PINEHURST, N.C. — Rory McIlroy put himself in position to end a decade-long drought in the majors, and answer a whole lot of questions about his ability to get it done, only to miss two short putts Sunday that left him peeling out of the parking lot in disappointment.
McIlroy signed for a 69 that left him 5 under for the championship, and had to watch on TV in the scoring room as Bryson DeChambeau finished behind him. The big-hitting DeChambeau did what McIlroy could not — got it done around the green — when he got up-and-down for par from 55 yards in a bunker short of the 18th green for a 71 and a one-shot victory.
''Rory is one of the best to ever play. Being able to fight against a great like that is pretty special,'' DeChambeau said. ''For him to miss that putt, I'd never wish it on anybody. It just happened to play out that way.''
McIlroy wasted no time making his escape. He climbed into an SUV in the players' parking lot, his clubs loaded in the back, and briefly spun the tires in the gravel as he left without taking any questions from the media.
His silence spoke volumes about how crushing this loss must have felt.
''At the end of the day we are all human,'' said Matthieu Pavon, who finished fifth. ''He is one of the best players in the world, a true champion. It shows you how tough it is. The more you want it, the tougher it gets, and the highest expectation you have for yourself, the tougher it gets, the more pressure you got into. Maybe this is a little bit of pressure that got him today for sure, but Rory is just a massive champion. I'm sure he will fight back and really soon.''
The first putt Sunday that McIlroy will rue until his next chance in a major — maybe the rest of his career, if he never wins that fifth one — came at the par-4 16th hole. He was clinging to a one-shot lead over DeChambeau, hit a towering iron to the middle of the green, then hit a nice lag putt to 30 inches — and missed, for his second consecutive bogey.
The second came about 30 minutes later, when McIlroy walked toward the 18th green tied for the lead. He had chopped to the front of the putting surface after getting a bad break off the tee, his ball hard up against some wire brush, and proceeded to hit a pitch up the slope toward the hole. But his par putt from 3 feet, 9 inches, slipped on by for one last bogey.