The Commercial Appeal

Mcilroy blocks out noise, hits his stride at TPC

- Doug Ferguson ASSOCIATED PRESS

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Rory Mcilroy managed to block out all the noise, all the distractio­ns, and this was long before he even reached the pivotal three-hole finish at the TPC Sawgrass to win The Players Championsh­ip.

Mcilroy, more than any other player, has been looked upon as golf’s next big thing in the decade since age and injuries began to slow Tiger Woods.

Jack Nicklaus took to Twitter on Sunday night for memories of the time Mcilroy first came to meet with him ahead of the 2010 Masters, and a few months later the precocious 20-year-old from Northern Ireland shot 62 on the final day at Quail Hollow for his first PGA Tour victory.

Mcilroy set the U.S. Open scoring record a year later with an eight-shot victory. He had four majors – missing only a green jacket – at age 25.

So with Mcilroy approachin­g his 30th birthday, and with only one victory over his previous 50 tournament­s worldwide, the critics took notice.

When he played in the final group nine times without winning – never mind that he was at least three shots back on five of those occasions – questions about his ability to close became louder. His patience was tested when he began this year by playing in the final group in three out of his five tournament­s, finishing no worse than a tie for sixth.

But he never showed any hint on panic.

His reaction when he tapped in for par Sunday to win The Players was not much different from when he finished with a par at Bay Hill, a bogey at Riviera, a birdie at Torrey Pines. All of them were good weeks when he looked back over 72 holes. One of them was better than the other because he won a trophy.

“I feel like I’ve managed the first six tournament­s of the year very well, even with some noise around me, whether ‘he can’t close, he can’t play on Sundays,’ blah, blah, blah,” Mcilroy said. “I’ve just got to do my thing. And if I go concentrat­e on me, control what I can do, good golf and good attitude takes care of the rest.” Attitude has been key for Mcilroy. It was important not to get down on himself if he didn’t win, even if everyone expected him to at Wentworth last year and Dubai two months ago.

Mcilroy says he has been reading books and working with people to remind himself that golf is a joy to play and provides a comfortabl­e lifestyle – he went over $45 million in career PGA Tour earnings alone – but that it doesn’t define him as a person.

“Who I am as a person isn’t who I am as a golfer,” he said. “And it took me a while to get to that point where I realized who those two people were. So that has been a big thing. And I think that’s been the big difference between the highs and lows of the last few years and the more consistent play. I’ve had two wins in the last 12 months, but even the play in between that has been pretty good.”

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