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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Rory McIlroy is seven weeks away from turning 30, and a decade removed from getting kicked out of bars in nearby Jacksonville Beach for underage drinking, a missed cut at THE PLAYERS Championship in 2009 leaving him with a free weekend. His once untamed hair has been replaced by a shorter, more professional look. But that’s just a visual difference of his maturity. Having entered what he describes as the “second phase of my career,â€� McIlroy has replaced peak-and-valley results with consistency and patience. He has replaced confidence – perhaps at times bordering on cockiness – with comfortability. Soon, he’ll celebrate his second wedding anniversary; no longer does he define himself by his golf results. He sees life through a different lens now. “I’ve been preaching perspective,â€� he explained, “and I feel like I’ve got a pretty good handle on that perspective.â€� Ten years into a PGA TOUR career that will one day end up in the World Golf Hall of Fame, McIlroy also has experiences. Many on the positive side; some not so good. Call it scar tissue, call it seasoning – all of it paid off Sunday in the pressure cooker at TPC Sawgrass. RELATED: Champion’s Wall | Winner’s Bag | By the numbers: No. 17 | Round 4 review | Furyk shines with runner-up finish Shaking off an early double bogey, McIlroy worked his way back up the leaderboard, then delivered the key shots down the stretch to emerge with the new gold trophy as THE PLAYERS champion, beating 48-year-old Jim Furyk by a stroke. It ends a drought of just over a year since his last TOUR win at Bay Hill. More important, it should end any chatter that McIlroy can’t deliver down the stretch. McIroy entered this week with top-6 finishes in each of his five previous starts. He had chances to win in Hawaii, in Mexico and last week in his defense at Bay Hill two hours down the road at Orlando. Some saw the results as a precursor to the inevitable. “At the start of the season when I was looking at his setup just on TV, he just looked a lot more relaxed,” said Jason Day, paired with McIlroy on Sunday. “You could tell that he was, just his demeanor was a lot different compared to last year, and it was just a matter of time, it was going to happen.” Yet his failure to close – he also had not won a tournament worldwide in the last nine times he had played in the final group – had the buzzards circling. However, McIlroy entered Sunday drawing on the positives he had seen in that stretch. In his first 23 rounds of 2019, just one was over par. He was playing brilliantly – and he drew on those positive vibes in his final-round 70. “I think all the experiences I’ve had over the last few weeks in terms of trying to win and not getting over the line definitely helped me today,â€� McIlroy said. “Maybe if I hadn’t had those experiences, I wouldn’t be sitting up here with this trophy. I’m thankful and grateful for those experiences.â€� But it wasn’t just the last two months that McIlroy leaned on to navigate a leaderboard in which a half-dozen players had a share of the lead at one point or another. As he saw the jumbled leaderboard, McIlroy thought back to his BMW Championship win in the 2012 FedExCup Playoffs at Crooked Stick (which, like TPC Sawgrass, is a Pete Dye course). It was another stacked leaderboard against the game’s biggest names – Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, to name a few. McIlroy emerged with three back-nine birdies to take the tournament “by the scruff of the neck.â€� “I sort of thought back to that today,â€� McIlroy said. “I don’t know why it popped into my head – I guess all these experiences are so helpful to draw on.â€� At the par-5 16th, McIlroy two-putted from 19 feet for birdie to pass Furyk and take the solo lead at 16 under. As he walked toward the iconic 17th – perhaps the toughest Sunday walk in golf with a one-shot lead – he told himself that he needed just three more good swings. The first one came when he choked down on a 9-iron at the 17th, his tee shot landing safely on the green for a sigh-of-relief par. The second was off the tee at the par-4 18th – among the toughest tee shots in golf. The night before, McIlroy spent time on the range, hoping to straighten out a driver that had hit just 4 of 14 fairways in the third round. He doesn’t usually make those post-round range visits, but the driver is the most important weapon in McIlroy’s bag, and he could ill afford a repeat in the final round. “It was the club yesterday that didn’t behave,â€� he said. “I gave it a couple of slaps on the range and it behaved itself today.â€� And he also drew on another experience – this time at the 2008 Hong Kong Open, when Rory was a teenager playing on the European Tour. He had a chance to win, even though he was uncomfortable with the tee shot at 18 all week. That Sunday, he pulled the 3-wood, committed to the shot and piped the drive. Although he eventually lost a three-man playoff that day, that one tee shot 11 years ago paid off this time. “I don’t believe in anything really, but I think the golf gods will reward you for just making a good, committed swing,â€� McIlroy said. “And any time I have a tough tee shot, I stand up, I pick my target and I swing as hard as I can. And it usually works out because you’ve committed to it, you’ve got a clear head.” “The last two days I’ve piped it down 18 by just remembering that tiny little thing from Hong Kong.â€� Safely on the fairway, he now faced the last of his three swings. From 155 yards, his approach covered the flagstick – a courageous line, to say the least, given the front-left pin placement just steps from the water. When he reached his ball 13 feet away, he knew the tournament was his. The win is the 15th of his TOUR career, and he now joins Tiger Woods as the only golfers to win a PLAYERS, the FedExCup, a World Golf Championships event and multiple majors. And his 15 wins before age 30 have been matched by just five other golfers – Woods, Mickelson, Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller and Tom Watson. Pretty heady company. But the celebration was muted as he rolled in his winning putt and headed to the scoring area. Sure, he was happy to win. His newfound perspective, though, has him keeping his emotions in check. He wants success in life, not just inside the ropes. “I desperately wanted the win today, but it’s just another day, it’s just another step in the journey,â€� he said. “… It’s a huge tournament to win. I’m very proud and very honored, but it’s just a step in the right direction.â€� Maybe it was just meant to be, a Northern Irishman winning on St. Patrick’s Day. Asked if he had ever previously won on this holiday, McIlroy mentioned last year at Bay Hill, when the third round was on St. Patrick’s Day, a two-day celebration. Then he pulled up the sweater he was wearing to reveal a green shirt. “It’s not a bad weekend for me,â€� he said, his Irish eyes doing all the smiling.
SAN ANTONIO — Jordan Spieth hasn’t lost his flair for the dramatic. First, he holed a delicate 70-foot lob shot from behind the green and over a bunker for birdie at the par-4 11th. “Slid under the ball really nicely on that chip shot, landed right on my spot, just trickled in,” Spieth said. “I was just trying to make 4.” Then he went one better at the par-5 eighth, holing a 56-degree wedge from 113 yards for eagle, and slapping five with caddie Michael Greller and lifting his lid in celebration. That capped off a second straight 68 for Spieth and was good for a five-way tie for the 36-hole lead at 8-under 136 among the morning finishers at the Valero Texas Open. “Certainly a bonus with that hole-out on 8,” Spieth said. “All in all, I think I progressed today from yesterday and that’s all I’m looking forward to doing day to day.” Spieth and Greller have tracked his holed shots from off the green since Spieth’s rookie year in 2014 and place a friendly wager on the total. It’s a tradition they picked up from Jason Day and his former caddie Col Swatton. Spieth’s over/under is based on the previous year’s total (hole outs at majors and from over-100 yards count double). Surpass that figure and you win; loser has to buy dinner and the tab tends to get steep. Â “I’ve really taken advantage of it,” Spieth said. “One time I brought 20 people along.” Spieth recalls holing out somewhere in the neighborhood of 23 or 24 times in 2015 en route to winning the Masters and U.S. Open, which set the bar so high that Greller was able to win the following year and enjoy dinner on Spieth at Cafe Sydney during the week of the Australian Open. But Greller wasn’t too happy about winning last year’s bet when Spieth figures he dunked only eight shots all season — a career low. His two hole-out round Friday was a flash back to his 2015 glory days. “This feels more like the way it should be, to be honest. It’s like me, I guess,” Spieth said. “I told Michael I already have more (hole outs) than all of last year combined…so at least I won that bet already.” Spieth’s short game has helped him overcome a crooked driver — he’s hit just 11 of 28 fairways, but color fellow former Texas Longhorn Jhonattan Vegas impressed with Spieth’s ability to scramble. “You’re going to miss shots around this golf course, which he has, we all have, but he manages to do his scrambling a lot better than a lot of us, so game’s looking good,” said Vegas, who backed up a first-round 67 with a 71. “I thought he’s supposed to be in a slump?” a reporter asked. “If that looks like a slump, I want to be on it for the rest of my career,” Vegas said. Spieth shares the top spot on a crowded leaderboard with Canadian Corey Conners, Korean K.H. Lee, and Americans Adam Schenk and Harold Varner III. What Spieth’s four co-leaders all share in common is that they’ve neither won on the PGA TOUR nor have they qualified for the Masters yet. (Only Conners, the 2014 U.S. Amateur runner-up, has ever played in a Masters.) Conners is playing out of category 32a this season, the No. 126-150 finishers on the prior season’s FedExCup points list, and had to survive a 6-for-1 playoff in a Monday Qualifier this week just to earn his way into the field. “Just pumped to be out here,” said Conners, who shot 67 and is 8 under this week on hole Nos. 14-18. “I hit the ball really well, and never got myself out of position except for No. 10, where I drove it a little right. Other than that, it was really solid ball-striking. I was able to make some putts.” Lee held the solo lead until he made bogey at his final hole and settled for 67. Lee, 27, withdrew after the first round of the Valspar Championship in March with a left hip flexor injury, but said medicine and stretching had made a difference. “Not withdrawing this week,” he said with a smile. Schenk and Varner III both posted 66, tied for the low round of the 72 players in the morning wave on Friday. Varner is coming off a stretch where he’s missed three cuts in his last five starts and his best result is a pedestrian T-51. “Every year I’ve had some type of stretch where I’ve not played well and I think that was my stretch,” Varner said. Schenk, 27, started on the back nine and raced out to a hot start with five birdies. He’s trying not to look ahead and think of the perks that come with a first-time victory. But if he were to earn the last spot into the Masters awarded to the champion of the Valero Texas Open, he’s bound to have a better experience than the one time he attended Augusta National as a patron at a practice round with his Purdue University teammates. “I lost my wallet and was sick and laid down and slept the whole time,” Schenk said. Tonight, he just might get to sleep on a share of his first PGA TOUR lead.
Set to tee off next week at Augusta National, could the event become the next battleground over the state of Georgia’s controversial voting law?