Xander Schauffele: Rory McIlroy in ‘tough spot’ after US Open heartbreak due to intense microscope | Golf News

Xander Schauffele: Rory McIlroy in ‘tough spot’ after US Open heartbreak due to intense microscope | Golf News


As someone who has held the unofficial title of ‘best player yet to win a major’, Xander Schauffele can empathise with Rory McIlroy’s decision not to compete at this week’s Travelers Championship.

On the heels of missing a pair of short putts over the final three holes on Sunday to finish second by a stroke to Bryson DeChambeau at the US Open, McIlroy left Pinehurst No 2 without speaking to reporters and announced the following day that he will not play again until next month’s Scottish Open.

McIlroy’s decade-long major drought will endure at least until at The Open Championship in July. Meanwhile, Schauffele is still riding the high of his first major title triumph at last month’s PGA Championship.

Until surviving DeChambeau by a stroke at Valhalla Golf Club, Schauffele had a reputation for struggling to close on final-round leads.

The story of McIlroy’s dramatic final round which descended into heartbreak with three bogeys in his last four holes

“As a competitor, all of us have had our highs and lows to a certain degree. It’s a tough spot,” Schauffele said when asked Tuesday how much empathy he has for McIlroy’s current situation.

“I’m sure him and his team are discussing what happened and sometimes you just need to step away from it all and really try and be as objective as possible, because you’re very much in the moment there and it obviously didn’t go his way.

“He needs some time away to figure out what’s going on.”

Highlights from a thrilling final round of the US Open at Pinehurst No 2

McIlroy has been criticised for bolting Pinehurst and returning home without speaking with reporters after Sunday’s final round. He issued a statement on Monday congratulating DeChambeau and announcing that he will be taking a break from golf for a few weeks.

The Northern Irishman acknowledged that it was “probably the toughest” day of his professional career, but vowed to show resilience when he returns for the Scottish Open followed by The Open at Royal Troon.

Paul McGinley believes McIlroy’s drought in golf’s major tournaments is due to ‘not taking initiative’ but Brandel Chamblee thinks it’s because his swing isn’t as good as it used to be

“It’s different for everyone. It’s hard to for me to compare my losses to his losses,” Schauffele said. “I would say his, he’s under a bit more of a microscope. When things are going really well people are all over him, and unfortunately when things don’t go your way people are all over him.

“So, there’s a microscope on him on why he didn’t win and things of that nature and he’s going to have to answer those questions at some point and he will, because he always does. So, for me, I wear them pretty hard, but sometimes it’s nice to just get back on the horse and compete.”

Nick Faldo and Wayne Riley were baffled by some of the decisions McIlroy was making towards the end of his final round of the US Open, which he lost by one shot to DeChambeau

Schauffele is coming off a T7 at the US Open, the seventh top 10 in the last eight individual starts for the world’s No 3-ranked player entering the final signature event of the year.

Schauffele also secured one of the four spots on Team USA for the Paris Olympics, where he will defend his gold medal come August.

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“It’s super special,” he said. “It’s always an honour to represent your country in any given tournament or event, so it was a really cool thing I was able to share with my family after winning the gold medal, and qualifying was my first goal this year. It’s a very hard team to qualify for, as you guys have seen on this US side.

“That was a really big goal of mine to get back and really looking forward to competing again.”

Watch Xander Schauffele at this week’s Travelers Championship, which you can watch live on Sky Sports Golf from Thursday at 5pm. Stream the PGA Tour, majors and more with NOW.

US Open tee times: Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele grouped together at Pinehurst No 2 | Golf News

US Open tee times: Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele grouped together at Pinehurst No 2 | Golf News


Rory McIlroy has been grouped alongside world No 1 Scottie Scheffler and Xander Schauffele – the two players above him at the top of the world rankings – for the first two rounds of the 124th US Open.

McIlroy, who won the 2011 US Open and is searching for his first major victory since 2014, has been given a late-early draw as he tees off at 1.14pm local time (6.14pm BST) on Thursday at Pinehurst No 2.

The Northern Irishman plays alongside Schauffele, who claimed a maiden major title in the PGA Championship last month and has finished no worse than 14th in his previous seven US Opens, with pre-tournament favourite Scheffler completing the star-studded threeball for the first two days.

Image:
Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy will play alongside Xander Schauffele for the first two rounds of the US Open

Scheffler claimed a one-shot success at the Memorial Tournament on Sunday, his fifth PGA Tour victory in his last eight starts, with the 27-year-old now looking to add to his two wins at The Masters and claim a third major title in as many years.

Wyndham Clark also begins his title defence in the afternoon wave alongside Open champion Brian Harman and reigning US Amateur champion Nick Dunlap, while Tiger Woods is out in the morning wave with Will Zalatoris and 2022 winner Matt Fitzpatrick.

Three-time US Open champion Woods has been given a special exemption by the USGA to tee it up this week, having failed to qualify for the first time in his professional career, with the 48-year-old starting on the 10th tee at 7.29am local time (12.29pm BST).

Last week’s Memorial Tournament runner-up Collin Morikawa tees it up with fellow former major champions Justin Thomas and Brooks Koepka – a five-time major champion, while 2020 US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau features alongside Viktor Hovland and Max Homa.

Highlights from the final day of The Memorial Tournament, where Scheffler edged Collin Morikawa

Two-time major champion Jon Rahm – currently battling a foot injury – is scheduled to be one of 13 players from the LIV Golf League in action this week, with the Spaniard set to partner former Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama and three-time major winner Jordan Spieth.

Thursday’s key tee times (BST)

*denotes starting at 10th hole

*1229 Will Zalatoris, Matt Fitzpatrick, Tiger Woods

1240 Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa, Brooks Koepka

As Brooks Koepka aims to win his third US Open title this week, check out his five previous major victories

*1251 Tony Finau, Ludvig Åberg, Dustin Johnson

1814 Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Scottie Scheffler

1825 Brian Harman, Nick Dunlap, Wyndham Clark

Watch the moment Wyndham Clark became a major winner with victory in the 2023 US Open at Los Angeles Country Club

*1825 Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland, Max Homa

1836 Hideki Matsuyama, Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth

When is the US Open on Sky Sports?

Sky Sports continues to be the home of the US Open, with over 45 hours of live coverage of the four tournament days from June 13-16 and lots of extra tournament programming throughout the week.

Speaking on the Sky Sports Golf Podcast, Rob Lee and Jamie Spence explain the difficult test that faces the players around the greens at the US Open

“Live from the US Open” will bring eight hours of build-up, interviews, analysis and practice action on Tuesday and Wednesday of tournament week, with coverage getting under way from 2pm each day, before round-the-clock coverage from each of the four tournament rounds.

Coverage from the first two rounds begins from 12.30pm on Thursday and Friday, with over 12 hours live from both days, with the action starting at 3pm on Saturday and 2pm on the final day.

Who will win the third men’s major of the year? Watch the US Open live on Sky Sports. Live coverage begins on Thursday from 12.30pm on Sky Sports Golf. Stream the PGA Tour, DP World Tour, majors and more with NOW.

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Xander Zayas dazzles in New York as Bruce Carrington wins in front of Naoya Inoue | Boxing News

Xander Zayas dazzles in New York as Bruce Carrington wins in front of Naoya Inoue | Boxing News


Junior middleweight phenom Xander Zayas underlined his glistening potential as he dominated Patrick Teixeira in front of his Puerto Rican fans at The Theater at Madison Square Garden. 

Zayas cruised past the former world champion to claim a unanimous decision win after a 10-round main event to kick off Puerto Rican Day Parade weekend.

The 21-year-old won it 100-90, 100-90, 99-91 on the scorecards to extend his perfect professional record to 18-0 as he marches towards the world’s elite.

“A couple weeks ago, we learned that Patrick’s mother passed away,” said Zayas. “And like a warrior, he was here. He came here and put on a show, so I want to give a round of applause to Patrick Teixeira.

“Thank you to all my people in Puerto Rico. Since I was five years old, I dreamed about this. It’s happening, thanks to you guys, and I want to thank you for everything you do for me.

“He was tough. He knew how to survive in there. It was sometimes difficult to find the body, but with the experience, he hid it. I tried to land the hook, and he was ducking underneath. I feel like it was a tough test, but I passed it with flying colours.”

The Shu Shu show rolls on

Bruce ‘Shu Shu’ Carrington, the Brownsville-born featherweight contender, starred in the co-main event as he recorded an eighth-round stoppage win over late stand-in Brayan De Gracia.

De Gracia had been drafted in on less than a week’s notice after Carrington’s original opponent Enrique Vivas faced delays in securing a visa.

Image:
Bruce Carrington celebrates his win over Brayan De Gracia. Image: Mikey Williams/Top Rank

Carrington would be unfazed by the late change and wore down a tough De Gracia to make the breakthrough in the fifth when he floored his opponent with a right hand.

The punishment built in the seventh when Carrington dropped De Gracia at the ropes, before an eighth-round assault finally convinced referee Eric Dali to step in and wave off the fight.

The victory lifts Carrington to 12-0 as a professional, with the American watched on by four-weight world champion Naoya Inoue at ringside amid suggestions of a potential meeting further down the line.

“It’s interesting that he’s here,” said Carrington. “He came to watch, and he’s leaving right now. So, obviously, he came to watch me. I’m ringing bells, and I’m making noise. That’s what we plan on continuing to do in our career. I want to make that fight happen some time soon.

“There are some things I could’ve done more. There are some things I could’ve done better on the defensive end. He’s a tough opponent, and I’m super happy that Brayan came in and took the fight on last-minute notice.

“He came to fight. He’s really strong. His knockout ratio shows the power is there, but you know me, I have a lot of experience and know how to get around that, break my opponent down, and do what I do. And that’s how we got the victory.”

Memorial Tournament: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy in early contention after first round | Golf News

Memorial Tournament: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy in early contention after first round | Golf News


World No 1 Scottie Scheffler and PGA Championship winner Xander Schauffele made strong starts to sit among the leaders after the first round of the lucrative Memorial Tournament on Thursday.

Canada’s Adam Hadwin though will head the field going into Friday’s second round at Muirfield Village Golf Club after the world No 59 produced an impressive six-under-par opening round featuring eight birdies.

Scheffler finished one shot back on five under, after recording six birdies and one bogey – which came on the par-five fifth – while Schauffele is a further shot back in a four-way tie for third.

Making his first appearance since winning at Valhalla last month, Schauffele went bogey-free through his 18 holes.

Ludvig Åberg, Corey Conners and Collin Morikawa also finished their opening rounds on four under.

Defending Memorial champion Viktor Hovland is one of five players tied at three-under 69, and Rory McIlroy is part of a group at two-under

“Going out this morning, a little softer greens, a little softer fairways, I was able to put up a good score,” said Scheffler.

“It felt like I hit a lot of quality shots today, it felt like my ball striking was really good, and I was able to hole a few putts as well, so overall, pretty pleased with the round today.”

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Hadwin, 36, is a top-60 player in the world but has just one PGA Tour win to his name, which came back in 2017.

The Canadian started his round with a downhill, 29-foot birdie putt at the first hole and added a 35 1/2-footer at the par-five fifth. Those were two of his four birdies on the front nine before a bogey at the eighth.

His four birdies on the back nine were much shorter, none longer than five feet, and he stood at seven-under before bogeying his last.

Watch the Memorial Tournament throughout the week live on Sky Sports. Early coverage begins of Friday’s second round starts from 12.15pm via the red button on Sky Sports Golf, before moving to Sky Sports Golf from 5pm ahead of full coverage at 7pm.