Showing posts with label stays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stays. Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Open 2011: Rory McIlroy stays steady amid a world of expectations

They came to worship at the court of the boy king. In their thousands they lined the 1st fairway – two, three, four deep and more, with not a space from tee to green and back the other side, half a mile of humanity all wanting to catch glimpses of the boy in green. Every step of the way he was applauded, just for being him. It was an astonishing sight. A giggling gaggle of young girls collecting the rubbish tried to attract his attention and were admonished by a marshall: "Please don't forget he is working." Embarrassed, they sidled away.

The level of expectation on Rory McIlroy since his US Open win has risen almost to unreasonable levels. Every drive must find not just the fairway but the correct side; every approach shot find the green; and every putt snake unerringly into the hole. Nothing less will do. But on Friday the fire burned no fiercer than it had on the first day when he ground his way to one over par, solid enough in the conditions but scarcely inspirational in conception.

This time it took six holes for the spark to burst into any sort of flame. The first two holes had been played solidly enough to set up birdie chances, each from around eight feet, but they were spurned, the ball sliding by. His tee shot on the short 3rd, an attempt to run the ball up the slope in front of the green to a pin cut on the front portion of the green, dribbled back down. "He nobbled that," said one harsh critic by the tee. His putted approach rushed by 18ft, and he holed the tricky downhill return with some nonchalance to maintain his equilibrium.

He was splitting fairways, booming the ball past the towering, treacherous Himalayas bunker on the right of the 4th – a nightmare for club members but in play for the professionals only if the wind blows mightily in their faces. His approach fell short again, although this time he putted deadweight up the slope to get his par.

Now came another chance. The 5th measures 419 yards but, with an insistent wind dead behind, is drivable. A shade more draw and McIlroy would have covered the pin, but from just left of the green, he contrived only a weak chip and his birdie putt from four feet, lipped out.

It was the 6th, played out in the magnificent amphitheatre of the massive dunes known as the Maidens, that the genesis of a challenge began. His tee shot finished eight feet from the hole and although by the time he was able to hit his putt, his two partners had already played 10 shots between them, he duly knocked it in for his first birdie.

Like the Lord, though, St George's giveth and it taketh away. The par-five 7th, downwind again, brought a second birdie, but on the 8th, a poor choice of shot into the wind saw the ball drift way to the right from where a poor chip and two putts took him back down again. Another bogey at the 10th saw him back where he started the day, and successive birdies at 13th and 14th were followed by a dropped shot at the next. He had still not made the leaderboard.

For the first part of the day, St George's put on its finery and transformed itself from brutal to benign. The wind that had massacred the first round had dropped and the sun shone from a pale blue sky. All over the course the colours emerged, replacing the austerity blacks and greys of the windproofs and waterproofs. On the main grandstand, the flags hung sluggishly. Come and get me, the course seemed to be saying, knowing that with the weekend, according to the forecasters, comes Armageddon.

For a while, until the first stirrings of the breeze began to ripple the hayfields, it was sublime and yet no one had been prepared to take it by the scruff until Darren Clarke, two under overnight, gave it a run. Two birdies and an eagle on the front nine, offset against a double-bogey six at the difficult 4th, got things moving in the right direction, and although a shot went at the 10th, he rolled in putts on the 12th and 13th of eight and 12 feet respectively, and suddenly, Clarke's name was on its own at the top of the leaderboard.

Shots went at the 14th where, faced with one of the most difficult shots in golf – a downwind chip, from the tightest of lies, over a bunker, to a tight pin, to an out-of-bounds backdrop hard by the other side of the green – he overcooked it and failed to get up and down, and the short 16th.

Golfers like to take a positive memory with them, though, and at the last, a seven iron, cut into the green, set up one final birdie for a second successive 68 to ensure he will start in the final group.


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Saturday, July 16, 2011

The Open 2011: Martin Kaymer stays in the mix by thinking on his feet

Martin Kaymer Martin Kaymer chips out of the bunker on the 18th on day two of the Open. Photograph: Tim Hales/AP

Given the mental gymnastics he had to perform to stay in touch with the leaders on the second day of the 140th Open, perhaps Gerry "Bubba" Watson would agree with Martin Kaymer when he says Royal St George's provides the most intellectually demanding experience in golf. If so, the 32-year-old left-hander from Bagdad, Florida – who described the Louvre as "that building beginning with L" during the French Open, outraging an entire nation of smarty pants – would be challenging assumptions about his good ol' boy image.

M Gustave Eiffel's architectural wonder, meanwhile, was "that big tower", and the Arc de Triomphe was "this arch I drove round in a circle". It was not Henry Miller's guide to Paris, but Bubba was mortified to learn that all of France, apparently, was on his back.

"I didn't know how to pronounce the names in the right way," he said, with endearing innocence. "That's my bad. They say it was disrespectful and I'm sorry for that. But I'm a golfer not a history major."

Kaymer has no such track record of gaffes. He leans, in fact, towards the cerebral. Before this tournament, Kaymer said the links course and its meteorological baggage were "mentally very tiring. You have to be very creative and you have to think a lot." The US Open and the PGA were more like "regular PGA Tour tournaments", he reckoned.

Kaymer beat Watson in a play-off to win the US PGA at Whistling Straits last year to confirm his arrival in the upper reaches of the game. At the US Open at Congressional, Watson played in camouflage pants, with epaulets on his military green shirt in honour of his ex-Green Beret father, Gerry, who died of cancer last October, and later spoke of his golfing philosophy: "My dad taught me everything I know. It's not very much but that's all I know."

He knows how to hit a golf ball, though, and was on course to make an impression in this tournament yesterday with three birdies on the front nine, before struggling home with a 72 that left him one over for the tournament. His is an instinctive golf, not best suited, perhaps, to a course that asks tough questions at every shot.

Watson and Kaymer, playing in different groups, are four strokes apart after two days but there's a lot of golf left in a tournament that is already battening down the hatches for a stormy finish. They might yet be drawn into another contest of wills and imagination on the final day.

Kaymer passed his examination by a stroke yesterday to go into day three at three under and stay comfortably within striking distance of the leaders after two days of average scoring in relatively benign conditions. He played steady, uncomplicated golf for par on the first six holes, then hit birdie, bogey, and collected another birdie on the 547-yard 14th to come home in 34.

Staying on the fairway is more important here than it might be on the manicured lawns of the United States, and Kaymer hit eight out of 14 he aimed at, one-putting nine greens. Watson out-drove Kaymer by a good 30 yards off the tee but missed eight out of 14 greens to put added pressure on his short game.

On Saturday and Sunday, the questions will be immeasurably tougher in winds of up to 30 miles an hour, with late, heavy showers to add bite to the breeze on Sunday. "If the rain comes and the wind," Kaymer said, "then it's a battle. Then you need to fight but I'm ready for it.

"I had a week off last week. I'm prepared. I have the mental strength. We don't play like this every week, maybe two or three tournaments where you have to go through it. I kind of like it."

The key, he says, is patience and an ability to cope with the occasional and inevitable setback. "You have to wait for a chance, avoid big mistakes. You're not going to shoot a 66 but sometimes if you make three, four bogeys on nine holes, it can be good or it can be OK. It's a different mental approach.

"Maybe I missed a few more greens than [Thursday] but my putter was very strong. I saved a lot of pars, especially 17 and 18 was quite important to keep me there where I am on the leaderboard, so that was nice. But I am striking the ball well."

And intelligently.


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