Lyle admits he 'chucked it' as former champion pulls out after ten holes - Sport - Evening Standard
       

Lyle admits he 'chucked it' as former champion pulls out after ten holes

Sandy Lyle hits his approach shot on the first hole at Birkdale

Former Open champion Sandy Lyle admitted he "chucked it" after quitting the
137th edition of the tournament mid-round having gone into "meltdown".

The 50-year-old was 11 over par after 10 holes, closing the outward half with two double bogeys and a triple in his last three holes before the turn.

It was not the first time the Scot had walked off the Royal Birkdale links, having done so at the 1991 Open on the 18th hole of his second round having hit
his ball out of bounds.

'It is not very nice when you are only an hour and a half, two hours into the Open and you have basically chucked it,' he said.

'I don't make a habit of it. I did it back in 1991 when I didn't realise I was out of bounds until I got down there but I was way over the cut line and so I said I wasn't going back for the sake of finishing the hole.

'This is the only course I have walked off twice, which is not good.'

In wet and windy conditions scoring was high throughout the field and despite beginning with a bogey Lyle was just one over after three holes.

His troubles started at the fourth where he hit is tee shot 20 yards right of the fairway into an unplayable lie, took a penalty drop and made a good bogey five.

Three successive bogeys followed before the strokes started to mount up, including at the eighth where his third to the 457-yard par four bounced on top of playing partner Graeme Storm's ball and ricocheted 30 yards through the green.

'For the first few holes I wasn't too bad and then the rain came and got my timing and I got out of position and I couldn't make a golf swing,' said the 1988 Masters champion.

'It was very poor golf and if you don't get the ball in the right place a few times there are not many opportunities for birdies.

'I was all over the place. I lost momentum, I couldn't really hit the ball hardly at all and it was total meltdown to be honest.

'I did myself more harm than good staying out there so I had to get back in, it just wasn't worth continuing; it was cold, my hands were hurting a bit from a few real skanky shots.

'It is very disappointing but that's the way it is and I live to fight another day.'

Lyle, who is playing in his first Seniors Open at Troon next week, added: 'My main achievement here was to try and make the cut. My practice round yesterday was in the 76-77 range and that was on a reasonable day.

'I think I was a bit disheartened before I got out there as I didn't think I could survive.

'Normally I'm usually quite good at surviving in hard conditions but once you get beyond that point of being able to make 75 or 76 it was senseless to carry on.'


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