
Bournemouth reach agreement to appoint Rose as Iraola successor
Bournemouth has reached an agreement to appoint Marco Rose as their new head coach, succeeding Andoni Iraola.
Rory McIlroy started strong at The Masters, leading by six shots after two rounds, but made a critical mistake during his third round that surprised many. This error has drawn significant criticism and raised questions about his performance.
Photo by Chris Condon/Augusta National/Getty Images
In stark contrast to last year, Rory McIlroy appeared to be coasting towards his second Masters title over the first two days at Augusta National.
It seemed that McIlroyâs victory 12 months ago had given him the freedom to play in a manner we have not seen from the Northern Irishman perhaps since 2011.
He opened up a record six-shot lead at the halfway stage this week. But just when many of us began to think of McIlroy going on to register a score comparable with Tiger Woods in 1997, Jordan Spieth in 2015, and Dustin Johnson in 2020, the 36-year-old decided to open the door for the rest of his rivals.
McIlroy will begin the last round tied for the lead with Cameron Young. Meanwhile, there are 11 players within five shots of top spot heading into Sunday at Augusta National.
McIlroy made three bogeys and one double bogey on Saturday. It was somehow both surprising and entirely predictable when he found the water on the 11th hole.
And speaking on the Golf Channel Podcast, Rex Hoggard admitted that he has been taken aback by so much of McIlroyâs performance so far this week.
âItâs a little shocking. We touched on this last night, the one thing that he wasnât doing particularly well, and thatâs relative to the rest of his game, was driving the ball. And itâs kind of shocking, itâs the one thing it seems like if he was doing well over the course of his career, yeah, heâs going to have a chance to win. If he wasnât, you kind of wrote him off. But through two rounds, he wasnât,â he said.
Photo by David Paul Morris/Augusta National/Getty Images
âI will point out he actually drove the ball better today. Thatâs pretty much what he did well. He picked up a shot and a half on the field. That has a lot to do with a couple of different holes where he just hit some phenomenal shots.
âItâs the double bogey on number 11. Jack Nicklaus was really clear when he talked to Rory about this. âNo double bogeysâ, weâre not going to fill in the blank. But Rory knows that. He didnât need Jack to tell him. That was a very sloppy double bogey.
âItâs one thing to make a bogey under these conditions. Itâs a tough golf course. You can end up with a bounce. Cameron Young, he was just talking about it, I think he had three straight bogeys on Thursday and was like, âI donât feel like I hit a bad shot, I just ended up in some weird situations and had eight-footers for par and just didnât convert themâ. Itâs really easy to do on this golf course.
âMaking double bogey isnât acceptable, not when youâre Rory McIlroy in that situation.â
Someone is going to go reasonably low on Sunday. The chasing pack includes the likes of Justin Rose, Shane Lowry, and Scottie Scheffler.
That may prove to be a blessing in disguise for McIlroy.
Obviously, he would much rather still have his six-shot lead. But if that lead is going to be eaten into, it may help decide his strategy to have that advantage evaporate entirely.
McIlroy has made more birdies than any other player in the field this week. His run of six birdies in seven holes on Friday was scintillating.
If McIlroy goes somewhat on the attack on Sunday, he could quickly take charge of the tournament once again.
It may backfire, but McIlroy is at his best when he pushes the limits and gives the golfing gods the opportunity to trip him up.
Rory McIlroy made a critical error that allowed his rivals to catch up, although specific details of the mistake were not disclosed.
McIlroy's performance in the third round was a stark contrast to his first two rounds, where he had a record six-shot lead.
Before his third round mistake, Rory McIlroy held a six-shot lead at The Masters.
McIlroy's mistake has opened the door for his rivals, potentially jeopardizing his chances of winning the tournament.

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