Rahm misses cut, McIlroy struggles
and Ferguson gets lucky break to lead at Dubai Desert Classic
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[January 18, 2025]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Jon Rahm and Viktor
Hovland missed the cut and Rory McIlroy was forced to battle to make
the weekend as the headline acts struggled at the Dubai Desert
Classic.
Ewen Ferguson was taking full advantage.
Ferguson, a Scot ranked No. 141, shot 7-under 65 and was the
unlikely leader by one stroke after the second round of the
prestigious European tour event on Friday.
Ferguson jumped into the lead courtesy of a huge slice of fortune
late in the day at the par-5 18th hole, where he overhit his second
shot but saw the ball rebound off a big advertising board and back
onto the green, settling 5 feet from the pin. He holed the eagle
putt to move to 12 under for the week.
David Hillier of New Zealand, who is ranked No. 223, also shot 65 to
be in second place and the only player within three strokes of
Ferguson. No. 17-ranked Tyrrell Hatton (65) was in a three-way tie
for third place on 8 under.
Rahm (77), a two-time major winner now playing on the breakaway LIV
Golf circuit, and No. 8-ranked Hovland (73) were headed home early
after a difficult two days at Emirates Golf Club, where changing
winds, thick rough and testing pin placements made for tough
conditions.
“I wouldn’t say that there was anything that went well,” said Rahm,
who has dropped to No. 31 in the rankings. “No part of the game
today was even average to what I would like to feel.”
McIlroy will be hanging around but doesn't look to be in the form
needed, especially with the putter, to win the tournament for a
third straight year.
The No. 3-ranked Northern Irishman cut a forlorn figure over the
final few holes, barely raising a smile even when making birdie at
No. 18 to shoot 71 and be on 3-under par for the tournament.
McIlroy was nine strokes off the lead, having made only 39 feet of
putts in his entire second round.
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Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland tees off at 8th hole during the
second round of the Dubai Desert Classic golf tournament, in Dubai,
United Arab Emirates, Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
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“A little frustrated,” McIlroy said. “But I thought
the conditions were a little tricky.”
However, McIlroy was buoyed when reminded he was 10 strokes behind
after 36 holes last year before going on to repeat as champion.
“I’d say the winning score isn’t going to be much above what the
leader is right now, especially the way the course is going to play
over the weekend, and the way especially this golf course has played
over the weekend the last couple years,” McIlroy said.
“The greens will continue to get a little bit firmer, and will put
such a premium on putting it in the fairway and hitting a lot of
greens. If I can focus on that over the weekend, get a couple of
putts to drop, I think I’ve still got a decent chance.”
Ferguson is a three-time winner on the European tour, his most
recent victory coming at the BMW International Open in July.
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