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Shane Lowry hoping for more Open magic at Royal Portrush

Shane Lowry hoping for more Open magic at Royal Portrush

Reuters14 hours ago
July 14 - Missing the cut at the past two majors hasn't dimmed Shane Lowry's confidence as the Irishman returns to the scene of his greatest triumph this week.
Lowry followed up a T42 at the Masters with early exits at the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow and the U.S. Open at Oakmont.
He won his lone major at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush -- site of this week's championship -- in Northern Ireland in 2019, finishing 15-under to defeat Englishman Tommy Fleetwood by a whopping six strokes.
"I kind of pride myself on not missing cuts, especially in the big events. I feel like I can always get myself there or thereabouts in the big events and I have done over the last number of years," Lowry said Monday at Royal Portrush.
"But I've been consistently quite good this year. I've given myself a couple of chances to win, which I'm very disappointed that I didn't, but we've got a few months left to kind of redeem myself and get a win on the board."
Lowry, 38, who skipped last week's Genesis Scottish Open, is ranked No. 18 in the world and has four top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour this season. He tied for second at the Truist Championship in May and was second at Pebble Beach in February.
"No matter how well you're playing the season, if you don't have a win beside your name at least once, you don't really class it as being very good," Lowry said. "Yeah, but my season has been going -- I've got a good FedExCup ranking (17th) at the minute and things have been going all right."
Lowry said he'd "spent the last six years" trying to figure out why everything came together for him at Royal Portrush in 2019.
"I'd been playing pretty solid, like really good golf the whole year," he said. "Then I came to a place that I knew and I loved, and it just all clicked. I was playing some of the best golf of my life."
At last year's Open at Royal Troon, Lowry held the lead entering Saturday's round and finished sixth.
Despite the disappointing results at the last two majors, Lowry said he feels like he is a better golfer now than he was six years ago.
"But it doesn't mean I'm going to go out and win by seven this year instead of six. It's just golf; that's the way it is," he said.
"I think, as a golfer, you always have to look at it as the glass is always half full. You can't look at it any other way. If you look at it any other way, you're going to be in trouble. So I try and look at it that way all the time."
--Field Level Media
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McIlroy vows ‘the story isn't over' as he revels in Royal Portrush support at the Open
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McIlroy vows ‘the story isn't over' as he revels in Royal Portrush support at the Open

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The Englishman who turned around Scheffler's putting fortunes
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They then hold up the corresponding number of fingers out in front of them towards the hole to line up the putt, using the outside edge of the fingers as the aim point."It's a valid method that is growing in appeal, but there are other ways to read greens," said Kenyon, who points to the internet as a huge source of information."It's not always good but people will come across things that will make them think more and that 'oh, I should try that this weekend'."And when you are next out and trying new putting techniques, perhaps frustrated at missing that eight-footer to 'win The Open', remind yourself that PGA Tour players fail to hole from that distance 50% of the time.

EXCLUSIVE The house that built Rory: Inside McIlroy's childhood home, his local pub and the 'lightning' putting green that forged a champion
EXCLUSIVE The house that built Rory: Inside McIlroy's childhood home, his local pub and the 'lightning' putting green that forged a champion

Daily Mail​

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EXCLUSIVE The house that built Rory: Inside McIlroy's childhood home, his local pub and the 'lightning' putting green that forged a champion

The man at the door is a kind and friendly sort. He's also not much of a golf fan, but there's an artificial putting green in his back garden and occasionally it draws strangers to his house on the corner of Strathearn Court and Belfast Road. This is Holywood, where a star was born 36 years ago, and an hour or so north from here is Royal Portrush, where that same guy will challenge for the Claret Jug this week. The noise and fuss will be off the scale for Rory McIlroy.

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