Another charge of the late brigade from Rory
AS the saying goes, it was deja vu all over again for Rory McIlroy as he assembled another final-round charge at the 104th US PGA Championship yesterday. At the Masters last month, he started ten shots off the lead and clambered all the way into second place with a spectacular closing round of 64. This time, the Northern Irishman was one shot nearer to the pacemaker and once more looked at his best when going for broke. The fun and games began at the second where a trademark bomb from the tee was followed by an approach to 15ft and he stroked in the birdie putt. Another gain followed from 6ft at the third and then a real bonus from 25ft at the fourth. The 33-year-old then took advantage of his length to make it four successive birdies at the par-five fifth. In all, 20 players teed off after McIlroy (right) but when he stood on the sixth tee there were only five in front of him on the leaderboard. The story of McIlroy’s week, though, has been silly mistakes every time he gets into position and there was another at the sixth, as a stubbed chip came up well short leading to a momentum-crushing bogey. He had an opportunity to get closer to the lead at the ninth but the putt drifted by. A succession of birdie putts failed to drop. He finally paid the price with another bogey at the par-four 17th before scrambling a par to finish with a two-under 68. The last group to step on to the course featured two players with history in their sights. The pursuer was Matt Fitzpatrick, trying to become the first englishman for 103 years to win the wanamaker Trophy. The leader by three shots was Mito Pereira, seeking to become the first Chilean to claim a major. Also in the thick of it were two more players without a win between them on the PGA Tour: will Zalatoris, the consistent American who started alongside Fitzpatrick at three adrift, and Cameron Young, another exciting rookie from the host nation, who was four back. Fitzpatrick began with first-hole nerves, as he missed the fairway and ran up a bogey. Pereira then missed from 8ft to drop a shot at the third. Zalatoris had moved within one of the lead with two early birdies but did well to escape with just a bogey after a big mistake with his tee shot at the sixth. It led to a 15-minute wait while he got a ruling — the speedy Fitzpatrick seemed affected when he struck his tee shot into the water but escaped with a bogey. with four holes to go, Pereira was maintaining a one-shot lead over Zalatoris and Young while Fitzpatrick had fallen further back as the pressure took a grip. Former winner Justin Thomas appeared back on the scene to sit just behind the leading three in the closing stretches. england’s Tyrrell Hatton closed with the same score as McIlroy, 68, to be tied 13th when he finished.