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5:22PM

Newsday (N.Y.): McIlroy ready for British Open challenge

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SANDWICH, England — Rory McIlroy said he no longer needs to answer the question, which of course is whether he can win a major, because a month ago he won the U.S. Open with ease and grace and a record score.

Now, there is another question: How does he react to the expectations created by his victory at Congressional? Whatever privacy or anonymity he had -- and after contending in the three previous majors there wasn't much left -- is gone.

"[Winning] has lifted a huge weight off my shoulders," said the 22-year-old McIlroy. "Now I can talk about winning my second one after having won the first. So it's a nice pressure to have lifted off you."

Winning the second one at Royal St. George's where the British Open begins Thursday along the English Channel, is what others also are talking about.

McIlroy, filling the void of Tiger Woods, absent for a second straight major, is the favorite of the legal oddsmakers, at 13-2, and of the crowds, since as a Northern Irishman, he is a Brit.

The wind was up Tuesday at St. George's, a rolling collection of undulating greens, huge bunkers and bizarre tales. In the 1949 Open here, Harry Bradshaw elected to hit a ball out of a broken beer bottle in the second round, botched the shot and two days later lost a playoff to Bobby Locke.

"The thing is with this wind, you're going to have to keep the ball low," said McIlroy. "But sometimes it's hard to run the ball onto these greens, because they can go so many different ways. I think you're going to need very strong ball flight, especially if the wind still picks up the way it is.

"With the rough not being up, I think this golf course is going to be all about the second shot and making sure you get the ball in the right position on the green, because these greens are so slopey, you're going to have 25-, 30-footers all day if you do hit the greens."

McIlroy seems to have hit the jackpot. The last two weeks, the Fleet Street press sent reporters and columnists swarming to his home in the Belfast, Northern Ireland, suburb of Holywood (pronounced the same as the movie city) to discuss his past, present and future

"It's nice to be the center of attention," said McIlroy, who had been in a less flattering way when he blew a final-round lead in the Masters in April.

"But yeah, I mean, I've prepared the exact same way that I've prepared for the last few major championships, and I feel that it works for me, coming to the course a week before, getting in a couple of practice rounds, and then not getting [back] until Tuesday afternoon.

"Well, I used to do it under the radar. I'm not sure I'll be able to do that anymore."

Phil Mickelson, preceding McIlroy into the interviews, was asked if he thought the young champion could "live up to the hype."

"I don't know if I would say that," was Mickelson's response. "I think the thing about Rory is he plays golf with a real flair and real charisma. He plays it with youthful exuberance, and it's fun to watch somebody play golf like that . . . He draws people to him."

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/mcilroy-ready-for-british-open-challenge-1.3020201
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.
12:35PM

Newsday (N.Y.): Rory's next test comes at Royal St. George's

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

SANDWICH, England -- The British Open this week returns to the course where Ian Fleming carried a handicap of 007 -- well, 7 -- where canines and females both were refused access; where France is visible across the Channel; and where Rory McIlroy is going to find out what it's like to be his sport's newest celebrity.

Royal St. George's is where Tiger Woods lost his opening tee shot in the rough in the Open of 2003; where Jack Nicklaus shot an 83 in the second round in the Open of 1981; and where a streaker darted out of the crowd only to be tackled by Peter Jacobsen at the 72nd hole in the Open of 1985.

When the wind blows, and Saturday it was around 20 mph, St. George's might be the hardest course in the Open rota. Unquestionably, it is the most southern, about 75 miles from London.

McIlroy, the reigning U.S. Open champion, will find out how it suits his game this week, and he hasn't played a competitive round since his overwhelming victory at Congressional.

McIlroy showed up at least twice at Wimbledon and jetted to Hamburg for last Saturday's Klitschko-Haye heavyweight championship fight.

"Some people may have wondered why I chose to go straight from one major to another, without anything in between,'' the 22-year-old McIlroy said this week. "The answer is simple. It's because of what happened at Congressional and the way it became such a big deal.

"I wanted to get everything out of the way and sorted, so when I did start playing again, I could just concentrate on golf.''

But Graeme McDowell, McIlroy's more experienced countryman and winner of the 2010 U.S Open at    Pebble Beach, and three-time major champion Padraig Harrington said just receiving congratulations is a huge distraction. Colin Montgomerie, captain of the 2010 European Ryder Cup team which beat the United States, seemed worried about the same thing.

"He's so natural, I don't think there are any fears about his game,''

Montgomerie pointed out, "but it's the locker room. Whether it was the French or the Scottish Open, he could have got that out of his system and out of the way so he can start the Open afresh.

"Now he's got that ahead of him and on the first tee, I think he will be mentally tired -- but who am I to say?''

While McIlroy was climbing the ladder of stardom when he won the U.S. Open, the last British Open at St. George's in 2003 produced one of the biggest "Who's he?'' champions, Ben Curtis of Ohio. He was a rookie then and benefited from back-nine failures by Woods, Vijay Singh, Davis Love III and Thomas Bjorn.

If that sounds like the plot of a James Bond novel, Bond's creator, Fleming, became a St. George's member in the late 1940s. In "Goldfinger,'' where Bond takes on Auric Goldfinger and his evil "caddie,'' Oddjob, Fleming named the course Royal St. Marks, but descriptions of various holes -- especially the fourth, the "Himalayas,'' with a bunker as big as a swimming pool -- are identifiable.

There used to be a sign near the entrance, "No Dogs, No Women,'' but ladies are now permitted.

So are American pros, although the English press has spent the week going after Bubba Watson, following Bubba's oafish remarks about France and the Alstom Open there, referring to the Arc de Triomphe as "The arch I drove around in a circle,'' and other such comments.

A writer for the Daily Telegraph said Watson had the "aesthetic appreciation of Ronald McDonald,'' and joined the gloating on this side of the Atlantic because Americans are winless in the last five majors.

The most recent was the U.S. Open last month at Congressional, where McIlroy of Northern Ireland -- part of Great Britain -- set records and golf on its ear.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/rory-s-next-test-comes-at-royal-st-george-s-1.3015127
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.
9:33AM

Global Golf Post: Golf's Next Big Swing

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com


BETHESDA, MARYLAND — It was not so much an issue of probability but inevitability. Rory McIlroy was a prodigy although never a problem, a golfing genius with a sense of purpose destined to be the games new star and its latest savior.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 Global Golf Post
9:20AM

SF Examiner: New star McIlroy emerges in time for 2012 Open in SF

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


This Open is closed, shut tight, impenetrably by the new genius of a golfer, Rory McIlroy. Record numbers, remarkable play. And now the focus shifts to the West, to San Francisco, to the Olympic Club, where America’s golfing championship will be on display next year.


Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 SF Newspaper Company
9:42AM

RealClearSports: McIlroy One 'Tough Guy' in Easy Open

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


BETHESDA, Md. — Over the hill at Capitol Hill the Senate was voting to reject the $6 billion credit to ethanol producers. Business as usual. Out on the course, Rory McIlroy was taking the lead in another major. Golf as usual.

There was a story in the New York Times that the pols, from President Obama to Speaker of the House Boehner will not be attending the U.S Open here at inappropriately named Congressional Country Club. "These days they would just as soon not be associated with the game of golf,'' said a long-time lobbyist.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011