Rory McIlroy wins Masters playoff
to complete the career Grand Slam
[April 14, 2025]
By DOUG FERGUSON
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — The closer Rory McIlroy came to fulfilling his
lifetime dream — winning the Masters — the more it kept slipping
away. Sunday at Augusta National felt like his last 11 years in the
majors, blunders mixed in with sheer brilliance.
A two-shot lead gone in two holes. A four-shot lead gone in three
holes with a shocker of a mistake. A 5-foot putt on the final hole
to win narrowly missed.
And then McIlroy turned what could have been another major collapse
into his grandest moment of all when he hit wedge to 3 feet for
birdie in a sudden-death playoff against Justin Rose to become —
finally — a Masters champion and take his place in golf history as
the sixth player with the career Grand Slam.
“There were points in my career where I didn’t know if I would have
this nice garment over my shoulders,” McIlroy said, that Masters
green jacket looking like a perfect fit. "But I didn’t make it easy
today. I certainly didn’t make it easy. I was nervous.
“It was one of the toughest days I’ve ever had on the golf course.”
The reward was greater than he imagined, and it showed. He rapped in
that final putt, raised both arms in the air and let the putter fall
behind him. He covered his head, dropped to his knees, and before
long his forehead was on the green as his chest heaved with emotion.
That was 11 years of pent-up emotion from his last major, when he
began to carry the burden of getting the final leg of the Grand
Slam. It was 14 years of remembering the time he wasted a four-shot
lead with an 80 on the final day as a 21-year-old.
“I started to wonder if it would ever be my time,” he said.
The thought could have easily crossed his mind during the final
round.

What could have been a coronation for McIlroy along the back nine
turned into a heart-racing, lead-changing, jaw-dropping finish at
golf’s greatest theater that ended with McIlroy sobbing with joy and
disbelief.
It ended with more heartache for Rose, who lost to Sergio Garcia in
a playoff in 2017 and forced this one with a clutch 20-foot birdie
on the 18th hole for a 6-under 66. He wound up joining Ben Hogan as
the only players to lose twice in playoffs at Augusta National.
“It’s the kind of putt you dream about as a kid, and to have it and
hole it, it was a special feeling,” Rose said. “And unfortunately,
the playoff, they always end so quickly. If you’re not the guy to
hit the great shot or hole the great putt, it’s over. But not really
anything I could have done more today.”
The joy on McIlroy's face never left him from the time that putt
dropped — on the green, in Butler Cabin when defending champion
Scottie Scheffler first helped him into the green jacket, and during
the trophy presentation on the 18th green.
“My dreams have been made today,” McIlroy said.
Moments later, speaking to 4-year-old daughter Poppy, he told her:
“Never give up on your dreams. Never, ever give up on your dreams.”
This was shaping up as another horror show for McIlroy, who in 2011
lost a four-shot lead on the final day with a 43 on the back nine, a
highlight reel that now can start collecting dust.
“I didn't make it easy today,” McIlroy said.
Right when it looked as though he would throw away another major,
McIlroy delivered two majestic shots when nothing less would do, two
birdies that sent him to the 18th hole with a one-shot lead.
That still wasn't enough. He hit a wedge into the bunker and wound
up missing a 5-foot par putt for a 1-over 73 and the first Masters
playoff in eight years.
Faced with more failure, McIlroy responded with another booming
drive, and this wedge bounced onto the slope of the top shelf with
enough spin to trickle down toward the hole, closer and closer,
until it stopped 3 feet away.
And when Rose missed from 15 feet, McIlroy finally sealed it.
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Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, celebrates winning in a playoff
against Justin Rose, of England, after the final round the Masters
golf tournament, Sunday, April 13, 2025, in Augusta, Ga. (AP
Photo/Matt Slocum)

“I just think all week how I responded to setbacks,
that’s what I’ll take from this week,” McIlroy said, though he could
have been speaking for the last decade. “Couldn’t be more proud I
myself for that and being able to back bounce when I needed to.”
McIlroy went 11 long years without any major, knowing the Masters
green jacket was all that kept him from joining Tiger Woods, Jack
Nicklaus, Gary Player, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen as the only
winners of golf’s four professional majors.
Nicklaus and Player spoke on Thursday how they thought this was his
time. Woods was among those to congratulate McIlroy and welcome him
to the club.
So wild was this Sunday at Augusta National that McIlroy set a
Masters record as the first champion to make four double bogeys —
two in the first round that put him seven shots behind, two in the
final round that turned this into a thriller.
U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, who beat McIlroy at Pinehurst
No. 2 last June, had the lead after two holes when McIlroy opened
with a double bogey. DeChambeau crashed out with a pair of
three-putts and two shots into the water on the back nine, closing
with a 75.
Ludvig Aberg, a runner-up in his Masters debut a year ago, suddenly
had a share of the lead when McIlroy fell apart on the middle of the
back nine. He missed a birdie putt from the fringe to take the lead,
then finished bogey-triple bogey.
McIlroy and Rose finished at 11-under 277, two shots ahead of former
Masters champion Patrick Reed (69). Scheffler, trying to win the
Masters for the third time in four years, never got anything going
this week and still shot 69 to finish fourth.
Rose had every reason to believe he threw away his chances on
Saturday with a 75 that put him seven shots behind, and then two
bogeys on the front nine. Even as he steadied himself, he was four
shots back and running out of time.
He did his part in a 10-birdie round and that dynamic birdie putt to
cap it off.
McIlroy did his part, too.
Nothing was more shocking than the 13th. McIlroy played it safe,
leaving himself a big target from 82 yards away and a lob wedge. He
missed his mark by some 20 yards, the ball disappearing into the
tributary of Rae's Creek and leading to double bogey.
Rose was on the par-3 16th and hit his tee shot to 4 feet for
birdie, and suddenly they were tied. Then, McIlroy hit a weak drive
to the right and was blocked by pines. He didn't reach the green,
didn't make the par putt and no longer had the lead.

But he was resilient as ever — he's been like that his entire
career. Seemingly in trouble left of the 15th fairway, McIlroy hit
7-iron around the trees and onto the green to 6 feet.
He missed the eagle putt — the birdie still helped him regain a
share of the lead. Two holes later, facing a semi-blind shot, he
drilled 8-iron and chased after it, urging it to “Go! Go! Go! Go!”
And it did, barely clearing the bunker and rolling out to 2 feet for
birdie and a one-shot lead.
Turns out that wasn't enough, either. He was 5 feet away from
victory and badly missed the putt, leaving him more work to do —
another chance to fail.
Not this time. The 35-year-old from Northern Ireland never wavered
in what he came to Augusta National to do. He leaves with a green
jacket.
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