Golf icon shares his thoughts on DeChambeau vs McIlroy

Lee Trevino has offered high praise for Bryson Dechambeau and also believes that Rory McIlroy has nothing to be ashamed of after falling short in their US Open showdown.

Trevino appeared on the ‘A New Breed of Golf’ radio show on Sirius XM and discussed the dramatic finish to the Major.

He feels that the high drama at the end really made the US Open memorable.

"You got to hand it to Bryson," he said on the show. "I mean, Bryson finished. I mean, that wedge shot — listen to me, I tell people that the hardest golf shot — there's two of the hardest shots in golf: one is the next shot after a shank. That's a hard shot. Once you shank one, then you got to go hit it again. That's a very difficult shot.

"But the other one is when you got to hit a bunker shot in the 50-yard area, you know what I'm talking about? Because you got to get some of that ball. You can't throw that sand that far. You got to get some ball out there. You got to play the ball back, you got to hit down on it, there's a lot of things you got to do. And for that guy to hit it 4 feet …"

Trevino feels that McIlroy shouldn’t beat himself up over the finish.

"That's OK. That's OK," Trevino said. "You finished second. What the hell? You could've finished third or fourth or fifth, you know? Be proud of what you did.

"He played extremely well.

"The putt that Rory had was the hardest putt in the world," Trevino said on the show. "People don't understand that. People saw him miss that four-foot putt really poorly on 18, but you have to understand — that thing was slick, and it broke right. And the problem with that putt is you can't hit it hard enough to hold the line. Because if you hit it hard enough to hold the line and miss it, in other words, it's going to go eight feet by. It's a very difficult putt that he had.

"Yeah, it's unfortunate. Unfortunate."

McIlroy says that he has taken the lessons from the loss at Pinehurst.

"I think the way I've described Pinehurst on Sunday was like it was a great day until it wasn't," he began. "I did things on that Sunday that I haven't been able to do in the last couple years. Took control of the golf tournament. Holed putts when I needed to. Well, mostly when I needed to. Made birdies. You know, really got myself in there. And then, look, obviously unfortunate to miss those last two putts, or the putt on 16 and obviously the putt on 18.

"Yeah, it was a tough day. It was a tough few days after that, obviously. But I think as you get further away from it happening, you start to see the positives and you start to see all the good things that you did throughout the week.

"Yeah, there's learnings in there, too, right. I can vividly remember starting to feel a little uncomfortable waiting for my second putt on 16, and you know, the putt on the last, it was a really tricky putt. And I was very aware of where Bryson was off the tee. I knew I had to hit it really soft. If the one back didn't matter, I would have hit it firmer.

"But because I was sort of in two minds, I didn't know whether Bryson was going to make a par or not, it was one of those ones where I had to make sure that if the putt didn't go in, that it wasn't going 10 feet by, which it very easily could have.

"Thinking back, yeah, maybe I was a little too aware of where Bryson was and what he was doing, but it was the nature of the golf course and how the golf course flowed. After the 14th tee, you're sort of looking at 13 green, and then I had to wait on my tee shot on 15 before he hit, or you know, to let him hit his second shot into 14. Just the way the course flowed, it just made me very aware of what he was doing at the same time. So it sort of got me out of my own little world a little bit.

"But no, I mean, when I look back on that day, just like I look back on some of my toughest moments in my career, I'll learn a lot from it and I'll hopefully put that to good use. It's something that's been a bit of a theme throughout my career. I've been able to take those tough moments and turn them into great things not very long after that."

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