Rory McIlroy tested by quick greens

With a course pushing the brink and promising to get tougher, the Rory McIlroy green jacket campaign sounded like a case of fear and loathing Thursday

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By Special Arrangement with The Augusta Chronicle

 

 By Scott Michaux | Staff Writer

 

April 11, 2014: With a course pushing the brink and promising to get tougher, the Rory McIlroy green jacket campaign sounded like a case of fear and loathing Thursday.

 

“It’s about putting your ball in the right place, and it becomes more of a mental challenge than anything else, just playing to your spots,” McIlroy said after a first-round 71 left him three shots off the Masters lead. “It almost becomes like chess, where you’re just making these moves. That hasn’t been my forte in the past, but I’ll learn to love it this week.”

 

With greens rolling hot and tougher-than-usual Thurs­day pins, McIlroy required 34 putts in a first round in which he hit 15 greens. He three-putted three times – on Nos. 8, 12 and 18 – scoring bogey each time.

 

“They’re fast already,” McIl­roy said. “By Sunday they’re going to be pretty dicey. I think every year you play practice rounds here, then there’s just a little extra fire in the course come Thurs­day. It’s a little firmer, a little faster. It’s to be expected here.”

 

Playing with prominent first-timers Jordan Spieth and Pat­rick Reed, McIlroy tried to put his experience to good use. Birdies at Nos. 3, 5, 13 and 15 had his name lurking on the leaderboard most of the day.

 

He kept his eye on it, paying less attention to the names and more to the scores, which never got too low. A few players reached as low as 4-under, where leader Bill Haas finished, but nobody could go deep. McIlroy called it “a good day for patience.”

 

“I think that they set the course up very difficult today,” McIlroy said.

 

When the course gets “fiery,” it requires more precision than power, and it leads to a grinding week on the greens, which hasn’t been McIlroy’s strength at Au­gusta.

 

“I think more grinding on the greens than anything else, because they’re getting firm and getting fast already,” he said.

 

McIlroy is still looking for his first clean Masters without any major hiccups. He’s posted 77 or higher in each of his past four Masters starts, blowing a chance to win wire-to-wire in 2011 with a Sunday 80.

 

He hopes the lessons from the past are ready to pay off.

 

“I think that coming back each and every year, you do learn where not to miss it, and you learn where you need to position your ball to give yourself the easiest chance at birdie,” he said.

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