Sky Sports Channel Logo
  • Golf

  • Pundits

David Livingstone News

News

  • News
  • Leaderboard
  • Features
  • Competitions
  • Schedule
  • Rankings
  • Video
  • Pundits
  • On Sky
  • Sky Bet
More from Golf
  • Golf Home
  • Pundits

David Livingstone

Golf Pundit

The Open: Rory McIlroy should give himself a break, says David Livingstone

Last Updated: 21/07/19 7:11am

Rory McIlroy's brave attempt to make the cut came up one shot short
Rory McIlroy's brave attempt to make the cut came up one shot short

After Rory McIlroy made an emotional early exit from The 148th Open in front of his home fans, David Livingstone is left wondering: "Where does he go from here?"

Everyone is asking "What now for Tiger Woods" but I'm asking myself the same question about Rory McIlroy.

The emotional scenes of Friday evening as the fans tried to will him into the weekend will never be forgotten and the tears in Rory's eyes when he talked to Tim Barter after his round were a measure of how much the occasion meant to him.

McIlroy struggled to contain his emotions after bowing out in front of his home fans
McIlroy struggled to contain his emotions after bowing out in front of his home fans

There are no asterisks in the record books but perhaps the MC after the name R McIlroy for the 2019 Open Championship could be bent into any acronym you think is appropriate. "Mea Culpa" springs to mind but perhaps the simplest and kindest would be "missed chance".

A special opportunity is gone for Rory to re-establish himself as the world's best golfer in front of his own people. The people of Portrush and Ireland had turned out to acclaim and celebrate their young son, but they unwittingly created a pressure that was too much for him.

On day one, what happened on the first hole was bewildering but excusable because of the emotion of the occasion. The trouble is there were no such mitigating circumstances when he missed a tap-in on the 16th. By his own admission, it was careless and a result of a loss of concentration.

An emotional McIlroy speaks to Tim Barter after missing the cut at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sky Sports

An emotional McIlroy speaks to Tim Barter after missing the cut at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush
An emotional McIlroy speaks to Tim Barter after missing the cut at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush

That was the mistake that triggered serious questions about where Rory goes from here. Golf Channel's Paul Azinger suggested Rory needed a different mindset for majors rather than his chosen approach of just treating them like any other tournament.

The Daily Mail's Martin Samuel, with some clever journalistic licence, wondered whether Van Morrison would come back to a hometown concert in Belfast and forget the words to Brown Eyed Girl.

What happened on Friday was a different story and it was enthralling to watch, but the harsh truth is we were watching arguably the best player in the world trying to make the cut. All Rory's hard work and effort in 2019 to get back to the top of the game, to win the Masters, to win The Open, was cruelly dismissed by first-round failure in front of his own people.

The damage was done for McIlroy on day one, when he shot 79
The damage was done for McIlroy on day one, when he shot 79

In the days leading up to the championship, the majority of experts talked positively about how consistent Rory had become as if that would somehow help him win an event that calls for brilliance and imagination and confidence in equal measure.

Cynics like me thought back to a memorable quote from Rory's fellow Irish major champion Padraig Harrington.

"Consistency is overrated," said a philosophical Padraig in response to a compliment about how steady his game was. It's an issue Rory touched on himself early in the week when he said: "I suppose some people would say it's better to miss a few cuts but win more of the big ones…"

Rory has worked so hard, listened so much, read so much, and talked about it all to the point of exhaustion. Sometimes, it feels as though he should just give himself a break.

David Livingstone

Well, he now has nine months to think about that and to consider what he does with his prodigious talent in the years ahead. It's tough to say, but he can win all the regular tournaments he wants and record a top-10 finish every week but the noise won't stop until he wins another major.

There is plenty of golf to be played before the end of the year and many questions to be addressed about his commitment to the European Tour and the Ryder Cup. But all that will be easy compared to the pressure that will once again build in the weeks and months before the Masters.

Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland

location

Courses

Locations

No results found. Please try another search.

So what does he do?

Does he stick with his mantra of not being defined as a person by how many majors he wins? Does he look back and perhaps question what he told the Guardian the week before the Masters: "I don't need to fill a void in my life by winning majors. I don't have that void."

Might he just wonder if all that sounds a bit defensive, almost anticipating criticism for not caring enough? Maybe it shows, if anything, that Rory cares too much. He has worked so hard, listened so much, read so much, and talked about it all to the point of exhaustion. Sometimes, it feels as though he should just give himself a break.

Also See:

  • McIlroy proud of Open fightback
  • What next for Woods?
  • Frustration for Tiger
  • Get Sky Sports
It is now five years since McIlroy last won a major
It is now five years since McIlroy last won a major

There is so much advice and coaching available to Rory McIlroy you'd think he would be able to get everything together in time for the four months of majors starting in April next year.

Maybe he will, maybe he won't but, in the meantime, the only advice a layman like me could offer is to enjoy life and get into the habit of watching old videos of himself winning majors. Look at that confident, freestyle young buck and let him inspire a somewhat hesitant thirty-something to cut loose and rediscover himself.

That's surely enough to erase the painful memories of day one at Royal Portrush and stop Rory worrying too much about what others think.

Trending

  • 1
    Fury blames Usyk for fight collapse
  • 2
    Man Utd bids: Ratcliffe and INEOS submit revised offer
  • 3
    Premier League Darts: Smith, van Gerwen and Price in action in Newcastle LIVE!
  • 4
    Euro 2024 Qualifiers: Everything you need to know
  • 5
    Transfer Centre LIVE! Stellini takes Spurs training | Conte still in Italy
  • 6
    Horner on shock Hamilton move: Red Bull 'can't accommodate' him
  • 7
    UEFA investigating Barcelona over referee payments case
  • 8
    World Athletics excludes transgender women from female competition
  • 9
    What can we expect from topsy-turvy Italy?
  • 10
    2023 WGC Match Play: All you need to know
  • Video
  • Latest News
  • Home
  • Sports
    • Football
    • F1
    • Cricket
    • Rugby Union
    • Rugby League
    • Golf
    • Boxing
    • NFL
    • Tennis
    • Racing
    • Darts
    • NBA
    • Netball
    • MMA
    • More Sports
  • Scores
  • Video
  • TV
  • Sky Bet
  • Games
  • More
    • Transfer Centre
    • Live on Sky
    • Get Sky Sports
    • TV Shows
    • TV Guide
    • Sky Go
    • Now TV
    • Kick It Out
    • Black Lives Matter
    • British South Asians in Football
    • Sky Zero
    • Podcasts
    • Mobile
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • Contact Us
    • Work @ Sky Sports
    • Terms & Conditions
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Sky Sports
    • Get Sky Sports
    • Sky Sports Apps
    • Sportinglife.com
    • TEAMtalk.com
    • Football365.com
  • Partners
    • Sky Bet
    • Fantasy Football
    • Super 6
    • Planet Rugby
    • Golf365
    • Planet F1
    • Cricket365
  • Sky Sports Channels
    • Sky Sports Main Event
    • Sky Sports Premier League
    • Sky Sports Football
    • Sky Sports Cricket
    • Sky Sports Golf
    • Sky Sports Racing
    • Sky Sports F1
    • Sky Sports Action
    • Sky Sports Arena
    • Sky Sports News
    • Sky Sports Mix
  • More Sky Sites
    • Sky.com
    • Sky News
    • Sky Group
    • Sky For Businesses
    • Work @ Sky Sports
    • NOW
    • Sky Communal TV
    • Bigger Picture
    • Store Locator
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sky TV Accessories
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy & Cookies Notice
  • Privacy Options
  • Accessibility Information
  • Contact Us

Sky Sports Channel Logo ©2023 Sky UK