News All Articles
McIlroy keen to make flying start at Winged Foot
News

McIlroy keen to make flying start at Winged Foot

Rory McIlroy is targeting a fast start to the 2020 U.S. Open Championship as he seeks to add further credence to golf’s so-called ‘Nappy Factor’.

Rory McIlroy

New fathers have been seen to experience an unusually high rate of success and McIlroy is hoping that rings true as he seeks to end a six-year wait for a fifth Major Championship, either at Winged Foot Golf Club this week or in the Masters Tournament in November.

With a home in Florida and an American wife it will be the ‘Diaper Factor’ getting the credit if McIlroy can claim a second U.S. Open title on Sunday, but the World Number Four is well aware he needs to get himself high on the leaderboard from the outset.

“If you’ve looked at my Major Championship performances over the last few years, I’ve just gotten off to slow starts,” he said.

“I probably just put a little too much pressure on myself going into tournaments. And from there, shooting a bad score on the first day and putting yourself under even more pressure from there to just make it to the weekend, and then to try to play catch-up, I think that’s been the big thing.

“When I start tournaments well, I seem to stay up there. I started Pebble (Beach) last year with a nice score and stayed up there for the most part, (although) I didn’t quite finish the week the way I wanted to.

“But that’s been the big thing for me. If I can start and put a good solid round together on a Thursday, I’m usually right there.”

McIlroy’s wife Erica gave birth to the couple’s first child, Poppy Kennedy McIlroy, two weeks ago and the timing allowed him to compete in the season-ending Tour Championship.

A tie for seventh place at East Lake – based on 72-hole scores rather than the tournament’s handicap system – was the 31-year-old’s first top ten since the sport returned following the coronavirus shutdown.

“I think it just puts things in perspective a little bit,” added McIlroy, who proudly revealed he had changed his daughter’s first two nappies.

“My career matters to me and I care about it very much, but at the same time, it makes the hard days a little easier to get over, right?

“When I say it’s not the be-all and end-all, it’s a Major Championship and I’ve grown up my whole life dreaming of winning these tournaments, and that’s not going to change, but if it doesn’t quite happen, I can live with that and go home and be very happy and leave what’s happened at the golf course, at the golf course.

“I think that’s maybe something that I haven’t done so well in the past. I haven’t left my job at the office basically, I’ve brought it home with me, and I’ve let it affect my mood and how I am.”

Read next