World No 2 makes 11th attempt at career grand slam but others in his way include Ludvig Åberg and Shane Lowry
The hardest walk at Augusta National is the one to the 1st tee. A venue and tournament that takes itself so seriously applies a heavy weight of expectation to competitors. This is totally phoney in a way, ridiculous in fact, but the Masters “thing” exists. Nobody feels that burden more acutely than Rory McIlroy, who on Thursday afternoon will begin his 11th attempt to march into the pantheon of golfing greats. Psychology matters in McIlroy’s quest to complete a career grand slam, not technical ability. It is the inches between McIlroy’s ears that are far more significant than 7,500 yards of picture-perfect golf course. Augusta’s great paradox is that beauty and splendour play such menacing tricks on the mind.
The theory of now or never in relation to McIlroy and the Masters is a prevalent one. He landed in Georgia with two wins in the calendar year, in itself a first. The 35-year-old won at Pebble Beach and Sawgrass while playing considerably short of his best, proof not only of his outrageous talent level but maturity. In a non-tribal environment, the foot traffic following McIlroy’s every move over Tuesday and Wednesday this week has been quite the sight.