Jack

Rory Mcilroy turned back to his driver Taylormade Qi10 on Sunday in Bay Hill.
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Rory Mcilroy passed into new forests Taylormade Qi35 In Bay Hill last week.
Then, on Sunday, he returned again.
After his first three rounds set The same Qi10 Driver and Fairway Wood Setup It is used for the past-plus year.
This was after Mcilroy sang his praise new forests qi35 Setting up at the beginning of the week, including a 3-tree that he said he held over 300 yards.
So what happened?
Mcilroy explained after his Sunday 72 left him in a tie for the 15th.
“Type of return to what I am pleased,” he said. “I tried new Woods for the first three days, I didn’t work as I wanted it. So, yes, I turned to my old things today. I directed the shocks won by both Pebble and Torrey, so it was a really good idea to change (laughter). And then, like yesterday, I lost my shocks from tee, which is the first time I did it in a long time. “
Mcilroy normally prevails in the strokes: the week of out-of-tee statistics inside and the week outside, but in Bay Hill, he was quite common (relatively spoken) through the first two rounds when he won 1.3 strokes. Mcilroy runs the tournament in statistics, on average a profit of almost the same number of shocks in a round as it reached the first two days in Bay Hill.
Then on Saturday, he actually lost Strokes (though only 0.032) from TeE for the first time since last year’s Championship FedEx St. Judea, when T68 finished and hit less than half of his roads for the week.
Mcilroy actually led him worse on Sunday, losing more than two tenths of a kick on Sunday when he hit only five straight roads, but it was clear that he had a level of comfort with his Qi10 driver that he was unable to repeat yet. He subsequently confirmed that he is likely to hold Qi10 in the bag through masters.
This whole episode tells us some things and one of them is not that there is any mistake with the new driver.
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First, the good ones are often motivated to change the means by which they earn their living. Notice how I said “motivated” and not “questioned” or even “encouraged”. Taylormade Tour representatives are never forcing Mcilroy to change the clubs. If Mcilroy did not think that he would see a benefit of performance from turning into something new, he would not even try it.
“There are the pros and cons of it, and it is a blessing and a curse at the same time that we have to go through these 12-month club cycles,” he said.
Mcilroy said he just did not give himself enough time to really comfortable with the new configuration, which brings us to our second point: competitive golf and all the other golf are two very different things.
Even for a professional golf player, hitting a home club or in the range does not even compare his games in the tour game, not to mention with a $ 20 million bag. Mcilroy knows how and anyone. Scottie Scheffler is passing the same For now.
Rory Mcilroy made some major changes of equipment. Here is the back story
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“I probably just didn’t give myself enough time,” Mcilroy said. “And it’s completely different, you know, it can look good on Trackman and it can look good at home at the Bear Club or Golf Course, but after going out here under these conditions, this is where it really shows yourself and was just not ready.”
So, for now, Mcilroy will continue with His Qi10 driver through at least masters. But with Player championship this weekGolf begins to be the so -called “Championship season”. In recent years, Mcilroy has played Valero Texas Open in front of masters, and is likely to play Heritage RBC shortly after him – and also potentially classic Zurich, where he and Shane Lowry are protective champions.
He will only have a week rest after New Orleans in front of Truist in Philadelphia and the Charlotte PGA championship in the post-back weeks.
So it’s safe to say if he wants to get a new driver in the game, he will have to enjoy it quickly as we hit the meat of the PGA Tour season.
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Jack
Golfit.com editor
Jack Harsh is the editor of associate equipment in Golf. A local Pennsylvania, Jack is a graduate of 2020 at Penn State University, earning degrees in transmitted journalism and political science. He was captain of his Golf High School team and recently returned to the program to serve as the main coach. Jack also * try * to remain competitive in local amateurs. Before joining Golf, Jack spent two years working at a Bend TV station, Oregon, mainly as a multimedia journalist/reporter, but also producing, anchoring and even presenting the weather. He can be reached in jack.hirsh@golf.com.