The National - News

Late misfortune derails McIlroy’s hopes of clinching third title

- John McAuley

Rory McIlroy’s short wedge to 15 caromed off the pin and careered back into the bunker that guards the green.

Looking forlornly at caddie Harry Diamond, the two-time winner’s big sigh said it all. McIlroy’s tournament had turned on a moment of misfortune.

His recovery nestled on the fringe still but the resultant par putt did not find the cup. Suddenly, the DP World Tour Championsh­ip’s overnight leader had relinquish­ed his spot at the summit.

On the very next hole, McIlroy three-putted from distance and his hopes of a third triumph around the Earth Course disappeare­d into the desert evening.

Up ahead, Collin Morikawa had birdied 17, moving three ahead of the pack and practicall­y sealing the tournament title to go along with his soonto-be-rubber-stamped Race to Dubai crown.

McIlroy’s last throw of the dice – a chipped attempt at birdie on the penultimat­e hole of the European Tour’s season finale – came up agonisingl­y short. Just like his tournament on the whole.

The four-time major champion, bidding to win for a second successive competitiv­e outing, would drop another shot on 18, when his drive found the wood-chipping well right of the fairway and his second, hooked around the trees that enveloped him, plonking in the creek just short of the green. By then, in the grand scheme of things, the closing bogey did not really matter.

In the end, McIlroy signed for a two-over-par 74 and fell into a tie for sixth.

The former world No 1, twotime DP World Tour Championsh­ip winner in 2012 and 2015, came into the week at Jumeirah Golf Estates on the back of victory at the CJ Cup in Las Vegas last month.

Through the first three days’ play in Dubai, for the most part, his form suggested his game was very much back, having left his recent Ryder Cup woes behind.

But McIlroy never capitalise­d on his one-shot advantage after teeing off at noon. He did birdie the second, but gave back the shot on the par3 fourth.

A birdie on the 10th lifted him more of a surging Matthew Fitzpatric­k, the defending champion who had pulled level at the top.

Then, with six holes of the European Tour’s 2021 campaign to play, McIlroy held a two-shot lead.

Not long after, Morikawa birdied the 15th – his third in four holes – and McIlroy had company.

Soon, he tackled the same hole, but his approach struck the flagstick and McIlroy came unstuck.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates