TV analysts rip Rory McIlroy for decision. He made birdie anyway

It’s a simple strategy in better ball: One player gets a ball in play and then the second player, usually the more confident off the tee, bashes away.

Looking at the team of Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry at this week’s Zurich Classic, no offense to Lowry, but it’s pretty clear who should be the one bashing away.

As CBS analyst Trevor Immelman described it, McIlroy was “pulling driver, left, right and center all day long from every tee” Saturday. On the 15th hole, McIlroy left himself just a pitching wedge on the 497-yard par-4.

And the 16th hole at TPC Lousiana would probably be a perfect site for the strategy to be employed by McIlroy and Lowry.

During a segment explaining the risk-reward value of the 355-yard par-4, Immelman said PGA Tour simulations showed that players who hit a longer drive, over the bunker and to the right of the pond at the end of the fairway, making birdie 35 percent of the time. Meanwhile, just 14 percent of players who hit a shorter tee shot, short of the water, make birdie.

“I think because McIlroy drives it so well, they’ll identify him as the guy to go ahead and try and send it as far down as he can,” Immelman said. “And that will be the better decision.”

Except that wasn’t the decision McIlroy made. When the camera came back to the World No. 2 on the tee, he was taking practice swings with an iron.

“He didn’t hear one word you said, Trevor,” said on-course reporter Dottie Pepper.

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“Dottie, go and catch him before he hits this ball, please,” Immelman responded. “Now he’s laying back? I’m going to have to talk to him later.”

Of course, Pepper couldn’t stop McIlroy from sending the long iron into the middle of the fairway, 108 yards from the hole. It was a fine shot, but McIlroy and Lowry started the day in a tie for the lead, but were now four shots back with three holes to go in the third round. Immelman and Pepper figured why not be aggressive on the short hole?

Lowry seemed to be following the same thinking when he stepped on the tee with another iron next, but the analysts panned his ultimate decision even more.

After talking with his caddie, Darren Reynolds, Lowry went back to his bag and pulled a headcover off a club. Except it wasn’t the driver. It was a 3-wood.

“This baffles me,” said Pepper. “I think you gotta go one way or the other. This brings the skinniest part [of the fairway] in, I think.”

Lowry pulled the tee shot straight through the fairway and into the water.

“That is a really, really bad play right there,” Immelman said. “I mean if you’re going to lay up, layup.”

“That was a bad decision and a bad play,” Pepper continued.

After watching the ball splash in the drink, Lowry simply tossed his club aside and headed for the restroom next to the tee.

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“I actually think the better decision would have been for him to go to the restroom before he pulled that wrong club there,” Immelman joked.

Even after the pair started walking down the fairway, the 2008 Masters champ wondered allowed why Lowry didn’t play first, layup and then let McIlroy have a go at the green.

“Just surprising that— this best ball format, it’s about identifying each player’s weapon and then putting them in a spot to go ahead and use that,” he continued. “Everybody on the planet who has any clue about golf knows that Rory McIlroy is one of the best drivers of the ball. He should have been ripping driver there.”

With Lowry out of the hole, McIlroy could only place his wedge about 20 feet short and right of the pin. Not a great opportunity on a hole that was playing more than a third of a stroke under par.

But it was too early to count out McIlroy. He poured in the putt through the dead center of the cup.

“They did it the hard way,” Frank Nobilo said.

McIlroy and Lowry got one more birdie on the 18th to post a 64 and sit at 21 under, two back in a tie for fourth, heading into the final round Sunday.

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