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Rory McIlroy overcomes frustration to settle into US Open leading pack after first round

Rory McIlroy teeing off at US Open

Rory McIlroy admits he is 'pinching himself;' after realising he is among the US Open leaders.

Rory McIlroy made a fine start to his US Open bid at Brookline, although you may not have realised it judging by his reactions at times.

The four-time major-winner carded a three-under-par 67 to put himself among the early leaders in a round round was underpinned by frustration.

At one point the Northern Irishman slammed a club into a bunker and he threw another on the fairway on the 18th.

However, his 67 was enough to put him alongside Callum Tarren, Sweden's David Lingmerth and American Joel Dahmen in joint-second, one stoke behind behind Canadian Adam Hewdin.
"You're going to encounter things at a US Open that you just don't really encounter any other week," McIlroy said.
"It's hard not to get frustrated because I'm walking up there going like, just come back into the bunker. The thickest rough on the course is around the edges of the bunkers.
"So I was sort of cursing the USGA whenever I was going up to the ball, but it's one of those things. It happens here, it doesn't really happen anywhere else. You just have to accept it.
"I gave the sand a couple of whacks because I'd already messed it up, so it wasn't like it was much more work for Harry (Diamond, his caddie), and then I just reset and played a decent bunker shot, and then it was really nice to hole that (par) putt."
Having saved par at the fifth, McIlroy birdied the seventh and eighth to take the outright lead, only to drop his only shot of the day on the ninth after missing the green with his approach.
That prompted the club throw and McIlroy added: "The margins are just so fine in this tournament, and I think you can sort of see that out there with some of the reactions.
"Once I played our front nine in two under, the goal was to try to play this round without a bogey. I did that for 17 holes, which was great, and then I was sort of in two minds about what shot to hit on the second shot on nine and missed the green where you just can't miss it.
"I didn't do that all day. If I missed it, I missed it in the right spot, played for the fat part of the greens, and that's why I was frustrated, because you miss it left, it's a pretty simple up and down. You make par, you move on.
"But it's fine. It's something to learn from. (I'm) sitting here talking about the bad stuff when 17 of the holes were really good. I'm happy with the start."
Tarren, who is ranked 445th in the world, carded an eagle, three birdies and two bogeys in his 67, the 31-year-old from Darlington admitting his presence at the top of the leaderboard had come as a shock.
"I'm kind of pinching myself because I didn't realise my name was on the top of the leaderboard until I holed that final putt," Tarren said. "Just excited with my start, and let's see what the next few days hold."
Rahm birdied the last to complete an eventful 69 which included two young spectators running off with his ball on the 18th and a number of uncharacteristically bad approach shots.
"There was about five iron shots that I skanked completely," Rahm said. "I'm not too worried.
"I think a lot of it was a bit of indecision and doubt in my mind because we weren't exactly sure where the wind was coming from and not committing 100 per cent of the time to the shot."
Among the later starters, England's Matt Fitzpatrick chipped in for a brilliant birdie on the 12th to reach three under par, a shot off the lead now held by Canada's Adam Hadwin, who had seven holes to play.

READ MORE: Jon Rahm laughs off stolen ball incident as he makes solid start to US Open title defence

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