Rory McIlroy needed a 15-foot birdie putt on his final hole at Quail Hollow on Thursday to avoid an unwanted piece of golfing trivia at the Truist Championship, salvaging a one-under-par 70 after 17 straight pars in his first competitive round since winning theMasters.

The Truist Championship marks McIlroy's return to action after his victory at Augusta National last month, a win that completedback-to-back Masterstitles and reignited questions about how far he can push his era-defining career. Quail Hollow in Charlotte, North Carolina, has long been a happy hunting ground for him, with four previous wins around the tree-lined layout. This time, though, the world No. 2 spent much of the opening round stuck in neutral, watching chance after chance slip by.

The number that defined McIlroy's day was not his 70, but the 17 consecutive pars that preceded his closing birdie on the par-four ninth, his final hole. For keen golf anoraks, that raised the prospect of what players and commentators have nicknamed a 'Faldo' — 18 straight pars in a single round.

The term is a nod to Sir Nick Faldo's famously controlled closing round at the 1987 Open Championship at Muirfield, where he won his first major with what looked on paper like a procession of routine pars. In the mythology of the game, it is a kind of anti-highlight reel, pure steadiness, no birdies, no bogeys, nothing to circle or square on the card.

McIlroy came closer than he probably ever expected to joining that club. Across his first 17 holes at the Truist Championship, he repeatedly gave himself chances only to watch the putts refuse to drop. According to analytics site Data Golf, he lost 0.7 strokes to the field on the greens alone, a small but telling measure of how often he was on the wrong side of the hole.

The tee-to-green work, by his own account, was not the issue. From 194 yards out on the ninth, McIlroy fired an iron to around 15 feet and, with one last roll of the ball, finally saw a putt disappear.

Walking off the course, McIlroy ran into fellow European Ryder Cup player Tommy Fleetwood, whose four-under-par 67 left him tied for eighth. The PGA Tour cameras captured their brief exchange, which quickly did the rounds on social media.

'I would have missed that putt on purpose,' Fleetwood joked, laughing about how close McIlroy had come to the full Faldo. 'You could have missed it on purpose.'

McIlroy, still fresh from the mild shock of finally seeing a putt drop, replied, 'Well, I was thinking, I can't remember my last time on tour that I had a round of golf that I didn't make a birdie in.' Later, speaking to reporters, he made clear he had no appetite for joining any Faldo-themed subculture.

When one journalist asked whether he had wanted to become part of the so‑called Faldo club, McIlroy was blunt, 'I didn't. Yeah, I was thinking more like I knew that I made so many pars, but I was thinking I can't remember the last time I played a round of golf and didn't have a birdie.'

Source: International Business Times UK