Rory McIlroy feeling less pressure to win Masters, Grand Slam

PGA Tour commissioner won't say if Phil Mickelson is suspended

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — The evolution of 32-year-old Rory McIlroy and his roller-coaster Masters career goes like this:

  • When he first hit the scene at Augusta as a hotshot 18-year-old in 2009, he was so talented with a game so perfectly suited for the golf course that he was almost expected to win right away despite his youth.
  •  At the 2011 Masters, nothing appeared to bother him as he spent carefree evenings between rounds playing soccer in the driveway of his rental home with his best mates. Then he blew a four-shot final-round lead en route to a stunning Sunday 80 and cried after it was over.
  •  In 2018, a four-time major winner by then, he failed to chase down his Ryder Cup rival Patrick Reed in the final round, finishing with a Sunday 74 that left him disillusioned.
  •  Since 2014, with a U.S. Open, British Open and two PGA Championships already inked onto this résumé, McIlroy has needed only a Masters green jacket added to his closet to become only the sixth player in the history of the game to achieve a career grand slam.

He enters this week’s Masters, which begins Thursday, 0-for-7 in pursuit of the slam.

Yet McIlroy, a father now, said the thing he was most looking forward to this week was playing in Wednesday’s annual Par-3 Contest with his young daughter, Poppy, rolling around in the grass.

Masters
Rory McIlroy talks with Tiger Woods
AP

“It’s funny, when you don’t have children, the Par-3 seems like a bit of an afterthought, and then once kids arrive it sort of becomes the highlight of the week in a way,’’ McIlroy said Tuesday. “I’m looking forward to it. It will be fun to get out there and watch her run around.’’

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