To say what happened to Rory McIlroy on Sunday at Augusta National was heartbreaking wouldn't totally do it justice. The entire time it was happening, titleist 2010 ap2 irons fans everywhere were turning their heads, hoping not to see exactly the massacre that was going on at the Masters. But if there is a silver lining, it's that Rory isn't the only one to fall apart lately in majors. Here is a short list of the most recent failures, and what exactly happened to each of them.
Rory McIlroy, final round 80 at the 2011 Masters: You just watched it, so you know the story, but just to recap; McIlroy turns the front nine at 1-over 37, not the best but not a bad number, and then completely falls apart. A triple-bogey on the 10th, followed by a four-putt on the 12th doomed him, and he would eventually miss a short birdie putt on the 18th hole to shoot a final round 80 after leading by four shots heading into the final round.
Rory McIlroy never made it that far. A 21-year-old star from Northern Ireland, McIlroy bogeyed the first hole and added another bogey at the fifth before making his first — and only — birdie at the seventh hole. He shot a front-nine 37, and then dissolved on the 10th hole.
But McIlroy picked his head up at the cheers he did not expect to hear. The remaining fans called his name and clapped for the entire 20 seconds it took him to walk to the clubhouse locker room. McIlroy — who had taken a four-shot lead into the final day of the Masters, blown almost all of it on one disastrous hole and finished 10 shots behind Schwartzel at four under par — smiled and waved his hand in appreciation.
After every round this week, we here at Devil Ball will give you a quick recap of the day, with our thoughts on some of the best, and worst, performances of the day. BTW, I want to recommend extremely cheap golf clubs for you. The round on Sunday at Augusta National belonged to Charl Schwartzel, the champion, who posted a 6-under 66 to win by two shots. Schwartzel had a chip-in and a hole-out over his first three holes, and then birdied his final four holes to claim the green jacket. It was a beautiful round of taylormade burner 2.0 irons for a rather unknown, and another Masters champion for South Africa. When you have a four-shot lead heading into the final round of a major, and finish tied for 15th, you're going to win this award, no matter how much it hurts to talk about it.
Rory McIlroy couldn't have been in a better position to win his first major, and it seemed almost destiny that he do it at this age, just like Tiger Woods did in 1997, but he never could get anything going, and then fell apart on the back nine, posting a nasty 8-over 80.
The 21-year-old Rory McIlroy, his hat pulled down across his eyebrows, emerged from a side door with the weary expression of someone who would give anything to start the day all over again. His shirt untucked in the back and his stride slow and sluggish, he looked young and slightly embarrassed, like a kid tromping home from school after two failed exams.
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