Golf

Sport24.co.za | 'Motivated' McIlroy headlines loaded WGC field in Shanghai



Shanghai – World No 2 Rory McIlroy said his strongest season in years has
“motivated” him to recapture golf’s top ranking, as he leads a field
packed with Major winners into this week’s WGC-HSBC Champions in
Shanghai.

Asia’s biggest event tees off on Thursday without world No 1
Brooks Koepka, out with a knee strain, nor a rejuvenated Tiger Woods,
who electrified golf with a record-tying 82nd PGA Tour win in Japan on
Monday.

But an event dubbed “Asia’s Major” still features plenty of star
power including 15 past Major winners such as Justin Rose, Bubba Watson,
Sergio Garcia, Phil Mickelson, Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed, and Adam
Scott.

But few are playing as well as McIlroy, the 2019 FedEx Cup champion
and PGA Tour Player of the Year, who won the Tour Championship event in
August and tied for third behind Woods at the Zozo Championship in Japan
two days ago.

The 30-year-old Northern Irishman’s stellar season has propelled him
up the world golf rankings, and although a victory in Shanghai won’t
push him past the absent Koepka, McIlroy said he’s not finished.

“I want to get as many world ranking points as I possibly can and try
to close that gap on No 1,” he said at Sheshan International Golf
Club.

“So you know, pretty motivated coming into the week.” 

That motivation might have been
juiced by Koepka, who this month dismissed the notion of a burgeoning
rivalry by pointing out that McIlroy hadn’t won a Major in five years.

McIlroy, who last sat on golf’s pinnacle four years ago, subsequently
played down the comments, saying that Koepka had a point, and that the
two were “good friends”.

McIlroy burst into golf’s top ranks with four Majors before the age of 25, but a succession of younger stars eclipsed him.

“But if I play well the next few weeks, you know, I’ll have a great
platform going into next year. I’ve achieved most things that I’ve
wanted to this year,” he said in Shanghai.

“I’m happy with where everything is, and yeah, just want to finish
the year off strongly because I feel the year that I’ve had deserves a
finish like that.”

The $10.25 million Shanghai event, with a winner’s prize of $1.7
million, is the third and final leg of the PGA Tour’s Asian swing, after
the Zozo Championship and the CJ Cup in South Korea the week before.

In Japan, McIlroy led the field in par-five scoring, which should
serve him well on the lengthy Sheshan course, widely considered one of
the toughest on the Tour.

Also in the mix in are a slew of past HSBC winners including Xander
Schauffele, who beat current PGA Tour driving distance leader Tony Finau
in an exciting playoff duel last year.

Schauffele, however, arrived in Shanghai badly under the weather and expressed some doubts about much strength he would have.

Rose, Watson, Garcia, Francesco Molinari and Mickelson also have tasted success in Shanghai.

Another to watch is 2016 winner Hideki Matsuyama, whose mojo is
working after finishing second to Woods on home soil in Japan at the
weekend and third in Korea the week before.





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