utterly bewildered when an embedded ball popped up when he struck his own ball.
"It's never happened to me before," said McIlroy, whose captivating five-under 66 leaves him six adrift of the relentless Scottie Scheffler.
"It could never happen on any other course but a links course as well. When the rough is all matted down and the balls get... it was very strange."
It didn't produce a disastrous outcome for his own ball, but it evidently left him discombobulated. He left his pitch woefully short, prompting him to furiously slam his club into the turf, and then made bogey.
Scheffler four clear at Open as McIlroy charges
The Open round four tee-times
Despite a spirited second-round charge, McIlroy did not make the weekend at 2019 Open at Portrush. He has been stewing on it for six years. This was never going to be dull.
The fans knew it, too. On every hole, the crowds that packed into the various grandstands and lined the fairways were indefatigable in their attempts to invigorate their hero.
With overnight leader and world number one Scheffler gradually pulling further clear at the top, the thousands following McIlroy needed another little injection of excitement.
To their relief, the Masters champion delivered with a spectacular, suspense-filled piece of showmanship on the 12th.
After two fine blows to the back of the green, McIlroy trickled a devilishly quick putt down the slope. It took 11 seconds to reach its destination and when it dropped into the cup, the ground shook.
"Yeah, this could be one of the coolest moments I've ever had on the golf course," added the 36-year-old.
"The roar when the ball went in was insane. It was insane all day, but the noise after that putt went in was incredible."
Having watched Oppenheimer (the first hour of it, anyway) and a couple of rugby games between his second and third rounds, McIlroy was primed for whatever the Dunluce Links hurled at him on Saturday.
Donning a Tiger Woods-esque red shirt, he flew out of the traps with three birdies in his first four, sending early shockwaves through the County Antrim property when he poured in a 36-footer for an opening three.
After further gains at two and four, he stalled. He failed to birdie five and seven - two of the four easiest holes on the course - and let another chance slip through his grasp on 10 before the whirlwind of 11 and 12.
He raised the decibels one more time when he hit the top of the pin on 15 and rolled in the resultant three-footer.
While he was unable to conjure a grandstand finish at 18, McIlroy gave the Portrush faithful an afternoon they - or he - won't soon forget.
Half a dozen strokes in arrears to Scheffler - who carded a bogey-free 67 to open up a four-shot cushion over Li Haotong - McIlroy is unlikely to win.
Hoisting the Claret Jug on home turf was, of course, his target, but he seems willing to treat this week as his soul-stirring post-Masters homecoming.
McIlroy is 36. It is unclear when Portrush will next host the Open, but there is no guarantee the five-time major winner will still be one of the game's superstars when it does.
With that, both player and fans have been keen to savour every moment this week after McIlroy admitted to not holding up his end of the bargain in 2019.
The fans certainly have all week. From getting out of their beds for his early-Monday morning practice round to gathering in astonishing numbers on Saturday, they have energised and lifted him at every turn.
On Saturday, in particular, the chants of "Rory, Rory, Rory" against the backdrop of roars from other parts of the course gave the afternoon a Ryder Cup Sunday-feel.
"I've come here really just trying to embrace it," he said.
"If I hadn't have won a major this year, if I hadn't have won the Masters, I might have felt differently.
"It's almost a celebration of what I've been able to accomplish. I want to celebrate with them too. I've just really tried to embrace everything this week.
"I'm having an incredible time. I'm really enjoying myself, and I feel like I've given myself half a chance now, and I'm excited for tomorrow."
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153rd Open: The man beloved at home and the one who has conquered the world
153rd Open: The man beloved at home and the one who has conquered the world

NBC Sports

time19 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

153rd Open: The man beloved at home and the one who has conquered the world

Watch the best moments from the late portion to the final round of the 2025 Open Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland. PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – The tone was set Saturday night. Rory McIlroy had just turned golf's most staid championship into a rollicking summer festival, the eventgoers delirious at the prospect of their celebrated native son, one of the most famous athletes to ever come from this tiny island of less than two million people, heading into the final round of the 153rd Open with a shot to hoist the claret jug at home, in front of them, and for them too. The only person who seemed unstirred by the possibility was McIlroy himself. He'd shot 66 but only moved within six of the lead. He had three players in front of him and four others pulled up alongside him, with a calm Sunday forecast that would make it even more difficult to separate, but his outlook was dimmed by the man at the top of the board. 'Yeah, look, Scottie Scheffler is ...,' McIlroy said, collecting his thoughts. 'It's inevitable.' It was an admission that, amid this lovefest in Rory's town, it's ultimately still part of Scottie Scheffler's world. McIlroy – too far back to seriously contend this week, and too far behind in the world rankings this year – has come to accept this reality. And so, rather than this Open homecoming becoming a monument to his dominance in the sport, he instead viewed the week through a different prism: a celebration of his greatness. How far he has come in his nearly two decades as a pro. And all he has accomplished, even now, with a new ruler in the sport. 'A lot of gratitude, a lot of pride,' he said. 'A lot of pride that I am from these shores.' McIlroy's stats and status might be under siege in this new world order, but it's hard to envision a crowd or a tournament ever tilting in Scheffler's direction as it did for McIlroy over these four days at Portrush. Kids high-fived him along the rope line and began to weep. Fans bellowed and chanted his name from high atop the dunes. Patrons gave him standing ovations in the grandstands. 'I've heard enough 'Rorys' to last me a lifetime,' Matt Fitzpatrick said. It was McIlroy, after all, who helped lobby R&A officials to bring the game's oldest major back to Royal Portrush, an hour from his childhood home in Holywood, for the first time in 63 years. But that 2019 Open represented a missed opportunity while at a professional crossroads. He'd lost some of his joy between the ropes. His major record had soured. He'd been displaced for a time by other talented players. When he strode to the first tee, he was blown away by the outpouring of support. Unprepared and overwhelmed by the reception, he melted down during an opening 79 and, only after his inspired rally fell short, did he realize the magnitude and the depth of his people's love. Check his record since then; it has spurred on his play over the past half-decade. Recalling those painful memories, McIlroy vowed to make this week, and this year, different in what, at age 36, was likely his last Portrush Open in his prime. He wanted to reciprocate. Embrace the experience, not shield himself from it. Maybe there would have been more angst had he not prevailed at the Masters. If he was still major-less for more than a decade. But he returned home a legend, and now everyone, 45,000 a day, could revel in it. McIlroy turned pro in 2007, at the age of 18, and took his talents globally, sharing himself with the rest of the world outside the borders of Northern Ireland. The U.S. Australia. Japan. South Africa. That was his way of not just growing his wallet, but also his brand and his platform and, along the way, his popularity. That wider reach has never appealed to Scheffler. He was born in New Jersey and moved with his family at a young age to Dallas, where he still resides. The Schefflers are all a tight-knit group, a short drive away while at home and, now, a consistent, supportive and loving presence on the road. As a kid, all Scheffler wanted to do was become a professional golfer, wearing long pants in the blazing summer heat like local heroes Justin Leonard and Harrison Frazar, and he still can't quite believe that he's blessed and talented enough to be living out his wildest dreams. Now with a young family of his own, he has made no apologies that he's U.S.-centric with his schedule and that he doesn't aspire to be a globetrotting ambassador for the sport. As the top player, he said it was 'not my priority nor my responsibility' to travel the world and ply his trade, to grow the game. It was at the end of that early-week press conference when Scheffler went viral. His 5-minute monologue on his inner war between fulfillment and satisfaction offered a rare glimpse into what drives the most dominant golfer since Tiger Woods. Frustrated that some of the social clips had taken his comments out of context, with the implication that pro golf left him feeling empty, Scheffler spent much of his winner's press conference Sunday defending himself. That he cares about competing. Doing the work. Trying his best. Seeing how far his talent and work ethic and dedication can take him. Everything that accompanies his success – status and stardom – holds little interest to him. 'There's more to life than playing golf,' he said. 'But I'm pretty excited to go home and celebrate this one.' Stoic and steady, simplistic and stable, Scheffler doesn't inspire much emotion. He might never become a beloved figure that spawns his own legion of fandom; the 2027 PGA in Frisco, less than an hour from home, isn't likely to become the lively lovefest that McIlroy's homecoming was. But sports fans love greatness, and they're undoubtedly now witness to Scheffler's brilliance. 'I think all you can do is admire what he does and how he does it,' McIlroy said. 'He just goes about his business. Doesn't do anything overly flamboyant. But he's the best at executing in the game right now. All you can do is tip your cap and watch in admiration.' What little hope the field had Sunday disappeared as soon as Scheffler stuffed his approach to a foot on the opening hole. Midway through the front nine, he led by eight. Over the final 36 holes, with the crowd at a fever pitch, desperate to will his chief rival to victory, Scheffler's only blemish came with a double bogey on the eighth hole – two strokes that he got back with birdies on two of the next four holes. There was nothing McIlroy or anyone else could do to stop the onslaught, so over the final two hours, he tried to soak in an Open unlike any other. A few extra nods to the crowd. More high-fives. When he tapped in for a final-round 69, leaving him in joint seventh, seven shots behind, he removed his cap and, before entering the tunnel, spun around to wave to the cheering crowd one last time. In the group behind him, Scheffler was polishing off another rout. Methodical, clinical, dominant – the first player in the modern era to win each of his first four major championships by at least three strokes. 'Walking up 18, I didn't really know if I was going to get that much support from the crowd,' Scheffler said. 'The crowd, I think, wanted somebody else to win this week, and I got to play spoiler a little bit.' Not just this week, but this entire year too. The best spring of McIlroy's career – a signature title at Pebble, a rousing playoff at The Players, and a Masters moment that transcended the sport – has since been supplanted by Scheffler's two-major summer, making him a virtual lock for Player of the Year honors for the fourth season in a row. 'I also had the three wins when Scottie wasn't quite on his game,' McIlroy said, chuckling. 'He is the bar that we're all trying to get to.' But now he's back on his game, just as he's largely been since February 2022, when this winning spree began. Scheffler was 15th in the world before that breakthrough week in Phoenix, when he was an unproven closer, when his putting was inconsistent, when his approach play was stellar but not peerless. This will soon be week No. 115 in a row at the top. He's converted 10 consecutive 54-hole leads. He's transformed into a world-class putter. (Matt Fitzpatrick: 'He's just not missed a putt.') And he is, statistically, the best ball-striker since prime Woods. Must it be inspiring or dispiriting, a reporter asked McIlroy, to go up against Scheffler when he's in form like this? 'Neither,' McIlroy said. 'All I can do is focus on myself and try to play the best golf that I can. I know that, when I do that, I'll have my weeks where I'll contend and hopefully win.' Even if those weeks are becoming less frequent. Afterward, McIlroy signed a hat and a flag, posed for two selfies, and then bounded up the hill and into the early evening. The hyped home game was over; a few weeks of vacation awaited. About a hundred yards away, with the trophy presentation underway and Scheffler in the middle of the arena, thousands of fans began to stream out of the grandstands and toward the exit. Their local hero didn't walk away victorious. They settled for a glimpse at history instead. Rory McIlroy talks about the experience at Royal Portrush, calling it an "awesome week" that came close to all he wanted -- and hoping the R&A can bring The Open back soon. Then, Live From debates Player of the Year.

Chris Gotterup doubled his career earnings with strong play at Scottish, British Opens
Chris Gotterup doubled his career earnings with strong play at Scottish, British Opens

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chris Gotterup doubled his career earnings with strong play at Scottish, British Opens

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Chris Gotterup had one heck of a two-week trip across the pond. Before he left, the 26-year-old New Jersey native had career earnings of $2,768,333. His earnings from the Scottish and British Opens? $2,703,000. Taxes will take a chunk out of that but still a pretty good haul for two weeks of work. One week after going toe to toe with Rory McIlroy in the final group at the Scottish Open to notch his second PGA Tour victory, Gotterup made his major debut and shot a final-round 4-under 67 at Royal Portrush Golf Club to finish third. 'I expected to play well, but I don't think I expected quite this well," said Gotterup, whose father's parents both hailed from Denmark. "I don't know what's going on over here, but maybe my European blood in me a little bit has come to life,' he said. Gotterup hadn't recorded a single top-10 finish this season on the PGA Tour prior to his two-week hot streak overseas and had missed nine cuts in 23 starts. So, what's been the difference? 'I don't have an answer. I wish I had it. I would have used it a long time ago,' said Gotterup, who vaulted to No. 27 in the Official World Golf Ranking. 'Just something clicked, and I'm going to ride it as long as I can.' Color Harris English, who finished second to Scottie Scheffler and was paired with Gotterup on Sunday, impressed. 'He can flight it, he can smash it,' English said. 'I've played in, I don't know, nine or 10 of these and finished 14th (previous best), and for him to first one finish third is pretty incredible. Got a heck of a game, and I know the best is in front of him. I don't know why it took him to long to play well out here.' All of a sudden, Gotterup has emerged as a potential pick for the U.S. Ryder Cup team. 'It really wasn't ever on my radar. I obviously hoped to play well, and it would be a miracle,' he said. 'I really haven't thought about it one bit. A month ago I really hadn't thought about it at all.' At No. 22 in the U.S. Ryder Cup points rankings, he's still a longshot but if he can remain hot during the FedEx Cup Playoffs, his length would be an asset and there aren't 12 American golfers playing better than he is right now. One thing is for sure: having stared down McIlroy last week and more than held his own in his majors debut, Gotterup has got to be on U.S. Captain Keegan Bradley's radar now if he wasn't already. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: British Open: Chris Gotterup finishes third, doubles career earnings

6-Time PGA Winner Faces Criticism After Missing The Open's Friday Cut
6-Time PGA Winner Faces Criticism After Missing The Open's Friday Cut

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

6-Time PGA Winner Faces Criticism After Missing The Open's Friday Cut

6-Time PGA Winner Faces Criticism After Missing The Open's Friday Cut originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The PGA Tour headed to Royal Portrush golf club in Northern Ireland this week for the 2025's 'The Open (also known as the British Open in the United States)' as a familiar face, Scottie Scheffler, finished with a field-best -10 score after two rounds on Friday. Scheffler's success obscured the struggles of Cameron Smith, the six-time PGA Tour event winner who signed a $140-plus million dollar contract with Saudi Arabia (Public Investment Fund) funded LIV Golf in February 2023. Smith missed the cut after a frustrating performance that caused fans to doubt where his career is headed, and where his motivation lies heading down the stretch of the 2025 Tour. Smith finished at +8 on Friday and did not make the cut. He has missed the cut at all four major PGA Tour events this year. Fans pointed to his lucrative LIV Golf contract as a reason for his struggles. "Got a jillion fishing 5-6 days a week except when he has to play," one reader said. "LIV Golf ruined him," a second added. "He got the bag (bag emoji) and checked out," a third said. "Took the bag and lost motivation," another said. "For some one title is enough." Another said that the competitive side of Smith vanished after his move to LIV. "Joining LIV is what went wrong," another story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 18, 2025, where it first appeared.

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