Injured Rory McIlroy shoots 73
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. -- If he had it do over again, U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy would not have picked a fight with a tree root.
"It was a mistake in judgment," he said.
McIlroy walked away from the mishap with a strained tendon, but it wasn't enough to keep him from resuming the PGA Championship -- despite some soreness Friday morning in his right wrist. And even though he is eight shots off the lead at Atlanta Athletic Club, the 22-year-old from Northern Ireland has not ruled out winning.
McIlroy
"If I don't think I could contend, I probably wouldn't be playing," he said.
Told that he could do no further damage, McIlroy had his wrist heavily taped, had Titleist ship him a new 7-iron after his was broken in the battle with the root on the third hole Thursday and then went out and shot 3-over 73.
The problem was not so much the wrist as it was the par-3 17th.
McIlroy swirled in a 45-foot birdie putt on the previous hole to get to 1 under for the tournament, enough for fans to yell out his name as he headed the 207-yard par-3 over water. He had a 7-iron and then switched to a 6-iron and hit it a bit higher than he wanted.
He was shocked when it came down short of the green and looked over at caddie J.P. Fitzgerald and mouthed, "Wet?" Worse yet was a three-putt that followed when he did get to the green, giving him a triple bogey and killing his momentum.
"It was tough to come back from that," McIlroy said.
Still, the big part of his day was getting to the golf course. McIlroy had an MRI on his wrist Thursday night that showed not even a partial tear. The "Rory Watch" on the practice range began an hour before his 8:30 a.m. tee time, and just the kid showing up in a cart 30 minutes later caused a minor buzz. He hit balls for 15 minutes before heading toward the putting green.
"If it wasn't a major, I probably would have stopped yesterday," McIlroy said. "To be honest, looking at the scans, they said, 'Look, you can't do any more damage to it, it's up to yourself. If you want to play and you feel as though you can play OK and carry on, then do. And if not, then you shouldn't play.'
"I feel as if I can play, so the decision was purely up to me," he said.
It's always up to Rory, and he made that clear when someone questioned whether his caddie -- at the center of a Twitter debate two weeks ago involving a BBC commentator -- should have talked him out of hitting a ball that was up against a two-inch-wide root Thursday.
"He's my caddie, not my father," McIlroy said.
Chubby Chandler, his agent at International Sports Management, said McIlroy is his own man in many areas. It was McIlroy's decision two years ago to play the PGA Tour and his decision to rejoin for next year. The only debate about the debate "root shot" was the degree of difficulty.
"I didn't see it. I only saw the replay. But he told he it was this far away, and it was that far away," said Chandler, holding his hands about three feet apart and then narrowing them to within inches.
"There's not a chance J.P. will ever be able to influence anything he's doing," Chandler said. "And I can't, either."
McIlroy was bothered more by his putting than anything else after the second round. He missed birdie chances on three straight holes before converting the long one at the 16th. He three-putted a par-5 on the front nine. His other bogey came at the third, when he tried to blast a shot out of the soft sand and watched it roll back into the bunker.
McIlroy said the strength of his wrist is probably at 75 percent.
"I'm worried about it because I feel as if I can't play to the best of my abilities with it," he said. "But I'm not worried about it long term. It should take a few weeks just to heal."
In the meantime, he has two days to make up a big deficit.
Three other players couldn't overcome their ailments.
J.B. Holmes withdrew Friday because of an illness, and Rocco Mediate dropped out because of an unspecified injury.
Neither was expected to make the cut. Holmes was coming off an 80 on Thursday. Mediate opened with a 79.
Two-time U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen, who shot a first-round 5-over 75, withdrew, also with an unspecified injury.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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2011 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
From Johns Creek, Ga. to the shores of Cape Cod, Keegan Bradley's dramatic playoff win at the PGA Championship on Sunday rung true for a multitude of reasons. Gene Wojciechowski
Championship Central
2011 champion: Keegan Bradley
Course: Atlanta Athletic Club
Where: Johns Creek, Ga.
Yardage, par: 7,467 yards, par-70
Past PGA champions: Complete list
- Wojciechowski: Bradley's win family affair
- Harig: Dufner reflects after crushing loss
- Bradley rallies, wins PGA in playoff
- Bradley: 'It seems like a dream'

- Round 4 PGA leaderboard
- Digital Drive: Bradley's historic victory

- St. John's coach weighs in on Bradley's win
- McIlroy finishes up PGA after Sunday 74
- Schaap Talk: Tolerate Tiger's losing?

- Wojciechowski: Beware Sunday's carnage
- Harig: Unlikely Americans on top
- Steele, Dufner share 54-hole PGA lead
- Rinaldi: Steele, Bradley in new territory

- Major rookie Steele on his chances

- Digital Drive: American explosion

- Harig: Woods misses cut by 6 shots
- Harig: leaderboard littered with winners
- Bradley, Dufner lead at 93rd PGA
- Wojciechowski: Rory's fateful decision
- Rinaldi: Frustrated Tiger getting a break

- Wojciechowski: Tiger's sense of relief

- Digital Drive: Who'll make a run Sat.?
- North: Debating Tiger's, Rory's issues
- Injured McIlroy shoots 73
- Snedeker docked 2 shots for being late