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29th September 2021
09:09pm BST

Rory McIlroy has been battling with his game all year. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)[/caption]
He has changed caddie, changed his swing coach and tried everything under the sun to get back to his best. The Ryder Cup, he must have hoped, would have provided that spark again.
At Whistling Straits, though, it was grim. McIlroy was the weaker partner in his matches with Shane Lowry and Ian Poulter. None of the three matches he played, on Friday or Saturday, even reached the 16th tee.
Captain Padraig Harrington had dropped him from the Saturday morning foursomes and may have sensed McIlroy's confidence was shot. It is unclear who made the final call, but McIlroy was originally slated to go out 11th in the Sunday Singles. He had, one may recall, led the Team Europe singles vanguard in 2016 and 2018.
Jon Rahm may have been the European talisman, but it was still concerning to think the out of form McIlroy would be sent out to play with the competition already likely to be decided. Team USA were, after all, leading 11-5 on Saturday night.
It was in the team room of the European side, according to CBS reporter Kyle Porter, that several of McIlroy's teammates approached him and told him they wanted him to lead them out on Saturday. Having gone 0-3 in his three outings so far, this was a big show of faith, and friendship.
According to Porter, it was that moment, and the fact that he was able to justify it by defeating Olympic champion Xander Schauffele 4&3, that brought on those post-round tears and his emotional interviews with NBC and Sky Sports.
Shane Lowry provided further insight into the efforts to gee-up their leader at Whistling Straits.
"I said to Rory McIlroy before we went out this morning. ‘You’re Rory f***ing McIlroy. You’re already one of the best players of all time, and you’re 32. Go and show it today.’ And he did."McIlroy will know that he came back to form when it was pretty much too late. Only Rahm and Sergio Garcia exceeded expectations against a fiercely talented American side. You can see how invested so many are in McIlroy's journey. As both sides lined up to shake hands, on Sunday, Phil Mickelson shared these words with the Northern Irishman:
"I think the world of you, as you know."https://www.instagram.com/p/CUaoZhcKjce/ The beauty of The Ryder Cup is that it is not going anywhere. We will all be glued to it, in Rome, when it swings by again in the autumn of 2023. "The more and more I play in this event, I realise that it's the best event in golf, bar none," McIlroy declared, on Sunday.
"I love being a part of it. I can't wait to be a part of many more. It's the best. I don't think there's any greater privilege (than) to be a part of one of these teams, European or American. It's an absolute privilege. "I've gotten to do this six times. They have always been my greatest experiences of my career. I have never really cried or got emotional over what I've done as an individual. But this team and what it feels like to be a part of... I was emotional because it's a highly charged event and it sucks to lose, it really does."The Holywood native has been given a mighty jolt, and it will be interesting to see how he finishes out 2021. Does he show up at tournaments and keep tweaking, or does he head to Florida to spent time with his young family and do more surgery on his game before a 2022 return? As always, we will be watching closely.
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