Bryson DeChambeau mentioned he hopes for tons extra final-round battles with Rory McIlroy and believes the Northern Irishman’s collapse over the ultimate few holes of their epic US Open battle will solely gas his quest for a fifth main title.
DeChambeau took a three-shot lead into the ultimate day at Pinehurst however discovered himself two behind earlier than birdieing the thirteenth. McIlroy then bogeyed three of his remaining 4 holes, lacking two putts from inside 4 toes over the closing stretch, handing the 30-year-old American his second US Open.
“Rory is one of the best to ever play,” DeChambeau mentioned. “With the ability to battle towards a fantastic like that’s fairly particular. I might like to have much more battles with him.
“I have nothing but respect for how he plays the game of golf… to be honest, when he was climbing up the leaderboard, I was like, ‘Uh-oh’, but luckily things went my way today.
“For him to overlook that putt [on the 18th], I might by no means want it on anyone.
“I’m sure it will fuel Rory’s fire even more. He’s a strong-minded individual. He’ll win multiple more major championships, there’s no doubt.”
DeChambeau: Bunker save at 18 the ‘shot of my life’
McIlroy second missed put from brief vary, this one from inside 4 toes at 18, gifted DeChambeau a one-stroke lead, just for him to drag his tee shot into the native space and miss the inexperienced along with his second.
What adopted, nevertheless was extraordinary, with DeChambeau’s chip out of the front-right bunker hailed by Dame Laura Davies on Sky Sports activities as “one of the all-time greats up-and-downs to win a major championship”.
“That bunker shot was the shot of my life,” DeChambeau mirrored.
“I knew where Rory was. After my tee shot, I was up there going, ‘Man, if he makes par, I don’t know how I’m going to beat him’. I just really didn’t know.
“Then I heard the moans. It was like a shot of adrenaline acquired in me. I mentioned, ‘Okay, you are able to do this’.
“I’m so happy I got that shot up-and-down.”
DeChambeau’s insistence on McIlroy’s potential to bounce again from this newest main near-miss is maybe primarily based on his win right here following swiftly off the again of a second-placed end to Xander Schauffele on the PGA Championship final month – albeit in not fairly such heart-breaking trend.
Reflecting on that disappointment, in addition to his eagerness to win at Pinehurst, DeChambeau paid tribute to his father, who died in 2022, and one among his {golfing} idols, the late Payne Stewart, who was victorious on the identical course on the 1999 US Open.
“Oh, man, I didn’t want to finish second again,” DeChambeau mentioned. “The PGA really stung. Xander played magnificent.
“I wished to get this one executed, particularly at such a particular place meaning a lot to me, SMU [Southern Methodist University where DeChambeau and Stewart both studied], my dad, what Payne meant to him, the one thousandth USGA championship. Stack them on prime.”
He added: “I do not know what to suppose. It totally hasn’t sunk in but. As a lot as it’s heart-breaking for some individuals, it was heartbreak for me on the PGA. I actually wished this one.
“I was a little lucky. Rory didn’t make a couple of putts that he could have coming in. I had an amazing up and down on the last.
“I do not know what else to say. It is a dream come true.”
What’s next?
McIlroy is due to be back in action at the Travelers Championship, the latest of the PGA Tour’s Signature Events, with early coverage live on Thursday from 12.30pm via the red button and 5pm on Sky Sports Golf.
The final men’s major of the year is The Open, taking place at Royal Troon from July 18-21, where DeChambeau will again be among the pre-tournament favourites. Stream the PGA Tour, majors and more with NOW.
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