An hour from home, Rory McIlroy closes in on the win of a lifetime

rory mcilroy irish open

Rory McIlroy plays a shot from the fescue Saturday at Royal County Down.

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Rory McIlroy left Northern Ireland many years ago, when his otherworldly talent and promise pushed him to a full-time career in pro golf. First, he lived in Dubai, playing plenty on the European Tour. Next came Florida, the landing spot for so many of the game’s best. 

McIlroy is still a Florida resident these days, now in his 17th year as a professional. He’s building a house outside London, for those days when he’s back in the United Kingdom. But this week, mentally and physically, he’s a long way from those houses. He’s back home, in Holywood, Northern Ireland — where it all began, driving an hour to the Irish Open each day. 

“Usually when you’re at a tournament site … you can hear people announced on the 1st tee, and maybe the first thing you do is checking your phone and seeing how the boys started off and checking the leaderboard,” McIlroy said Friday. 

“Staying an hour away, I’ve felt detached from the tournament this week, which has been quite a nice thing and haven’t been so wrapped up in it, which is quite nice. Probably the reason why I started well, I would say.”

McIlroy did start well at Royal County Down, widely regarded as one of the best golf courses in the world, and has continued to play well in his native homeland. He was a few shots back of the lead when he gave that quote, and now 24 hours later he’s behind no one. He shot a two-under 69 Saturday to reach six under and be the lone man atop the leaderboard. Naturally, that kicks off a long Saturday night of ominous thinking, for him and everyone else:

What if he actually gets it done in Northern Ireland? 

Pro golf has a tendency to ask these forward-looking questions, and on a daily basis. In part because top players often give press conferences after each round. Every 18 holes requires a new way of thinking about the same goal he had at the beginning of the week. 

“It would be great,” McIlroy said Saturday evening. “I talked about it at the start of the week. You know, after the sort of year that I’ve had and the close misses, it wouldn’t make up for all of it, but it would go a long way in putting a nice shine on 2024.

“I can’t get that far ahead of myself. I need to go out and play another very solid round tomorrow to try to get the job done. But I’m pleased with the first three days.”

McIlroy will say he can’t get ahead of himself. But he knows what it’s like for his best golf to have an added layer of significance when it happens in a special location. It was back in Northern Ireland in 2019, at the Open at Royal Portrush, where McIlroy shot 65 in the second round in hot pursuit of the cut line. When he finished on the outside of it, he was brought to tears by the support he received that day. Or even the 2022 Open at St. Andrews in Scotland, when McIlroy was unquestionably the crowd favorite at the Old Course. They sang his name out in the streets after 54 holes, but after 72, he had come up two shots short of a playoff. Once again, it ended in tears. 

This would be different, one would think. On Sunday, McIlroy will make that one-hour drive from his home to one of the best courses in the world one more time, and he’ll be forced to wonder if that trophy will be riding shotgun on the drive home. Or if there will even be a drive home. When Scotland’s very own, Bob MacIntyre, won the Scottish Open at Renaissance Club in July, McIlroy was in the field but on his way across the country to Royal Troon. The crowd belted the Scottish national anthem throughout the night after Bobby Mac won it with a birdie on the 72nd hole.

Later on, the anthem of the night became “I Would Walk 500 Miles,” by The Proclaimers, as MacIntyre and his family and friends raged into the wee hours of the morning, filling up the trophy with all manner of alcohol. His press conference scheduled for the next day was rightly postponed, because when you win your home Open, everything on the calendar gets put on hold. 

Check back in Sunday afternoon. 

Sean Zak

Sean Zak is a writer at GOLF Magazine and just published his first book, which follows his travels in Scotland during the most pivotal summer in the game’s history.