‘It was very strange’: McIlroy’s bizarre double-ball moment at the Open
By Sam McClure
Rory McIlroy has been a professional golfer for almost 20 years. In the third round of the Open championships, he experienced something he never had before.
After missing the fairway to the right with his tee shot on the 11th hole, McIlroy was forced to punch out from the rough.
As his ball flew off the club face, another ball that, unbeknown to McIlroy, was lying right below his own, came out as well.
There’s no telling how long that ball had been buried below the surface.
The five-time major winner said it was one of the weirdest things he’d ever experienced on a golf course.
“It’s never happened to me before. 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.”
McIlroy started like a house on fire, birdying three of the first four holes, eagled the par-five 12th and birdied the 15th to card a 66, leaving him eight-under for the tournament and six shots off leader Scottie Scheffler, sending sections of Royal Portrush into pandemonium.
All smiles: John Parry grins after sinking a hole-in-one.Credit: Getty Images
“Yeah, it was incredible. It was so much fun. I got off to the perfect start, three-under through four. Felt like at the end of the front nine there, at least through 11, the par on seven felt like a bogey, and then the bogey on 11,” he said.
“Then to play those last seven holes at three-under I thought was a good effort. Yeah, I played well. I rode my luck at times, but yeah, it was an incredible atmosphere out there. I feel like I’ve at least given myself half a chance tomorrow.”
More than just money on the line for Leishman
Marc Leishman, Australia’s last man standing at the Open, will be striving for a top 10 finish on Sunday to guarantee him a start in next year’s tournament.
On a day when tens of thousands of fans packed out Royal Portrush to watch local hero McIlroy propel himself up the leaderboard, Leishman made five birdies and two bogeys to card a three-under round of 68, keeping alive his chances of doing damage to the leaderboard in the final round.
Marc Leishman tees off on the sixth hole.Credit: Getty Images
A top 10 finish would grant the LIV golfer exemption into the Open in 2026 while an unlikely top four-finish would also give Leishman entry into next year’s Masters.
It’s far more than just money on the line.
Leishman told Australian reporters that he will wait to see what the conditions are – they’ve been chaotic – on Sunday before figuring out a game-plan for his final round.
“I’m hitting it well enough to be aggressive. Depends what the conditions do. If the wind gets up a little bit, you’ve got to try and give yourself makeable birdie putts on every hole. If it’s like it was today, you probably have to be a bit more aggressive and try and make something happen.
All eyes were on homegrown hero Rory McIlroy. Credit: Getty Images
“It’s one of those things; you just have to hit good shots. If you’re not hitting good shots, whether you’re aggressive or conservative, you’re not going to have a good score. If you are hitting good shots, you can play that way and still have a good score.
“I feel like my iron play is really good at the moment, and there might be a few pins that I’ll be able to go at that maybe, depending on the situation, I might otherwise not go at. Yeah, we’ll see what the situation brings.”
Leishman admitted he could hear the rapturous applause that reverberated around the golf course every time McIlroy played a shot.
“You can tell when it’s him, as you could tell when it was Shane [Lowry] in 2019. The Northern Irish are loving seeing him in contention. It’s exciting. It would be exciting for Rory too.”
McIlroy and co will be chasing the runaway train that is world No.1 Scheffler, who had another strong round of 67, leaving him four shots clear of China’s Haoton Li.
Matt Fitzpatrick, who is one shot behind Li at nine-under for the tournament, is attempting to be the first English winner of an Open since Nick Faldo 33 years ago.
McIlroy and Leishman, who are in different sections of the leaderboard, have very different plans for their Saturday nights.
For McIlroy, it’s another hour of Christopher Nolan’s Oscar winning epic Oppenheimer, having made it through just one hour on his first attempt 24 hours earlier.
And for Leishman it’s also a repeat of what he did the previous night. A pint – or two – of Guinness.
Sam McClure travelled to the British Open with the assistance of Golf Australia.
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