Irish Independent

McIlroy patient even though last win ‘feels a long time ago’

- Brian Keogh

WIPING the slate clean is part of the joy of a new year and Rory McIlroy is no different as he bids for the first opening-week win of his career in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip.

As he jumped to the defence of pal Justin Thomas who admitted it was “humiliatin­g” and “embarrassi­ng” to be dumped by a sponsor for blurting out a homophobic slur, McIlroy (right) is looking to win for the first time in 14 months and set himself up for a season in which he will aim to end a near seven-year drought in the Majors.

“I’m raring to go after the Christmas break,” said McIlroy, who has had an incredible 11 top-five finishes but no wins in the first event of the year since 2008 – including eight in ten appearance­s in Abu Dhabi. “I’ve done some good practice, and you come into the new season with renewed optimism and a lot of goals.

“I want to hit the ground running, play a lot, get into contention a lot and give myself chances to win tournament­s. [The WGC HSBC Champions in] China in 2019 was the last time I won, and it feels like a very long time ago.

“I’m trying not to be impatient. I try to stay as patient as possible, but what I will say is that last win does feel like quite a long time ago at this point.”

As for Tiger Woods, McIlroy expects him to make a speedy recovery from a fifth back surgery.

“I’ve known for a while,” said McIlroy, who will play seven of the next eight weeks to find Masters form. “He had it on the 23rd of December. In his words, it was a small procedure.

“Obviously any time you are being cut into, you try to avoid that as much as you can, but he was back on his feet the next day, so I don’t think we can read too much into it.

“I think they were just trying to clean a couple of little bits up. Obviously, he won’t be playing for the next couple of months, but he should be back for the Masters, if not before that, so I think he’ll be just fine.”

When it comes to Thomas’s misfortune, he does not condone what he said but clearly feels the world number three has been harshly treated.

“He’s got a lot of integrity,” McIlroy said. “Obviously it doesn’t make what he said any better, but I think in this day and age, it’s hard because it seems like you’re not allowed to make a mistake anymore. Any mistake gets jumped on.”

Thomas, who was jettisoned by sponsor Ralph Lauren last week, hopes to make amends for his error of judgement in Hawaii, where he missed a short putt in the Sentry Tournament of Champions and blurted out a homophobic slur.

“I’m clearly not proud of what I said,” the 2017 PGA champion admitted. “It’s humiliatin­g. It’s embarrassi­ng. It’s not me. It’s not a word that I use, but for some reason, it was in there.”

Meanwhile, England’s Tommy Fleetwood confirmed he will tee it up in the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open at Mount Juliet from July 1-4 as part of his new strategy of playing two weeks before every Major, then taking the following week off.

Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip, Sky Sports Golf, 11.0am

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland