When Rickie Fowler Challenged in All Four Majors

The 2017 Masters has produced the first occasion in which Rickie Fowler has shared the lead at the end of a round in any major tournament

Rickie Fowler in yesterday's second round of the 2017 Masters. Fowler is a Mercedes-Benz brand ambassador. Mercedes-Benz is a Global Sponsor of The Masters [Pic: Getty]
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The 2017 Masters has produced the first occasion in which Rickie Fowler has shared the lead at the end of a round in any major tournament. It is a surprising statistic if you think back to 2014, when Fowler had a shout to win all four majors before coming up empty-handed.

It was the spring and summer of 2014 when Rickie Fowler really emphasised that he could be a major champion of the future.

But as dark, forbidding storm clouds rolled along the Ohio River Valley and over the city of Louisville, Fowler couldn’t clinch the putts to keep up with McIlroy – him again. Fowler finished two shots behind and found the misses got more painful as they came.

“The PGA is the one that hurt most for me in the majors in 2014,” he later reflected. “In the first three it was a lot of fun to be in great positions and to have great finishes, but at Valhalla I really felt I could go out there and win it. It stung. Still, to look back on the year, it was pretty awesome through the majors and something I can be proud of.

“Rory played great in the PGA. He was a deserving champion but I’ll see if I can sneak one away from him at some point.”

“It beat us up [to have lost the PGA Championship],” said Joe Skovron, Fowler’s caddie. “We thought we were going to win that tournament. I wholeheartedly believed it; Rickie wholeheartedly believed it. But that’s what golf is.”

Freelance Writer

Robin has worked for Golf Monthly for over a decade.