McIlroy's Masters cruise hits the skids at Amen Corner

McIlroy's Masters cruise hits the skids at Amen Corner
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Summary It took just 12 holes on Saturday for his six-shot cushion to evaporate, undone by a brutal trip through Amen Corner

AUGUSTA, Georgia (Reuters) – Rory McIlroy arrived at Augusta National on Saturday with one arm already slipped into the Green Jacket but the defending champion left the course with a fight on his ​hands.

The Northern Irishman had built the biggest 36-hole lead in Masters history and looked to ‌be barrelling toward a stress-free Sunday stroll around Augusta National.

But it took just 12 holes on Saturday for his six-shot cushion to evaporate, undone by a brutal trip through Amen Corner — the picturesque but treacherous three-hole stretch that often proves ​pivotal at the Masters.

"This golf course has a way of, you know, when you're not quite ​feeling it, you struggle," said McIlroy.

Standing in the 11th fairway with a three-shot lead, McIlroy's approach shot bounced off the front of the green and rolled into the water, leading to ​a double-bogey.

He then bogeyed the par-three 12th after sending his tee shot behind the green.

The five-times major champion, ​who had covered those same three holes in a combined three-under over the first two rounds, steadied the ship with birdies at 14 and 15 to regain the lead, but a poor tee shot at 17 led to another bogey, leaving ​him bent over in disbelief.

"I have to look at the positives even though there isn't that many ​to take today," said McIlroy. "But I did bounce back. I hit some good shots coming in."

He will need more of ‌those on Sunday as he looks to become just the fourth repeat Masters champion -- and first since Tiger Woods in 2001-2002 -- with Cameron Young, who started the day eight back, now level and breathing down his neck.

"There was a lot of guys that shot good scores," said McIlroy. "I'm still tied for the best score going ​into tomorrow, so I can't ​forget that, but I do know I'm going to have to be better if I want to have a chance to win."

McIlroy infamously collapsed from a four-shot lead heading into the ​final round of the 2011 Masters, a meltdown that led to years of ​questions about whether he'd ever win a Masters.

He finally answered the call last year by winning a sudden-death playoff to complete the career Grand Slam of golf's four majors and he expects that having that garment in his closet will help ​him in the final round.

"I'd like to think that I'll play ​a little bit freer and I'll play, you know, like I've already got a Green Jacket, which I do," said McIlroy. "Sometimes I ​may just have to remind myself of that."

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