There is a moment in every major championship where the tournament reveals itself. Where the course stops being a backdrop and starts being a character.
At Aronimink Golf Club on Thursday afternoon, that moment arrived in the space of four holes, and it arrived specifically for Rory McIlroy.
He was level par standing on the sixth tee. Not great, not a disaster. Manageable. Then he missed the fairway right on six. Missed it right on seven. Missed it right on nine.
Then missed it again on the last. Four consecutive bogeys to finish. A 74. The first time in 990 PGA Tour rounds, including every major he has ever played, that McIlroy has closed out a round that way.
When a reporter asked him how he would describe his opening round, McIlroy had one word for it.
“S***,” he said.
That is not the answer of a man in a good place mentally with his game. That is the answer of someone who knows exactly what is wrong and cannot figure out how to stop it.
“I just got on that bogey train at the end,” he said. “I’m just not driving the ball well enough. It’s been a problem all year for the most part. I miss it right, and then I want to try to correct it. And then I’ll overdo it, and I’ll miss it left.”
McIlroy is 37 years old. He completed the career Grand Slam at the 2025 Masters, the achievement that had defined the conversation around him for a decade.
He defended his Augusta title in April and walked into this week as world number two and one of the two or three most credible threats in the field.
Seven shots back after Round 1 and at genuine risk of missing the cut for the first time since 2016, the week is not going the way anyone imagined.
Meanwhile, in the afternoon wave at the same golf course, Scottie Scheffler was hitting 13 of 14 fairways and making birdie look routine.
What Scheffler Did on Thursday and Why It Means Something
Scheffler shot 67. Three under par. He is tied for the lead with six others, and the number matters less than what surrounded it.
In every major he has ever won, including last year’s PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, Scheffler has tended to start slowly and hunt the field down from behind. He has never held a share of the lead after the opening round of a major. Until Thursday.
He found fairways when the rest of the field was finding rough. He made his birdie on the par-five 16th to reclaim a share of the top spot late in the afternoon. He did not do anything flashy. He did not need to.
Aronimink was eating players alive all day. Only 31 players in the entire 156-man field broke par. The scoring average sat two shots over par through the afternoon.
On a golf course that was ripping up game plans and making the pre-tournament favourite look like he had never held a driver before, Scheffler was methodical and precise and almost boring about the whole thing.
Scheffler arrives at this tournament as the defending champion and as the player who sits one major away from completing his own career Grand Slam.
He needs the US Open at Shinnecock Hills in June, and if the way he played Thursday is any indication of where his game is right now, that conversation is going to get very serious very quickly.
The gap on the leaderboard between the two of them after Round 1 is seven shots. On a golf course where 67 led the field, that is a significant number. It is not insurmountable.
Rory McIlroy has made up larger deficits in major championships and everyone in professional golf knows it.
But the manner of it matters. Scheffler was controlled and accurate, the two things the course was demanding. McIlroy was fighting himself off the tee from the opening hole and never stopped.
What happened Thursday at Aronimink was not a fluke. McIlroy himself said his driving has been a problem all year.
Former Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley, watching for Sky Sports, was direct about what he saw. Almost every dropped shot McIlroy took, he said, could be traced back to the driver.
The approach play was not the issue. The putter was not the issue. The tee shot was the issue, and it was the issue on hole after hole after hole in the back nine stretch that finished his day.
Aronimink last hosted the PGA Championship in 1962, when Gary Player edged Bob Goalby by one shot. It is a course that asks questions off the tee before it asks anything else.
Thursday answered the question of which of the two favourites was ready for those questions and which one was not.
Round 2 begins today. McIlroy needs something in the low 60s just to make the cut feel comfortable. Scheffler needs to stay where he is and let the leaderboard come to him, which is something he has proven he knows how to do.
But Thursday at Aronimink already told you something true about where both of them are right now, and it was not a particularly complicated message to read.
