Rory McIlroy's second Masters win shows a new comfort level

ASFN Admin

Administrator
Administrator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 8, 2002
Posts
1,130,794
Reaction score
59
As a past champion at the Masters, CBS Sports's Trevor Immelman had some rare access to Rory McIlroy’s successful title defense of the Green Jacket last month – from a seat at his Champions Dinner to the Green Jacket presentation at Butler Cabin — and he observed a new-found comfort for the Northern Irishman at Augusta National Golf Club.

“It was the whole way that he managed the week. And it just felt like he came there with so much less uncertainty and anxiety than I’d ever seen from him before,” Immelman, the 2008 Masters champ said. “He just seemed throughout the week – whether it be at the Champions Dinner or in the locker room and around the club – just seemed to be so much more light than what I’ve ever experienced from him before at the Masters having won the year before. And you could just really feel his comfort level throughout the whole week. Like he was totally comfortable and prepared for whatever was going to happen. … even watching the Green Jacket presentation down in Butler Cabin. As Jim [Nantz] was interviewing him and he was there with the Chairman, the atmosphere in the room felt different to me than the year before. I mean, the year before it was such relief that he had finally got it done. Whereas this time around he just seemed so comfortable with everything that was happening and that was the thing that I really took out of it.”

You must be registered for see images


McIlroy became just the fourth player to successfully defend his title at the Masters – and the first since Tiger Woods in 2002 – earning his sixth major championship. Even McIlroy agreed that winning at Augusta National, a year after completing the career Grand Slam, felt different this time.

“I felt like winning the Grand Slam was like this, was going to be this life-changing thing and in some ways it was, but in other ways I had to remember like, no, I still have a lot of my career left and I want to keep playing and keep competing,” McIlroy said on Wednesday during a news conference ahead of the Truist Championship. “This year, I think winning was validation for all the work that I've put in over the last few years to get myself back to this place where I'm winning majors.”

It’s funny how fast McIlroy went from seemingly being resigned to being a nearly-man at the Masters to a two-time champ, and he summed up how being part of that exclusive club that gets to wear a Green Jacket around the property has almost become old hat with a cute story about five-year-old daughter Poppy. “I think for Poppy it sort of seems normal for her now to just go into Butler Cabin at the end of the day and have a grilled cheese and talk with the chairman,” he said.


Rory McIlroy spoke with media on Wednesday for the first time since winning the Masters. He told a funny story about Poppy at Augusta National.

"I think for Poppy it sort of seems normal for her now to just go into Butler Cabin at the end of the day and have a grilled cheese and… pic.twitter.com/a7CAJ8HccI

— Cameron Jourdan (@Cam_Jourdan) May 6, 2026

McIlroy returns to work this week in Charlotte after taking three weeks off and skipping two signature events. He took a trip to New York with his wife, was a guest of President Donald Trump, who recognized his Masters achievement mid-speech, at a State Dinner for King Charles III at the White House eight days ago, and gave himself a good 10 days to let this latest victory soak in before it was back to the grindstone to prep for this next stretch, which includes the PGA Championship next week.

“I’m not concerned about him taking this time off at all,” Immelman said. “He quite frankly did it before the Masters and had a great week there.”

It doesn’t hurt that McIlroy returns at one of his favorite hunting grounds, site of his first PGA Tour victory in 2010, and the course Jordan Spieth dubbed “Rory McIlroy Country Club.” McIlroy, who celebrated his 37th birthday on Monday, has won four times in all at Quail Hollow Club and is seeking to become the first player since Tiger Woods at Augusta National to win at the same course five or more times.

As a small measure of his success at Quail Hollow, McIlroy has carded 20 birdies on the Green Mile, the nickname given to the challenging closing stretch consisting of Nos. 16-18, the most of any player since 2010, and five more than his closest competitor. That includes an 80-foot bomb, the longest putt made by a competitor on the 17th hole, which he dropped during the third round in 2016.

But a year ago, McIlroy showed up at Quail Hollow and laid an egg at the PGA Championship, a non-factor who barely made the cut and finished T-47. He suffered through an extended post-Masters hangover as he struggled to set new goals after reaching the top of his personal mountain. But just as that winning feeling at the Masters was different this time, so, too, is McIlroy’s drive to push beyond six majors. He’s even entertained the idea of doing the career Grand Slam twice (he’s already half way there).

“I feel like if anything I'm more motivated after what happened at Augusta this year than I've ever been,” he said.

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Rory McIlroy motivated for more majors after second Masters win

Continue reading...
 
Top