2007–2009: Early years, first European Tour win McIlroy turned professional on 18 September 2007 and signed with
International Sports Management. He made his first professional start the following day at the
Quinn Direct British Masters, where he finished in a tie for 42nd place. In his next start, he finished third at the
Alfred Dunhill Links Championship. He secured his European Tour card for 2008 the following week by finishing in a tie for 4th place at the
Open de Madrid Valle Romano. Aged 18, he became the youngest affiliate member in the history of the European Tour to earn a tour card. On the 2007 European Tour season, he earned €277,255 and finished in 95th place on the Order of Merit list. McIlroy entered the top 200 of the
Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) for the first time on 27 January 2008. On 7 September 2008, McIlroy took a four-stroke lead into the final round of the
Omega European Masters in
Crans-sur-Sierre, Switzerland, but finished in a tie for first place with Frenchman
Jean-François Lucquin and lost in a play-off. McIlroy finished the
2008 European Tour season with six top-10 placements and ranked 79th in the OWGR. After finishing second in the
UBS Hong Kong Open in November 2008, McIlroy moved into the top 50 of the OWGR. He ended the calendar year at 39th; this earned him an invitation to the
2009 Masters Tournament. McIlroy's first professional win came at age 19 when he won the
Dubai Desert Classic on 1 February 2009, which took him to 16th in the OWGR. At the
2009 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in March, McIlroy reached the quarterfinals, where he lost to eventual champion
Geoff Ogilvy. In April, McIlroy made his Masters debut, which was his first major championship as a professional. He finished the tournament tied for 20th place. Of the players to make the cut, he ranked third in average driving distance, beaten only by
Dustin Johnson and
Andrés Romero. McIlroy then returned to Europe, finishing fifth at the
BMW PGA Championship and 12th at the
European Open in May. He played in his second major as a professional at the
2009 U.S. Open, where he shot a final-round 68 to finish in a tie for 10th. The following month, he tied for 3rd on debut at the
2009 PGA Championship. McIlroy subsequently announced that he would join the American-based
PGA Tour for the 2010 season. He ended 2009 by representing Ireland at the
2009 World Cup, alongside
Graeme McDowell. They opened with a 14-under 58 in the first-round
fourballs, and held a three-shot lead after the third round, but a final-round 70 resulted in a tie for 2nd.
2010: First PGA Tour victory, Ryder Cup debut McIlroy started the year by finishing third at the 2010
Abu Dhabi Golf Championship in January. As the defending champion at the
Dubai Desert Classic, he shot a final-round 73 to tie for fifth place. On 2 May, McIlroy shot a course-record 62 in the final round of the
Quail Hollow Championship to beat
Phil Mickelson by four strokes and record his first PGA Tour win. The win came two days before McIlroy's 21st birthday, making him the first player since
Tiger Woods to win a PGA Tour event prior to that age. The win earned him a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour. At the
2010 Open Championship, held at the
Old Course at St Andrews in July, McIlroy tied the course record with a 9-under-par 63 on the opening day. He ended the tournament tied for third. In August, McIlroy finished in third-place at the
2010 PGA Championship, one shot outside of a playoff between
Bubba Watson and eventual winner
Martin Kaymer. McIlroy stated in 2012 that he regretted this 2010 decision to give up his PGA Tour card and skip the
2011 Players Championship. McIlroy's manager
Chubby Chandler's aversion to the PGA Tour was cited by McIlroy as one of the main reasons for their later professional split.
2011: Masters collapse, U.S. Open breakthrough In his first start of the year, McIlroy finished runner-up at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship in January, eight strokes behind
Martin Kaymer. In April, McIlroy shot a bogey-free 65 in the first round of the
2011 Masters Tournament to lead the field. This made him the youngest player at the time ever to hold the first-round lead at the Masters. He then shot rounds of 69 and 70, giving him a four-stroke lead after 54 holes. In the final round, McIlroy shot an 8-over-par 80, including a triple bogey on the 10th and double bogey on the 12th hole. He ultimately finished in a tie for 15th, 10 strokes behind winner
Charl Schwartzel. He posted 68 in third round, to also set the 54-hole scoring record at 199 (−14). In doing so, he built an eight-stroke lead going into the final round. McIlroy shot a final round of 69 to earn his first major championship title, eight strokes ahead of runner-up
Jason Day. McIlroy's 72-hole aggregate score of 268 (−16) was a new U.S. Open record, breaking the previous record of 272 jointly held by
Jack Nicklaus (
1980),
Lee Janzen (
1993),
Tiger Woods (
2000) and
Jim Furyk (
2003). The 16-under in relation to par beat Tiger Woods's 12-under at
Pebble Beach Golf Links in 2000. At age 22, McIlroy also became the youngest winner since
Bobby Jones in
1923 U.S. Open, and the victory lifted him to a new career-high fourth in the OWGR. At the
2011 Open Championship in July, he struggled in the tough weather conditions and finished in tied-25th place. He was also a non-factor at the
2011 PGA Championship, where he injured his wrist in the first round after attempting to play a stroke from behind a tree root. In October, McIlroy won the
Lake Malaren Shanghai Masters in a playoff against
Anthony Kim, earning the $2 million first-place prize, the highest in golf at that time. In December, he won the
UBS Hong Kong Open by two strokes.
2012: World number one, five-win season, second major championship title In January, McIlroy finished solo-second at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship, one stroke behind winner
Robert Rock. At the
2012 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in February, he recorded another runner-up finish, losing to
Hunter Mahan, 2 and 1, in the final. The following week, McIlroy won the
Honda Classic, where he shot a final round of 69 to finish two strokes ahead of
Tiger Woods and
Tom Gillis. With this victory, McIlroy reached the
number one position in the
Official World Golf Ranking for the first time in his career. Aged 22, he became the second-youngest man to reach number one, behind Woods who achieved the feat at 21. in
San Francisco At the
2012 Masters Tournament in April, McIlroy was in third place after two rounds, one stroke behind the leaders, but struggled on the weekend with rounds of 77 and 76 and finished in a tie for 40th. In May, he was in contention at the
Wells Fargo Championship and went to a playoff with
Rickie Fowler and
D. A. Points. Fowler won the tournament on the first playoff hole with a birdie. In August, McIlroy won the
2012 PGA Championship at the
Kiawah Island Ocean Course. He
birdied the final hole to shoot 66 and win by eight strokes, a new record for the largest margin-of-victory at the PGA Championship. The prior record had stood since
Jack Nicklaus won the
1980 PGA Championship by seven strokes. The following week. McIlroy won the
BMW Championship, two strokes ahead of
Phil Mickelson and
Lee Westwood. He totalled 40-under par across the two tournament victories. With these wins, he became the first European to win four PGA Tour events in a single season and the only person other than
Tiger Woods to win four events in a season since 2005. McIlroy topped the qualification standings for the
2012 Ryder Cup, which was held at
Medinah Country Club at the end of September. He picked up three points for the European team. To finish off his season, he won the
DP World Tour Championship, Dubai in November, making birdie on the last five holes to beat
Justin Rose by two strokes.
2013: Equipment change, downturn in form McIlroy struggled with an equipment change at the beginning of 2013, having signed a lucrative endorsement deal with
Nike in January. He missed the cut at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship in January and withdrew from the Honda Classic as the defending champion in February. In April, he finished runner-up at the
Valero Texas Open, two strokes behind
Martin Laird, and at the
2013 Masters Tournament the following week, he tied for 25th place. McIlroy tied for 41st place at the
2013 U.S. Open, missed the cut at the
2013 Open Championship and tied for 8th place as defending champion at the
2013 PGA Championship. As a result of his downturn in form, he dropped from first to sixth in the OWGR. McIlroy recorded his first win of the year in December, at the 2013
Emirates Australian Open. He birdied the final hole to beat Australian
Adam Scott by one stroke.
2014: First Open Championship, second PGA Championship title In January, McIlroy finished runner-up again in the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship. He was assessed a two-shot penalty for taking an improper drop from a spectator pathway in the third round and ultimately finished one stroke behind the winner
Pablo Larrazábal. He said afterwards: "There are many stupid rules in golf and this is one of them." In March, McIlroy lost in a playoff at the
Honda Classic on the PGA Tour. He held a two-shot lead entering the final round, but shot 74 (+4) and lost on the first extra hole, when
Russell Henley made birdie. In May, McIlroy shot a final-round 66 to overcome a seven-shot deficit and win the
2014 BMW PGA Championship by one stroke over
Thomas Bjørn. The win was McIlroy's first on either of the two major tours in 18 months. At the
2014 Open Championship held at
Royal Liverpool Golf Club in July, McIlroy led
wire-to-wire and won by two strokes over
Rickie Fowler and
Sergio García to claim the first Open Championship and third major championship of his career. The victory put McIlroy alongside
Tiger Woods as the only golfers to win both the
Silver Medal and the
Claret Jug at the Open Championship. In his next start, McIlroy won the
2014 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, shooting a final-round 66 to beat
Sergio García by two strokes. The following week, McIlroy edged out runner-up
Phil Mickelson by one shot to collect his fourth major championship victory with a win at the
2014 PGA Championship at
Valhalla Golf Club in
Louisville, Kentucky. In doing so, he joined
Jack Nicklaus and
Tiger Woods as the only three players to win four majors by age 25. At the
2014 Ryder Cup in September, McIlroy played in all five sessions. He finished with a record of , including a win in his Sunday singles match against
Rickie Fowler, as Europe won by a score of .
2015: Four-win season at
East Lake Golf Club In January, McIlroy finished runner-up for the fourth time of his career at the
Abu Dhabi Golf Championship, one stroke behind
Gary Stal. In his second tournament of the year, he won the European Tour's
Omega Dubai Desert Classic for a second time. At 22-under-par, he matched the tournament's scoring record set by
Stephen Gallacher and
Thomas Bjørn. He missed the cut in his first start of the PGA Tour season at the
Honda Classic. It was his first missed cut on the PGA Tour since the 2013 Open Championship, a streak of 22 consecutive events. At the
2015 Masters Tournament in April, McIlroy finished in solo-fourth place, a new-best career Masters finish. In May, he won the
2015 WGC-Cadillac Match Play event held at
TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, defeating
Gary Woodland in the final. This was his second
World Golf Championship and his tenth PGA tour title. Later in May, while playing in the
Wells Fargo Championship, McIlroy shot a course-record 61 at
Quail Hollow Club in
Charlotte, North Carolina. He went on to win the championship for a second time, by seven strokes with a tournament record score of 21-under 267. A week prior to the
2015 Open Championship in July, McIlroy ruptured his left
anterior talofibular ligament while playing soccer. This led to him withdrawing from the Open Championship and the subsequent
2015 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, both tournaments where he was the defending champion. He made his return at the
2015 PGA Championship, where he made the cut and finished in 17th place. Entering the
DP World Tour Championship, Dubai, McIlroy was leading the
Race to Dubai standings. He posted a score of 21-under to win the tournament by one stroke from
Andy Sullivan. This was his second victory in the lucrative year-end tournament and his third Race to Dubai title in four years.
2016: First FedEx Cup title Chasing his first win of the year, McIlroy took a three-shot lead into the final round of the
2016 WGC-Cadillac Championship at
Trump National Doral in March, but faltered with a two-over-par 74 to finish two shots behind winner
Adam Scott. At the
2016 Masters Tournament, McIlroy was in the final group in the third round alongside
Jordan Spieth but shot a five-over 77 and ultimately finished tied-10th. Afterwards, he said he was affected at the Masters by the pressure of trying to complete the
Grand Slam. In May, McIlroy claimed his first victory of the year at his home
Irish Open, a tournament hosted by the Rory Foundation. He finished three strokes clear of
Russell Knox and
Bradley Dredge and subsequently donated the €666,000 winner's cheque to charity. McIlroy had qualified to represent Ireland in
the golf tournament at the
2016 Summer Olympics in August, but withdrew due to the threat of the
Zika virus in Brazil and stated he would not watch the tournament. Following the tournament, McIlroy admitted he had been surprised at the event's success and said he had been wrong to dismiss the tournament. He later outlined his intention to compete at the
2020 Olympic Games. In September, McIlroy won the
Deutsche Bank Championship in
Norton, Massachusetts. He produced a final-round 65 to finish two shots clear of
Paul Casey. Two weeks later, at the 2016
Tour Championship, McIlroy overcame a two-shot deficit after the third round to force a playoff with
Ryan Moore and
Kevin Chappell, winning the competition with a birdie at the fourth playoff hole. The result earned McIlroy his first
FedEx Cup title, along with the $10 million bonus prize. At the
2016 Ryder Cup in October, McIlroy played five matches and won three points, all when paired with
Thomas Pieters. In the Sunday singles, he lost to
Patrick Reed, 1 up, due to a birdie by Reed at the last hole, as the United States defeated Europe .
2017: Winless season, injury problems At the end of 2016, Nike announced their withdrawal from the golf equipment market, releasing players from their contracts early. After spending several months trying different clubs and balls, McIlroy signed a $100 million endorsement deal with
TaylorMade. McIlroy did not win during 2017, the first time he had a winless year since 2008. He was hampered throughout the season by a rib injury first sustained at the
BMW SA Open in January, where he lost out on the title in a playoff to
Graeme Storm, McIlroy played a limited schedule as a result of injury, although he did record top-10 finishes at both the
2017 Masters Tournament and
2017 Open Championship. In his final start of the season, McIlroy finished tied-63rd at the
Alfred Dunhill Links Championship in October. He said after the event that he was going to take a three-month break to recuperate from his injuries. Having started the year at 2nd in the OWGR, McIlroy dropped to 11th by the end of the year. Late in the 2017 season, McIlroy parted ways with JP Fitzgerald, who had been his
caddie since 2008, and hired
Harry Diamond, a former Irish amateur international golfer and childhood friend of McIlroy. McIlroy said he had been "inundated" with caddie requests, including from
Jim "Bones" Mackay and Tiger Woods's former caddie
Steve Williams, but decided to opt for Diamond on a permanent basis after a successful trial period.
2018–2019: First Players Championship title, second FedEx Cup McIlroy returned after over 100 days away from professional competition at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship in January 2018. Prior to the tournament, he said he had been diagnosed with a slight heart irregularity but downplayed its impact on his golf. The following week, McIlroy finished runner-up to
Li Haotong in the
Omega Dubai Desert Classic. He lost by one stroke, having led by two with five holes to play. It was the 22nd runner-up finish of his career. In March 2018, McIlroy won the
Arnold Palmer Invitational with a final-round 64, his first win since the 2016
Tour Championship. At the
2018 Masters Tournament, which was his tenth Masters start, McIlroy was in the final pairing on Sunday alongside
Patrick Reed, three strokes off the lead. McIlroy shot a two-over 74 to finish in a tie for fifth, six strokes behind the winner, Reed. McIlroy was also in contention at the
2018 Open Championship, where he finished runner-up, two strokes behind
Francesco Molinari. In September 2018, McIlroy competed in the
2018 Ryder Cup. He went , including a loss in the Sunday singles to
Justin Thomas, as Team Europe beat Team USA to reclaim the Ryder Cup. McIlroy started 2019 on the PGA Tour in good form with five straight top-6 finishes, including a runner-up finish in February at the
2019 WGC-Mexico Championship, five strokes behind
Dustin Johnson. McIlroy subsequently won the
2019 Players Championship in March with a score of −16. With the win, he joined
Jack Nicklaus and
Tiger Woods as the only players to win four majors and 15 PGA Tour titles before the age of 30. In June 2019, McIlroy won the
RBC Canadian Open. He shot a final-round 61 to win the tournament by seven strokes and became the sixth golfer to win the career
Triple Crown (the PGA Tour's three oldest events being the Open Championship, the U.S. Open and the Canadian Open). Two months later, McIlroy clinched his second
FedEx Cup title by winning the
Tour Championship at
East Lake Golf Club. The winning payout was $15 million, the largest in golf history. He became the second player to win multiple FedEx Cups, after Tiger Woods (2007, 2009). In November 2019, McIlroy won the
2019 WGC-HSBC Champions tournament in a playoff against
Xander Schauffele in
Shanghai, China. The following month, McIlroy stated that he turned down an invitation to the European Tour's
Saudi International tournament in
Riyadh, stating that it is "not something that would excite me" and "there's a morality to it as well", in reference to Saudi Arabia's human rights record.
2020–2021: Return to world number one McIlroy began 2020 with four consecutive top-5 finishes on the PGA Tour, which, along with his four wins in the previous calendar year, brought him back to world number one in the OWGR for the first time since 2015. Amidst the suspension of professional tournaments due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, McIlroy, alongside
Dustin Johnson, secured a win in a charity skins game in May 2020 played under the nearest-the-pin shot rule, as golf returned to television after nine weeks. The event raised around £4 million for relief efforts. In July, McIlroy lost his spot at world number one to
Jon Rahm. At the delayed
2020 U.S. Open held in September, McIlroy finished in a tie for 8th place. He also recorded a top-5 finish at the
2020 Masters Tournament, which was delayed until November. In January 2021, McIlroy held the 54-hole lead at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. A final round 72 saw him finish in third place, five shots behind eventual winner
Tyrrell Hatton. In May 2021, McIlroy won the
Wells Fargo Championship at
Quail Hollow Club by one stroke, which was his third win at Quail Hollow and his 19th PGA Tour victory. McIlroy represented
Ireland at the
Olympic Games in August 2021. He tied for third after 72 holes and lost in a seven-man playoff for the bronze medal. In September, he played on the European team in the
2021 Ryder Cup at
Whistling Straits in
Kohler, Wisconsin. The US team won and McIlroy went 1–3–0, including a win in his Sunday singles match against
Xander Schauffele. In October 2021, McIlroy won the
CJ Cup. He shot on the weekend to win by one stroke over
Collin Morikawa. This was his 20th PGA Tour victory, earning him life membership. In November, McIlroy held the 54-hole lead at the
DP World Tour Championship, Dubai, as he sought to become the first player to win the event for a third time. He faltered with a final-round 74 and ultimately finished five shots behind the winner Morikawa.
2022: Top 10 at all four majors, third FedEx Cup title In January, McIlroy was in contention to win the
Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic for the third time in his career but hit his second shot into the water on the final hole and missed out on a playoff for the title by one stroke. At the
2022 Masters Tournament In April, McIlroy shot a bogey-free 64 in the final round to finish as runner-up, a new-best finish at the Masters of his career. In May, McIlroy held the first-round lead at the
2022 PGA Championship after opening with a 65. He ultimately finished 8th. In June, McIlroy defended his title at the
RBC Canadian Open, shooting a final-round 62 to win by two shots ahead of
Tony Finau. The following week, he finished tied-5th at the
2022 U.S. Open. In July, McIlroy was tied for the lead after 54 holes at the
2022 Open Championship. He shot a final-round 70 to finish third, two strokes behind
Cameron Smith. He thus finished
top-10 in all four majors for the first time in his career. In August, McIlroy won his third
Tour Championship, by one stroke from
Scottie Scheffler and
Im Sung-jae, to claim his third
FedEx Cup victory. This victory surpassed
Tiger Woods's two successes and earned McIlroy an additional $18 million bonus. In September, he finished tied-second at the
BMW PGA Championship, losing to
Shane Lowry by one shot. In October, McIlroy successfully defended the
CJ Cup at
Congaree Golf Club in South Carolina. This victory also saw him return to number one in the
Official World Golf Ranking, overtaking
Scottie Scheffler. In November, McIlroy entered the
DP World Tour Championship on the European Tour sitting in first place on the
DP World Tour Rankings. A fourth-place finish was enough for McIlroy to maintain his position at the top of the rankings. It was also his fourth
Harry Vardon Trophy win.
2023: Continued success, fifth Race to Dubai title McIlroy started off the year by winning the
Hero Dubai Desert Classic In January. He birdied the final two holes to beat
Patrick Reed by one shot. McIlroy missed the cut at the
2023 Masters Tournament in April, and finished tied-7th at the
2023 PGA Championship in May. At the
2023 U.S. Open in June, McIlroy finished solo-second, one shot behind
Wyndham Clark. In the final round of the U.S. Open, McIlroy received an incorrect drop after officials determined his ball was "plugged in the ground" and then misidentified the nearest point of relief. The USGA later acknowledged their error, but since McIlroy’s ball was dropped within 18 inches of the correct spot and he earned no advantage from its placement, no penalty was given. In July, McIlroy won the
Genesis Scottish Open, one stroke ahead of
Robert MacIntyre. The following week, at the
2023 Open Championship, he finished tied-sixth. In September, McIlroy played on the European team in the
2023 Ryder Cup at
Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in
Rome, Italy. The European team won and McIlroy was the top points scorer with a 4–1–0 record, including a win in his Sunday singles match against
Sam Burns. In November, McIlroy won his fifth
Race to Dubai title; he finished tied-22nd at the
DP World Tour Championship, but had already secured the Race to Dubai title before the tournament started. This moved McIlroy to third for most season-long titles won on the European Tour, behind
Seve Ballesteros's six and
Colin Montgomerie's eight.
2024: Four-win season, U.S. Open loss McIlroy opened his season at the inaugural
Dubai Invitational in January. He led by one shot with one hole remaining, before hitting his tee shot on the final hole into the water. He bogeyed the hole while
Tommy Fleetwood made birdie to win by one. He defended the
Hero Dubai Desert Classic the following week, his fourth win in the tournament overall. Trailing by 11 shots entering Saturday, he shot a nine-under 63 to propel him into contention before a final round two-under 70 gave him a one shot win over
Adrian Meronk. After a tepid start to
the season on the PGA Tour, including a T22 finish at the
2024 Masters Tournament, McIlroy won his first title of the season in April at the
Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a team event where he competed alongside Ryder Cup teammate
Shane Lowry. They won in a playoff over
Chad Ramey and
Martin Trainer. This was McIlroy's 25th win on the PGA Tour. In his next start, McIlroy won the
Wells Fargo Championship for the fourth time in his career. He closed with a 6-under 65, playing the final 11 holes in 6-under and won by five strokes over
Xander Schauffele. During the
2024 U.S. Open, McIlroy entered the final round in second-place, three strokes behind the lead. He erased the deficit and had a two-stroke lead over
Bryson DeChambeau with four holes to play, but bogeyed three of the final four holes, including missed putts from inside four feet on both the 16th and 18th holes, to finish one stroke behind DeChambeau. At the
2024 Open Championship, McIlroy shot and missed the cut, extending his major championship drought to ten years. In September, after the
Tour Championship, McIlroy turned his attention to the
European Tour, recording back-to-back runner-up finishes at the
Amgen Irish Open and the
BMW PGA Championship, in which he lost in a playoff to
Billy Horschel. In November, at the season's penultimate event, he finished tied-third at the
Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. The following week, he won the
DP World Tour Championship, also claiming the
Race to Dubai title for the sixth time in his career.
2025: Completion of career grand slam, sixth Ryder Cup win in June 2025 In his first PGA Tour event of 2025, McIlroy won the
AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, finishing with a score of −21, beating
Shane Lowry by two strokes. At the
2025 Players Championship in March, McIlroy shot a final-round 68 to tie for first with
J. J. Spaun and entered a three-hole aggregate playoff. McIlroy won the playoff with an aggregate score of +1 to claim his second Players Championship title. Two weeks later, he finished tied-fifth at the
Texas Children's Houston Open and earned $337,844, which took his career earnings on the PGA Tour to $100,046,906. This made McIlroy the second man to reach $100 million in official PGA Tour earnings, joining Tiger Woods who crossed the mark in 2012. In April, at the
2025 Masters Tournament, McIlroy held a two-stroke lead after 54 holes, which was his first 54-hole outright lead at a major since the
2014 PGA Championship. He shot a 1-over 73 in the final round while
Justin Rose birdied six of his final eight holes to force a playoff. McIlroy birdied the first playoff hole to win his first Masters and complete the career
grand slam. He became the sixth player, after
Gene Sarazen,
Ben Hogan,
Gary Player,
Jack Nicklaus and
Tiger Woods, to win each of the four major championships in the modern era. In his next major championship start, McIlroy tied for 47th at the
2025 PGA Championship, held at
Quail Hollow Club, a course where he had previously recorded four wins. He then missed his first cut of the year at the
RBC Canadian Open, shooting rounds of 71-78. After the
2025 U.S. Open, where he finished tied-19th, McIlroy stated he had lost motivation since winning the Masters: "I climbed my Everest in April, and I think after you do something like that, you've got to make your way back down, and you've got to look for another mountain to climb." In July, McIlroy finished runner-up at the
Genesis Scottish Open, two shots behind
Chris Gotterup. The following week, McIlroy was the home favourite in the
2025 Open Championship held at
Royal Portrush Golf Club. He finished tied-seventh. At the
Amgen Irish Open in September, McIlroy holed a putt for eagle on the final hole to match the 17-under 271 posted by
Joakim Lagergren and enter a playoff. McIlroy made birdie on the third extra hole to win his national open for the second time in his career. Three weeks later, McIlroy represented Europe at the
2025 Ryder Cup. He had a record, including a loss in the Sunday singles against world number one
Scottie Scheffler, as Europe defeated the United States by a score of 15–13, which was the first away victory in a Ryder Cup since
2012. This marked the sixth time he won the event with team Europe. In November, McIlroy made eagle on the final hole of the
DP World Tour Championship to force a playoff against
Matt Fitzpatrick. McIlroy lost the title to Fitzpatrick on the first playoff hole, but the runner-up finish secured his seventh
Race to Dubai title, overtaking
Seve Ballesteros's tally of six and moving within one of the record held by
Colin Montgomerie.
2026: Second Masters title McIlroy finished runner-up at the
Genesis Invitational in February, one stroke behind
Jacob Bridgeman. As defending champion at the
2026 Players Championship in March, McIlroy placed tied-46th. He struggled prior to the Players with a back injury which had forced him to withdraw from the
Arnold Palmer Invitational a week earlier. In his title defence at the
2026 Masters Tournament, McIlroy opened with rounds of 67-65 to total 12-under and establish a six-stroke lead. This broke the record for largest 36-hole lead in Masters history, surpassing the five-shot margin first set by
Harry Cooper in
1936. McIlroy's lead vanished after a 73 in the third round and he was reduced to co-leader alongside
Cameron Young. McIlroy closed with a 1-under 71 to claim his second Masters title, finishing one stroke ahead of
Scottie Scheffler. With the victory, he joined
Jack Nicklaus (
1966),
Nick Faldo (
1990) and
Tiger Woods (
2002) as the only players to successfully defend their titles at the Masters. McIlroy also drew level with Faldo,
Phil Mickelson and
Lee Trevino with six major championships. The
CBS broadcast of McIlroy's victory averaged 14 million viewers, which was the highest viewership since the
2015 Masters Tournament.
Awards At the 2005
Belfast Telegraph Sports Awards, McIlroy received the Young Player of the Year award. He also won the 2008 George Best Breakthrough Prize and the 2009
Belfast Telegraph Sports Star of the Year award. In recognition of his win at the 2011 U.S. Open, McIlroy was named the 2011
RTÉ Sports Person of the Year and
BBC Northern Ireland Sports Personality of the Year. He also received the
Laureus World Sports Award for Breakthrough of the Year, and was appointed
Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the
2012 New Year Honours, for services to sport. In 2012, McIlroy won the
PGA Player of the Year and
PGA Tour Player of the Year awards, as well as the
Vardon Trophy and
Byron Nelson Award. He was also voted the
European Tour Golfer of the Year and
European Tour Players' Player of the Year in 2012. He repeated this award sweep in 2014. Also in 2014, he was named RTÉ Sports Person of the Year for a second time, and BBC Northern Ireland Sports Personality of the Year for a third time. McIlroy has won the
Mark H. McCormack Award for leading the
Official World Golf Ranking for the most weeks in a calendar year three times: 2012, 2014 and 2015. In 2019, he won the PGA Tour Player of the Year award and the Vardon Trophy for the third time. In 2022, McIlroy won the Vardon Trophy for a fourth time. His scoring average of 68.67 was the lowest since Tiger Woods's 68.05 in 2009. In 2024, McIlroy won the European Tour Player of the Year award, now renamed the
Seve Ballesteros Award, for the fourth time in his career. McIlroy won
BBC Sports Personality of the Year in
2025, topping the public vote; he had previously been shortlisted in
2014 and
2023, finishing as runner-up in 2014. McIlroy was also named the 2025
RTÉ Sports Person of the Year. This made him the first person to win both these awards in the same year since
Barry McGuigan in 1985. ==Technique and coaches==