LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rory McIlroy got the sort of break most players need to win a U.S. Open. If only he could've made a putt or two to go with it.
The golf gods, to say nothing of the golf rulebook, gave McIlroy a chance to save par after his approach shot on the 14th hole embedded in the deep grass above a greenside bunker. But McIlroy missed the putt — a common theme on Sunday — and ended up with his only bogey of the day. That single shot cost him in a one-stroke loss to Wyndham Clark.
McIlroy shot even-par 70 — one birdie, 16 pars and that single bogey — to finish at 9-under 271. His drought in the majors is now at 33, a dry spell that is nearing nine full years.
He finished the day with 36 putts over 18 holes — no need for complex math there — and didn't sink a single putt over 8 feet. His attempt to tie things on the 18th green looked like most all of the 18 birdie tries he had over a day in which he hit the ball as well as anyone from tee to green. It was a 40 footer that looked like it was tracking, but drifted away at the end for a simple tap-in.
But if there was a single moment that defined the day for McIlroy, it came on the par-5 14th. After driving into the left rough, he punched out to the fairway and had a 125-yard shot into the narrow green.
The approach came up short. He put both hands on his knees, bent down and stared at his caddie, Harry Diamond, in disbelief. Moments later, McIlroy was down on his knees near the bunker, desperately trying to find the ball that had disappeared in the gnarly grasses above the sand.
He not only found it, but found it embedded in the facing just above the bunker. In the past, an embedded ball outside of the fairway had to be played as it lied. But after a reworking of the rulebook in 2019, free relief is now granted for any ball embedded in any area other than sand.
McIlroy dropped above the bunker, 40 feet away in a perfectly workable lie. He chipped to 10 feet, but missed the par putt. His only bogey of the day put him three behind Clark.
Clark made two bogeys down the stretch but McIlroy, his putter still ice-cold, couldn't convert birdie tries from 22, 62, 33 or 40 feet over the last four holes.
He hit 15 greens in regulation, tying Jon Rahm for the lead on Sunday, and hit 59 for the week — six more than anyone else in the field but will go to Hoylake next month for the British Open still without a major title since the 2014 PGA Championship.
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