Rory McIlroy finally won the Masters. Now he’s chasing 3 more goals

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com
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Rory McIlroy talking to the press ahead of the Hero Dubai Desert Classic (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

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At least a few observers likened Rory McIlroy’s 17-year-long Masters title chase to the fictional Captain Ahob’s revenge-driven pursuit of a whale dubbed Moby Dick. Trouble with that analogy is Ahob’s hunt did not end well. In the climactic moments, the captain got tangled up in his own harpoon line, and the whale dragged him to his death.

McIlroy’s expedition, on the other hand, ended in much cheerier fashion, with Scottie Scheffler slipping the green jacket on to McIlroy’s shoulders.

Hurrah? Yes, of course! But there was also a downside to McIlroy’s long-awaited win: the sudden dearth of motivation he felt now that he had finally slayed his proverbial whale. McIlroy said he had spent years obsessing over winning the Masters and, with it, the career Grand Slam, yet little to no time considering his next steps if he actually closed the deal. Asked at the U.S Open in June about his five-year plan, McIlroy sounded like a job candidate caught flat-footed in an interview.

“I don’t have one,” he said. “I have no idea. I’m sort of just taking it tournament by tournament at this point. Yeah, I have no idea.”

McIlroy’s lack of direction and motivation paired with his underwhelming form — in his two previous starts before the U.S. Open, he’d missed the cut at the Canadian Open and finished T47 at the PGA Championship — caught the attention of the golf world, in particular McIlroy’s former Ryder Cup captain, Paul McGinley, who said on Golf Channel that week at Oakmont: “It was very worrying looking at [McIlroy’s] press conference. His eyes weren’t alive. The energy was not there. He didn’t have the pointy elbows. It looks like something has gone out of him since the Grand Slam, like the air has gone out of him, not just in how he’s played but in his press conferences. There will be a reset at some stage, but it doesn’t look like it’s coming this week. This is not normal Rory.”

McGinley’s analysis was shrewd, because a reset did come, in the form of six top-10s for McIlroy in the second half of the season, including a win at the Irish Open, and a 3.5-point haul at the Ryder Cup. There was something else, too: McIlroy began looking forward again. He had new goals, new fuel. He spoke of his PGA Tour and DP World Tour resumes “meaning a little less to me as time goes on,” and pouring himself into the majors and Ryder Cup. The legacy-building weeks.

On Wednesday, McIlroy got more specific still about his new carrots, identifying three more boxes he’d like to check before he hangs up his spikes.

“Olympic medal,” McIlroy said speaking from the Dubai Desert Classic. “Open at St Andrews. Maybe a U.S. Open at one of those like old, traditional golf courses whether it’s Shinnecock this year or Winged Foot or Pebble Beach, Merion.

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