McIlroy pushed to solid Open start by home support

Rory McIlroy "felt the support of an entire country" as he ground his way to an under-par start at the British Open on Thursday, battling errant driving during a marathon first round at Royal Portrush that lasted almost six hours.
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It was a massive improvement from the opening 79 that ruined his tournament six years ago, when the Open returned to Portrush after a 68-year absence.
"I felt like I dealt with it really well today," McIlroy added. "Certainly dealt with it better than I did six years ago. I was just happy to get off to a good start and get myself into the tournament."
The 36-year-old, who arrived earlier this week wearing his Masters green jacket, was undoubtedly the star attraction on a course where he fired a record-breaking 61 in 2005.
NERVY START
McIlroy found the left rough off the first tee, but avoided a repeat of his disaster on the same hole in 2019 when he went out of bounds en route to a quadruple-bogey.
A short missed par putt induced some groans from the thousands of fans around the green, but he quickly rebounded despite another wild tee shot with a birdie on the par-five second.
One house behind the fifth tee was adorned with a large "Go Rory" banner, while a group of children peered towards the fairway from a nearby road.
McIlroy gave them a birdie to cheer with an excellent curling putt.
The crowd liked that.
— The Open (@TheOpen) July 17, 2025
A birdie for Rory on 5. pic.twitter.com/IM6M1hV7N3
He stayed otherwise bogey-free on the front nine, despite not finding a fairway until the eighth hole, almost holing his third shot on the par-five seventh after yet another wayward drive to the left.
McIlroy, who Bryson DeChambeau complained did not speak to him during the Masters final round, appeared in relaxed mood, chatting to playing partners Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood during frequent hold-ups due to slow play up ahead.
He drained another putt to move to three-under after 10 holes, but could not recover after his latest drive into deep rough and gave the shot straight back.
McIlroy was in danger of throwing away his strong start when a tee shot into a bunker ultimately led to a bogey on the 12th, the easiest hole of the day, before another on 14.
Like McIlroy, the crowd started to run out of stamina as the clock passed 8pm local time, with the number of fans lining the course dwindling.
Those still braving the increasingly chilly conditions were given a brilliant recovery shot from wide left on the 17th to enjoy, setting up a crucial birdie.
Rory escapes trouble on 17. He takes a birdie heading onto 18. pic.twitter.com/QmplsgkTl3
— The Open (@TheOpen) July 17, 2025
Five hours and 50 minutes after launching his bid for a second Claret Jug, McIlroy was given another rousing reception after tapping in on the final green to complete a round which kept him in the title hunt.
"I'm surprised four-under is leading. I thought someone might have gone out there and shot six or seven today," he said.
"Only three back with 54 holes to go, I'm really happy with where I am."
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