Toronto Star

McIlroy finally over Masters loss

Multiple major winner needed time to recover from letdown at Augusta

- CHRIS VIVLAMORE

It took Rory McIlroy some time — and a few bottles of wine and some prodding by his wife — to get over his loss at the Masters last month. Without only a Masters victory to complete the career Grand Slam, McIlroy called the event “the biggest golf tournament in the world” this week.

McIlroy entered the final round of the 2018 Masters in the final pairing with Patrick Reed.

However, he shot a 2-over-par 74 on Sunday and finished tied for fifth, six shots behind firsttime winner Reed.

“I went back home and sort of decompress­ed,” McIlroy said before this week’s Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in Charlotte, N.C., his first event since the Masters.

“Binged watched a couple of shows, read a couple of books, drank a few bottles of wine. No, I didn’t mean it like that. That sounds really bad. It wasn’t that bad. It got to the point where (wife) Erica (Stoll) had to drag me out of the house and say we are going to go do something. I said ‘OK, let’s.’ Once I got back into my routine, I was fine.

“I was disappoint­ed because I didn’t give a good account of myself that last day. I got lucky on Saturday. That 65 was as good as I could have played. I got lucky. I chipped in. There were a couple of balls that hit trees and came back into the fairway. Hit it up into the azaleas and I got away with it. My game, I was sort of holding it together.

“Then with the pressure of Sunday trying to chase Patrick down, it never quite clicked for me. It was just disappoint­ing that that was the way the week finished. It was nowhere near as disappoint­ing the experience I had there a few years ago so it was much easier to get over.”

The reference, of course, was to the 2011Master­s where McIlroy entered the final round with a four-stroke lead only to shoot an 8-over par 80. He missed out on his first major title — and one that still eludes him after wins at the 2011 U.S. Open, 2012 and 2014 PGA Championsh­ip and 2014 British Open.

McIlroy is trying to join the elite company of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only golfers with titles in all four majors. “The Masters has now become the biggest golf tournament in the world,” McIlroy said. “And I’m comfortabl­e saying that. I don’t care about the U.S. Open and the Open Championsh­ip. It is the biggest golf tournament in the world. The most amount of eyeballs. The most amount of hype. The most everything is at Augusta.

“For me, it’s the most special tournament that we play. It’s the one that everyone desperatel­y wants to win.

“I don’t think about trying to win the Grand Slam. I just think about trying to win the Masters and what that means.”

It wasn’t during a binge watch of the Showtime series Billions or reading books The Chimp Paradox or Essentiali­sm that got McIlroy’s mind to wander back several weeks to Augusta. It was in the still times. Isn’t it always?

“It was more the quiet moments,” McIlroy said. “You catch yourself. I was trying to immerse myself in anything but golf at that point … It was just the quiet moments when you are staring off into the distance and you think a certain shot or a certain putt and you are just like ... It got to the point where I needed to see a bit of daylight and get outside and go for walks and start to do my usual thing and then it sort of went away.”

 ?? JASON E. MICZEK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rory McIlroy reacts to his approach shot on the 10th hole during the first round of the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in Charlotte, N.C. McIlroy was tied for seventh after a 3-under 68, three shots back of first-round leader John Peterson.
JASON E. MICZEK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rory McIlroy reacts to his approach shot on the 10th hole during the first round of the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in Charlotte, N.C. McIlroy was tied for seventh after a 3-under 68, three shots back of first-round leader John Peterson.

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