Rory McIlroy’s Bucket List Reveals What We’re All Missing About Elite Golf
There’s something refreshingly human about Rory McIlroy’s admission that he hasn’t played Bandon Dunes.
Think about that for a second. Here’s a guy who’s won four majors, earned a lifetime invitation to Augusta National, belongs to more exclusive clubs than most of us will ever set foot in, and yet one of golf’s most celebrated destination resorts remains unchecked on his itinerary. When McIlroy sits down with Kevin Van Valkenburg of The Fried Egg and starts rattling off courses he’s desperate to play, it tells us something profound about the modern professional game—and about golf itself.
In my 35 years covering this tour, I’ve watched the player experience evolve dramatically. Back when I was caddying for Tom Lehman in the ’90s, guys were grateful to play the same 14-15 courses year after year on the PGA Tour schedule. You got your Masters, your U.S. Open, your Open Championship, and you made peace with it. Now? The schedule is more diverse than ever, but the elite players are busier than ever. The irony is that access has created a different kind of scarcity.
The Paradox of Privilege
McIlroy’s situation epitomizes something I’ve been observing for the last decade: unlimited access can paradoxically mean limited exploration. Consider his resume. He plays world-class venues on tour—Pebble Beach, Riviera, Harbour Town. He’s a member of Queenwood in London and The Bear’s Club in Florida. His father happens to be a member at Seminole, which McIlroy has joked should make him a member too.
“There are so many in the States that I haven’t,” McIlroy said, singling out Chicago Golf Club and Pasatiempo Golf Club.
What strikes me most is the honesty here. McIlroy isn’t pretending to have played every significant course in America. He’s living proof that even the most privileged players in golf have gaps in their résumé. And frankly, that’s okay. It’s actually healthy.
The courses on McIlroy’s wish list tell us what truly matters in golf’s upper echelon: heritage, design pedigree, and exclusivity. New South Wales Golf Club—an Alister MacKenzie design that recently vaulted 18 spots in GOLF’s Top 100 after a MacKenzie & Ebert renovation—represents that perfect marriage of classic architecture and thoughtful stewardship. Fishers Island Club, the Seth Raynor masterpiece on Long Island Sound, represents an era of American golf design when geography and playability were in perfect conversation.
But here’s where my cynicism gets tempered by something more interesting: McIlroy wants to play these courses for the right reasons. He’s not chasing bragging rights. He’s chasing the experience.
Why Bandon Matters More Than You Think
The fact that McIlroy hasn’t made it to Bandon Dunes speaks volumes about tour life. Bandon isn’t on the PGA Tour schedule. It’s not a major venue. It’s a destination you have to *choose* to visit, and that choice requires time that tour professionals simply don’t have during the season. McIlroy has stolen away to New Zealand for a Tara Iti adventure in the past, but those escapes are luxuries carved out of an already-packed calendar.
“I’d love to go to Bandon and do that,” McIlroy said.
The subtext here is important. McIlroy is signaling that when his schedule permits more recreational golf—and it will, eventually—he wants to experience golf the way the rest of us do: on his own terms, without the pressure of competition, without the entourage, just golf in its purest form.
In my experience covering the tour, this is where most fans misunderstand elite professionals. We assume they’ve seen and done everything. We assume that playing professional golf means you’ve experienced all golf offers. But that’s backwards. Professional golf is incredibly narrow. It’s a schedule, a grind, a destination-driven treadmill. Real golf—the kind McIlroy is chasing—requires freedom from that structure.
The Gaps Tell the Story
What fascinates me most about McIlroy’s bucket list is where the gaps appear. Chicago Golf Club, Pasatiempo in California, Waterville in Ireland—these aren’t obscure tracks. They’re significant American and Irish venues. Yet McIlroy’s professional commitments have left them untouched.
This reflects something I’ve noticed accelerating over the last five years: the professionalization of professional golf has paradoxically made it harder for players to *play golf*. The media obligations, the sponsor commitments, the conditioning regimens, the travel logistics—it all adds up. McIlroy is one of the most disciplined, committed players on tour, which actually works against him having the spontaneous, freewheeling golf adventures that would take him to a Fishers Island or a Chicago Golf Club.
“There are so many in the States that I haven’t,” McIlroy admitted.
The positive takeaway here is that McIlroy is self-aware enough to recognize what he’s missing. He’s not pretending to be a golf omniscient. And more importantly, he’s already planning to change that when his schedule allows. The Tara Iti adventure suggests he’s willing to carve out time for meaningful golf experiences.
Having covered 15 Masters and watched the tour evolve from a regional American circuit to a genuinely global enterprise, I think what we’re seeing with McIlroy’s bucket list is actually encouraging. It suggests that even at the highest levels of professional achievement, players still hunger for the pure golf experience. They’re not satisfied with tournament golf alone.
The game is healthier when that’s true. And maybe McIlroy’s admission that he hasn’t played Bandon—despite having access to virtually everything else—is a reminder for all of us that the best golf experiences aren’t always the most famous ones. Sometimes they’re the ones you have to choose to pursue.
Let’s hope when McIlroy’s schedule finally loosens up, he makes good on those promises. Courses like Bandon, Waterville, and Chicago Golf Club deserve to be experienced by players who genuinely want to be there—not because they have to be, but because they choose to be.
