Ottawa Citizen

McIlroy ready to play catch-up with the rest of golf’s shining stars

The PGA field is top-heavy with Masters right around corner, writes Doug Ferguson.

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Even during his seven weeks away from competitio­n, Rory McIlroy stayed relevant.

He started last week by accepting an invitation to play golf with U.S. President Donald Trump. It was his first 18 holes since he played through a rib injury at the South African Open. McIlroy ended the week by playing a match against Dustin Johnson.

“Quite a week for me,” he said Tuesday. “I got to play with the president of the United States and the best golfer in the world.”

He returns this week at the Mexico Championsh­ip, and this is no time for a siesta.

The Masters — the only major keeping McIlroy from the career Grand Slam — starts April 6. One positive aspect from so much time off so early in the season is McIlroy has been more consumed with recovering from a hairline fracture of his rib than with his pursuit of an elusive green jacket.

Then again, that time off gave him a good view of the competitio­n.

Consider the last four weeks. Hideki Matsuyama won the Phoenix Open for his fifth victory in his last nine tournament­s worldwide. Jordan Spieth got back into the race for No. 1 when he won Pebble Beach. Johnson reached No. 1 the following week with a five-shot lead at Riviera. Then Rickie Fowler showed up last week at the Honda Classic, finished bogey-bogey and still won by four shots.

It’s what led Jack Nicklaus to say Sunday that he couldn’t recall golf ever being so top-heavy with talent.

“I think you’ve got more good players in the game today — that have a chance to win a major championsh­ip — than you’ve ever had in the history of the game,” Nicklaus said. “And I don’t often say that. I mean, we had a pretty good era when I played, not much of an era when Tiger played ... Not much of an era when Arnold was playing. And prior to that they had Hogan, Snead, Nelson, which was a pretty good era.

“But not the number that they have today.”

No one has really noticed McIlroy missing because so many top players are winning.

The question is how quickly he can recover.

“I don’t feel that far behind,” McIlroy said. “I come in here this week with a chance to get back to No. 1 in the world. But in terms of maybe preparatio­n and just rounds played ... I haven’t had that. So hopefully over these next three competitiv­e weeks that I’m playing — here, Bay Hill and Match Play — I can get that. And hopefully, I feel like I’ve played enough to go into Augusta and feel ready.”

The rib injury — he said he hurt it from overuse while testing so much equipment during the off-season — cost him four tournament­s and came at a bad time. McIlroy had won the FedEx Cup with two big victories, and nearly won in South Africa with a bad rib.

Two years ago, he had already won three times in the first half of the year when he injured his ankle playing soccer and missed two months, which cost him a chance to defend his title in The Open at St. Andrews. That injury was far worse, and it took until the end of the year for him to win again.

“It’s frustratin­g because I felt like I started the year so well,” McIlroy said.

He said he felt the pain in his rib during the Friday round in South Africa but kept playing because he didn’t want to let anyone down. Only when he had tests after the tournament — he lost to Graeme Storm in a playoff — did he realize the extent of it.

McIlroy then weighed in on a few touchy subjects.

First, there was an interview with the Sunday Independen­t in Ireland in which the 27-yearold from Northern Ireland said he resented how the Olympics forced him to choose whether to represent Ireland or the United Kingdom and it reached a point that it wasn’t worth the trouble going to Rio.

Then, a photo emerged of McIlroy playing golf with Trump. By the end of the week, he had heard enough negativity that he took to Twitter to defend his decision. He said their common ground was golf, nothing more.

“You can respect the guy, not respect the guy, I don’t care,” McIlroy said. “But if someone has a chance to play in that scenario and just sort of experience the whole thing ... it’s not as if we were speaking foreign policy out there. We were talking about golf and the grass that he put on the greens and the grass that he’s putting on the greens at Doral. We talked golf the entire day.”

Asked what he shot at Trump Internatio­nal, McIlroy smiled and said: “I picked up a few times. We both did.”

Every shot counts now. The competitio­n is as good as ever.

The Masters is around the corner.

I come in here this week with a chance to get back to No. 1 in the world. But in terms of maybe preparatio­n and just rounds played ... I haven’t had that.

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Masters, starting April 6 at Augusta National, is the only major that has eluded Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES The Masters, starting April 6 at Augusta National, is the only major that has eluded Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy.

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