Rory McIlroy moves clear to strengthen grip on defence of Masters title

McIlroy’s Ryder Cup team-mates Tyrrell Hatton and Justin Rose are also in contention.
Rory McIlroy moves clear to strengthen grip on defence of Masters title

By Carl Markham, Press Association, Augusta

Rory McIlroy began to strengthen his grip on his defence of the Masters title after moving clear at the top of the second-round leaderboard at Augusta National.

Three successive birdies from the second had put him three clear on eight under but a poor chip at the fifth cost him a shot as he turned in 34.

The Northern Irishman produced the kind of flex associated with a career grand slam winner just as Ryder Cup team-mates Tyrrell Hatton and Justin Rose were closing out their rounds within a shot of the lead.

Tyrrell Hatton
Tyrrell Hatton carded a 66 (Gerald Herbert/AP(

Hatton’s 66 moved him to four under, while Rose – loser in the play-off last year – reached five under, which had been the score to match at the top, with a 69.

But McIlroy was in no mood for challengers and a wedge to six feet after finding a fairway bunker at the second started his run of birdies.

He chipped to three feet after driving close to the front of the 350-yard third and, having flirted with the greenside bunker at the next, he rolled in a 22-foot putt to get to eight under and celebrate with a fist pump.

But he was fractionally out with his approach to the fifth and a clumsy chip from the fringe rolled nine feet past for bogey.

Patrick Reed, champion in 2018, closed to within one after three birdies in his first 12 holes, with Rose a shot further back but safely in the clubhouse after four birdies in five holes from the seventh boosted a round that was going nowhere.

The 45-year-old would give a shot back after going long at the par-three 12th, but a birdie on the 15th righted that mistake.

Rose said this year’s near miss in a play-off against McIlroy had not had a bearing on his current approach.

“Of course I want to win this tournament. I don’t really need to try any harder,” he said.

“I just think the experience in that is probably trying harder ain’t going to help me so that’s probably the dance I’m doing with myself. I know the intrinsic motivation is there.

“I felt like I got into a bit of cruise control today. I felt like I was cruising through the round and I was on the front foot for the last few hours of the round.

“If I was thinking anything, I was thinking birdie. That’s a nice mode to be in and that felt similar to Sunday last year (when) I felt like I needed to birdie every hole.”

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