Robert MacIntyre didn’t like the buzzing of the CBS drone one bit and let them know at 2024 RBC Canadian Open

The big wasp in the sky failed to sting MacIntyre on Sunday.

HAMILTON, Ontario – Robert MacIntyre doesn’t like drones.

“If it didn’t go away, I was going to start throwing my clubs at it,” he said. “That’s how annoyed I was getting.”

During Sunday’s final round of the RBC Canadian Open, the CBS Sports drone following his pairing bothered him to end.

It had started on Saturday on the 18th hole but it began in earnest on the drivable par-4 fifth hole when the crowd went silent.

“It’s a big wasp. I asked ’em to get rid of it. They did,” he explained. “Next hole, I’m in the bunker, and sure enough everyone’s silent and all I hear is this buzzing again. I look up and here it is. And, I don’t know, one of the guys must have been getting sick of me. I just kept turning to him because I knew he was the man to go to when that drone starts annoying me because yesterday on 18 it was the same guy. And he just radioed, ‘Get that drone out of here.’”

RBC Canadian Open: Photos | Merchandise | Leaderboard

MacIntyre could be heard saying, “I told you once, I’m not going to tell you again.”

On the CBS broadcast, Jim Nantz, Dottie Pepper, who was following the group, and Trevor Immelman understood that it was disturbing MacIntyre but pushed back that drones are now part of the coverage. A request for a comment from CBS Sports wasn’t answered.

“They were horrible,” MacIntyre’s father, Dougie, who served as his caddie this week, said. “He was getting a wee bit agitated. It takes your concentration. In the back of the head you’re thinking about the buzzing so he called the rules official over.”

That occurred at the ninth fairway when MacIntyre was preparing to hit a wedge to the green.

“All I can hear is this drone again, and I had had enough at that point. Rules official from the R&A was just beside us, and I brought her over, and I said, ‘Look, this drone needs to get out of here. I’ve said it three times now. The drone is annoying me, the drone’s putting me off, it’s too close.’ I mean, it’s easier when the blimps up there, but it’s obviously the weather and stuff and it’s just, I had a job to do, and anything that was getting in my way was getting told to get out of the way. I was focused today and that drone was doing my head, and so I told it to get away.”

MacIntyre’s father said he helped calm down his son, who focused on the task at hand and earned his first Tour title.

“He gets grumpy. That’s his downfall. When he gets grumpy and mad at himself the game goes. He knows it himself,” Dougie said.

But the big wasp in the sky failed to sting MacIntyre on Sunday.

[lawrence-auto-related count=4 tag=451206519]

2022 RBC Canadian Open prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Rory McIlroy.

The 33-year-old Northern Irishman defended his title from 2019 and claimed his 21st PGA Tour win by two shots over Tony Finau and three over Justin Thomas at the 2022 RBC Canadian Open at St. George’s Golf and Country Club in Ontario, Canada. The event was played for the first time after a two-year hiatus due to COVID-19 restrictions.

McIlroy will take home $1.56 million for his efforts and is now over $64 million in career on-course earnings. Finau, meanwhile, earned a cool $948,300. Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2022 RBC Canadian Open.

RBC Canadian: Scores | PGA Tour all-time money list

Position Player Score Earnings
1  Rory McIlroy -19 $1,566,000
2  Tony Finau -17 $948,300
3  Justin Thomas -15 $600,300
T4  Justin Rose -14 $391,500
T4  Sam Burns -14 $391,500
6  Corey Conners -12 $315,375
T7  Keith Mitchell -10 $273,325
T7  Chris Kirk -10 $273,325
T7  Wyndham Clark -10 $273,325
T10  Danny Lee -9 $219,675
T10  Shane Lowry -9 $219,675
T10  Matt Fitzpatrick -9 $219,675
T13  Kelly Kraft -8 $160,515
T13  Brendon Todd -8 $160,515
T13  Aaron Rai -8 $160,515
T13  Harold Varner III -8 $160,515
T13  Austin Cook -8 $160,515
T18  Patrick Rodgers -7 $123,975
T18  Scottie Scheffler -7 $123,975
T18  Doug Ghim -7 $123,975
T21  Adam Svensson -6 $94,830
T21  Scott Piercy -6 $94,830
T21  Adam Long -6 $94,830
T21  Alex Smalley -6 $94,830
T25  John Huh -5 $71,485
T25  Jim Knous -5 $71,485
T25  Sebastián Muñoz -5 $71,485
T28  Mackenzie Hughes -4 $57,047
T28  Emiliano Grillo -4 $57,047
T28  Hank Lebioda -4 $57,047
T28  Chase Seiffert -4 $57,047
T28  Danny Willett -4 $57,047
T28  Jonas Blixt -4 $57,047
T28  Nick Taylor -4 $57,047
T35  Adam Hadwin -3 $39,730
T35  Justin Lower -3 $39,730
T35  Vince Whaley -3 $39,730
T35  Seung-Yul Noh -3 $39,730
T35  Charley Hoffman -3 $39,730
T35  Ryan Moore -3 $39,730
T35  Matt Wallace -3 $39,730
T35  Ryan Armour -3 $39,730
T35  Nick Hardy -3 $39,730
T44  Austin Smotherman -2 $30,015
T44  Mark Hubbard -2 $30,015
T46  Carlos Ortiz -1 $26,535
T46  Paul Barjon -1 $26,535
T48  Cameron Smith E $22,568
T48  Brandt Snedeker E $22,568
T48  Aaron Cockerill E $22,568
T48  Vaughn Taylor E $22,568
T48  Lee Hodges E $22,568
T53  Sahith Theegala 1 $20,387
T53  Brett Drewitt 1 $20,387
T53  Robert Streb 1 $20,387
T53  Ben Martin 1 $20,387
T53  Jhonattan Vegas 1 $20,387
T53  Bo Van Pelt 1 $20,387
T59  Cameron Percy 2 $19,662
T59  J.J. Henry 2 $19,662
T61  Dylan Frittelli 3 $19,314
T61  Kramer Hickok 3 $19,314
63  Ben Crane 4 $19,053
T64  Sean O’Hair 5 $18,531
T64  Rafa Cabrera Bello 5 $18,531
T64  David Skinns 5 $18,531
T64  Andrew Novak 5 $18,531
T64  Brandon Hagy 5 $18,531
69  Trey Mullinax 6 $18,009
70  Dawie van der Walt 8 $17,835

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Winner’s Bag: Rory McIlroy, 2022 RBC Canadian Open

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Canada.

[mm-video type=video id=01fcr01v8sg2rree9k59 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01fcr01v8sg2rree9k59/01fcr01v8sg2rree9k59-b5aa3e358212a84ad20bbda475e60bea.jpg]

A complete list of the golf equipment Rory McIlroy used to win the PGA Tour’s 2022 RBC Canadian Open:

DRIVER: TaylorMade Stealth Plus+ (9 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 6X shaft

FAIRWAY WOODS: TaylorMade SIM (15 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 8X shaft. Stealth Plus+ (19 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 9X shaft

IRONS: TaylorMade P730 RORS proto (3-PW), with Project X 7.0 shafts 

WEDGES: TaylorMade MG3 (54, 60 degrees), with Project X 6.5 shafts 

PUTTER: TaylorMade Spider X Hydro Blast

BALL: TaylorMade TP5x

GRIPS: Golf Pride New Decade Multicompound (full swing) / SuperStroke Traxion PistolGT Tour (putter)

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

[vertical-gallery id=778275968]

Rory McIlroy throws subtle shot at LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman after winning 2022 RBC Canadian Open

The win is McIlroy’s 21st on Tour and first since October 2021.

It was just shy of 1,100 days that Rory McIlroy finally got a chance to defend his 2019 RBC Canadian Open title.

Not much changed.

McIlroy authored another tour de force north of the border at St. George’s Golf & Country Club in Toronto on Sunday with a brilliant display of scoring and overcoming a stretch that tested his mettle to win his 21st PGA Tour title.

Following a 5-under-par 65 in the third round, McIlroy, No. 8 in the Official World Golf Ranking, held off world No. 6 Justin Thomas and world No. 18 Tony Finau in the final megawatt grouping with a 62 to finish at 19 under.

In 2019, McIlroy closed with a 61 to win the Canadian Open by seven shots. The tournament was not played the past two years due to COVID restrictions.

“It’s incredible,” McIlroy said. “Playing with Tony and JT, and all of us playing the way we did, I think the worst round was 6 under, this is a day I will always remember. My 21st PGA Tour win, one more than somebody else, that gave me a little extra incentive today and I’m happy to get it done.”

That somebody else would be Greg Norman, who is the commissioner of LIV Golf, a rival league backed by Saudi Arabia that played its first event this week outside of London.

Well, the RBC Canadian Open was the PGA Tour’s resounding response to the inaugural LIV Golf Invitational Series event that featured a 54-hole, no-cut, shotgun tournament ending Saturday. In Canada, the massive galleries were loud, chants broke out for numerous players throughout the week, and the fans heartily celebrated its first live golf action after the COVID-induced silence of the past two years. The fans’ final act? Thousands of them circled the 18th green, the crowd stretching back 50 yards down the fairway.

Adding to McIlroy’s celebration? It was the first time in 15 attempts that he defended a title. He shot 29 over the front nine – the first 29 on either the front or back nine in his career.

And he had to dig deep to overcome a lull. In full flight, McIlroy was 8 under through 12 holes and led by three. But he missed a four-footer on 13 and a two-footer on 16 to fall back into a tie. But he birdied 17 after knocking his approach from 127 yards to tap-in range and birdied 18 from five feet.

“After COVID, I needed a total reset,” McIlroy said. “I rededicated myself and wanted to do what makes me happy and this makes me happy.”

Finau knocked in a 40-footer for birdie on the last to finish at 17 under. It capped a huge weekend – in the third round he tied his career low with a 62.

Thomas, who came back from eight shots with 10 holes to play to win the PGA Championship in a playoff, was tied for the lead before making his first bogey in 34 holes and then another at the last. He finished at 15 under.

Justin Rose made a run at a sub-par 60 round and was actually 11 under through 15 holes and three pars away from a 59. But in his round of three eagles and seven birdies, Rose bogeyed two of his last three holes to match his career low of 60.

He finished in a tie for fourth at 14 under.

“I’m totally disappointed,” Rose said, especially about his last-hole bogey. “Because you know what’s at stake, for sure. You’re really just playing the last hole – I never shot 59 before – so it would have been a lovely footnote on the week.”

Joining Rose at 14 under was Sam Burns, who shot 65.

[vertical-gallery id=778275968]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Justin Rose blew a shot at PGA Tour history on the final hole of the RBC Canadian Open

The 10-time winner on Tour was on 59 watch after an incredible final round on Sunday.

Standing on the 18th tee Sunday, Justin Rose had a round to remember going. Two swings later it turned into a round to forget.

The 10-time winner on the PGA Tour made three eagles, seven birdies, five pars and two bogeys to get to 11 under through 17 holes during the final round of the RBC Canadian Open at St. George’s Golf & Country Club in Toronto.

Officially on 59—or even 58—watch, Rose was looking to become the 13th player to sign for a sub-60 round in Tour history, and the first since current world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler shot a 12-under 59 in the second round of the 2020 Northern Trust. That is until Rose airmailed his approach to the 18th green.

He got relief from the grandstands and chipped from the thick rough behind the green to leave an 18-footer for par and a piece of history. Instead, he two-putted for bogey and the most-disappointing 10-under 60 in golf history (which set a course record, an RBC Canadian Open record and a personal best).

RBC Canadian: Leaderboard

The lowest score in relation to par in Tour history is 13 under, achieved four times, most recently in 2017 by Adam Hadwin at the CareerBuilder Challenge. Jim Furyk is the lone player to ever shoot two sub-60 rounds, and is the only player to ever shoot a 58, doing so at the 2016 Travelers Championship.

[listicle id=778050681]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Check the yardage book: St. George’s Golf & Country Club for 2022 RBC Canadian Open

Take a peek at the StrackaLine yardage book for this week’s PGA Tour stop.

St. George’s Golf & Country Club in Etobicoke, Canada – site of the PGA Tour’s RBC Canadian Open – was designed by legendary Canadian golf architect Stanley Thompson and opened in 1930 not far from Toronto.

St. George’s ranks No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best ranking of classic courses built before 1960 in Canada. The club has worked with architect Ian Andrew since 2013 to restore the course. The course will play to 7,014 yards with a par of 70 for the 2022 RBC Canadian Open. 

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.