RORY MCILORY insists he’s “earned the right to do whatever I want to do” after snubbing the press after his first two US Open Rounds.
The Masters champion declined to speak to the world’s media after his first two rounds at Oakmont in an apparent response to the coverage of his use of an illegal driver at last month’s PGA Championship.

Roy McIlory refused to speak to the media after his firs two rounds at the US Open

The Northern Irishman was seemingly frustrated at the media’s coverage of his use of an illegal driver at the PGA Championship

The 36-year-old vented his frustrations with the media after his third round on Saturday
The 36-year-old eventually spoke with the press after his four-over 74 round on Saturday and didn’t hold back in his first post-round interview since Augusta.
He said of his brief blackout: “It’s just frustration with you guys [some sections of the media].
“I have been totally available for the past number of years.
“That [driver issue] was a part of it, but at Augusta, I skipped you guys on Thursday.
“It’s not out of the ordinary as I’ve done it before, but I am doing it a little more often.
“I feel like I’ve earned the right to do whatever I want to do.”
McIlroy’s form has fallen off a cliff since sealing his career Grand Slam in April.
He looked certain to miss the cut — like defending champion Bryson DeChambeau and plenty of other big names — until he conjured two birdies in the last four holes of his second round.
And McIlory admitted his lack of motivation is so bad that he would not have worried if he had missed the cut.
He said: “I was thinking, ‘Do I really want two more days here?’ So it makes it easier to play better in that mindset.
“You don’t know how you’re going to react to something like my Masters win — something I’d dreamt about for a long time. And, yeah, I have felt a little flat on the golf course afterwards.
“I actually feel I’ve played OK this week. It’s a golf course where the tiniest mistakes get penalised.”
Given his mindset, it is no surprise McIlroy’s faint US Open hopes vanished with a whimper rather than a roar.
A four-over-par 74 kept the Northern Irishman among the back markers, and in this mood, he will do well to improve on his 47th-place finish at the USPGA a few weeks ago.
At times, it has looked as if McIlroy has been going through the motions since Augusta, especially when he finished 149th out of 153 finishers in the Canadian Open last week.
Sadly, Oakmont has proved another example of McIlroy playing without his usual drive and desire.
It was hard to avoid the suspicion that he set out yesterday knowing he was unlikely to make significant inroads on the nine-shot gap that separated him from 36-hole leader Sam Burns — especially on a front nine that has proved a minefield for the world No 2.
McIlroy played the opening stretch in NINE OVER PAR over the first two days, while shooting three under on the back nine. The front nine is the tougher half — but not that much harder.
Marc Leishman and Corey Conners, in the groups just behind McIlroy, underlined that fact by both playing the first nine holes in three under yesterday, although both found it much tougher after the turn.
McIlroy needed a fast start to round three to have any chance of a miracle fightback, but a bogey on the third meant he was quickly heading in the wrong direction.
Another shot went at the ninth and even though he finally made his first birdie at the tenth, he gave it straight back by finding a bunker on the 11th.
A rueful shrug of the shoulders was the only reaction when he missed a tiddler for par at the 14th.
And another shot went with a three-putt on the 16th.
The relatively easy 17th, where he demolished the tee marker 24 hours earlier, yielded a second birdie.
Almost inevitably, that shot was handed back at the last, dropping the five-time Major winner to ten over.
Asked what he was hoping for in his final round, McIlroy added: “Hopefully a round in under four and a half hours and get out of here.”

Rory McIlroy’s form has fallen off a cliff since he won the Masters