The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

3rd round at Masters a day of wasted chances for McIlroy

- By Doug Ferguson

Rory McIlroy was in great position — on the leaderboar­d, in the fairway, on the green — to make a run in the Masters.

He wound up going nowhere.

McIlroy wasn’t ready to give up hope on a green jacket to complete the career Grand Slam, though he left Augusta National on Saturday with a 1-under 71 that left him wondering how many opportunit­ies he threw away as so many other players were cashing in.

McIlroy was only six shots behind, but he had 10 players ahead of him — Justin Rose and Sergio Garcia, Rickie Fowler and Jordan Spieth, enough of them to make it difficult to expect all of them to stumble on Sunday.

“I think I probably could have shot a 67 or 68, but just a few too many wasted opportunit­ies,” he said.

McIlroy blistered drives of more than 300 yards in the fairway on the two par 5s on the back nine at Augusta, and both times walked off with pars. His pitch from 50 feet behind the 13th green came up 15 feet short. His approach on the 15th hole went over the green, and after a fine pitch to 10 feet, he missed that one, too.

Not to be overlooked was a 10-foot birdie chance on the 14th, and a 5-foot birdie putt he missed on No. 11, the toughest hole on the back nine.

“I’m going to need my best score around — 65. I’m going to need something like that to have a chance tomorrow,” McIlroy said. “I’ll be able to tell you better tomorrow night whether those missed opportunit­ies hurt my chances.”

Nothing irritated him more than the fifth hole.

McIlroy, who started the third round just five shots out of the lead, fired off two quick birdies and a good par save on the par-3 fourth. He was three shots behind, a name on the white leaderboar­ds that was getting everyone’s attention.

And he was in good shape on the par-4 fifth hole. The only thing he couldn’t do was leave it short.

“Had an 8-iron in my hands and then switched to a 9,” McIlroy said. “The one place you don’t want to miss it on that green is short, which I did.”

He was some 40 feet short and ran the first putt 10 feet by. He missed that for a three-putt bogey.

“That sort of stopped any momentum I had,” McIlroy said. “I was a little frustrated.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States