McIlroy, who began the final round at East Lake six shots back
of Scheffler, carded a four-under-par 66 to reach 21 under on
the week at the PGA Tour's season-ending event to capture his
third FedExCup title and an $18 million first-place prize.
After being presented with the trophy, McIlroy, who has become
one of the one of the most important voices for the PGA Tour
amid the threat from LIV Golf, spoke about his passion for the
U.S.-based circuit.
"I believe in the game of golf, I believe in this tour in
particular. I believe in the players on this tour," said world
number four McIlroy. "It's the greatest place in the world to
play golf, bar none. And I've played all over the world.
"This is an incredibly proud moment for me but it should also be
an incredibly proud moment for the PGA Tour. They have had some
hard times this year but we are getting through it.
"That was a spectacle out there today. Two of the best players
in world going head-to-head for the biggest prize on the PGA
Tour and I hope everyone at home enjoyed that."
The final round was a back-and-forth tussle between McIlroy and
world number one Scheffler (73), who were paired together, as
they traded places atop the leaderboard while South Korea's Im
Sung-jae (66) threatened but settled for a share of second.
McIlroy began the round with a bogey but responded with four
birdies over his next six holes and walked off the seventh green
level with a misfiring Scheffler, who made three early bogeys.
Scheffler moved back in front with a birdie at the eighth but
McIlroy re-joined him atop the leaderboard with a six-foot
birdie at the par-four 12th before falling a shot back after a
bogey at 14.
McIlroy again grabbed a share of the lead, this time at the
par-three 15th where his birdie putt from 31 feet rolled into
the heart of the cup, lighting up the crowd and setting the
stage for a tense finish.
At 16, McIlroy caught a lucky break as his fast-rolling chip was
headed for the other side of the green until it slammed into the
flagstick and settled eight feet from the hole from where he
saved par while Scheffler bogeyed to fall one back.
"I feel sort of bad that I pipped him to the post," said McIlroy,
who finished runner-up to Scheffler at the Masters and started
the Tour Championship six shots back of the world number one
given the event's staggered-strokes start.
"It was an honor and a privilege to battle with him today and I
am sure we'll have many more. I told him we're 'one all' in
Georgia this year. He got the Masters, I got this."
The previous largest final-round comeback at the Tour
Championship came in 2008 when Camilo Villegas trailed Sergio
Garcia by five shots but carded a 66 and went on to defeat the
Spaniard in a sudden-death playoff.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto)
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