By: Josh Schrock April 13, 2025
Rory McIlroy’s Masters triumph earned him a heartfelt message from Tiger Woods.
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Rory McIlroy had been dreaming about what unfolded Sunday at the Masters for as long as he can remember.
Navigating a turbulent final round at Augusta National — which included two double bogeys — to beat Justin Rose on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff likely wasn’t what danced in McIlroy’s head from the age of 8 until Saturday night.
But the end result, a green jacket draped over his shoulders, is an image he has long pictured, ever since he watched his boyhood idol, Tiger Woods, capture his first Masters title in historic fashion.
“Look, it’s a dream come true,” McIlroy said Sunday after winning the 2025 Masters to complete the career Grand Slam. “I have dreamt about that moment for as long as I can remember. I mentioned it out in the prize ceremony, but watching Tiger here in 1997 do what he did, and then winning his first green jacket, I think that inspired so many of my generation to want to emulate what he did.
“You know, there were points in my career where I didn’t know if I would have this nice garment over my shoulders, 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.”
When McIlroy’s four-foot birdie putt dropped on the first playoff hole, he became just the sixth golfer in history to win the career Grand Slam. Only McIlroy and Woods have achieved the feat since Jack Nicklaus won the 1966 Open Championship.
Woods wasn’t at Augusta National this week as he continues to recover from surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles tendon, but he congratulated McIlroy for his momentous achievement on X.
Welcome to the club @McIlroyRory. Completing the grand slam at Augusta is something special. Your determination during this round, and this entire journey has shown through, and now you’re a part of history. Proud of you!
— Tiger Woods (@TigerWoods) April 14, 2025
On Tuesday, before the tournament started, McIlroy talked about being patient, resilient and willing to have his heart broken to achieve his dreams.
“I think it’s a self-preservation mechanism,” McIlroy said. “It’s just more of a thing where you’re trying to not put 100 percent of yourself out there because of that. It happens in all walks of life. At a certain point in someone’s life, someone doesn’t want to fall in love because they don’t want to get their heart broken. People, I think, instinctually as human beings, we hold back sometimes because of the fear of getting hurt, whether that’s a conscious decision or subconscious decision, and I think I was doing that on the golf course a little bit for a few years.
“But I think once you go through that, once you go through those heartbreaks, as I call them, or disappointments, you get to a place where you remember how it feels and you wake up the next day and you’re like, yeah, life goes on, it’s not as bad as I thought it was going to be. And I think it’s going through those times, especially in recent memory, where the last few years I’ve had chances to win some of the biggest golf tournaments in the world, and it hasn’t quite happened. But life moves on. You dust yourself off and you go again.”
McIlroy stumbled multiple times during the last four days but refused to crumple.
He made two double bogeys during Thursday’s fist round but responded with back-to-back 66s on Friday and Saturday to take a two-shot lead into Friday.
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He opened with a double bogey on the first Sunday and lost the lead to Bryson DeChambeau on the second hole. He regained the lead on the third and held it until he made another catastrophic double bogey at the par-5 13th. McIroy dusted himself off again and made birdies at 15 and 17 to retake the lead by one over Rose. He needed par at No. 18 to win in regulation, but he missed his par putt to the left and wound up facing Rose in a sudden-death playoff.
Any one of those moments could have broken McIlroy. They have in the past. But his determination, as Woods pointed out, kept him in the fight and ultimately delivered him a prize he had coveted for his entire life.
“Look, you have to be the eternal optimist in this game,” McIlroy said. “You know, I’ve been saying it until I’m blue in the face. I truly believe I’m a better player now than I was 10 years ago. It’s so hard to stay patient. It’s so hard to keep coming back every year and trying your best and not being able to get it done.
“There was points on the back nine today, I thought, you know, have I let this slip again? But you know, again, I responded with some clutch shots when I needed to, and really proud of myself for that. It’s been an emotionally draining week for a lot of reasons, a lot of just roller coaster rounds and late finishes. And so just, you know, absolutely thrilled to be sitting here at the end of the week as the last man standing.”
He was last man standing at Augusta National and now has a place in a pantheon of golfing greats that only includes six names: Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Ben Hogan, Gene Sarazen and Rory McIlroy.