sport

McIlroy shoots a 73 in Miami

World number one Rory McIlroy posted a first-round 73 in the £5.8million WGC-Cadillac Championship in Miami on Thursday.

McIlroy was three over par with three holes of the Blue Monster course at Doral to play, but birdied two of them to finish seven shots behind playing partner and clubhouse leader Tiger Woods.

He is now an approximate 18 over par for 98 completed holes in 2013, but it could have been worse but for a superb eagle at the par-five first hole, his 10th, with the swing problem he worked so hard at over the weekend clearly still an issue.

In contrast, Woods carded nine birdies in his 66 as the 65-strong field took advantage of calm conditions, with Ryder Cup team-mates Peter Hanson, Sergio Garcia and Graeme McDowell all five under approaching the end of their rounds and Ian Poulter carding a 68.

Former world number one Luke Donald, playing alongside McIlroy, returned a 70 despite two sixes on his card, while defending champion Justin Rose was three under with five to play.

McIlroy has dominated the golfing headlines this year, firstly for signing a multi-million pound deal with Nike and then missing the cut in his first event with his new equipment in Abu Dhabi.

He then lost to Shane Lowry in the first round of the WGC Accenture Match Play, before things went from bad to worse as he quit the defence of his Honda Classic title last week after completing just eight holes of his second round.

McIlroy issued a full apology for his withdrawal yesterday, admitting the pain from a wisdom tooth and being in a "bad place mentally" was no excuse for walking off the course after playing those eight holes in seven over par.

The 23-year-old spent all weekend working with coach Michael Bannon to iron out a flaw in his backswing, but admitted getting the club in the right position still felt "very alien" to him.

Starting on the back nine today, McIlroy twice found sand on the 551-yard par-five 10th, but saved par and repeated the trick on the 11th and 12th before a wayward tee-shot on the par-three 13th resulted in a bogey.

Another bogey followed on the 14th before a first birdie of the day from nine feet on the 15th, but another dropped shot on the 18th took the Northern Irishman to the turn in 38.

Having promised to "grind it out" better when the going gets tough, McIlroy looked to have got his reward when he responded to another missed fairway on the par-five first by hitting a superb iron shot through the trees to the back edge of the green and holing from 18ft for an eagle three.

However, that was instantly followed by a hat-trick of bogeys - two of them down to three-putting - and it took birdies on the seventh and eighth to rescue a respectable total.

McIlroy, whose 73 was matched by Lee Westwood and Ernie Els, told Sky Sports 3: "It was a bit of a struggle to be honest.

"I hit some good shots, I hit some not-so good shots. As I have been saying all week this is a work in progress, I am staying patient and I have another three rounds to work on it more and shoot a few good scores.

"I just had to play each hole as it came and shoot the best score possible. It was nice to sneak in a couple of birdies in the last three holes and make it look somewhat respectable, even though everyone seems to be going pretty low out there; it was a day where it was perfect scoring conditions.

"I wasn't putting as much pressure on myself and that's why I didn't get as frustrated. If I had played like that last week I would have been not so happy but I understand it's a work in progress and hopefully it will come together soon."

Woods, who revealed he had been working on his putting under the guidance of Ryder Cup team-mate Steve Stricker, added: "I don't think we're going to get all four days in this wind, it's gotta switch sometime and come from the east and if it does then the course plays more difficult. But today was as easy as it gets round this place."