FLOURTOWN, Pennsylvania. — With all due respect to the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, the PGA Tour’s lone team event, the Truist Championship was Rory McIlroy’s first real test of golf since winning the Masters.
The five-time major winner tied for seventh at 10 under par at the Philadelphia Cricket Club, six shots off Sepp Straka’s winning score.
McIlroy said entering the week that he was “excited to get back to being a golfer” and figure out where his game is at entering the second major of the year, the PGA Championship. Consider that task complete.
“I think I’m in a good place,” the Northern Irishman said Sunday (Monday in Manila). “I didn’t feel like I played all that well this week, I still finished seventh. Even my—what I feel is my bad golf, I’m still there or thereabouts.
“A couple little improvements and little tweaks, especially going to a place I love like Quail Hollow, and I feel like I’m in a really good spot.”
McIlroy shot in red figures all week, capped by Sunday’s 2-under 68 with 16 pars and two birdies. He did not make a bogey or worse over his final 28 holes of the tournament, but thought he missed several chances to climb the leaderboard.
“Overall I felt like I got a little better as the week went on, played good,” McIlroy said. “As you said, bogey-free. I wish I’d made a few more birdies. I’ve got a better gauge of where my game is standing here right now than I did at the start of the week. It was a good week for that.
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“I wish I had gotten myself into contention a little bit more, but it was a good week, especially looking ahead to next week.”
McIlroy birdied the first hole but had to scramble for pars the rest of the front nine, mainly due to wayward drives. He hit only five fairways in regulation out of 14, following a surprising 3-for-14 performance on Saturday (Sunday in Manila).
McIlroy theorized that wide-open fairways at the club’s Wissahickon Course may have actually thrown him off.