Rory McIlroy didn’t waste any time after his third round at the British Open on Saturday. Asked about Bryson DeChambeau’s two-shot penalty from the second round, McIlroy came out swinging, calling the ruling “obvious” and taking issue with the way the situation dragged on Friday night.
McIlroy said he was watching the action on TV when DeChambeau stepped into his shot on the par-4 5th hole, and the reaction in the players lounge was immediate.
“I was watching it live up in the players lounge with a few other players and as soon as he made the step into the ball we all sort of looked at each other and were like ‘that didn’t seem right,’” McIlroy said. “And then when I heard he was called in by the rules officials it was pretty obvious for why.”
From McIlroy’s view, the call wasn’t a close one.
“I think there’s no doubt that he improved the line of his backswing,” he said. “And again, whether it was careless or whether it was intentional I don’t think it matters. Hopefully it was careless, but I think the two-shot penalty was justified for sure.”
The delay that followed only added to McIlroy’s frustration. After the penalty was made official, DeChambeau considered withdrawing from the British Open, and his agent said a decision might not come until Saturday morning.
That pushed back the release of third-round tee times, leaving players waiting late into the night. DeChambeau later tweeted Friday night that he would continue in the tournament.
“Late night for everyone,” McIlory said of the delay caused by DeChambeau. “I won't pretend to be up here and defend Bryson.
I'm not particularly fond of him. I think a lot of it's performative.
I think a lot of it's for attention. To hold the tournament hostage like that, and to have all of us players, volunteers, everyone waiting on him to depart, I didn't feel like it was a great look."
McIlroy also addressed the idea that other players might make similar mistakes without getting caught because their shots aren’t shown as often.
“It’s hard, every shot [of DeChambeau’s] is on camera,” McIlory said. “There’s a lot of guys that play this week and their shots aren’t on camera.
You can say that’s unfair or whatever or it might happen more than it does but it’s obviously impossible to police everyone and that’s why, for the most part, it’s a self-policing game. But I think when there is obvious evidence like there was last night then obviously that’s a different story.”
McIlroy carded a one-under 69 on Saturday and sits in a tie for 30th place. DeChambeau is five-under and tied for eighth.
In Other News...
Bryson DeChambeau Hit With Stunning Open Penalty As Contention Turns Chaotic
Bryson DeChambeaus British Open week took a sharp turn when officials hit him with a two-shot penalty for improving his lie on the fifth hole, a ruling that came after he had already put together a strong second round. The penalty changed his score from a 66 to a 68 and knocked him down the leaderboard, turning what had looked like a contending position into a much messier afternoon.
The bigger question now is whether he keeps playing at all. DeChambeaus agent said he is weighing whether to tee it up in the next round, with a decision due before his scheduled start, leaving one of the tournaments biggest names in limbo as the Open heads into its next stage. [Read more 🡒]
British Open Fans Missed One Of Friday's Biggest Moments
Friday at Royal Birkdale had the kind of second-round chaos that can make a major feel like it is happening in layers. Lucas Herbert and Sam Burns both posted eight-under 62s to tie a major-championship record, while Bryson DeChambeau finally made the cut in a major this year and put himself one shot off the lead heading into the weekend. Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler stayed in the mix, and Tommy Fleetwood gave the home crowd something to cheer with a move up the board in his own backyard.
Even with all that going on, the day still had room for a few of the sports sharper edges. Wyndham Clarks strong finish was not enough to extend his week, and Rahm had to navigate a tense moment of his own before escaping a conduct penalty. For fans who only caught the broadcast in passing, the leaderboard may have looked busy enough on its own, but the real drama was in how many contenders kept forcing their way into the picture. [Read more 🡒]
