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Robert MacIntyre Fires 6-Under to Back Up 8-Under Round | BMW r2 Post-Round Press Conference

Watch the full post round press conference interview with Robert Macintyre following their round at the PGA Tour 2025. In this exclusive golf interview, Robert Macintyre breaks down their performance, shares insights on their golf swing, course strategy, and mental game. Hear their thoughts on the front nine, back nine, birdies, bogeys, and key moments that shaped today’s scorecard.

Get behind-the-scenes access to PGA Tour player reactions, tournament highlights, and expert analysis direct from the player’s perspective. Whether you’re a golf fan, PGA Tour follower, or looking for pro golf tips, this is the place to catch all the latest from Robert Macintyre.

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📅 Tournament: BMW Championship
📍 Course: Caves Valley

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You had a discussion with one of the officials there just worried potentially if the ball had moved as you were approaching. Yeah, it moved. My partner was down behind the ball um about half an inch um 3/4 of an inch behind the ball. Ball moved. Um but that’s the way that I’ve had a couple this week that my ball plugged on I think it was five the T-shot and the par three plugged and the ball wouldn’t sit in it spot. Um so I had to find a spot. Look the greens are running at about 13 in the stimp on the flat. So the minute you get on a slope, they’re running about 16 17. So they’re quick and the ball will not set on certain slopes. And when when you mark it and you replace it exactly where you you’re meant to, sometimes it’s not in the exact spot that it’s it’s laid in and then it just won’t sit. And yeah, we had a few. I mean, Hideki had one today as well and when he was chipping and yeah, it’s closely moaned stuff. Do you like putting on quick grains? A little different than what you face back home. Yeah, it’s good. You just got to be in the right side of the holes. Um, everyone will say it. If you’re the wrong side of the holes, it’s going to be carnage out here. And I feel like this week I’ve I’ve really done a good job of getting it underneath the hole to be able to be aggressive with an uphill putt. Um the hardest parts are the are the ones probably 5 6 7 8 ft down the hill where you’re just breathing on it, touching it to get it going and then yeah, you just stand there and watch it bob and weave away down this hill and praying that it’s going in. But yeah, I don’t mind quick greens. Do you remember ever having this big of a lead tournament? Not as a professional. Um I don’t think but I’ve had it before as an amateur. Um, so yeah, again it’s it’s only 36 holes gone. There’s a long way to go and I’m comfortable with who I am. I’m comfortable with the team around me and I’m comfortable on this golf course. Just go and play golf. You think you would have said the same, I don’t know, a year and a half ago or two years. Do you feel like that comfort has really come on recently? Yeah, I just I believe I’m I’m able to compete at this level. Um, I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t believe that. And I’ve had so many experiences in my life that have helped me to get here from whether it’s normal life back home in fighting for fighting as an amateur. Um, different sports back home and then like experiences as a rider cup, winning Scotland, Canada. I’ve experienced the majority of it and then this year at the US Open I felt things that I never thought I would ever feel and um yeah I’m I’m ready for the weekend. Are you more comfortable being here in the US? Yeah, I don’t spend I mean I don’t spend my off weeks anymore over here um as much. Last year I try we tried to live here but I travel back and forward now. Um, and yeah, I love home. Um, it’s no secret and it’s probably not going to change, but everything that’s that means anything to me is is in Scotland, so why why be anywhere else? You and Hideki both shot 64. When you’re playing partners playing well like that, are you able to feed off that at all? Yeah, you are. Um, and it’s good when you’re kind of good shot, good shot back and forward. Um, but it’s always good when you’re playing partners playing well and you can you’re not seeing wild shots, you’re seeing good shots if he’s going before you, he’s hitting hitting the fairway, uh, hitting the greens. So, you you get to see good shots and makes it far easier when you’re trying to execute something yourself and um, yeah, when you see something happening good before you, well, it it frees you up a little bit. Um, give us a sense of what the next couple hours on going into tonight kind of look like for you as you prepare to kind of finish strong this weekend. Yeah, I mean, I don’t even know the time. Um, probably get a coffee before 4:00 and then get dinner, chill out, sit, watch the golf, speak to my family and friends back home and drink a couple of Coca-Cas and go to bed. question, Bob, about about golf and shenty. You use the word fight. I’ve heard you use that word a lot over the last three or four years. What does it mean to you? Because we’re talking about fight and shenty when it can be when it can be physical and fighting golf when it when it can’t be. So, what is your definition of of of being a good fighter when you’re playing a very uh calm sport? Not mentally calm, but you know. Yeah, I’m not very calm on the golf course. Um but look, yeah, Shint is a physical contact sport where the fight is not so much physical fight as in but it’s it’s like don’t win half-hearted. Don’t go 50/50 in a tackle. That’s when you get injured. Go 100% into a tackle and hopefully you win the tackle and then if not you get back up and you go again. And golf’s exact. That’s the way I treat it. Like yesterday I had a bad t-shot in 12 into the water when it’s a tough test. I find it easier when you know people are making bogeies. But I was in make the just get there, make the drop, think about what you’re doing. And it just it’s more of a switch on for me. It’s more like in golf it’s more focusing more. Um and just do not give up no matter what. Do not give up. And there’s times when it’s not going well and you want to throw in the towel, but I mean it’s not what I do. And I just for me it’s just try your hardest until it’s done and someone tells you to stop. And along those lines, there was a time probably a couple years ago where you kind of notoriously were a bit of a slow starter and then and then and then got it going. Did you ever um concentrate or contemplate more going at the get-go? Yeah, there’s a couple of things that I’ve I’ve changed. Um I this event last year I was injured. Um I injured myself I think before the second round. Um and we noticed statistically that I was slower in the mornings. like I my scoring average was wasn’t as good in the morning as it was in the afternoon. So, we worked we looked at that. We we checked out why that was. We’ve not scientifically found out the answer. We’ve we’ve kind of worked it out between my team and I um from bands to heart rate monitors to everything. And I’m warming up now before my rounds, stretching, doing some stuff in the gym before I play now. so that when I get out there, I’m ready to go. And to be honest, um I got told by a very successful Scottish athlete that sleep is the most important thing that he learned in his career. And um it’s something that I really prioritize before before a day is my sleep. Would we know who this Scottish athlete is? Probably the greatest or one of the greatest sportsman, Andy Murray. Okay. Um, when I played the pro with him, it was one of the things I asked him and he really said the biggest thing that he learned was for recovery was he sleep. So, let’s get the head done. I thought he was British only when he loses. Correct. We’re Scottish just now. Bob, thank you. Thank you.

28 Comments

  1. Bob is a totally grounded typical Scot. He’ll not be wooed by fame into thinking he’s something he’s not. He’s passionate and honest and will do his best and his best is truly exceptional. He also has a wicked sense of humour. Don’t be fooled by the dour demeanour, he’s a hoot if you listen carefully.

  2. The only advice Andy Murray is able to give is how to whine about how unfair the universe is to him. As he counts his hundreds of millions, it’s tough to attract fans. Murray is essentially feminized by having been raised with only female influence. Murray’s documentary is an embarrassment to the heroic ideal in Scotland. McIntyre needs to channel Sean Connery not embrace Murray’s victim mentality.

  3. Coffee in the afternoon plus a couple cans of coke in the evening. I'm not sure that's going to help with the sleep performance !! 🙂

  4. Proud Scotsman watching this lad-great role model for a lot of young Scottish lads too! Good luck for the weekend son and defo got the minerals to win a major 100%

  5. Rob is definitely able to compete at this level. One of the most completely grounded and gritty players in the world at this moment. He will go from strength to strength.

  6. Go on Bob 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿! His honest and humble approach to interviews is commendable, he’s truly a top guy, we’re rooting for you big man!

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  8. Everything that means anything to me is in Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🤍💙🤍💙🤍…. These words moved me .

  9. Bob MacIntyre is the finest ambassador for golf and ranks among the best in the game in stature and admiration alongside Seve Ballesteros, Gary Player, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer. Humble but proud, candid but honest. A man's man. I'm wishing that he wins his fiest Major soon.

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