Humble: Rory
McIlroy sent a text message to Tiger Woods on Tuesday, congratulating
him on winning at Bay Hill and taking over the No. 1 world ranking
again.
Woods responded by telling McIlroy to get
going — he put it a bit more crudely than that — and win this week’s
Houston Open. A victory would put McIlroy back at No. 1, a spot he held
for 32 weeks before Woods’ latest win.
For now, McIlroy is fine with Woods holding the world’s top ranking, especially with the Masters coming up in two weeks.
“I didn’t think I could go into the
Masters under the radar, Focus will be off me,” McIlroy said. “I can go
in a little bit underneath him. So, in a way, losing the world No. 1 is
not a bad thing. You can say I am happy.”
McIlroy skipped Bay Hill and says he had a “good week, a fun week” in Miami.
He watched girlfriend Caroline Wozniacki
play in the pro tennis event in Key Biscayne, Florida, then stopped by a
municipal course on Saturday night to hit range balls in relative
anonymity with Wozniacki and Novak Djokovic, currently the world’s No. 1
tennis player.
“People left me alone, it was fine,”
McIlroy said. “It’s nice to just go, not just go about my business and
no one cares, but you go about it and not be, I guess, the most talked
about person in golf. It’s a nice thing.”
McIlroy won four times in 2012, including
the PGA Championship that catapulted him to No. 1. He signed a Nike
contract in the offseason, but has gotten off to a rough start this
year, raising questions about his adjustment to his new equipment.
He missed the cut at Abu Dhabi, lost in
the first round of the Match Play Championship and then walked off the
course during the second round of the Honda Classic, citing frustration.
He finally saw signs of progress when he
shot a 65 in the final round at Doral and tied for eighth, and he’s
confident that he’s ready to contend at Redstone this week.
“We’re not machines, we’re humans,”
McIlroy said. “You’re going to have patches where you play great and
have patches where you struggle a little bit.
“I guess you’ve just got to take the rough
and the smooth and just try and treat those times, sort of play and be
patient and know that you’re working on the right things.”
Maybe McIlroy can learn from Woods as he
tries to dig out of his early-season slump. Woods has won three times in
five starts this year, looking as dominant as ever after going through
injuries, personal turmoil and a swing change.
“I’ve always said he’s been one of the greatest fighters on a golf course,” McIlroy said.
“If things aren’t going his way, he’ll dig
in and get whatever he can out of a round. He can repeat day-in,
day-out, that attitude and that single-mindedness or that drive or
motivation, I think that’s his most impressive aspect.”
McIlroy said he’s seeing more good shots since the last round at Doral, his lowest of the season.
“The weekend at Doral was great and the
way I’ve been hitting the ball recently,” he said. “I’ve just got to
keep working on it and keep working on it. I definitely feel like it’s
going in the right direction.”


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