Rory McIlroy will reportedly not play in the Cadillac Championship at Trump National Doral in Miami
A Donald Trump-owned golf course will host a PGA Tour event for the first time in a decade next week – but Rory McIlroy will be absent.
The six-time major champion hasn’t competed since successfully defending his Masters title on April 12. Now he’s said that he’s postponing his comeback by giving next week’s Cadillac Championship at Trump National Doral in Miami a miss.
McIlroy has been open about his wish to reduce his PGA Tour commitments, and the Cadillac Championship has fallen foul of an awkward positioning in the calendar. World number 12 Robert MacIntyre, who’s also sitting out the event, characterised this stretch of the PGA Tour schedule as “carnage”.
Most golfers prefer to avoid playing consecutive weeks ahead of a major championship, yet the PGA Tour has scheduled back-to-back $20 million signature events in the Cadillac Championship and the Truist Championship at Quail Hollow directly before next month’s PGA Championship at Aronimink.
McIlroy’s choice, consequently, comes as little shock, with Ludvig Aberg, Xander Schauffele and Matt Fitzpatrick also opting to rest rather than compete in Miami, reports the Mirror US. MacIntyre shared his thoughts on the schedule before Friday’s field announcement.
He told The Scotsman: “I’m meant to go away on Sunday, but I might take Doral off just to have a little bit more time at home. I will play the Truist at Quail Hollow, and then I’ll play the PGA.
“The schedule is so tightly packed now – it’s carnage – that you just feel as though you can’t take a week off. So it’s about trying to manage myself.
“Obviously, living [in Scotland], it’s difficult with the travel and stuff. But it’s what I want to do, it’s what I’ve picked to do. Yeah, I just need to give myself enough time to recover and calm down and get ready to go again.”
McIlroy reaped the rewards of an extended hiatus from competitive golf before the Masters, focusing on behind-the-scenes preparation, and it appears this approach will become his standard practice going forward.
“I think it’s a good blueprint. I’m not going to take three weeks off before every major, but to get to the major venues early, do your preparation, play. And not just play and look at things, but actually play. Go out there with one ball, shoot a score, and try to do it that way,” he said in his champion’s press conference at Augusta National.
“When I’ve talked to Jack Nicklaus over the years about how he prepared for majors, he would go the week before, and he would simulate a tournament. He’d play one ball for four days, shoot scores. So then, when he got to the tournament, it felt second nature to him.”
“I did a little bit of that leading up to here, and I think that’s certainly a good way to prepare going into the next majors.”
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