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Rory McIlroy explodes in ugly US Open temper tantrum: 'Messed it up'

Rory McIlroy took out his frustrations on a bunker during an eventful opening round at the US Open. Pic: Getty/Twitter
Rory McIlroy took out his frustrations on a bunker during an eventful opening round at the US Open. Pic: Getty/Twitter

Rory McIlroy has recovered from a mini meltdown during his opening round at the US Open to shoot a three-under 67 which puts himself firmly in the mix at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts.

The Northern Irishman mixed four birdies with one bogey and a pair of tempter tantrums to grab himself a share of the early clubhouse lead after a solid start to the year's third major.

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One of the day's late starters, Canadian Adam Hadwin, then jumped out to a one-stroke lead after rocketing to four-under after 16 holes.

Fresh from last week's win in the Canadian Open, McIlroy took that recent form with him to Brookline, although his round was not without its hiccups.

A month after an opening 65 in the US PGA, it was another welcome start to a major for McIlroy after previous struggles, but it was not without incident as he slammed one club into a bunker and threw another down the fairway on his final hole.

After starting from the 10th, McIlroy had covered his first 13 holes in two under par before a pushed tee shot on the fifth finished in thick rough on the edge of a bunker and left him struggling to take a stance in the sand, with the ball well above his feet.

From there McIlroy could only hack his second shot into another bunker a few yards in front of him, prompting a furious reaction which saw him twice slam his club into the sand.

The footage of the usually unflappable McIlroy taking out his anger on the bunker - before incredibly saving par - unsurprisingly left fans amused on social media

“You’re going to encounter things at a US Open that you just don’t really encounter any other week,” said McIlroy, whose mood was not helped by the slow pace of the group in front of himself, Hideki Matsuyama and Xander Schauffele.

“It’s hard not to get frustrated because I’m walking up there going like, just come back into the bunker. The thickest rough on the course is around the edges of the bunkers.

“So I was sort of cursing the USGA whenever I was going up to the ball, but it’s one of those things. It happens here, it doesn’t really happen anywhere else. You just have to accept it.

“I gave the sand a couple of whacks because I’d already messed it up, so it wasn’t like it was much more work for Harry (Diamond, his caddie), and then I just reset and played a decent bunker shot, and then it was really nice to hole that (par) putt.”

Rory McIlroy satisfied after rollercoaster round

Having saved par at the fifth, McIlroy birdied the seventh and eighth to take the outright lead, only to drop his only shot of the day on the ninth after missing the green with his approach.

That prompted the club throw and McIlroy added: “The margins are just so fine in this tournament, and I think you can sort of see that out there with some of the reactions.

Pictured here, a frustrated Rory McIlroy tosses his putter in the air during the opening round of the US Open.
Rory McIlroy started strongly at the US Open despite a dew blips in his three-under 67. Pic: Getty

“Once I played our front nine in two under, the goal was to try to play this round without a bogey. I did that for 17 holes, which was great, and then I was sort of in two minds about what shot to hit on the second shot on nine and missed the green where you just can’t miss it.

“I didn’t do that all day. If I missed it, I missed it in the right spot, played for the fat part of the greens, and that’s why I was frustrated, because you miss it left, it’s a pretty simple up and down. You make par, you move on.

“But it’s fine. It’s something to learn from. (I’m) sitting here talking about the bad stuff when 17 of the holes were really good. I’m happy with the start.”

Joining McIlroy on three-under 67 after their opening rounds were a host of players including unheralded Englishman Callum Tarren, Swede David Lingmerth and American Joel Dahmen.

Tarren, who is ranked 445th in the world, carded an eagle, three birdies and two bogeys in his 67, the 31-year-old from Darlington admitting his presence at the top of the leaderboard had come as a shock.

“I’m kind of pinching myself because I didn’t realise my name was on the top of the leaderboard until I holed that final putt,” Tarren said. “Just excited with my start, and let’s see what the next few days hold.”

Defending US Open Rahm birdied the last to complete an eventful 69 which included two young spectators running off with his ball on the 18th and a number of uncharacteristically bad approach shots.

with agencies

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