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Just $39.99Rory McIlroy smashes a U.S. Open tee marker with his club on the 17th hole at Oakmont.
Courtesy of NBC
Rory McIlroy made two late birdies on Friday evening to make the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open. But if you think that made him happy, well, not necessarily. McIlroy’s frustration also boiled over in Round 2 at Oakmont, climaxing with the Masters champion smashing a tee marker with his club.
Before that McIlroy was caught tomahawk-throwing his club, and post-round, McIlroy again refused USGA requests to meet with the media.
After shooting a 74 in the opening round at Oakmont, McIlroy knew he’d need a solid score on Friday to get into contention to win his second U.S. Open title. But at first, only double black squares appeared on his scorecard.
McIlroy made devastating double bogeys at the 1st and 3rd holes to quickly move to eight over for the tournament. He got one back with a birdie at the 9th, but by then the reality was clear. Instead of battling for the lead, McIlroy would be spending all Friday fighting to make the cut.
When he made bogey at 11 to drop back to eight over, his frustration neared a breaking point. So much so that when he hit a squirrelly approach shot at the par-5 12th hole, McIlroy reared back and threw his club, tomahawk-style, 20 yards down the fairway.
Rory is in a battle with Oakmont this week, and it is not going his way. 😳pic.twitter.com/A97qRd8lQt
— GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) June 13, 2025
Despite the poor second shot and club throw, McIlroy still saved par at 12, and then made two more pars at 13 and 14. At 15, he made his second birdie of the day, moving him back to seven over and right near the cut line.
At that point, McIlroy knew he needed to at least par his way in and potentially make one more birdie to secure his tee time for Saturday. So when his tee shot at the short par-4 17th started tailing away from his target, he lost it.
McIlroy took his club, which appeared to be a fairway wood, and smashed into a white U.S. Open tee marker on the 17th tee. The tee marker exploded on impact, sending one piece flying back to hit McIlroy in the leg. Check out the angry moment below.
Nine years later, the USGA gets its revenge. 🤣pic.twitter.com/z86wo1dflD https://t.co/NyeqOMM7Pb
— GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) June 13, 2025
Despite the emotional eruption, McIlroy nearly made birdie at 17, tapped in for par and followed that up with a birdie at 18 to finish at two over for the day and six over for the tournament, one shot inside the cut line of seven over.
But as has become routine for the five-time major champion lately, McIlroy declined to speak to reporters after the round; he’d skipped on Thursday evening, too. So we’ll have to wait to hear his own explanation for the series of unsavory on-course conduct.
McIlroy’s Friday was the latest in a turbulent on-course stretch since winning the 2025 Masters in April. He has admitted that completing his lifelong dream of winning the career Grand Slam has also messed with his motivation. But it’s also caused him to skip post-round media sessions more frequently, as he did repeatedly at the PGA Championship last month.
Golf.com Editor
As senior managing producer for GOLF.com, Cunningham edits, writes and publishes stories on GOLF.com, and manages the brand’s e-newsletters, which reach more than 1.4 million subscribers each month. A former two-time intern, he also helps keep GOLF.com humming outside the news-breaking stories and service content provided by our reporters and writers, and works with the tech team in the development of new products and innovative ways to deliver an engaging site to our audience.