After two relatively mild days — there was actually a sunshine sighting midafternoon Monday — the air cooled, the whitecaps reappeared in the English Channel and the flags stiffened, snapped and pointed toward the White Cliffs of Dover. If you didn't have a jacket, you had pneumonia.
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The British Open begins Thursday, and Rory McIlroy is here.
On the 19th of June, at age 22, he won the U.S. Open. Correction: He destroyed a field of the best golfers in the world in arguably the toughest tournament in the world.
That was just over three weeks ago.
That's old news, but a recap adds context to the new news of what he has become and what is expected of him at this British Open. A quick sample:
--His 72-hole total of 268 was best ever in a U.S. Open by four strokes.
--His 16-under-par finish broke the previous tournament record by four.
--He became the second-youngest to win the event since 1923, when some guy named Bobby Jones did it.
--He became only the fourth player in tournament history to shoot four rounds in the 60s, and became only the seventh start-to-finish winner.
--He hit 62 of the 72 greens in regulation, and nobody has done better than that since they started keeping that statistic.
--He was the first player in the tournament to get to 13 under par, then 14 under, 15 under, 16 under and 17 under.
However, all that disappears on the mega-star meter if the mega-star is a jerk or a felon or is dull. Or is uncomfortable in the limelight.
McIlroy is none of the above. Celebrity has overtaken him like a 10-foot wave at high tide and he has paddled right along, riding the crest with a smile.
Since he won, there has been a parade of media to the city of Holywood, Northern Ireland, population 12,000. His friends have been interviewed, so have baby sitters who changed his diaper. One writer joked in Tuesday's news conference that there was a story due on his hometown hairdresser.
In the three weeks since McIlroy walked down the 18th fairway of famed Congressional Country Club on that final Sunday in the U.S. Open, the media have responded to the public appetite.
We know now that McIlroy drives a Ferrari and bought a Mercedes for his father, but that he also seems to have the proper perspective about this sudden wealth and fame. When asked about now being able to afford travel in private jets, he told the London Mail, "It's incredible, ridiculous, really, isn't it?"
To pay for his golf lessons and eventual international travel as a rising junior player, his father often worked three shifts, including one as a bartender and another cleaning toilets. His mother pitched in by taking an extra night shift at a local factory.