
Rory McIlroy: ‘It has been a great week. Missing the trophy, that's about it'
had to accept second best in the Genesis
Scottish Open
– where American Chris Gotterup claimed a second career win on the
PGA Tour
– but the world number two wasted little time in moving on to home turf, flying over to Northern Ireland for the 153rd Open at Royal Portrush where an early-morning practice round tee time is the first entry on his week's schedule.
'I'm really happy with where my game is; the way I played over the weekend; the shots that I hit, how I controlled my ball flight. It has been a great week. Missing the trophy, that's about it,' said McIlroy, who closed with a final round 68 for 13-under-par 267 to finish tied-second with Marco Penge, two shots behind winner Gotterup who also clinched an exemption into the field for the season's final Major.
McIlroy sharpened up his game ahead of
The Open
, especially happy with his iron play but also believing that the greens deteriorated at The Renaissance club over the weekend which impacted putting.
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Scottish Open final round: Chris Gotterup holds off Rory McIlroy to win - as it happened
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'[The greens] just got a little bumpy. I had some putts and some looks that felt like I hit good putts that just didn't go in, whether they were misreads or poor speed here and there ... I feel like my game got a little better each and every day. I controlled my ball flight, Everything is in a really good spot and I'm happy with how my game progressed as the week went on,' said McIlroy, already a three-time winner on the PGA Tour this season, including at the Masters where he completed the career Grand Slam.
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Chris Gotterup of the United States poses for a photograph with the Genesis Scottish Open. Photograph: Warren Little/Getty
The final three spots to Portrush available from the Scottish Open went to Gotterup, Nicolai Højgaard and Matti Schmid.
Gotterup – who is due to celebrate his 26th birthday next Sunday, the final day of The Open – cancelled his flight back to California and changed his itinerary to head for the Antrim coast instead.
'I was a one-time champion. Two-time champ sounds a lot better. I know what I'm capable of and I know when I feel the way I did today, I can beat the best. It's just awesome,' said Gotterup.
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RTÉ News
25 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Masters win helping Rory McIlroy deal with Open pressure
Rory McIlroy believes that he is far more mentally prepared for the 2025 Open Championship at Royal Portrush than he was for the 2019 running of the event at the same venue. Feeling all the pressure of being the returning local hero six years ago, McIlroy shot an eight-over 79 on the first day so that even a second-round 65 could not prevent him missing the cut by a stroke. However, since then he has completed the fabled career Grand Slam, claiming victory at the Masters in April, and he feels that the gruelling final day at Augusta has given him the tools to deal with he pressure he will face at Portrush. Speaking to RTÉ Sport, he said: " If someone had to told me at the start of this year, you'd be going back to Portrush with your game in good form, with a chance to win the Open, and by the way, you've got a green jacket with you too? Yeah, I would've taken that. "It's amazing to be back. It really doesn't feel like six years ago that we were here. It's amazing that Portrush and Northern Ireland have this opportunity so soon after the last Open here. "Personally, and selfishly for me, I'm happy that it's back so soon because I want to have another crack at it. "I didn't have the week that I wanted back in 2019, but I feel like I'm a way better player and way better equipped to handle everything that this week throws at me, from a golfing perspective and from a mental and emotional perspective as well. "The two places I'd love to win an Open more than anywhere else are here and St Andrews. They're the two venues for me that are probably more important than the rest. "No other round of golf will feel as difficult as the one I felt in that last day at Augusta, so everything should feel a little bit easier than that." "I've come here feeling really good about where my game is at" McIlroy has spoken recently of struggling for motivation after completing the career Grand Slam and his results in the immediate aftermath of the win at Augusta were not what he would have expected. However, he has enjoyed an upturn in form over the last few weeks and is again playing the kind of golf that fans have come to expect from him. "I'm excited and I've found that enthusiasm again," he said. "I don't know if it's the good golf that's making me enthused again, or if my enthusiasm that's making the good golf. It's a little bit of the chicken and the egg. "I had a good week at the Travelers (Championship) finishing sixth, and then I had a good week last week, with a chance to win in Scotland. So I couldn't be coming in here feeling better about my game. "I did all the right things last week. I feel like my game progressed as the rounds went on in Scotland and I've come here feeling really good about where my game is at."


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
The Open Diary: Tournament lagging behind other Majors in golf gold rush
Portrush braces for big week Hats off to the people at Portrush Primary School whose grounds have been overrun this week with a bevvy of campervans and tents as golf fans avail of any and every opportunity to catch the world's best players in action. It isn't just the town itself that has had to work around The Open. Vast stretches of the northern coastline are having to accommodate this enormous logistical operation with 40mph speed limits in operation for miles around. A no-fly zone is in place with the PSNI warning anyone thinking of launching a drone of the consequences involved and a traffic management system is in operation to funnel people in and out of the area while allowing residents and businesses to go about with minimal fuss. That's all but impossible, really. Think of the East Strand car park and its 600 spaces that have been sealed off for the purposes of the tournament and this can't be anything other than a unique week for the people in this part of the world. Saturday evening promises to be especially interesting with a planned loyalist march in the town containing more than 60 bands and a couple of thousand people, just around the time when the golf ends down the road and punters are streaming out. Watch that space. Money, money, money Golf's gold rush has been jaw-dropping in modern times, and the riches race has been supercharged since the advent of LIV into the market and eco-system. That injection is obvious on weeks like this. When Shane Lowry took home the Claret Jug from Portrush in 2019 he earned with it a record cheque worth $1.935 million (€1.65m). The Champion golfer this time will take home $3.1m (€2.65m). Some difference in such a short space of time. And yet, that €2.65m figure remains unchanged from when Xander Schauffele came out on top in Royal Troon 12 months ago, and it remains behind the other three majors in financial terms with no real bump of note since an 18% leap for St Andrews in 2022. By comparison, Rory McIlroy was paid $4.2m (3.59) for his Masters triumph at Augusta in April, Scottie Scheffler's PGA win was worth $3.4m (€2.91), and JJ Spaun got rewarded $4.3m (€3.68) for his US Open work. The total prize fund for this week's Open sits at $17m (€14.53m). Oh, and why all the dollar values? Because that's how the R&A pays out now. Sprinkling of magic for McIlroy Shane Lowry's win here at Royal Portrush was immortalised in a huge mural painted on to the gable end of a house on the Causeway Road that leads from the course into the town itself. That was last year, to mark one year before The Open's return. Now, Rory McIlroy has been honoured too. The Holywood man has been rendered in sprinkles, or hundreds of thousands if you prefer. Two-and-a-half million of them, to be precise. This mural has been rendered by the family-owned Morelli's Ice Cream shop in the town's Eglinton Street. McIlroy, famously, missed the cut when The Open visited these parts in 2019 but this artistic nod has been made on the back of his Masters win in April and the achievement in having won all four of golf's majors.

The 42
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- The 42
Ireland U20s in danger of wooden spoon after defeat to Scotland
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