Arizona Tribune - 'Tough night' for McIlroy after Open disappointment

NYSE - LSE
CMSC -0.53% 21.93 $
BCC 1.56% 81.02 $
CMSD -0.73% 21.77 $
BCE -1.22% 22.92 $
JRI 1.64% 12.79 $
NGG -0.49% 83.01 $
RIO -1.46% 93.74 $
VOD 0.22% 13.89 $
RBGPF 5.69% 65 $
GSK 1.16% 52.5 $
RELX 1.34% 31.34 $
AZN 1.45% 188.41 $
RYCEF 2.12% 18.39 $
BTI 0.45% 62.76 $
BP -1.59% 37.13 $
'Tough night' for McIlroy after Open disappointment
'Tough night' for McIlroy after Open disappointment / Photo: Stacy Revere - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

'Tough night' for McIlroy after Open disappointment

Rory McIlroy endured a "tough night" after an agonizing Open Championship defeat extended his major drought, but the Northern Ireland star said the misery didn't linger.

Text size:

McIlroy held a share of the 54-hole lead at St. Andrews last month and was two up through nine holes in the final round before Australian Cameron Smith surged away with a 64 to take the Claret Jug with a 20-under par total.

"That night was tough," McIlroy, a four-time major winner, said Wednesday as he prepared for the US PGA Tour St. Jude Championship in Memphis, Tennessee.

"The few days after it were OK, I guess. It probably took me three or four days to sort of get back to myself again. But I think what softened the blow a little bit, I felt -- I should have got the ball up and down on 9, 12 and 14.

"But apart from that, I didn't lose it. I think that's what made it a little easier to get over. The fact that Cam went out and shot 30 on the back nine ... It's not as if I went out there, shot 75," said McIlroy, who was 18-under for the tournament.

"I think because of how I played, it made it I guess just a little easier to get over."

McIlroy said he spent two weeks on holiday in Britain after the final major of the year, not touching a club.

"It was nice to take that little break," he said. "I felt like I needed it. I feel refreshed and ready to go for the playoffs."

McIlroy said the fact that he did little wrong at St. Andrews and still couldn't bag a fifth major was less frustrating than encouraging.

"I think it's more, if I keep playing like that in major championships, the law of averages suggests that I'm going to get myself back in the winner's circle eventually," he said.

"If I keep playing the way I've been playing in the bigger tournaments, the law of averages would suggest that I'm going to get myself a trophy at some point."

D.Lopez--AT