‘I’m not perfect’: Analyst opens up after roasted Rory McIlroy read
Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy hits his par putt on his 72nd hole at the U.S. Open.
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Smylie Kaufman says you can aim left-center.
But now there are some catches.
“You just got to hammer it,” he said.
“And it needs to hit the back of the hole, go up and then go down.”
Yes, Kaufman’s good. Smylie is smiling a couple weeks after the U.S. Open’s final round, where Rory McIlroy’s putt for par on Pinehurst’s 18th green was 3 feet, 9 inches away and above the hole — and Kaufman, an NBC on-course analyst, gave his audience the following read:
“Not outside the hole. It’s a left-center putt, but you can make it if you start it right in the middle, too.”
Only McIlroy aimed well left of left-center — and missed to the right. He bogeyed, and he finished a stroke behind winner Bryson DeChambeau.
And Kaufman heard it from folks. Even Jon Rahm had thoughts. The 2021 U.S. champ had withdrawn from this year’s tournament earlier in the week and watched from home. Mostly, he said, his viewing is done without sound.
But there was some volume on McIlroy’s putt.
“I thought from the times I had it on and I could hear, I thought [the broadcast] was OK,” Rahm said a few days later. “One of the things that absolutely burned me, and I think it was Smylie who said it, he severely underplayed how difficult Rory’s putt on 18 was. When he said it’s a left-center putt, if you hit that putt left-center and miss the hole, you’re off the green because of how much slope there is. You could see Rory aiming at least a cup left from three feet. They severely underplayed how difficult that putt was. Severely.
“I think that can happen a few times where unless you’ve been there on the golf course and you’re playing it or you’ve played it, it’s hard to truly explain how difficult the golf course can be. A lot of times they only have those five seconds to say something quickly, so I also don’t blame them. But besides that, I thought it was good.”
So why did Kaufman say what he said?
Notably, Rahm gave a reason. Appearing on this week’s episode of GOLF’s Subpar podcast, Kaufman called it a learning experience. He said he wished he would’ve been more vague in his read.
But Subpar co-host Colt Knost, himself a CBS on-course analyst, said the looks are quick. Misreads can be made.
“If he would have made it,” Kaufman said on the podcast, “it wouldn’t have mattered. But since he missed and then it happened to break off the planet and he pushed it, it’s like, ahhhh, man, I wished I would have just said, ah, it depends on the speed, you know.”