Daily Mail

RORY SETS UP SLAM TILT

McIlroy stays cool in the breeze but now comes test of nerve

- DEREK LAWRENSON

Rory McIlroy has done everything he needed to do over 36 compelling holes at the 82nd Masters to set up the exciting possibilit­y of completing the career Grand Slam this weekend.

Now comes the ultimate test of nerve.

Swinging beautifull­y, and with an assured touch on and around the greens, McIlroy reaped the dividends of all the countless hours he spent accumulati­ng knowledge of Augusta National in the build-up.

Everything appears in place for the 28-year-old to become only the sixth man to win all four majors.

But can he cope with all that’s on the line, as well as defeat some starry names including world No 1 Dustin Johnson, last year’s runner-up Justin rose and Jordan Spieth, who made a wonderful recovery from a horrific start, to keep his own dreamm alive?

What a final 36 holesles we have in prospect as this much- anticipate­d ip event lives up to all its billing.

on a tricky day filled with capricious breezes, McIlroy was steadiness personifie­d as he followed his opening 69 withh a 71 to set the clubhouse bour lead on four under par.

Fifteen minutess laterlater, Spieth matched his total to set up the grandstand possibilit­y of a duel between the two best players of their generation over the back nine tomorrow. We’d settle for that, wouldn’t we?

‘I’m pleased with how I played and the position I am in,’ said McIlroy. ‘ I’m just a little disappoint­ed that I didn’t convert either of two good chances on the last two holes but overall I’ve got to be happy. It’s going to be an exciting weekend.’

Playing together, Johnson and rose inspired one another as the former birdied the last for a 68 to be one behind McIlroy and Spieth. rose, the perennial Masters contender, was one shot further back after a 70.

Spieth not only knows how to win the Masters, he also knows how to leave the patrons slackjawed with horror. Nothing will beat his collapse two years ago on the final day to set up Danny Willett, of course, but his dreadful front nine still scored high marks for shock value.

So assured on day one with his 66 for a two-stroke lead, the general expectatio­n was he would assume control.

That theory lasted all of 40 minutes — the time it took him to complete the first three holes. Playing this trio in 11 shots is entirely possible, and no more than 12 is the target.

Spieth, however, needed no fewer than 16 shots to reach the fourth tee. All that brilliance on the opening day undone by a series of loose strokes that blew this Masters wide open. So begbegan a fearsome Friday that left not just SpietSpiet­h but many players ersplayers feeling badly bebeaten up. McIlroy began nnervously with a drive into the trees and then a woeful three- putt. Any wworries that he wwouldn’t have the ppace of the greens disdisappe­ared, however, everhoweve­r, at the second, where he holed a 25-foot birdie puputt. A lovely chip set up another birdie at the third and then came two hours of hard work, where he buckled down and protected his score.

True, there were bogeys at the two short holes on the front nine but the hole locations were so tough they were not bad scores.

More important were the gutsy par putts he holed at the seventh and 10th, and then came two gains at the 13th and 14th. By this stage McIlroy was playing so well it was understand­able he was disappoint­ed he didn’t profit from great iron shots to the 17th and 18th.

But this was still a fine day’s work to set himself up for what lies ahead.

‘I’m having a constant conversati­on with myself to stay in the present,’ he revealed, and that’s how it must be for two more momentous and potentiall­y historic days. Two years ago, McIlroy was in a similar position and, playing alongside Spieth, he played tight golf and subsided to a 77. He looks a wholly different player now, but finds a familiar opponent in his way.

The sight of the flags blowing lustily on top of the giant scoreboard adjacent to the first fairway foretold the story of a tough second round. locating the correct shelves on greens is hard enough with no wind. When there are gusting breezes, it plays havoc.

That didn’t explain Spieth’s crushing start. His problems began with his first tee shot as he flailed his opening blow into deep trouble on the right. As we’ve seen so often, get out of position at Augusta National and anything can happen.

Spieth couldn’t even locate the fairway with his next shot, much less the green and then, when he did come up just short of the putting surface with his third, he needed three more to finish the hole. In terms of scoring, it got no better at the par-five second, as this time he missed the fairway badly on the right. A six, six start therefore, and neither was the birdie on offer at the short par four third accepted.

The 24-year-old Texan looked as if he had stemmed the bleeding with three pars at the trio of devilishly difficult holes that followed. But a loose approach to the seventh cost him a shot, and then he three-putted the long eighth. A par at the ninth and he had failed to break 40 for the outward half.

only someone with Spieth’s inner strength could recover from those nine holes and come home in 34

shots. He might not be in Rory’s league as a ball striker but he is anyone’s equal in terms of character.

Among the later starters, Tiger Woods played the front nine in 38 shots to be four over and was being outshone by his playing partners, Tommy Fleetwood, who was on level par, and particular­ly Australian Marc Leishman. He and American Charley Hoffman were on five under, two shots behind the oncourse leader Patrick Reed, who had played eight holes.

 ?? AP ?? Rough time: Spieth hits out of the dust on the first hole
AP Rough time: Spieth hits out of the dust on the first hole
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