Santa Fe New Mexican

McIlroy falls short

Woods, Mickelson also out; Lowry, Holmes share lead

- By Chuck Culpepper

HPORTRUSH, Northern Ireland e wondered whether they would show up in droves or in something more akin to trickles. He reckoned they might consider his 79 on Thursday, his quadruple-bogey start and his tripleboge­y finish, too ghastly to follow more on Friday. Would they go ahead and deem him a “lost cause” and move along to other golfers or distant beer taps?

He’s Rory McIlroy, the four-time major winner from Northern Ireland whose Royal Portrush daydream spent Thursday eroding in a nightmare, and they’re the great, sturdy faces of British Open galleries, often standing beside tees and greens and fairways in weather that qualifies as appalling. They’re an essential part of the annual tapestry, especially those that appear to have weathered untold rains and winds.

And now McIlroy can only watch on the weekend as one of his best friends, Shane Lowry of Ireland, goes after the claret jug. Lowry birdied four of his opening five holes on his way to a 4-under 67 and shared the 36-hole lead with J.B. Holmes, who had a 68.

Lee Westwood and Tommy Fleetwood were one shot behind. Brooks

Koepka and Jordan Spieth were three back.

Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson won’t be around, either. It was the first time in 77 majors they have played as profession­als that both missed the cut in the same major. Darren Clarke, who honed his game on the Dunluce Links as a junior and now calls Portrush

home, missed the cut in a most cruel fashion with a triple bogey on his final hole.

At 3:10 p.m., McIlroy emerged through the little grandstand tunnel to the No. 1 tee alongside U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland and longtime English contender Paul Casey. He, McIlroy, couldn’t imagine the five

hours that awaited. It became somehow both a great disappoint­ment (a cut missed by one harsh shot) and “one of the most fun rounds of golf I’ve ever played,” McIlroy said.

That’s because they, the faces, lined the first hole three-deep, four-deep, five-deep, and they shouted encourage

ment such as, “You’re only 16, Rory,” a reference to the fact he shot 61 here at age 16. They rang the five hours and the 7,344 yards under the leaky skies with the forgiving, cajoling refrains of, “Come on, Rory!” They forgave, and, better yet, they loved. They turned a chase for the cut into something that felt like a chase for the claret jug, and they created what figures to remain one of the most memorable among golf ’s millions of missed-cut rounds.

Through McIlroy’s heady second-round 65 and his oft breathless bid to hang on for the weekend, they reminded through their backing of McIlroy that while it’s very much an Open crowd — knowledgea­ble, respectful — it’s an Open crowd on this side of the sea, and that matters deeply.

Kentuckian J.B. Holmes and Irishman Shane Lowry led after two rounds at 8 under par. Two Englishmen, Tommy Fleetwood and 46-year-old, are-you-kidding-me Lee Westwood, nibbled closely at 7 under.

Yet the galleries reminded that even on a day when Northern Ireland’s three stars went from a bundle of emotions (McIlroy) to agony (Darren Clarke, who missed the cut through the impossible agony of reaching No. 18 one shot clear but then triple-bogeying) to narrow success (Graeme McDowell nudged by right on the cut at 1 over par), McDowell’s words soared.

“Without getting into politics or religion, because that’s not a good thing to get into around here, it’s symbolic,” McDowell said in a region that spent the late 20th century riven with sectarian strife. “It’s a shift. It’s a move on. It’s a step from our past. It shows how many hurdles we’ve overcome, how far we’ve come as an island, really. This is not just about Northern Ireland. This is about the whole country of Ireland. Because we’re very proud of our golf. And golf has always united this country.”

Proof lined the ropes and barricades for the splashiest of the Northern Irish chances, McIlroy. It filled the grandstand­s, the people huddled like proud parents in raincoats. It turned up in the passageway­s between the holes, when McIlroy often would smack litanies of hands.

As he and they coursed through the holes with the stunning sea views and the holes with vistas of the town and its Ferris wheel in the distance, a star who doesn’t get home as much as he used to came to feel … home. “As much as I came here at the start of the week saying I wanted to do it for me, you know, by the end of the round there today I was doing it just as much for them as I was for me,” McIlroy said. “I wanted to be here for the weekend. Selfishly I wanted to feel that support for two more days.”

His tee-shot trip to a greenside bunker on the par-3 No. 13 set him back a bogey. He would need three birdies from five holes. He dunked in what looked like a hard 10-footer on a ridge for a birdie on No. 14. He smashed down a strong 12-footer for a birdie on No. 16. He needed one more birdie from two holes.

He couldn’t get it, narrowly missing on No. 17 even after sending a beauty from benign rough to within maybe 18 feet and sending his approach from the fairway on No. 18 off an embankment and into the impossible. The crowd noise rose with the shot, then ebbed with its descent. So he walked up No. 18 at this most meaningful of Opens for him and for so many witnesses, and then something happened.

The cheer began, and it sustained itself for longer than any in the day. It went on and on, from beneath the traditiona­l flags of all the countries, as he doffed his cap repeatedly. It felt like a Sunday — on a Friday. Then he did the best he could with the impossible chip, finished, shook all the hands, stopped on his way into the tunnel, turned and waved. He looked gutted but felt “thankful” and “humbled” and “disappoint­ed” and “unbelievab­ly proud.”

“Look, it’s a moment I envisaged for the last few years,” he said. “It just happened two days early.”

The Associated Press contribute­d to this story.

 ?? JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy plays out of the rough on the 17th hole Friday at the British Open at Royal Portrush, Northern Ireland. Needing one last birdie, his approach took a wrong turn along the humps left of the 18th green. He made par for a 65.
JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy plays out of the rough on the 17th hole Friday at the British Open at Royal Portrush, Northern Ireland. Needing one last birdie, his approach took a wrong turn along the humps left of the 18th green. He made par for a 65.
 ?? MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ireland’s Shane Lowry walks to the 18th hole Friday. He birdied four of his opening five holes on his way to a 4-under 67 and shared the 36-hole lead with J.B. Holmes, who had a 68.
MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ireland’s Shane Lowry walks to the 18th hole Friday. He birdied four of his opening five holes on his way to a 4-under 67 and shared the 36-hole lead with J.B. Holmes, who had a 68.
 ?? PETER MORRISON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tiger Woods bids farewell to the British Open. Woods finished at 6 over par for the two rounds.
PETER MORRISON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tiger Woods bids farewell to the British Open. Woods finished at 6 over par for the two rounds.
 ?? MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phil Mickelson of the United States plays a shot from the rough on the 11th hole Friday at the British Open at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. He missed the cut.
MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS Phil Mickelson of the United States plays a shot from the rough on the 11th hole Friday at the British Open at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. He missed the cut.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States