Rory McIlroy toils at British Open as putting woes leave him 7 shots off the first-round lead
SOUTHPORT, England — There were no “I’m so bad at golf” exclamations from Rory McIlroy this time.
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The puzzled looks, shakes of the head and sagging shoulders said it all.
McIlroy was just 10 holes into his bid to win the British Open for the first time since 2014 and he was veering dangerously close to playing himself out of title contention.
Missing one putt from four feet wasn’t necessarily unusual. But doing it three times? In the space of four holes?
That trio of bewildering close-range mishaps — on Nos. 7, 8 and 10 — came either side of McIlroy driving the green to make birdie on the 415-yard No. 9. Go figure.
And it pretty much summed up the world No. 2’s wild late-afternoon ride in a 2-over 72 that included six bogeys and left him seven shots off the first-round lead, held surprisingly by 115th-ranked Jackson Suber on Thursday.
“Just too many stupid mistakes,” McIlroy said — and he was specifically referring to his putting on greens he described as “very inconsistent”
“I missed a couple early on that looked like they were going to break one way and they actually went another way, and then when you get the next one, you’re over it and it’s just very hard to trust that the ball is going to do what you think it’s going to do. Then you maybe don’t make quite as committed of a stroke.”
McIlroy arrived at the Open after a seventh-place finish at the Scottish Open, where he went viral by shouting “I’m so bad at golf” following a poor approach shot late in his final round.
The sixth player — and only European — to complete the career Grand Slam rarely hides his emotions and he cut a frustrated figure for most of his round Thursday, not least when he chipped through the green and into a bunker at the par-5 No. 17.
McIlroy managed to splash out to 8 feet while having one knee on the ground but a weakly struck par putt led to another dropped shot.
“It’s just hard to judge the speed sometimes,” he said.
Making birdie at the tough last hole after a brilliant approach to 5 feet sparked shouts of “Rory, Rory” from spectators in the grandstands and at least gave him something to cling to.
He barely raised a smile, though, after plucking the ball out of the cup. One stat spoke volumes: he ranked 148th in putting in the 156-man field.
McIlroy is playing a reduced schedule in 2026 and this is just his sixth event since winning the Masters for the second straight year, which moved his total of major titles to six.
A win this week would tie him with Harry Vardon as the European player with most majors in men’s golf.
He already has plenty of work to do, even if he tried to remain positive.
“Hopefully we’ll get the better conditions tomorrow and maybe the greens are a little bit smoother in the morning,” McIlroy said. “Go out there and shoot a good one and get myself right back in it for the weekend.”
Brown lights it up
Dan Brown, one of the few smokers in golf, went through “seven or eight” cigarettes during his 4-under 66 that left him tied for second place, one shot off the lead, after the first round at Royal Birkdale.
After weeks of sunshine in this northwest corner of England, the fairways here are baked and parched — making them a potential fire hazard from discarded cigarettes.
“I’ve been making sure that they’re out,” the 31-year-old Englishman said reassuringly.
Not that he sounds too proud of a habit that makes him stand out on the circuit, but which he feels is needed to relieve some stress.
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“Sorry, Mum,” he said with a cheeky smile.
The burly and bearded Brown is an interesting character, not least because of the 10 tattoos on his body — three of which are of little birds — and his YouTube channel called “BeersForeBogeys” which has around 4,000 subscribers.
Brown first came into widespread consciousness in golf in 2024 when, as the world No. 272, he shot a 6-under 65 for the outright first-round lead in his British Open debut at Royal Troon.
His name — one he shares with the author of “The Da Vinci Code” — was a headline writer’s dream and his dry humor proved popular, too. Brown was tied for second place heading into the final round at Troon and wound up in a tie for 10th.
That experience taught him he could compete with the best players in the world.
“I feel like I’m a better player now to what I was back then, two years ago,” he said. “So we’ll see.”
Brown arrived at the Open with no form from his first year on the PGA Tour — he missed the cut in his last four events — but has immediately taken to the Birkdale links.
He made seven birdies, including three straight around the turn, after being 1 over after seven holes.
“Today a few putts dropped, which was nice to see,” Brown said, “because I’ve not seen that for a while.
“[Hopefully], I’m in a sort of similar area on the leaderboard come Sunday.”
That might mean continuing to have a smoke during his rounds.
“There might be a big drop off by Sunday if I’m not allowed,” he said.
Argentine golfer hears it
Mateo Pulcini, the only Argentine golfer in the British Open field, was playfully jeered by some spectators on the first tee, the morning after his national soccer team’s epic 2-1 comeback win over England in the World Cup semifinals.
Pulcini delivered an amusing response a few hours later.
After holing a 40-foot putt for birdie on the 18th green at Royal Birkdale, the 25-year-old amateur cupped both of his ears in a gesture to spectators that mimicked the celebration his countryman, Enzo Fernandez, produced after scoring Argentina’s 85th-minute equalizing goal on Wednesday.
“I was pretty excited and that came to my mind,” he said, “and I did it.”
Pulcini, who shot a 5-over 75 in his British Open debut, stressed there were only “a few boos” on the first tee and that it was just a bit of fun.
“People are being great. Fans are being spectacular. They were cheering for me as well,” he said.
Asked what felt better — his putt on the 18th or seeing Fernandez’s goal — Pulcini said: “Enzo’s goal, for sure.”
A ‘terrifying’ tee shot
Matthew Baldwin had the honor of hitting the opening tee shot of the British Open at Royal Birkdale, where the Englishman has been a member for 23 years after growing up in the area.
It meant needing a 3:30 a.m. alarm.
It also meant missing one of his country’s biggest ever soccer matches.
Baldwin said he didn’t watch England’s agonizing 2-1 loss to Argentina in the men’s World Cup semifinals, a match that started at 8 p.m. on Wednesday. He was dozing until waking up 55 minutes into the game and discovering England was leading, 1-0.
He fell asleep and woke up again around midnight, to be informed by his wife that England lost.
More important to Baldwin was making a good start to his fourth appearance at the Open — and first at Birkdale.
He said the opening shot — an iron that split the middle of the parched fairway and was approved by a cheering crowd in a full grandstand under early morning sunshine — was “terrifying” and “overwhelming.”
“But,” added Baldwin, who shot 2-over 72, “it’s something that will stay with me for the rest of my life.”
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