McIlroy no fan of compacted majors
schedule
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[August 29, 2019]
(Reuters) - Rory McIlroy is not
a fan of golf's new compacted major schedule and fears it might make
the sport irrelevant to fans for much of the year, the world number
two said on Wednesday.
The majors came thick and fast this year, played in a 101-day window
from April to July, starting with the Masters and ending with the
British Open.
The PGA Championship's move from August to May meant that players
barely had a chance to catch their breath between one major and the
next.
"I'd like to see them spaced out the way tennis does it," McIlroy
told the BBC on the eve of the European Masters in the Swiss Alps.
"(Tennis) have the Australian Open in January and the U.S. Open is
going on now.
"They have a nine-month window of relevancy. You want to stay
relevant for as long as possible throughout the year and I don't
know by spacing the (golf) majors so close together that that's the
right thing to do."
McIlroy says his victory at the Tour Championship in Atlanta on
Sunday, where he earned $15 million by winning the season-long FedEx
Cup points race, helped "soften the blow" of not winning a major in
2019.
"The money's nice ... but the satisfaction of winning the Fedex Cup
and beating the guys that I beat down the stretch, that's what makes
me happy," he told the European Tour.
"I feel I'm in a very privileged position where that money isn't
going to change my life in any way.
"It's more about the competitiveness and getting myself back in a
position where I feel I can be the best golfer in the world again."
BODY OF WORK
McIlroy urged golf followers to consider a wider body of work than
just the majors when assessing a player's season.
[to top of second column] |
Rory McIlroy reacts after winning the Tour Championship golf
tournament at East Lake Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Adam Hagy-USA
TODAY Sports
The Northern Irishman has won four majors, but it has been five
years and counting since his most recent triumph.
"We play 25 tournaments a year," he said. "If the narrative becomes
majors are the only important thing in golf, that's a dangerous
narrative to run with because then fans are not going to care about
the other 48 weeks of the year."
McIlroy has a busy slate of tournaments over the next two months.
He will play in England and Scotland next month before heading to
Asia in October for the Zozo Championship in Japan and the WGC-HSBC
Champions in China.
McIlroy only flirted with contention at one major this year, the
U.S. Open where he tied for ninth. Most disappointing of all was
missing the cut at the British Open in his homeland at Royal
Portrush.
"I think the golf I've played this year, if I keep playing like this
my chances will come and I'll win more majors ... and hopefully all
this noise will go away," he said.
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina, editing by Nick
Mulvenney)
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