Rory McIlroy surrendered a six-shot lead to leave the defence of his Masters title in the balance and headed straight to the range to find a fix ahead of the final round
Rory McIlroy made a beeline for the practice range to work on his game after squandering a six-shot lead, leaving his Masters title defence hanging in the balance.
Just 24 hours prior, the Northern Irishman had appeared set to dominate the field, having established the largest 36-hole lead in the tournament’s storied history.
While his rivals were posting impressive scores — the nine players immediately beneath him all carded sub-70 rounds — the world number two could only manage a one-over 71, having come unstuck at Amen Corner.
The persistent tee troubles he had been carefully managing throughout the week proved costly, and he wasted no time heading to the range to seek a solution ahead of his final-group pairing with Cameron Young, who fired a Masters-best 65, on 11 under.
“The course was obviously gettable, there was a lot of good scores out there, and the quality of the chasing pack is obvious,” McIlroy acknowledged.
“There’s a lot of guys in with a chance tomorrow. I’m still tied for the best score going into tomorrow, so I can’t forget that, but I do know I’m going to have to be better if I want to have a chance to win.
“I’m in the final group. I just need to go to the range and try to figure it out a little bit.”
McIlroy had entered Augusta National’s notoriously demanding Amen Corner stretch at 13 under, holding a three-shot advantage but showing signs of vulnerability. He finished one stroke behind Young after a difficult stretch that saw him take a double bogey, bogey and par, having pulled a seven iron into the water at the 11th, failing to find the green at the 12th and driving into the trees at the 13th.
“When you’re not quite feeling it, you struggle. You have to dig deep and I felt like I did that on the front nine and made a lot of good par saves,” he added.
“I missed a couple of chances on eight and nine and then I thought I turned the round around with the birdie on 10.
“I felt like I hit a pretty good second shot on 11 but it just drifted on the wind a little bit and went in the water. Those two holes (11 and 12) weren’t great.
“But again I felt like I bounced back pretty well with the birdies on 14 and 15. It would have been nice to play those last few holes and not make that bogey on 17 but, you know, I still have a great chance.”
Meanwhile, Shane Lowry, renowned for his knack for aces, celebrated his “wild” hole-in-one at the Masters, which propelled him into contention ahead of the final day.
The Irishman boasts an impressive array of aces throughout his career, and this marked his second at Augusta National, making him the first player to achieve this distinction.
Lowry’s tee shot at the 190-yard sixth saw him leap from six to eight under, and he concluded on nine under following a 69, sitting just two shots behind the leader.
“That’s wild, isn’t it? I made one a couple of weeks ago in Houston. You don’t ever expect to make a hole-in-one, I just couldn’t believe it,” remarked the former Open champion, whose previous ace here came at the 16th during the final round in 2016.
“Obviously you’re out there and you’re in the hunt at the Masters and you’re making hole-in-one, it’s pretty cool.
“The walk down the sixth hole with everyone around 16 and the sixth was very special. I’ll remember that for a while. It was obviously amazing.
“It gives you obviously a huge kind of boost. You go from six-under to eight-under and then all of a sudden you’re only four back.
“It’s getting real now. I felt like I did a great job of calming myself down afterwards.”
Lowry has also recorded aces at the 17th at Sawgrass in 2022 and the seventh at Pebble Beach in January 2025, two of golf’s most iconic par threes.
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