Rory McIlroy has defended his decision to skip post-round interviews again during the US Open and said he has āearned the right to do whateverā after his Grand Slam success.
McIlroy became just the sixth player to complete the career Grand Slam by ending his 11-year wait for major glory with a dramatic play-off victory at The Masters in April, his third PGA Tour win of the season.
The world No 2 declined the media for all four rounds of the PGA Championship, where reports of his driver being deemed non-conforming became public, with McIlroy electing to avoid post-round interviews after the first two days of this weekās major at Oakmont Country Club.
McIlroy stuttered into the weekend on six over after rounds of 74 and 72, with the five-time major champion explaining his āfrustrationā when speaking to journalists after a third-round 74 dropped him further down the leaderboard.
āThat [the driver issue at the PGA Championship] was a part of it [not doing media],ā McIlroy told reporters. āAt Augusta I skipped you guys on Thursday, so yeah, again, itās not out of the ordinary. Iāve done it before ā Iām just doing it a little more often.ā
When asked why he was taking that stance, McIlroy added: āI feel like Iāve earned the right to do whatever I want to do.
āIām not daring them [the PGA Tour, who donāt enforce speaking to the media] to do anything. I hope they donāt change it because itās a nice luxury to have. Iām just pointing out the fact that we have the ability to do it.ā
McGinley: This is not normal
Former Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley, commentating for Sky Sports: āI think Roryās better than that, either not talking to the media or giving a press conference like that doesnāt serve him fairly or rightly for the kind of person that he is.
āHe looks fed up to me. He looks like heās had enough of everything. Whether it was the emotion or the release of everything thatās gone on, not just in winning the Masters but in his whole career being pointed towards being a Grand Slam winner, and now heās kind of reeling on the ropes after that emotionally ā I donāt know. But heās not himself, this is not normal.
āIām disappointed for Rory that itās come to that. Something is eating at him that he hasnāt let us know what it is. But thereās something not right.ā
McIlroy ādidnāt really careā about making US Open cut
The 36-year-old previously revealed it had been āhard to find the motivation to get back on the horse and go againā since his Grand Slam success, with a tied-47th finish at the PGA Championship followed by a missed cut at the RBC Canadian Open.
McIlroy was in danger of an early US Open exit after carding two double bogeys in his first three holes on Friday morning, with the Northern Irishman needing two late birdies just to avoid missing the cut for a second successive week.
āI alluded to it in my pre-tournament press conference, you donāt really know how itās going to affect you,ā he said. āYou donāt know how youāre going to react to something that Iāve dreamt about for a long time. I alluded to the fact that, yeah, I have felt a little flat on the golf course afterwards.
āItās funny, like itās much easier being on the cut line when you donāt really care if youāre here for the weekend or not. I was sort of thinking, ādo I really want two more days here or not?ā. So it makes it easier to play better when youāre in that mindset.ā
McIlroy has finished no worse than ninth in his previous six US Open appearances and ended runner-up each of the last two years, although looks set to end that run after a week he described as āpretty averageā.
āThe name of the game this week is staying patient and try to do a good job of it out there, but itās one of those golf courses that you can lose patience on pretty quickly,ā McIlroy shared.
āIāve driven the ball better. Iāve driven the ball as good as I have in a long time, so thatās at least a positive this week. I was hoping to play better, but I didnāt.ā
When asked how McIlroy hoped to finish his US Open campaign, he closed with: āHopefully a round in under four and a half hours and get out of here.ā
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