McIlroy makes a big splash
by Golf guest 03/05/2010, 11:56
Rory McIlroy first gained worldwide attention when he was 18 and opened the British Open with a bogey-free round at Carnoustie.
A European Tour victory came a year later, and a pronouncement
by Tiger Woods that the young Northern Irishman had all the tools
to one day be No 1 in the world.
Sunday's win at the Quail Hollow Championship was only a step,
but the 20-year-old showed why there is so much fuss about him.
With one dazzling shot after another, McIlroy shattered the
course record at the Quail Hollow Championship with a 10-under 62
for a four-shot victory over Masters champion Phil Mickelson,
making him the youngest PGA Tour winner since Woods.
The man billed as Europe's next big star made quite an
impression in America.
"One of the best rounds I've seen in a long, long time,"
Mickelson said after a birdie on the final hole gave him a 68 and
second place alone. "He's an incredible player, a great talent, a
great young man, a great kid. I really enjoy being around him. And
I'm so happy for him. I'm just disappointed it's at my expense."
McIlroy didn't feel the stress of being locked in a tense battle
at the Quail Hollow Championship with Mickelson and two-time major
champion Angel Cabrera right behind him, on the course and on the
leaderboard.
The freckled-face youngster didn't feel anything at all.
He saw the flag, hit the shots and roared to such a big lead
that no one could catch him. He hit 5-iron up the hill on the par-5
15th hole to 3 feet for eagle. He blasted 7-iron out of the bunker
on the next hole to 5 feet for birdie. And when he emphatically
ended his amazing round with a 40-foot birdie putt, McIlroy thrust
his fist in the air as thousands of fans around the 18th green
leapt out of their chairs.
McIlroy can sure put on a show.
"I suppose I got into the zone," said McIlroy, who turns 21 on
Tuesday. "I hadn't realized I was going in 9, 10 under. I just know
I got my nose in front, and I was just trying to stay there."
The zone is not a new sensation.
When he was 16, McIlroy shot a 61 at Royal Portrush, and he
still can remember just about every shot. Mostly, he remembers what
it was like, and those feelings washed over him in the steamy
Sunday of late spring in North Carolina.
"I was just seeing my shots, I was hitting them. I was getting
up-and-down, I was seeing putts go in, I was reading lines," he
said. "It's pretty cool when it happens, because it doesn't happen
often. But when it does, you have to make the most of it."
That he did, finishing at 15-under 273 to earn $1.17 million and
feel much better about his decision to join the PGA Tour this year.
Mickelson, who has never won in his first tournament after the
Masters, gave himself a chance until hitting deep into the trees on
the par-5 10th, having to play a shot right-handed because his ball
was on the wrong side of a pine tree, and making bogey. By the time
he began his charge, McIlroy was pulling away.
The real threat was Cabrera, a formidable opponent on fast
greens. The Argentine won his two majors on courses renowned for
the speed of the greens - Oakmont and Augusta National. Tied for
the lead with eight holes to play, the putts stopped falling.
Cabrera missed five putts inside 10 feet on the back nine, closed
with a 68 and finished third.
McIlroy's other victory came at the Dubai Desert Classic, when
he had a six-shot lead and nearly threw it away at the end as his
mind wandered to the significance of winning. There was no time for
that at Quail Hollow.
"I had Phil behind me, Angel Cabrera. There's a lot of guys
still around there," he said. "I kept telling myself, 'There's
still a lot of golf to play,' especially with the finish around
here. I tried to pick my targets, hit my shots. I executed all
those shots pretty nicely."
Of all the splendid shots he hit in the final hour, none was as
significant as the 4-iron he hit on Friday.
McIlroy was headed for his third straight missed cut when he was
two shots over the cut line and had only three holes left. From 206
yards into the breeze on the par-5 seventh, he ripped a 4-iron over
the water to 6 feet for eagle and made the cut on the number.
"Most important shot of the year, to be honest," McIlroy said.
"If I don't make eagle there, I'm practicing at Ponte Vedra this
weekend. I said after the 66 yesterday, 'That could have been the
turning point in my season.' I think today I've confirmed that."
He became the first player since Chris Couch at New Orleans in
2006 to make the cut on the number and win. McIlroy was so good on
the weekend that he had the low round each of the last two days - a
66 on Saturday and the 62 on Sunday.
Padraig Harrington of Ireland closed with a 68 and hung around
for two hours to congratulate the kid when he finished. He was
growing concerned for McIlroy, who was under enormous pressure
since turning pro when he was 18.
McIlroy added to the hype by winning the Dubai Desert Classic
last year at 19 and nearly winning the Order of Merit. He had
missed two cuts going into Quail Hollow, and had not had a top 10
since the first week of February.
"At home, no matter how he does, the focus is on him,"
Harrington said. "When you're not winning, not delivering, the
focus becomes a burden. If he can get across the line here, he can
go from strength to strength. He will be a lot more comfortable
with who he is, a lot more patient. The win is significant - very
significant - at this time."
McIlroy moves to No. 9 in the world with the victory, and he can
only hope he is headed in the right direction. He had to endure
back problems, alarming for someone so young, yet the heat helped
loosen him up and allowed him to hit the ball at full power.