Showing posts with label Steve Stricker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Stricker. Show all posts

Friday, 4 March 2016

Rory Needs to Eliminate Mental Errors - McGinley

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Paul McGinley believes Rory McIlroy needs to eliminate mental errors to get back to winning ways, likening the four-time Major winner to a football team conceding too many goals.

McIlroy had finished third, sixth and 20th in his first three events of 2016 before a missed cut in the Honda Classic last week prompted him to switch to a “crosshanded” putting method he last used in 2008.

The early signs were promising as McIlroy carded five birdies in the first 10 holes of his opening round in the WGC-Cadillac Championship, only for the 26-year-old to three-putt the eighth – his penultimate hole – for par and find water with his tee shot on the last.

“There were some mental unforced errors at the end of his round, which is disappointing,” McGinley said. “We’ve seen quite a bit of this from Rory this year.

“He’s averaged over five birdies a round; he’s like a soccer team who’s scoring lots of goals, but he’s letting a lot of goals in. He’s making too many mistakes and that’s why he’s not winning tournaments. We’re seeing great glimpses of fantastic rounds, but not following through with a win. He needs to cut out those errors if he’s going to win.”

McIlroy looked to have eradicated such errors with eight victories in the last two seasons, but McGinley added on Sky Sports 4: “It’s crept back in again.

“His game is to such a high level, he hits so many greens, so many fairways, drives the ball so far . . . when you play that well you are going to have a lot of putts from 20 and 30 feet and patience is a big word for Rory.

“He needs to remain patient and now and again that frustration creeps in and manifests itself in bad putting.That’s what we are seeing.

“He’s not weak mentally, he’s won big tournaments, four Major championships. But the reason why he hasn’t won this year is that he’s like a football team conceding too many goals. He needs to minimise that, then we’re going to see Rory winning again.”

McGinley, who captained McIlroy as Europe won their third straight Ryder Cup at Gleneagles in 2014, believes the three-putt on the eighth led directly to the double bogey on the ninth in the world number three’s opening 71.

“What he did was he carried this through to the next hole,” McGinley added. “It’s a very difficult hole, 190 yards, the pin was on the right hanging over the water; you never take on this pin. And this was an unforced error and we’ve seen quite a bit of this from Rory so far this year and there it was evidenced again.”

Starting the second day five shots off the lead, McIlroy made the ideal start by pitching to three feet for birdie on the par-five first, but bogeyed the next after hitting his approach over the green and lipping out from four feet for par.

Two pars were then followed by a hot streak as four straight birdies moved him to five under and into the top six at the tournament.


Saturday, 21 September 2013

Stenson Extends Lead

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Sweden's Henrik Stenson leads the Tour Championship after carding a first-round six-under 64 in Atlanta.

The world number six had a run of four birdies on the East Lake course and after a bogey on the 16th, he birdied the last to lead Adam Scott by one.

Justin Rose is two under while fellow Englishman Luke Donald is level par.

The 30-man field is competing for the $10m (£6.24m) bonus prize for winning the FedEx Cup - Tiger Woods leads the points going into this final event.

However, the world number one, who is guaranteed to win the pot if he is victorious, opened with a three-over par 73.

It was the American's first round without a birdie since the 2010 US Open and he is 29th.

Four other golfers are guaranteed to take the $10m prize if they win the event - which itself carries a first prize of $1.4m (£875,000) - Stenson, Scott, Zach Johnson and Matt Kuchar.

Johnson and Kuchar both shot rounds of 69 to lie one under but it was 37-year-old Stenson who made the best start, holing from seven feet at the second, eight inches on the fourth and four feet on the fifth to race to three under.

An accurate tee shot on the par-three sixth left him with another tap-in birdie before an eight-foot putt on the seventh and a birdie on the par-five 15th took him to six under.

Stenson's performance came just three days after he knocked the head off his driver by smashing into the ground in frustration towards the end of his rain-delayed final round in the BMW Championship on Monday and then damaged his locker.

Stenson paid for the damage and "apologised to the appropriate parties".

Australia's Masters champion Scott sank six birdies in seven holes from the 10th to shoot up the leaderboard and finish on five under, one shot ahead of American duo Billy Horschel and Steve Stricker.

An eight-strong group containing Rose, Spain's Sergio Garcia and American Dustin Johnson are in touch at two under.


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