NewsRory McIlroy becomes first repeat Masters golf champion in 24 years

Rory McIlroy becomes first repeat Masters golf champion in 24 years

1 of 6 | Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland holds his trophy after winning the 2026 Masters Tournament on Sunday at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

April 12 (UPI) — Rory McIlroy watched his historic lead evaporate, but responded with the mettle of a champion to defend his Masters title Sunday in August, Ga.

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McIlroy, who needed 17 attempts to win his first Masters Tournament last spring, added a second green jacket to his closet less than a year later.

With Sunday’s victory, he became just the fourth player to win consecutive Masters crowns, joining Jack Nicklaus (1965-66), Nick Faldo (1989-90) and Tiger Woods (2001-02).

“I can’t believe I waited 17 years to get one green jacket and then I get two in a row,” McIlroy said on the CBS broadcast. “I think all of my perseverance at this golf tournament over the years has really started to pay off. It was a tough weekend. I did the bulk of my work on Thursday and Friday.

“I’m just so happy to hang in there and get the job done.”

McIlroy, who carded a 12-under for the tournament, took home $4.5 million for his win. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who finished second at 11-under, cashed in for $2.4 million. Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Henley, Justin Rose and Cameron Young tied for third, two strokes behind McIlroy.

“Some good play by me and I’m fortunate the guys didn’t really come at me this year, either,” McIlroy said.

McIlroy, the No. 2 player in the Official World Golf Ranking, held a six-stroke lead though the first two rounds of the tournament, the largest advantage through 36 holes in Masters history. He carded a 1-over-73 on Saturday and started Sunday in a tie with Cameron Young atop the leaderboard at 11-under.

He holed four birdies, three bogeys and a double bogey for a 1-under-71 over his final 18 holes, while fending off Scheffler and Young, among other elite foes.

Scheffler made four birdies for a 4-under-68 over his final 18 holes. He didn’t bogey once over the final two rounds.

“Overall, over the weekend, I put up a good fight,” Scheffler said. “I did a lot of good stuff in order to give myself a chance and just ultimately came a couple shots short.”

Sam Burns sank a birdie on hole No. 1 to jump into three way tie for the lead with Young and McIlroy at 11-under.

Young, who started the tournament 4-over through his first seven holes, was eight strokes back of the lead to start the third round. He took the solo lead away from McIlroy with a birdie on his second hole of the final round.

McIlroy struggled with his putter early, leading to respective disastrous scores of double bogey and bogey on Nos.

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