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Rory McIlroy Completes Career Grand Slam with Masters Victory

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The Athletic
AUGUSTA, Ga. — After more than a decade of heartbreak, near misses, and relentless pressure, Rory McIlroy finally captured the elusive green jacket to complete the career Grand Slam. In a heart-stopping finish at Augusta National, McIlroy emerged victorious over Justin Rose in a sudden-death playoff, etching his name alongside the legends of the sport.

The 35-year-old from Northern Ireland overcame a rollercoaster Sunday that saw him lose a four-shot lead, battle through double bogeys, and nearly let another Masters title slip through his fingers. But when the moment demanded greatness, McIlroy delivered. His decisive wedge on the playoff hole settled just three feet from the cup, setting up a birdie that secured the one title that had eluded him for so long.

This win places McIlroy in rare company. He now joins Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods as the only players in history to win all four of golf’s major championships. It was his fifth career major, but his first since 2014—eleven long years of waiting, doubting, and grinding.

“This is my 17th time here,” McIlroy said, tears still fresh on his face. “I started to wonder if it would ever be my time.”

The final round was anything but smooth. McIlroy opened with a double bogey and later dropped four shots over three holes on the back nine, including a disastrous wedge into Rae’s Creek on 13 that led to a double-bogey. His composure wavered, but it never broke. Two gutsy birdies on 15 and 17 revived his chances, the latter following a soaring 8-iron that landed two feet from the hole as he shouted, “Go! Go! Go!”

Still, it wasn’t over. A missed 5-foot par putt on the 72nd hole sent the Masters into its first playoff since 2017. Rose, who had clawed his way back with a sensational 66, nearly holed his approach on the playoff hole but missed his birdie attempt. That left the door open, and McIlroy, this time, did not miss.

As the putt dropped, McIlroy collapsed to his knees, overcome with emotion. The weight of the last fourteen years—the 2011 collapse, the countless close calls—came pouring out. He hugged his caddie, his family, and his coach, calling it “a rollercoaster” of a journey that made the victory that much sweeter.

Rose, now a two-time playoff runner-up at Augusta, was graceful in defeat. Bryson DeChambeau, who led early before falling apart on the back nine, and Patrick Reed, who finished third, also faded in the final stretch. But all eyes were on McIlroy, who had finally scaled the mountain that once seemed unclimbable.

In a tournament filled with drama, missteps, and magical moments, Rory McIlroy stood tallest in the end. For a golfer who has won everything but had been defined by the one that got away, Sunday was not just a win—it was redemption. And it was historic.

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