Even though he was unable to end strongly, McIlroy has taken great satisfaction from his overall display.

“Anything under or around even par is a good score,” stated McIlroy who won his solitary US Open title in 2011.

“It was a day to keep yourself in the tournament and not shoot yourself out of it, which is exactly what I did eight years ago here,” added the 37-year-old who opened with an 80 in 2018 as he went on to miss the halfway cut.

McIlroy’s playing partners Ludvig Aberg and Tommy Fleetwood also enjoyed solid starts.

Swede Aberg also shot a 69 while England’s Fleetwood knocked in birdies on the fifth and sixth holes – his 14th and 15th – as he posted a level-par 70.

World number one Scottie Scheffler found greens and birdies hard to come by as his bid to become the seventh player in history to complete the career Grand Slam got under way.

Only Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy are in that unique set of winning all four of the men’s majors.

And on this evidence, the American, who has topped the rankings for the previous 161 weeks will need to improve on a scrambling two-over 72 which featured four birdies, four bogeys and a double-bogey.

Twice in three holes he cut a bemused figure as his iron shot found the green only for it to spin away from the hole and cost him chances of making a birdie.

Shinnecock serves up tough start

Scheffler was far from the only one to endure moments of incredulity.

His playing partner JJ Spaun hit his ball on to the par-three seventh green but by the time the defending champion reached the putting surface a gust of wind had sent it tumbling backwards into a bunker and into a scramble to save his par.

The notoriously tricky par-three 11th hole did for Keegan Bradley’s ball in a similar way and while it did not cost him a shot, it underlined why 2010 winner Graeme McDowell had described Shinnecock Hills as “a torture chamber” in the build-up to his first major appearance in eight years after coming through qualifying,

McDowell birdied the 10th and 11th to surge to the top of the leaderboard but his card was eventually littered with bogeys and he eventually signed for a six-over 76.

American Keith Mitchell looked set to be another falling foul of the unforgiving terrain when he reached the turn in 41.

However, the 34-year-old became the first player in the tournament’s history to hit 40 or worse on one nine and break 30 on the other nine in the same round – his second-half 29 seeing him sign for a level-par 70.

Meanwhile, Australian Adam Scott became only the second man to play in 100 consecutive majors – joining the legendary Jack Nicklaus, who played in 146 on the trot. The 2013 Masters champion opened with a 73.

That was the same score as two-time US Open champion Brooks Koepka, who won the last time Shinnecock Hills held this championship.

They were a shot better off than England’s Tyrrell Hatton, while Spaun failed to make a single birdie as he posted a seven-over 77.

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