Cape Breton Post

A start-and-stop year

McIlroy hoping to catch his wave at British Open

- BY DOUG FERGUSON

Just three years ago, Rory McIlroy was the best player in the world without a trace of argument. He won the final two majors of the year, with a World Golf Championsh­ip title in between. He had reason to believe his reign would last as long as he wanted it to.

Now he’s simply trying to get back into the conversati­on.

The starkest reminder of the state of his game was not so much missing three cuts in his last four tournament­s. It was being told on the eve of the British Open that the bookies listed him at 20-1 to win at Royal Birkdale.

“Good time to back me,” McIlroy said. “I mean, look, if I was a betting company and I saw my form over the past few weeks, yeah, that’s probably a fair enough price. But again, all it takes is one week for those odds to go back.”

He has been through these mini-slumps more than once in the 10 years since he first played the British Open at Carnoustie. McIlroy missed four of five cuts in 2012, including his title defence in the U.S. Open, and ended the summer by winning the PGA Championsh­ip to return to No. 1 in the world.

This one has been the most aggravatin­g because it involves injury.

The hairline rib fracture he suffered in January during the

South African Open is no longer an issue, but it forced him to sit out nearly two months, and then he played only once in two months between the Masters and the U.S. Open in part because it was acting up.

It all led to what McIlroy describes as a start-and-stop year, one that to this point doesn’t include a trophy.

“But I’m in good spirits,” McIlroy said. “I feel like it’s all coming together. I’m just waiting for that round or that moment or that week where it sort of clicks and I’ll be off and running. I’ve had little periods like this before in my career, and I’ve been able to bounce back from them. I’d say I was in worse positions than this. I feel like my game ... the pieces are all there, it’s just about trying to fit them together.”

As for his odds?

That speaks to a broader picture of the 146th edition of the British Open, which starts today at Royal Birkdale. Dustin Johnson, the No. 1 player in the world, and Jordan Spieth have taken turns as the favourite by the bookies.

Right behind them is Jon Rahm, the dynamic 22-year-old from Spain who already has won twice this year. Masters champion Sergio Garcia is right up there.

There is no clear favourite. When he won the British Open down the coast at Royal Liverpool in 2014, McIlroy mentioned an adage he first heard from Tom Weiskopf. When a player is going well, he can’t imagine what it was like to play poorly. And when he’s playing badly, he can’t imagine what it was like to play great.

So where is he now?

“I feel like I can hit the ball in the fairway, and from there I can hit the ball on the green,” McIlroy said. “And if I get my line, I can put the ball in the hole from there. So it’s not bad. It’s not as if I can’t see myself shooting a good score. It’s all there. It’s just a matter of putting it all together.”

He has slipped so far from the dominant force in golf — McIlroy hasn’t been at No. 1 since September 2015 — that he could win the next two majors and still probably not reach Johnson at the top of the ranking.

 ??  ?? Rory McIlroy speaks during a press conference ahead of the British Open Golf Championsh­ip at Royal Birkdale, Southport, England, on Wednesday.
Rory McIlroy speaks during a press conference ahead of the British Open Golf Championsh­ip at Royal Birkdale, Southport, England, on Wednesday.
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