Sunday, June 19, 2011

Watch US Open Championship Finals Live Online

Rory McIlroy will not be stopped at Congressional. Any reasonable thought Rory McIlroy will blow this U.S. Open died in the ankle-high grass halfway down the left side of Congressional’s 11th fairway Saturday afternoon. Far in the distance the ball plunked down a few feet from the hole. And right then the tournament was over.
The making of Rory McIlroy as the greatest golfer in the world has needed a moment where he will not be broken. No one doubts the talent – the splendid swing like a great baseball slugger, the smooth gentle putts that roll as if drawn by magnets to the hole – but his story has always included these enormous implosions. Saturday, in round three, he could have wavered. Because play was suspended on Friday, the second round needed to be finished in the morning which pushed his tee time back to 3:50 p.m. To keep his mind focused on Saturday, McIlroy tried to set little goals, the most significant of which was to finish the day 15-under par. The rest of the field surged to catch up, with lots of 66s, 67s and 68s on the scoreboard and yet McIlroy kept pushing ahead – to 12 and 13 under.
Then came the 10th hole on which he had two missed putts for a bogey and following that was his drive on the 11th that rocketed through the soggy air, landing left in the thick rough. Suddenly, he seemed shaky again, the kid in Augusta who somehow wound up by the cabins watching his first major title fly away with every swing of his club. It was just a few month ago when the Rory McIlroy, the golfing superstar from Northern Ireland, had a four-stroke lead lead heading into the final round of the Masters. What happened next was hard to watch as the 22-year old sprayed the ball all over Augusta National Golf Club to shoot 80 and lose a chance to collect his first major title.
Fast forward to Sunday afternoon, after three unbelievable rounds of golf, McIlroy will begin the final round of the 111th US Open at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, MD with a 54-hole record score of 14-under par and an eight-shot lead over Korea's Y.E. Yang. Yang sits in second place at 6-under par, while Robert Garrigus (USA), Jason Day (Australia) and Lee Westwood (England) each are a total of 5-under par, nine shots off the lead.
Needless to say, golf fans will either witness the greatest collapse in golf history Sunday or something nobody, not even Tiger Woods or Jack Nicklaus, has accomplished.
Entering the final round, McIlroy leads the field in birdies made (15), greens in regulation (85.19 percent) and head-shaking moments (roughly a dozen or more).

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