Rory’s Rust Runs Deep at Players, But Don’t Count Him Out Just Yet
There’s a particular kind of golf injury that doesn’t show up on an X-ray but shows up everywhere on the scorecard. I learned that lesson the hard way back in 1997 when Tom Lehman missed three weeks with a similar back issue, and we both discovered that time away from competition does something to your rhythm that no amount of range balls can fully restore. Watching Rory McIlroy navigate Thursday’s opening round at TPC Sawgrass, I found myself thinking about that exact phenomenon—and wondering if the defending champion’s troubles run deeper than a simple matter of shaking off the cobwebs.
Let’s start with the numbers, because they tell a story that McIlroy himself seemed to downplay. A 2-over 74 while defending your title is never ideal, but in context, it’s worse than it first appears. Six fairways hit out of fourteen attempts. Ten greens in regulation out of eighteen. One birdie. These aren’t the marks of a player who’s merely rusty—these are the marks of someone operating at a significant disadvantage, sitting T-69 and seven shots off the overnight lead after opening rounds were suspended.

The Preparation Gap Problem
Here’s what strikes me most about McIlroy’s situation: he arrived Wednesday afternoon at TPC Sawgrass, a brutally demanding golf course that punishes poor preparation like few others on the tour. Instead of his typical multi-day acclimation process, he got approximately 30 range balls—stopping at a 6-iron, mind you—plus some chipping and putting work. For most players on most courses, that might suffice. For a defending champion at Sawgrass with a lingering back issue?
“It’s weird, I obviously played on Friday; it’s not as if I’ve taken a ton of time off. But just felt unbelievably rusty out there. I’m glad I got through the round.”
That quote from McIlroy captures something important: he’s acutely aware that this isn’t the typical excuse-making of a professional athlete. He played the week before at Arnold Palmer. It’s not as though he’s been sidelined for a month. And yet, something about the rushed preparation—something about the incomplete physical testing—has clearly thrown off his internal calibration. In thirty-five years around this tour, I’ve seen this pattern before, and it usually takes 36 holes to resolve, not 18.
The Chipping Demons
What troubles me more than the overall score is where McIlroy struggled most. He mentioned two flubbed chips on par-5s as specific mistakes, and he cited chipping generally as where the back remained most problematic. This is the canary in the coal mine for golfers recovering from spinal issues. When you can’t get comfortable bending down to the ball, when your hip flexors are tight, the short game—the area where precision matters most—becomes exponentially harder to execute.
In my caddie days with Tom, I watched him grind through back issues at three different points in his career. The progression is always similar: full swings return before short swings, driving stability returns before chipping consistency. McIlroy’s still in that intermediate zone.
“I would say the most discomfort was like when the ball was below my feet or with chipping. Just like getting down a little bit to it.”
That’s honest assessment, which I appreciate. He’s not pretending everything is fine. He’s identifying the specific mechanical compromises his body is forcing him to make.
The Silver Lining Worth Considering
Now, before we write the first-round epitaph, let me offer some perspective that McIlroy himself provided: no one shot particularly low Thursday. The afternoon conditions were described as “benign,” and yet the field largely muddled through. This isn’t a round where someone went 8-under and put the rest of the field in an impossible hole. It’s a round where the course won and everyone, including the defending champion, is still very much in it.
In my experience covering competitive golf, there’s something psychologically valuable about surviving a difficult day when you’re compromised. McIlroy got through 18 holes with a sore back, rusty timing, and incomplete preparation. He’s seven shots back. That’s not insurmountable, particularly at a course where scoring patterns can shift dramatically based on conditions and momentum.
“Honestly, I don’t feel like I’m that far away. No one went really low this afternoon, which I expected them to, just because the conditions were pretty benign. So, yeah, if I can go out and shoot a good one tomorrow, I feel like I’ll be right in it for the weekend.”
There’s a difference between rationalization and accurate assessment. McIlroy is doing the latter here, I think. One solid round—maybe a 68 or 69 in decent conditions—and suddenly he’s in the weekend conversation. More importantly, one more day of preparation, one more day of the body settling, one more day of rhythm returning… these matter.
The Road Ahead
What I’ll be watching isn’t just McIlroy’s scorecard Friday and beyond, but specifically his approach play and his short game. If the hip flexors continue to loosen, if the timing continues to sync up, we could see the defending champion make a legitimate run. If the chipping remains problematic and the fairway accuracy doesn’t improve, we might be looking at a missed weekend.
But this isn’t a cautionary tale yet. It’s a player working through a legitimate physical challenge while also acknowledging the mental demands of incomplete preparation. There’s no shame in that, and there’s absolutely still runway here for a comeback narrative worth following.
