Golf is hard, folks.
After an opening 69, Nelly Korda shoots a career-high 81 and is set to miss the cut at the KPMG Womenâs PGA Championship.

Following his loss, McIlroy launched a scathing attack on his fellow players and the tournament organizers, making threats that were deemed inappropriate and potentially harmful to the reputation of the sport.
Thereâs no way to get around it: Rory McIlroy blew an incredible chance at ending his decade-long major drought on Sunday at the 2024 U.S. Open. Two missed putts were the most glaring culprits, and NBC/Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee was quick to blame those failures in a sharp criticism shortly after the tournament ended.
With three bogeys over his final four holes, McIlroy handed Bryson DeChambeau a second U.S. Open title that should have been his. At holes 16 and 18, Rory missed putts from 2-feet, 6-inches, and just under four feet, to put a historically shocking end to a thrilling final round.
Rory mcilroy leaving the Pinehurst clubhouse after us open on sunday
Inside the tense moments after Rory McIlroyâs calamitous U.S. Open defeat
Chamblee joined Golf Channelâs âLive Fromâ booth not long after DeChambeauâs final putt dropped, and after giving Bryson his due, he turned to McIlroyâs collapse.
âWeâll be talking about the misses by Rory McIlroy at 16 and 18 forever,â Chamblee began calmly, âWe still talk about Hubert Green missing that putt at the Masters. We still talk about Scott Hoch missing that putt.â
But quickly Chamblee became animated when criticizing McIlroyâs putting âroutine,â one he argued ultimately led to McIlroyâs embarrassment on Pinehurst No.2âs greens Sunday evening.
âYou know Iâm a big fan of [sports psychologist] Bob Rotella⊠but I am not a big fan of routines. I donât understand it, I donât get it,â Chamblee said Sunday evening. âI feel like over the last 10 years Roryâs fallen in love with a routine. As if the routine in a putting stroke is more important than the stroke, more important to feel comfortable.â
He used 18-time major winner Jack Nicklaus as an example to counter what he sees as McIlroyâs philosophy around putting routines.
âJack Nicklaus didnât have a routine⊠Jack would always say, âI wait until I get the right picture in my mind.ââ, Chamblee continued, âThis is my problem with routine. These are not routine. That putt he had on 18 is not routine. Itâs down the hill, itâs breaking to the right. You wait until you get the right picture.â
Chamblee then went to the other golfer in the debate for Greatest of All Time, Tiger Woods, to prove his point even further.
Rory McIlroy suffered a heartbreaking loss at the U.S. Open on Sunday.
Rory McIlroy just lost the U.S. Open in heartbreaking, agonizing fashion
âGo back and watch Tiger Woodsâ better-than-most putt. Watch him stalk that putt for two minutes. Watch him get up over it and not take his normal routine. He made strokes with just one hand trying to get the feel for it. Never seen him do that before. Where did that come from? He made it.â
The way Chamblee sees it, McIlroyâs process on Sunday at Pinehurst stands in stark contrast to the example of Nicklaus and Woods.
âI have a problem with routines, and to me itâs like you think about the routine. Itâs more important that you make the putt and find the right picture. And I think thatâs part of the problem at 16 and 18 for Rory.â
It should be said that McIlroyâs putting routine did help him get into contention in the first place, look no further than the multiple lengthy putts Rory did drain on Sunday.
But McIlroy didnât meet with the media following the U.S. Open, so weâll have to wait to hear his side of the story. But we might not have to wait long. McIlroy is scheduled to play in this weekâs Travelers Championship, with a press conference tentatively planned for Wednesday.