After the heartbreak: Rory McIlroy analyzes what went wrong at the 2024 U.S. Open and ready for his next chance

McIlroy said, “It was a great day until it wasn’t.”

After suffering heartbreak at the U.S. Open at Pinehurst three weeks ago, Rory McIlroy stewed for a couple of days but said he’s ready to return to action at this week’s Genesis Scottish Open and see if he can handle the closing stretch better next time.

Summing up the disappointment of making three bogeys over the final four holes, including two short misses, to lose by one stroke to Bryson DeChambeau, McIlroy said, “It was a great day until it wasn’t.”

“I got over it pretty quickly,” added McIlroy, who in the aftermath opted to withdraw from the Travelers Championship the following day and take a few weeks to build himself back up ahead of the final major of the year, next week’s British Open. “The few days after it were pretty tough at times but I feel like I’ve done a good job of thinking about it rationally and constructively, and staking what I need from it and trying to learn from it. But like for the most part it was a great day…You know, there’s not a lot that I would change about what I did on Sunday for the first 14 holes. That’s the best I’ve played in that position in a long, long time.”

SCOTTISH OPEN: Tournament hub | Thursday tee times, TV

McIlroy has analyzed how it all went terribly wrong and he took the time during his pre-tournament press conference in North Berwick, Scotland, to share some of his Monday Morning Quarterbacking.

“The short putt on 16 is one that I’ll probably rue most because it was a pretty simple putt,” he said. “I can vividly remember starting to feel a little uncomfortable waiting for my second putt on 16.”

He noted that he thought his birdie effort might fall but then it rolled a foot beyond tap-in range and he marked. He had a long time to think about it as his playing competitor, Patrick Cantlay, was deliberate in lining up his par effort and McIlroy said his mind began to wander.

“I hit a decent putt on 16,” he said. “I probably read that just right of center. Probably started it a touch left of that. Probably started it straight, maybe a touch left of center, and the green grabbed it and it caught the left edge. Wasn’t a terrible putt, but I definitely felt a little bit of uneasiness before I hit it.”

2024 U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy warms up on the range during the second round of the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2. (Photo: Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

In replaying what went wrong at 18, where he missed a tricky 4-foot, left-to-right slider, McIlroy again pointed to a mental miscue.

“I was very aware of where Bryson was off the tee. I knew I had to hit it really soft. If the one back didn’t matter, I would have hit it firmer,” he explained. “But because I was sort of in two minds, I didn’t know whether Bryson was going to make a par or not, it was one of those ones where I had to make sure that if the putt didn’t go in, that it wasn’t going 10 feet by which it very easily could have.”

Other observations included noting that his pre-shot routine became longer and he started to look at the target a few more times over the ball than usual. He also regretted becoming too aware of what DeChambeau was doing in the group behind him and failing to stay “in my own little world for the whole 18 holes.”

“I’ll learn a lot from it and I’ll hopefully put that to good use,” McIlroy added. “It’s something that’s been a bit of a theme throughout my career. I’ve been able to take those tough moments and turn them into great things not very long after that.”

His first crack at getting back into the winner’s circle commences on Thursday, where McIlroy is the defending champion at the Scottish Open, a co-sanctioned event between the DP World Tour and PGA Tour, at The Renaissance Club. A year ago, he finished with birdies on the final two holes to edge Scotland’s own Robert MacIntyre by a shot. That included a heroic 2-iron from 202 yards into a 40-mile-per-hour wind that stopped 11 feet from the hole. The club commemorated the shot with a plaque, though they had to fix a spelling error in which the ‘I’ looked too much like an ‘L’, in the 18th fairway to mark the spot. Shortly after claiming the trophy, his first in Scotland, McIlroy told club founder Paul Sarvadi, “When I turn 80, it will be one of the five best shots I hit in my entire career.” On Wednesday, McIlroy raved just as much about his tee shot at the par-3 17th.

“Everyone talks about the 2-iron at the last but the 5-iron I hit into 17 was just as good a shot if not a little bit better,” McIlroy said. “To hit two iron shots like that and to hole the putts when I needed to, yeah, it was awesome. Sort of I felt in some ways bad that it came at the expense of Bob but at the same time it was amazing to win a tournament that I had never won before.”

McIlroy speaks from experience of knowing both the thrill of victory that day at The Renaissance Club and the agony of defeat at places such as Pinehurst and he’s ready to put the past behind him and get back in the arena.

“It hurt but I felt worse after some other losses,” McIlroy said of his U.S. Open heartbreak. “I felt worse after Augusta in ’11 and I felt worse after St Andrews (in ’22). It was up there with the tough losses but not the toughest.”

Rory McIlroy, fresh off defeat at U.S. Open, withdraws from this week’s Travelers Championship

Where will we see McIlroy next?

Rory McIlroy, fresh on the heels of losing the U.S. Open with two short missed putts on the closing holes Sunday, announced Monday via X (formerly Twitter) that he is withdrawing from this week’s Travelers Championship on the PGA Tour.

McIlroy, who is No. 2 in the Official World Golf Ranking, wrote that he will play next at the Genesis Scottish Open on July 11-14 at the Renaissance Club in North Berwick. That event is the week before the Open Championship at Royal Troon in South Ayrshire, Scotland.

McIlroy had built a two-shot lead in the U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina before making bogey on three of the last four holes, including missed short putts on Nos. 16 and 18. Bryson DeChambeau won with a simply ridiculous 55-yard bunker save on No. 18 after McIlroy had opened the door.

After a hasty exit from the U.S. Open parking lot, McIlroy took to X to share his thoughts on the defeat.

The Travelers is a signature event on the PGA Tour with a $20 million purse. Top players committed to compete at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, include World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Xander Schauffele, No. 4 Ludvig Aberg and No. 5 Wyndham Clark.

Golf fans were flabbergasted by the awful camera angle of Rory McIlroy’s winning putt at Scottish Open

This terrible view was so far away!

Usually, when a climactic moment in golf arrives — like, say, a winning putt — you want the best possible view for a broadcast audience. Everything should be visible, close up, and crystal cut and clear.

Someone evidently did not pass this memo along to broadcasters of the 2023 Genesis Scottish Open.

While mostly cruising his way through the tournament, Rory McIlroy came upon his deserved shot to win on the final hole. Except, for whatever reason, some of the main broadcasts decided to set the camera so far away from McIlroy before his shot.

Heck, even the European Tour organizing body strangely decided to promote McIlroy’s winning moment from the same perspective:

I don’t know about you, but I typically want to see the most essential moment of a sporting event with a quality view. I don’t know why, but maybe having a closer, better angle was too much to ask here.

Loaded field headed to The Renaissance Club for 2023 Genesis Scottish Open

Plenty of big names will battle it out in Scotland.

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Before the best players in the world head to Royal Liverpool for the 151st Open Championship, many are destined for The Renaissance Club in North Berwick, Scotland, for the 2023 Genesis Scottish Open.

Last season, Xander Schauffele outlasted Kurt Kitayama for a one-stroke victory after an even-par final round.

Schauffele is joined in the field this year by world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 3 Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Max Homa, Jordan Spieth, Matt Fitzpatrick and Viktor Hovland.

Rickie Fowler, fresh off his win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, is also in the field.

The Renaissance Club is a par-70 track that will measure 7,237 yards.

Here is the complete field for the 2023 Genesis Scottish Open (as well as the Barbasol Championship, an opposite-field event held in Kentucky).

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Xander Schauffele captures Genesis Scottish Open, wins second straight start

Schauffele captured the Genesis Scottish Open for his seventh career PGA Tour title.

It has been a pretty good week for Xander Schauffele.

On Tuesday, he captured the JP McManus Pro-Am in Ireland. Come Sunday, it was his turn to hoist yet another trophy.

Schauffele played brilliantly on the back nine at the Renaissance Club to capture the 2022 Genesis Scottish Open. He shot an even-par 70 during the final round to win his seventh PGA Tour title, finishing at 7 under for the week.

He trailed by 11 strokes after the first round.

It’s also Schauffele’s second straight professional win after he claimed the Travelers Championship two weeks ago in Connecticut. He’s the first golfer to win consecutive starts on the PGA Tour since Scottie Scheffler won the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play and the Masters.

Schauffele birdied his first two holes, but bogeys on three of the final four holes on the front nine gave others chasing him hope. Birdies on Nos. 14 and 16, however, helped Schauffele pull away from the field, though a bogey on the 18th made his winning margin only one.

Kurt Kitayama finished solo second, his second runner-up of the season, after a 4-under round of 66, one shot behind Schauffele. J.H. Kim, a 20-year-old from South Korea, finished in third, his best career result on the PGA Tour.

Now, Schauffele, searching for his first major, heads to St. Andrews for the 2022 Open Championship as the hottest golfer in the world.

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Will Zalatoris’s chip shot improbably landed atop Matt Fitzpatrick’s ball marker and everyone was in awe

Zalatoris couldn’t do this again with 1,000 tries.

Will Zalatoris almost chipped in from just off the green on the 16th hole of the Scottish Open. While his ball failed to find the bottom of the cup, he ended up with something even rarer than holing out.

His ball stopped perfectly on partner Matt Fitzpatrick’s ball marker.

Zalatoris’s birdie shot crossed the long, links green at North Berwick’s The Renaissance Club, kissed the edge of the cup without hitting the pin, and then took a direct path to Fitzpatrick’s poker chip marker. And that’s where it stayed, balancing perfectly on a spot roughly the same diameter as the ball itself:

It was such a rare coincidence that the group’s caddies felt compelled to document it. Here it is up close, from Zalatoris’s Instagram story:

Zalatoris was away and sunk his putt to save par. Fitzpatrick, having seen the exact line of the putt he’d have to make, also found the bottom of the cup for a five. Each finished their opening round at +1.

Watch: Viktor Hovland shanked and duffed his way to a relatable double bogey at the 2022 Genesis Scottish Open

Professional golfers, they’re just like us.

On today’s episode of “Professional Golfers, They’re Just Like Us!” we welcome rising star Viktor Hovland to the program.

The 24-year-old Norwegian was playing his first round of the 2022 Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club when he hit a series of shots that made him look more like a weekend hacker and not the three-time PGA Tour and two-time DP World Tour winner that he truly is. After finding the fairway on the fourth hole, Hovland hit a shank into thick grass, leaving a difficult approach. Things went from bad to worse for the former U.S. Amateur champion, who proceeded to duff his third shot, barely advancing the ball at all.

Hovland went on to make a double-bogey six and signed his name to a 4-over 74 to sit 13 shots behind first-round leader Cameron Tringale, who shot a 9-under 61 on Thursday morning.

We’ll give Hovland a break for this unfortunate sequence, seeing as his clubs and baggage didn’t arrive with him in Scotland earlier this week. And this isn’t a first-time incident for Hovland, either. In fact, the last time he had issues with clubs, he went on to win.

What’s a portakabin? And why are Scottish golfers sad it’s gone from Dundonald Links?

The hand dryers in the loos are pretty fancy, too.

Those of you keen on the history of cherished, triumphant edifices will probably know that the Eiffel Tower was originally intended as a temporary exhibit when it started to get rattled up back in 1887.

And look at it now? Still plonked there as a majestic beacon for patriotism, resistance, romance and long bloomin’ queues of camera-clicking tourists. Now, we’re not saying the old portakabin clubhouse at Dundonald Links — which sits less than an hour southwest of Glasgow, Scotland — was anything remotely like this grand Parisian pile but, having stood as a stopgap facility for almost two decades at the Ayrshire venue, it too became something of a treasure.

“People had a real soft spot for it and by the end, we thought it would just about have listed status,” said Dundonald Links general manager, Ian Ferguson, with a reflective chuckle as he looked back on a hardy make-shift assembly which has welcomed some of the world’s best golfers in both the men’s and women’s Scottish Opens.

“It was actually quite emotional when they took it away. They took it off in sections, from one end to the other, and you could see it disappear day by day to the point where you could glimpse the exposed hand dryers in the loos. As much as people loved it, there were others who didn’t. Some people wouldn’t bring a corporate event here as it just wasn’t as grand as some other places so we had to move on.”

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The portakabin is no more but in its place has emerged the bricks, mortar and shimmering fixtures and fittings of a fully operational and permanent clubhouse. The hand dryers in the loos are pretty fancy, too.

As part of a major, multi-million pound investment by new owners, Darwin Escapes, Dundonald, which was sold by Loch Lomond a couple of years ago, is now ready to return to the big stage of championship golf again with the Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open coming back to this neck of the woods in 2022 and 2023.

With the prize fund of the championship rocketing to $2 million next year, this is a terrific time to be involved with a tournament that is going from strength to strength.

“The business model here is pretty straightforward,” added Ferguson, after a VIP night of lavish, glass-clinking indulgence that would’ve made Nero envious. “We are catering for golf tourism from all over the world and want to get people to stay, play, eat, drink and have a good time. But we definitely are a tournament venue and we made sure that what we designed and developed would fit in with significant championships.”

The addition of an abundant cluster of delightfully appointed lodges around the premises clearly has benefits for the stay-and-play side of things but, from a championship perspective, there are added advantages.

Mi Hyang Lee of Korea, winner of the Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open, plays her second shot at the 18th hole as she finishes her final round at Dundonald Links Golf Course on July 30, 2017 in Troon, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

Golf got used to operating in tightly controlled bubbles during the Covid pandemic. Fingers crossed, we don’t go back to all that palaver but, amid ongoing uncertainty, resurgences, spikes and variants you never know what the future holds. Whatever happens, Dundonald is well placed to cope and cater for any radical changes in operational procedures and protocols.

“It lends itself to these changed times,” added Ferguson. “If we did have to go back to that tournament bubble, it’s now easy to create that isolation here and you can comply with whatever regulations are in place at that point.”

Having staged the Women’s Scottish Open three times from 2015, while hosting the men’s championship in 2017, Dundonald is certainly no stranger to showpiece occasions. “If the European Tour [now the DP World Tour] would like to come back we would be very keen to talk to them,” added Ferguson.

For the time being, the focus is on the Women’s Scottish Open and a stellar cast that will arrive for an event that takes place the week before a historic AIG Women’s Open at Muirfield.

“Having the Women’s Scottish Open here for the next two years adds huge value and it’s a great morale booster for all the staff to work towards,” said Ferguson. “Who knows? Dundonald could become the home of the event.”

As for the dearly departed portakabin?

“It will always have cult status,” smiled Ferguson.

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Missing cut last week could be blessing in disguise for Rory McIlroy heading into British Open

Rory has historically played well the week after missing the cut.

Missing the cut the week before a major isn’t exactly the preferred preparation.

Then again, it isn’t fatal.

Four-time major champion Rory McIlroy has made the best of things after not playing the weekend in last week’s Scottish Open.

The 2014 winner of the British Open got to Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England, two days ahead of time and played 29 holes over Saturday and Sunday on the course hosting the 149th playing of the British Open.

He also found something in his swing on Sunday that has lifted his spirits.

And McIlroy can call on his splendid history of rebounding after missed cuts. The last nine times he failed to play more than 36 holes he’s finished in the top-20 eight times in his next start. Three times he’s won, including this year when he missed the Masters cut and won Quail Hollow the next time he teed it up.

“The great thing about golf is there’s always next week. You can always get back on the horse,” McIlroy said Tuesday at Royal St. George’s. “You never want to miss a cut, but as missed cuts go, this wasn’t necessarily a bad one.

“It would have been great to stay and play an extra couple days in Scotland, but to be down here and get a few holes in on Saturday, play a full round on Sunday, felt like I got a bit of a head start on the rest of the field, which feels good.

“I can take it a bit easier the next couple days, not feel like I’m trying to cram all the preparation in.”

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While McIlroy has won 28 worldwide titles, the world No. 11 said he’s learned more about himself and his game after failing inside the gallery ropes.

“In golf you always learn more about your game when you’ve missed a cut or struggled or not played as well. I’ve always learned more from disappointments and from not doing as well,” he said. “I’ve always tried to figure out, OK, why did this week not go so well, and then you give yourself a couple of thoughts and they’re fresh in your mind going into the next week.

“That’s why I say in golf there’s always next week, and that’s a great thing, because you can right some wrongs pretty quickly.”

McIlroy missed the cut in the 2019 Open at Royal Portrush, the most recent contest of the oldest championship in golf. Before that, however, he won the Open in 2014, missed the championship in 2015 with a ruptured ankle ligament, tied for fifth in 2016, tied for fourth in 2017 and tied for second in 2018.

He likes his chances this week despite playing just 36 last week.

“I feel good. I’ve hit the ball really good in practice the last few days,” he said. “I feel like I figured something out on Sunday here, which has been really good. I hit the ball great on the range, and I hit the ball well today on the course.

“It’s hard. You’re thinking swing so much, and it’s really about trying to get that blend of getting your mechanics right but then also letting your athletic ability and your instincts shine through, as well. It’s just been trying to get that balance.

“I feel like I figured something out on Sunday, and I feel good with it. I feel good about where I am going into the week.”

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Dean Burmester cards four 2s in a row, posts back-nine 28 at Scottish Open

Dean Burmester recorded a back-nine 28, the lowest back this century, according to the European Tour.

Dean Burmester golfed his ball on Saturday.

In the third round at the abrdn Scottish Open, Burmester recorded a back-nine 28, the lowest back nine this century, according to the European Tour.

His scorecard shows four 2s in a row, two on par 3s and two hole-outs for eagle on par 4s.

On the 12th, he made a birdie putt from two feet. On the 13th, he holed out from 177 yards. On 14, another birdie putt, this time from eight feet. On the 15th hole, a 488-yard par-4, Burmester holed out from 210 yards.

For good measure, he then birdied the par-5 16th. That’s right, he went 7 under on a five-hole stretch.

His third-round 66 moved up into a tie for 31st.

Heading into Sunday’s final round, Burmester sits at 7 under, seven shots back of co-leaders Matthew Fitzpatrick and Thomas Detry. Jon Rahm is in solo third, one shot back at 13 under.

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