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McIlroy opens the door at the Barclays

Van Pelt walks through it for a Day 1 lead in New Jersey
Rory McIlroy, the British Open and PGA champion, went 13 holes before he made his first birdie and finished with a 74. That ended a streak of 14 consecutive rounds under par, and it was his highest score in the opening round since a 74 in the Irish Open in June.

PARAMUS, N.J. – Rory McIlroy took a week to celebrate his blockbuster summer and paid for it in The Barclays with his worst start in two months.

He could afford a day off.

That wasn’t the case for players such as Paul Casey and Bo Van Pelt, and they picked a good time to produce good scores.

With no guarantee of playing beyond this week, Van Pelt opened with three consecutive birdies Thursday and chipped in for eagle late in his round for a 6-under 65 that gave him a one-shot lead in the opener of the FedExCup playoffs.

Van Pelt is No. 104 in the FedExCup. Only the top 100 advance to the next tournament.

Casey is No. 118 with a lot on his mind – specifically the birth of his first child in two weeks – and played bogey-free at Ridgewood to join seven other players at 66. That group included Brendon Todd, who is trying to get Ryder Cup captain Tom Watson’s attention as a possible wild-card pick; and Hunter Mahan, who at No. 62 is in danger of missing the Tour Championship for the first time since the FedExCup began in 2007.

Ridgewood featured some of the deepest rough of the year, though the greens were soft enough to allow for birdies if players could keep it in the fairway. The average score was 70.8, with 44 rounds in the 60s.

McIlroy was not among them.

The British Open and PGA champion went 13 holes before he made his first birdie and finished with a 74. That ended a streak of 14 consecutive rounds under par, and it was his highest score in the opening round since a 74 in the Irish Open in June.

“Fatigue isn’t playing a part,” he said. “It’s I think just not putting the time in that I probably should have over the past week. And I think I allowed myself that and deserved that. But this is the consequence of it, and I need to work hard this afternoon and go out (Friday) and shoot a good number.”

McIlroy established himself anew as golf’s No. 1 player with a wire-to-wire win at the British Open, a come-from-behind win at a World Golf Championship and a late charge at Valhalla to win the PGA Championship and become the third-youngest player with four majors.

“I wanted to enjoy it for a week,” he said.

Van Pelt doesn’t have that luxury. He started his year missing seven cuts in nine tournaments before it slowly started to come around over the last month. He felt he was heading in the right direction and received more confirmation Thursday. Van Pelt didn’t make a bogey, and finished strong with a 10-foot birdie putt on the 16th and the eagle on the par-5 17th hole that put him in the lead.

“As poorly as I played at the start of the year, I’m just kind of glad to be here,” Van Pelt said. “Things have been trending in a lot better direction. So I felt fortunate to be here with the position I was in three months ago. I just felt like if I kept doing what I was doing, hopefully I would at least get to next week and then kind of cross that bridge when I got there.”

Jim Furyk, Charles Howell III, Brendon de Jonge, Ben Martin and Cameron Tringale also were in the group one shot behind.

Casey hasn’t had a top 10 on the PGA Tour all season and didn’t make it into the playoffs with much room to spare. He’s not sure how long he’ll be around, although a solid start was sure to help.

“I think (Thursday) was probably a product of really not having really any expectations and just going out there and smashing it around and having fun,” Casey said.

McIlroy had his fun last week, and he was headed to the range after his opening round to get his game back. He took an early double bogey by barely getting out of a bunker and chipping 15 feet by the hole on No. 12, and then going long into a bunker for a bogey on the par-5 13th.

“It’s not a bad thing,” he said. “A score like this would be tougher to take if I had not just come off the weeks that I had. But at the same time, I want to play well, and I want to give myself chances to win tournaments.”

Mahan is the only player to compete in every playoff event since the FedExCup began. He is assured of two tournaments, though he needs a good week somewhere to keep alive his hopes of reaching Atlanta for the Tour Championship. The top 70 will advance to the third week, and the top 30 will get to East Lake for the finale. Plus, he hopes to audition for one of the captain’s picks for the Ryder Cup.

“It will be a bonus to make it to Atlanta, and it will be a bonus right now to make the Ryder Cup team,” Mahan said. “So I have nothing to be nervous about or get out there and doubt myself. I have to trust myself, because everything I’m doing is good, and everything else will kind of take care of itself.”



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