Two double-bogeys cost McIlroy
chance of victory at Bay Hill
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[March 10, 2020]
(Reuters) - Rory McIlroy managed
something nobody has done since Tiger Woods two decades ago but that
was scant consolation to the Northern Irishman after a mediocre
final round at the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando, Florida on
Sunday.
World number one McIlroy was the man to beat, starting the day two
strokes behind England's overnight leader Tyrrell Hatton, but two
quick double-bogeys late on the front nine all but ended his chances
at Bay Hill in Orlando.
In shooting four-over-par 76 and finishing equal fifth, four strokes
behind winner Hatton, the Northern Irishman reinforced the notion
that for all his explosive brilliance he is just as likely to blow
cold as hot on final-round Sundays.
"Two loose shots cost me," McIlroy said after racking up his seventh
straight top-five finish on the PGA Tour, something nobody has
managed since Tiger Woods in 2000. That stretch includes a win at
the WGC-HSBC Champions four months ago.
"I stood up here yesterday and said the key was to keep the big
numbers off the card and I made two (big numbers) today."
There was few signs early on that it would not turn out well for
McIlroy, until he dropped two shots at the par-five sixth, after
firing his third shot from a greenside bunker into rocks beyond the
green from where he had to take a penalty stroke.
Things went from bad to worse at the par-four ninth when he pulled
his drive out-of-bounds for another double and, though there were no
more dropped shots on the back nine, the damage had been done.
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Rory McIlroy hits his drive on the 10th hole during the final round
of the Arnold Palmer Invitational golf tournament
at Bay Hill Club & Lodge. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY
Sports
McIlroy will have little time to lick his wounds before preparing
for this week's Players Championship.
He is defending champion at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedre Beach, where
last year he ended a similarly frustrating stretch of early year
near-misses.
"There is a lot of similarity between the start of this year and the
start of last year, of chances and not converting but knowing the
game is pretty much there," he said.
"I'll keep knocking on the door."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by Ken
Ferris)
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