The 11-year chase is finally complete − and it took a playoff. Rory McIlroy emerged victorious at Augusta National as the winner of the 89th Masters Tournament , capturing the one major that eluded him and putting himself in golf immortality. The 2025 winner of the green jacket was in a showdown with Justin Rose and only needed one playoff hole to win.
McIlroy finished with a 1-over 73 before it went to the playoff. With the win, the 35-year-old from Northern Ireland becomes the sixth Grand Slam champion in golf history, and the first since Tiger Woods capped off the achievement in 2000. One of the most recognizable names in golf, McIlroy burst onto the scene after becoming an accomplished amateur star and proved he could play with the best in the world when he turned pro at 18.
He won his first major at the 2011 U.S. Open, took the 2012 PGA Championship and had a stellar 2014 when he won the British Open and PGA Championship in less than a one-month span.
But as McIlroy became a household name, the Masters has always been a sore spot in his career. In 2011, he looked like he'd win it when he had a four-stroke lead heading into the final day. Instead, he had a disastrous last round and finished tied for 15th.
The following year, weekend struggles took him out of the race. McIlroy finished in the top 10 every year from 2014-2018, and in 2022, he finished in second, three strokes behind Scottie Scheffler. There was wonder if McIlroy would ever win at Augusta.
But something felt different about this year. McIlroy met with Jack Nicklaus , winner of six green jackets, about how to play the course, shot-by-shot. The legendary golfer told McIlroy he wouldn't change a thing about his approach.
“I think it’s about time that Rory won,” Nicklaus said. Maybe it was a good omen. After a rough end of the first round spoiled his Thursday and seemed like it would be another disappointing weekend, he recovered with a 6-under-par second round to catapult himself into third place.
On Saturday, he had another big day to get to 12-under-par, in first place by two strokes heading into the final day. It was his first 54-hole sole lead at a major since the 2014 PGA Championship. It was near the same scenario as the 2011 collapse.
The question on Sunday was would McIlroy finally exercise the demons ? Bryson DeChambeau made it interesting early when he briefly took the lead after the second hole, but there was nothing stopping McIlroy from ending the day on top, even when things started going wrong. He was dialed in off the start. After a poor tee shot on the par-4 seventh, McIlroy split the trees and the ball beautifully landed on the green eight feet from the cup.
He couldn't help but smile as he saved par on the hole, and it was just that kind of Sunday McIlroy dreamt of having. McIlroy was 4-under-par after the first 10 holes, and despite everything going right to start the day, there was still some intense drama to cap off the weekend. The winner's third shot on the par-5 13th hooked right and bounced into the water in a stunning turn of events.
He ended up with double bogey on the hole to drop to 11 under, and moments later Justin Rose birdied on 16th for a tie on top of the leaderboard. On the following hole, McIlroy had a rough tee shot and could only hope to save par. On the shot, the ball got as close to the cup as it could without going in, stunning everyone watching.
It resulted in a bogey and there was a three-way tie between McIlroy, Rose and Ludvig Aberg just before 6 p.m. ET.
When it looked like McIlroy might fade back into complete disaster, he had an unforgettable 15th. On the par-5, his second shot was a magnificent display. The ball landed on the green and rolled to just six feet away from the pin as the crowd erupted from the stellar performance.
He missed the shot for eagle, but got the birdie to re-take the lead with three holes to go. Still, more was needed. Rose hit an incredible birdie putt on the 18th to finish the day at 11-under-par and tie for first.
McIlroy did it again with a spectacular second shot on the 17th hole that set up him two feet away from the cup. He nailed the birdie shot and headed into the final hole with a one-shot lead, but couldn't save par and the Masters headed to a playoff between McIlroy and Rose. The two competitors replayed the 18th and started off with ideal tee shots.
On second shots, Rose nearly hit the hole and ended up 15 feet away, while McIlroy's ball had incredible backspin after hitting the green to end up four feet away. Rose couldn’t hit the putt for birdie and settled for par. All McIlroy needed was birdie to win, and he hit it.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rory McIlroy wins 2025 Masters in playoff, earns career Grand Slam.
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Rory glory: McIlroy wins 2025 Masters in playoff, completes Grand Slam
After a dramatic playoff against Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy won the major that eluded him for years with the green jacket at 89th Masters Tournament.