"He led, what, seven out of eight rounds in majors, which is pretty impressive? I didn't really know much about Rory at the time. I hadn't played with him.
"The first time I got a chance to really sit down and talk to him was this year at Abu Dhabi. That was fun, I think, for both of us."
Alas, the greenjackets decided not to pair Woods and McIlroy for the first two rounds of the 2012 Masters and the hope of the majority is these Titans of their generations will collide on Saturday or, whisper it, on Sunday. Woods will play with Spain's Miguel Angel Jimenez and young South Korean Bae Sang-moon. Yet it was the McIlroy draw which caused eyebrows to raise.
McIlroy returned to the Augusta National yesterday declaring he had already expunged the bad memories of that capitulation. But, as if to test his resolve, the officials then handed him a date with the player who he partnered during his Masters meltdown.
Angel Cabrera, the 2009 champion, had stood and looked on in discomfort - as did the whole of the watching world - as McIlroy blew a four-shot lead in a hail of pine needles. The Argentine consoled the then 21-year-old. "I told Rory that he's very young and he can win this tournament many times," said Cabrera. "That can happen to anyone. It was just tough."
Tough, indeed. Although McIlroy cut a confident pose in the media centre as he spoke of that slow torture. "It's something that I learned from and quickly forgot," said McIlroy, who won the US Open by eight strokes two months later. "I moved on and moved on pretty well."
McIlroy actually laughed when he first revisited the 10th hole during a practice round last week. The par four was the scene of his triple-bogey seven following a hook which finished between two previously uncharted cabins. "I can't believe how close those cabins are - they're only 50 yards from the tee," he said. "But, you know, it's great to be able to laugh about it now."
If McIlroy laughs, the whole of Georgia will laugh with him. Of course, the brunt of the attention is centred on him and Woods. But Luke Donald, the world No 1, and Lee Westwood, the No 3, were keen to point out the obvious fact that this major features other players. Indeed, Westwood looked and sounded completely bemused when informed that a headline in Sports Illustrated had labelled "the Tiger and Rory show" as "the only show in town".
"Rory has never won here and Tiger hasn't won here since 2005," said the Englishman, who finished runner-up here two years ago. "Someone would have to be very naive to think it was a two-horse race, wouldn't they?
"I think Phil [Mickelson, the three-times champion] could [do something] about that; Luke might; I might ... I hope they [Woods and McIlroy] get drawn together and we can just cruise around in our own little bubbles."
As it transpired, the Englishman was not granted his wish, but would have been pleased with receiving a low-key draw alongside Vijay Singh and Jim Furyk. The same applies to Donald, who is paired with Francesco Molinari and Nick Watney.
Donald recognises the over-simplistic perversity in the spotlight zeroing in on just two names. "In the last three or four years of majors, I don't think there's been multiple winners of the majors," he said.
In fact, that run stretches back 14 majors. Donald is plainly confident of making it 15. "What am I, 14-1, 16-1? "That could be a good price, yeah."
- Independent