Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Rory McIlroy in familiar position at Bay Hill

Rory McIlroy in familiar position at Bay Hill

ORLANDO – Rory McIlroy was in the Bay Hill clubhouse when he saw a few people asked to remove their hats. If it wasn’t obvious before, he knew then that he was back at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard. RELATED: Leaderboard | Featured Groups, tee times “There’s so many nice little traditions here,â€� McIlroy said after going 7 under for his final 12 holes and signing for an opening-round 66 to take the early lead. “… Still having to take your hat off when you walk into the clubhouse, that’s something that I really like.â€� Two years ago, McIlroy came to Bay Hill slightly overdue for a win. He shot a final-round 64, holing the famous, left-to-right slider on 18, and donned the winner’s red cardigan. Starting with that victory, McIlroy has finished in the top 10 in just under 70% of his starts (27/39), including a PGA TOUR-leading 14 top-10s last season and five in five starts so far this season. His round Thursday featured a bogey on his second hole, the par-4 11th, but he called it a good bogey – he made a putt from just under eight feet. It was his only wobble. At the par-4 fourth hole, he hit a 3-iron from the fairway bunker 254 yards onto the green, his ball stopping just under 24 feet from the hole. He made the eagle putt. “Harry (Diamond, his caddie) said that’s the best shot I’ve hit all year, so, you know, high praise from him,â€� McIlroy said of his 3-iron shot, which came out perfectly and rolled up to pin high. He said he feels more comfortable at Bay Hill than Club de Golf Chapultepec, where he led after the opening round of the WGC-Mexico Championship only to wind up in fifth place. The style of golf, the greens – it’s all familiar here. And to think he didn’t put Bay Hill on his schedule early in his career. What was it like to don the red cardigan two years ago? “It was special. It was warm. Alpaca isn’t as comfortable as you think,â€� McIlroy said. “But it was nice. I mean, for me at that point just to, just to win a tournament again, it was 520-whatever days, and so I think just the, I don’t know, the joy in winning again was really, really special. “You could have given me a neon cardigan and I would have worn it all the way home.â€�

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If your tee shot is great, then it is exponentially easier to get it under the hole — and if you are under the hole, it is exponentially easier to make birdie. “You need to find the slopes where it will push the ball towards the pin, not away from the pin. If you let Royal Melbourne give you things it will, if you fight it … it will punish you every time. You can’t force it.â€� 3. Play to the front yardage, not the hole. Underestimate the bounce factor at your peril. If the ball looks like it’s all over the pin at Royal Melbourne, there is a good chance it won’t stay there. Says Ogilvy: “You have to be used to landing the ball short of the hole and having it bounce up. We are so used to getting the pin number and then taking the corresponding club and just fly it to the hole on the PGA TOUR where you can stick it or spin it back. “At Royal Melbourne, if the number is 170 [yards], you might be flying it 150. 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