You know how commentators are inclined to interpret the effect of a player's breakthrough win. Yanno, to the effect that it will "Free them up" and open the floodgates? And do you further remember how dismissive I typically am of such prognostications? It never happens that way except, yanno, when it does...
Not that I would describe Rory as looking especially "freed up"...
Shall we begin with Geoff's Masters by the numbers? Again, mostly rhetorical:
- -11 (276): Winning score by Rory McIlroy (2025: 277)
- 364: Days since McIlroy won the Masters
- 6: Career majors for McIlroy (ties Trevino, Faldo, Mickelson)
- 4th: Back-to-back champion (Nicklaus, Woods, Faldo)
- 283-327-327-304-325-349-317-267-335-350-328-346-303-266: McIlroy’s non-par 3 drives in regulation
- 155-17-208-118-136-228-199-124-151-179: McIlroy’s par-4 approaches in the final round
- 6’7”: McIlroy’s tee shot distance to the 12th hole (birdie)
- 15th: Masters champion to birdie No. 12 in the final round
- 11,036: Masters shots hit at No. 12 since the last hole-in-one
- 27/56: Fairways hit by McIlroy (T52) (2025: 35/56)
- 48/72: Greens in regulation (66.7%, T21) (2025: 47/72)
- 17/25: Scrambling
- 1.54: Putts per hole (T3)
- 334.3: McIlroy’s driving distance average (2025: 329.3)
- 0: Eagles by McIlroy (2025: 3)
- 24: Birdies by McIlroy (2025: 18)
- 8: Bogeys (2025: 5)
- 2: Double Bogeys (2025:4)
- 0: Bogeys over the final 36-holes by Scottie Scheffler (65-68)
- 72.859: Sunday scoring average (2025: 72.05)
- 89: Degrees, Sunday’s high with some swirling breezes
Even a weather update, so quite comprehensive....
Now to the atmospherics:
Wire-to-wire. Back-to-back. Ho. Hum. Rory. McIlroy.Never dull. Sneakily complex. And a year later, winning with less than his best on the kind of crusty (adjacent) golf course that a frizzier, logoed-up younger self once loathed. The greying and wiser McIlroy took us on a different toboggan ride—Ben Crenshaw’s Champions Dinner description of last year’s heart attack-inducer—this time en route to taking the 2026 Masters.“This win is just -- I don’t want to say a stop on the journey, but yeah, it’s just a part of the journey,” McIlroy said. “I still have things I want to achieve, but I still want to enjoy it as well.“I’ve waited so long to win the Masters, and all of a sudden I win two in a row. So I still want to enjoy it. I’ve got a couple of weeks off before I go back to play competitive golf, but I don’t think I’ll go through that lull of motivation or the sort of things that I was feeling last year post-winning this tournament.”
I certainly hope he doesn't repeat last year's summer poutfest, when stiffing the media became his signature move.
More from Geoff:
With long weekend days to ponder life, watch Zootopia 2 with Poppy, and a deep golf mind capable of pondering possibilities as only intensely observational greats like McIlroy seem capable of, the third and fourth round execution was ragged at times. Those jet trips up here while, uh, rehabbing his back, also kept him clear of tournament golf. But the time away from the Tour and scrutiny of returning to Augusta quieted his mind and allowed McIlroy to drill down on the nuances that emerged at a faster, drier version of Augusta National. The crash course in local knowledge included a decision to keep score ala Jack Nicklaus. The added focus on scoring bolstered an already strong short game that ended up producing ingenious shots and enough distance from a strong cast of 2026 pursuers.“My scrambling and my short game and my putting, that's what won me the tournament this week.”As did his play at Amen Corner.McIlroy has an unusual relationship with the stretch of three holes that tend to play a massive role in determining who dons the Green Jacket.Saturday’s double bogey at the par-4 11th raised his career scoring average to 4.354 and a career +23 total. And while McIlroy has made just six career birdies at the par-3 12th entering Sunday’s final round, he’s also recorded only six bogeys and one double bogey on the disaster-laden par-3.And he’s feasted on the dogleg left 13th, where McIlroy was a career 29-under-par entering the final round. He’s made six career eagles there (and that disastrous double in 2025’s final round).
He's certainly correct about his short game, because he hit it all over the yard the whole week, though he did control things better yesterday. The drive at No. 13 was to me as important as any shot he hit all week.
My strongest memories of yesterday are how each and every player in the mix had that, "Hey, I can win the Masters" moment, here's his take on the kid from Sleepy Hollow:
Now, truth be told, Rory's tee shot on No. 12, was a significant miss that he got away with, no?
The walk up to the 12th tee featured the traditional standing ovation from the Masters patrons. McIlroy was more concerned with wind that (finally) surfaced to throw some Amen into a Masters played with three extremely benign days (by Augusta-in-the-21st-century standards.)With the wind coming in from the left, McIlroy seemed to hit quickly in a manner that might have hinted at panic.“This is going back to one of my first-ever practice rounds here,” McIlroy said. “I played a practice round with Tom Watson in 2009, and he said to me on the 12th tee he always waited until he felt where the wind should be and then just hit it. You know, just hit it as soon as you can.“That’s what I did on 12. It was all over the place. When I stood up on the tee, it felt like it was off the right, and I looked at the 11th flag, it was blowing right to left. But I was patient, and I waited to feel where the wind should have been coming from,and I knew it was just a perfect 3/4 9-iron.
Protracer (later Toptracer) technology, which draws a digital line following the golf ball's flight, first appeared on television broadcasts around 2006-2008
Then I asked it when it first made its way to ANGC:
The Masters officially implemented shot-tracer technology during its television broadcasts for the first time at the 2018 tournament.
Did you see those cute Masters-themed commercials that recreated Bubba's, Rory's and Jack's iconic moments? Just a reminder of that 2012 Bubba shot that Nantz and Sir Nick are not giving you a yardage nor are they able to tell you whether he had an opening. Why? Because as late as 2012 the Lords of Augusta still wouldn't allow CBS to have an on-course reporter.
My other though is that Geoff gave us the tracers for Rory on Nos. 12 and 13, but the one I really want is No. 18.... Yeah, just how I roll.
Let's see what the Tour Confidential gang made of it:
Rory McIlroy won the Masters to become just the fourth repeat winner in the tournament’s history. McIlroy closed with a 71 to finish 12 under and beat Scottie Scheffler by one. This all, mind you, after he was up by six after 36 holes but lost that all by Saturday night. How did this happen? What’s your takeaway from his win?Zephyr Melton: Man, that was gritty. Rory obviously didn’t have his best stuff over the weekend — and he said as much during his Butler Cabin interview — but he played just well enough over the weekend to nab another green jacket. There’s something extra impressive in watching someone win without their best stuff, and Rory did exactly that this weekend.Sean Zak: Excuse the modern parlance, but this Masters felt like a movie, with an opening act, a middle contextualization, some conflict and then a bit of late drama. Damn — it was wildly entertaining! But I think the McIlroy takeaway is that he is just such a different golfer than he used to be. He’s become the best player in the world on firm and fast conditions. He should have won the ‘22 Open at finicky St. Andrews. He wasn’t doing that early in his career, but late-career Rory is just different. More imaginative, less reliant upon conditions and draw-shots, etc. It’s impressive and makes you wonder mostly about his chances for Shinnecock.Jessica Marksbury: When the tournament was hanging in the balance on the back nine on Sunday, Rory hit some incredible shots at exactly the right time. I’m thinking of the birdies on 12 and 13 in particular, and the amazing putt from off the green that led to the par save on 16. But he was also the beneficiary of adversaries that didn’t push him much down the stretch. This could easily have been Justin Rose’s Masters, but he faded away on the back nine, as did Sam Burns and Cameron Young. Scottie Scheffler tried hard, but his late-momentum birdies on 15 and 16, and missed opportunity on 17, ended up being too little, too late.
We all watched so I think we all know how it happened....
What really struck me is how each of the guys had that "Hey, i can win this thing" moment in which they completely lost their minds and games. We'll have a Rose reference coming below, but the only exception was Scottie, who couldn't stop making pars when those weren't quite what he needed.
What was the pivotal moment on Sunday? And what did you learn from it?Melton: I think it came earlier than the viewers might’ve thought in the moment. After a silly double on No. 4 and another shaky bogey on 6, the tournament looked to be slipping from Rory’s grasp. But on No. 7, he calmly found the fairway, hit the proper shot right over the flagstick and then rolled in a birdie putt to stop the bleeding. From then on, he was nails. When you’re a gunslinger like Rory, sometimes all you need is to see one shot go through the hoop.Zak: I think it was Justin Rose backing off his shot in the middle of the 11th fairway. Rose was in the lead alone at 12 under. If he pars-in, he’s in a playoff. But Rosey backed off the shot and flared his eventual approach wide, leading to bogey. He mangled the 12th hole. He three putted for par on 13. If that goes differently, everything changes. The man who could have really put pressure on McIlroy faded, and the better golfer won.Marksbury: Totally agree with you, Sean. Justin Rose went from in command to lackluster over the course of three holes. The bogey-bogey-three-putt-par trifecta on 11, 12 and 13 sunk him. And, as the only player with life at that time in the tournament, his exit from contention changed everything.
I love Rose as much as anyone, a really solid citizen that we all would have loved to see get it done. But he's got a troubling history of, as the Guess Who would put it, coming Undun.
Don’t look now, but McIlroy suddenly has six major titles and two green jackets. Is the man to beat over the next decade at Augusta National Rory McIlroy, or is it fellow two-time Masters winner Scottie Scheffler? And who you got the rest of the year?Melton: I’m still on Team Scottie. He was the best golfer in the field over the weekend — by a wide margin — as he didn’t card a bogey in Rounds 3 or 4. And he did all of that seemingly without having his best stuff with the putter. Whatever “funk” Scottie was in early on in the season seems to be behind him, and he should be the favorite for years to come at Augusta National. That said, I won’t be surprised if Rory nabs another green jacket before he decides to hang it up. He seems to have cracked the code on how to win there.Zak: Yeah, I’m with Zephyr and on Team Scheffler. I’m waiting for him to get some real luck to go his way in the way McIlroy has at the last two Masters. That’s not taking anything away from McIlroy’s brilliance — he’s so deserving. But I just think Scheffler has brought his B-plus game to the last two Masters and is probably on the verge of another special summer.Marksbury: I dunno guys, I find Rory’s Augusta stats extremely compelling. Scottie has five straight top-10 finishes since 2022, including two wins. But Rory has nine top-10 finishes since 2014, including the last two wins. Recency bias points to Rory for me. But picking Rory apparently also means signing up for a roller-coaster ride that Scottie rarely puts you through.
Why would we rule out a modern Arnie-Jack arrangement?
To me, the bigger point is what it does for Rory's historical place in the game, as he starts to look like much less of an under-achiever. But am I the only one seeing a comparison with Phil? Their games have always shared connective tissue, but remember how Phil enhanced his career perspective with late wins at Muirfield and Kiawah? This feels much the same, admittedly without the steamer trunk of baggage that is Phil.
But can someone explain Rory's summer of 2025 hissy fit to me? because that would have been a really good time to start adding major wins, but he was for reasons unexplained angry at the world... Then again, that reminds of Phil as well.
McIlroy pulled away late, but a handful of capable chasers — Scheffler, Rose, Young, Burns, etc. — were still in it down the stretch. Which player is kicking themselves the most about what could have been?Melton: Gotta be Scottie. That Friday 74 was so un-Scottie-like, and it really put him in desperation mode heading into the weekend. If he scraps together even an even-par round, he’s the one putting on the green jacket this evening and not Rory.Zak: Disagree! I think it’s Rose. It has to be Rose. The man without the jacket. The man who was in the lead by himself! Scheffler never touched the lead all week. He also has another 20 Masters in his future. Rosey may not have more than a few.Marksbury: Rose for sure. He had it! It slipped away. Again! No doubt that stings.
Is this a gross or net competition?
In the gross flight, it's a three-way tie among Cam Young, Justin Rose and Scottie Scheffler.
In the net flight, alas, it's not even close, because Scottie already has two of them and Cam Young is, well, young. Rose in a rout, because his runway is getting very short.
The Masters’ popular Par-3 Contest received some criticism for what some thought was too much celebrity involvement and strayed too far from the Masters’ long-standing “traditionalist” values. What do you think? And how does the Masters evolve without straying too far from the things that make it unique?Melton: I could do without the cameo appearances from Kevin Hart and Jason Kelce, but I won’t clutch my pearls too much. The par-3 contest is supposed to be fun. So long as that silliness doesn’t spill over into the actual competition, I’m largely unbothered.Zak: My strongest par-3 take is … I wonder if players were a bit more surprised by the Thursday conditions of the big course because they’ve grown so comfortable writing off their Wednesdays to the par-3 course. There was such universal surprise at the course conditions that I don’t think we see at other majors with this Wednesday intermission. Anyway, I don’t totally hate the strategy by ANGC. It’s not for ME, but I’m as into golf as anyone in the world. There’s a natural pursuit of all governing bodies in all sports of, as the kids say, the casuals. I think they — or maybe more so ESPN — achieved some of that audience.Marksbury: The Masters is revered for its traditions and decorum for a reason. I think most people watch or attend the tournament eager for that experience. So while I don’t think it’s necessary for the tournament to evolve in any way, I can understand why there is a feeling that it’s important to try new things to reach new demographics. And hey, if those efforts create new golf fans, that’s a win for everyone.
Jess, if we need Jason Kelce to grow the game, we're in a world of hurt.
The event has been unwatchable for years for one understandable reason, now they've gone and added a second. No, you should get to bring your emotional support comedian to the Par-3. Just sayin'...
I said before the event that the gods of Augusta were punishing Bryson for his Par-67 comment. I think Friday's 18th hole meltdown was retribution for Kevin Hart. Well earned Bryson.
Who is leaving Augusta National most disappointed, and who won the week without actually winning the week?Melton: Justin Rose has to be the most disappointed. He’s been oh so close at Augusta National many times, and once again he couldn’t quite get it done. The clock on his career is ticking, and you only get so many cracks at the green jacket. When you head to the back nine with a lead, you’ve got to close the door. He may go down as his generation’s biggest “what-if” at the Masters.Zak: I would reckon Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau feel pretty disappointed. They were two of the most deserving favorites entering the week and were never once relevant. Frankly, they seem more confused than anything right now. Can’t be a great headspace!As for who won the week without winning the jacket, I think Collin Morikawa deserves some recognition. He grinded through a bad back all week, made seven birdies on Sunday and garnered a top 10 finish. That was wildly impressive. He said it’ll be one of his best tournaments forever.Marksbury: Most disappointed: Bryson and Jon are good picks, Z. Justin Rose also, for reasons discussed above. I will also add Cameron Young, as a leader who faded, and Haotong Li, who suffered a triple-quintuple to completely derail his tournament.Those who won the week: I’ll add anyone who got their hands on a gnome, and the players who finished T12 or better to guarantee themselves a spot in the Masters for next year.
A bad week for LIV in general. Hard to keep making the caser that their Tour keeps the guys sharp....
What shall we finish on today? You know your humble blogger, so I'm thinking you'll be ready for this, though I'll lede with this header:
That's about Haotong Li's ten, so hold my beer! I think Geoff is the man for this task:
Garcia Highlights New Conduct PolicySergio Garcia’s petulant start to Sunday’s final round revealed a new code of conduct policy that could lead to a penalty or disqualification.After teeing off at the second hole ahead of fellow competitor Jon Rahm, Garcia slammed his driver into the turf. He subsequently took a swing at a cooler off to the side of the tee and broke his driver.The entire debacle was caught on Featured Group coverage and to the credit of producers, there was no glossing over the shenanigans. The coverage even returned to show a marshal walking away with the broken driver shaft, an official cleaning up some of the mess left behind, and eventually a maintenance crew using a cup cutter to replace the maimed turfgrass.Two holes later, Rules and Competitions Committee Chairman Geoff Yang paid Garcia a visit. Yang was issuing a warning to Garcia under a new, unannounced policy that is separate from the Rules of Golf and expected to be implemented at the PGA Championship. The Associated Press’ Doug Ferguson reported that Garcia received a “code of conduct warning” that starts with a warning, invokes a two-stroke penalty for a second violation, and a third violation results in disqualification.
Gents, if this only deserves a warning, you might want to revisit that policy:
You're gonna let this guy play next year?
Gotta love Geoff providing this transcript:
Q. What did they tell you on the 4th hole?SERGIO GARCIA: I’m not going to tell you.Q. You talked coming into the week about how frustrating this year has been overall. Is that just a culmination of everything, too? What’s the plan to try to --SERGIO GARCIA: No, it’s not a combination of everything. It’s fine. It’s what it is. You’ve just got to deal with it.Q. How much more difficult does it make it strategy-wise with you not being able to use a driver?SERGIO GARCIA: It makes it very easy. I just have to hit 3-wood all the time. I didn’t have to choose another club.Q. Your record here since you won is surprising to a lot of us. Is there a theme there or one reason for it? How do you explain that?SERGIO GARCIA: Bad golf.Q. Is there something specific here that has happened --SERGIO GARCIA: Bad shots.Q. But you can do that anywhere, but you win here and we would think you know how to play this golf course, so there must be more to it.SERGIO GARCIA: Well, if you don’t hit good shots, you’re not going to score well here. It’s very simple.Q. You’ve just coincidentally hit bad shots here, a lot since you’ve won. Is it as simple as that?SERGIO GARCIA: Yeah, unfortunately a lot of bad shots.Q. Did they give you a warning or something on the 4th --SERGIO GARCIA: Next question, please.
Bad golf shots followed by disgraceful behavior.....
It's always time to remind folks of who Sergio is:
Although the "Nothing but net" defense is a classic of the genre.
Do they invite him back next year? This is why I've made my peace with LIV, they are welcome to give him a venue for such outbursts.
Have to wrap up now. Would you believe that Friday night my large living room OLED TV decided to go on the fritz? Perfect timing, eh? Anyway, my A/V guy is on the way, so I will try to circle back as the week progresses. Have a great week.

















