KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. — The birth of a champion, and maybe golf’s next
dominant player, was a dispiriting, humiliating defeat. Put Rory McIlroy back
in the woods of the 10th hole at the 2011 Masters as he whacked his ball from
tree to tree, a boy lost in the forest on his way to a mortifying fall from the
summit of the leader board.
Wilting and wounded, McIlroy vowed to return as something sturdier.
Fast-forward 16 months and measure the substance of McIlroy’s
comeback.
Two months after his Masters collapse, he won the 2011 United States
Open by 8 strokes and set 12 records for the event. On Sunday, the 23-year-old
McIlroy led the final round of the 2012 P.G.A. Championship from start to
finish, crushing an elite field of new wave and veteran contenders to again win
by eight strokes — the largest margin in the tournament’s 94-year history.
On Pete Dye’s unnerving Ocean Course, during a weekend of unyielding
pressure, McIlroy cruised to a final-round six-under-par 66 — after a
third-round 67 — while the rest of the field averaged 72.2 strokes for the
final two rounds. Leading by three strokes after completing the
rain-interrupted third round Sunday morning, McIlroy ran away from his
challengers. His four-day total on what many consider the most difficult golf
course in America was 13-under-par 275.
David Lynn, a European Tour journeyman, was second at 283. Ian
Poulter, who made an early charge at McIlroy on Sunday, was one of four golfers
tied for third at 284.
And now, as the golf world wonders if it is witness to the dawn of
the Rory Era — Tiger Woods, not insignificantly, floundered down the stretch
again — McIlroy still turns to his past to give perspective on his future.
“Losing the
Masters sets up everything to follow; it changed me,” he said after he became
the youngest winner in the modern era of the P.G.A. Championship and the first
from Northern Ireland. “It will always stand me in good stead. I needed to
learn how to play at the end of a major championship.”
What next for the new king of men’s golf?
“I won my
second major at roughly the same age as Tiger but he went on an incredible run
from there,” McIlroy, who is about five months younger than Woods was when he
won his second major. “I would love to say I’m going to do the same thing, but
I don’t know. I won my first major last and another one this year. Hopefully,
there’s a few more of these in my closet when my career finishes.”
The message of McIlroy’s precocious talent is getting through to his
competitors. Listen to Poulter, who birdied his first five holes Sunday and
still trailed.
“You now, I’m
looking at the leader board thinking I must be chasing him down, but I never
did,” Poulter said. “Rory is obviously playing some immense golf. Everybody
should take note: the guy is pretty good.”
The victory should also quell criticism McIlroy has received about
off-field distractions, specifically his dating of the tennis star Caroline
Wozniacki.
Padraig Harrington, a Dubliner and past P.G.A. Championship winner
who has said that McIlroy will be the first to break Jack Nicklaus’s record of
18 career major championships, marveled at what McIlroy has already
accomplished, including the scale of his victory Sunday.
“He lapped
the field, and that’s twice he’s done that,” Harrington said. “Quite
impressive, isn’t it?”
The previous record for greatest margin of victory at the P.G.A. was
seven strokes by Nicklaus in 1980. It was a record that seemed in jeopardy
nearly from the start Sunday as McIlroy birdied the second and third holes of
the final round.
“Gaining
confidence early was a big part of my plan for the day,” said McIlroy, who is
the new world No. 1 and the first player from the United Kingdom to win the
P.G.A. since Tommy Armour in 1930.
As Poulter, with sensational iron play and aggressive putting, moved
to two strokes of the lead three holes into his back nine, McIlroy was calmly
piling up pars even when he drove it into the rough, as he did on the 10th and
11th holes. Poulter yanked a 200-yard approach shot to the left of the 13th
green, his ball bouncing off a sand dune and coming to rest on a dirt path. It
led to the first of three successive bogeys .
McIlroy, like a seasoned titleholder, responded with a birdie on the
12th, and the rout was on.
There were other would-be contenders, but they faded fast. Paired
with McIlroy, Carl Pettersson was penalized two strokes on his first hole for
accidentally moving a leaf — considered a loose impediment — with the backswing
of his club when his ball was in a hazard.
Justin Rose, who tied for third with Pettersson, fired a 66 on
Sunday but lost the momentum of his challenge on the back nine. Adam Scott, the
British Open runner-up, who began the final round four strokes out of the lead,
also made an early run but double-bogeyed the 13th to disappear from
contention.
Woods had a series of birdie putts flutter away from the hole on the
front nine. Frustrated, his approach shots began to wander too, and he had two
bogeys on the back nine to finish at par for the day and two under for the
tournament, good for a tie for 11th.
As was the case when he won with a score of 16 under par at the 2011
United States Open, McIlroy was fortunate to be playing in favorable scoring
conditions. While Friday — when McIlroy shot 75 — was windy and testing, Sunday
was hot with a minor breeze. The Ocean Course was also softened considerably
from rain earlier in the week, as well as on Saturday when several golfers,
including McIlroy, were chased inside because of thunderstorms.
Perhaps McIlroy’s greatest good fortune during the tournament
occurred before the rain Saturday when an errant drive of his lodged in the
crevice of a dead tree on the third hole. Had that ball not been found, McIlroy
might have been looking at a big number that could have undone his charge to
the third-round lead. Instead, after a one-stroke penalty, McIlroy made par.
“I didn’t
think it at the time, but maybe the tree did do me a favor,” McIlroy said
Sunday night. “In the past, I haven’t been in the habit of feeling good about
being in the trees. But there’s always another lesson.”
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