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Rory McIlroy repeats as Masters Champion, officially greatest European player ever  Rory McIlroy stands alone. And then some.A year ago the anointed one from Northern Ireland conquered Augusta National at long last. As his playoff-clinching putt sank on 18 it forever altered the history of professional golf. McIlroy joined the ranks of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods as the only players to complete the Career Grand Slam.On Sunday some more gates of history unlocked for Rory. By defending his title as Masters Champion with a victory, one that came with a few less dramatic twists than 2025, he joined Jack, Tiger, and Nick Faldo. Rory is amassing entry keys to the most exclusive clubs that the world of golf has to offer.Rory was already the lone European to complete the Career Grand Slam and he now joins Faldo as the other to defend at Augusta National of all places. He is more than just the greatest golfer of his generation. He is unquestionably the greatest European player of all time.Many posited that Rory’s first Masters win was poetic with regards to the overall path that he took to the iconic green jacket. It was chaotic. Emotional. Devastating. Enthralling. Captivating. A similar argument can be made that Rory’s defense of it was also true to his career form.Consider that Rory held at least a share of the lead after each and every round of this year’s Masters. He has quite literally never finished a competitive Masters round as a Masters Champion without at least being tied for the lead.This speaks to how his breakthrough empowered him. Winning at Augusta at long last very clearly unleashed Rory in a way that made him untouchable relative to his peers. This April Sunday at Augusta National did not feature the drama that last year did as it was the field who bowed to the mounting pressure… not Rory.It was a matter of chasing down Rory for everyone else. Someone was going to have to rip that green jacket off of his shoulders and the fight to even get their hands around his shoulders proved too much for everyone. Tyrrell Hatton made a noble race of it all, Collin Morikawa had an incredible surge, but just when someone like Justin Rose or Cameron Young reached equal footing with Rory the intensity of it all proved too much and their games faded. Even the great Scottie Scheffler, who became the first player in Masters record books that date all the way back to 1942 to go bogey-free in the third and fourth round of the tournament, was no match.Time has shown us that only one man is fit to carry the burden that making this kind of history demands. Only one player of this generation, only one European across the history of the world, has proven capable of living up the legend that so many were imploring them to be.Rory McIlroy, this and last year’s Masters Champion, is that player. He is the greatest European player of all time beyond any doubt at this point and his super strength was just amplified. He has all of the individual accomplishments, all of the bells and whistles, leads his generation with individual major titles won at six now, and officially has multiple green jackets in his locker at Augusta National Golf Club. There is nothing that anyone has that he needs. He has it all.Congratulations to Rory. Who knows what he will do next?  #Rory #McIlroy #repeats #Masters #Champion #officially #greatest #European #player

Rory McIlroy repeats as Masters Champion, officially greatest European player ever

Rory McIlroy stands alone. And then some.

A year ago the anointed one from Northern Ireland conquered Augusta National at long last. As his playoff-clinching putt sank on 18 it forever altered the history of professional golf. McIlroy joined the ranks of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods as the only players to complete the Career Grand Slam.

On Sunday some more gates of history unlocked for Rory. By defending his title as Masters Champion with a victory, one that came with a few less dramatic twists than 2025, he joined Jack, Tiger, and Nick Faldo. Rory is amassing entry keys to the most exclusive clubs that the world of golf has to offer.

Rory was already the lone European to complete the Career Grand Slam and he now joins Faldo as the other to defend at Augusta National of all places. He is more than just the greatest golfer of his generation. He is unquestionably the greatest European player of all time.

Many posited that Rory’s first Masters win was poetic with regards to the overall path that he took to the iconic green jacket. It was chaotic. Emotional. Devastating. Enthralling. Captivating. A similar argument can be made that Rory’s defense of it was also true to his career form.

Consider that Rory held at least a share of the lead after each and every round of this year’s Masters. He has quite literally never finished a competitive Masters round as a Masters Champion without at least being tied for the lead.

This speaks to how his breakthrough empowered him. Winning at Augusta at long last very clearly unleashed Rory in a way that made him untouchable relative to his peers. This April Sunday at Augusta National did not feature the drama that last year did as it was the field who bowed to the mounting pressure… not Rory.

It was a matter of chasing down Rory for everyone else. Someone was going to have to rip that green jacket off of his shoulders and the fight to even get their hands around his shoulders proved too much for everyone. Tyrrell Hatton made a noble race of it all, Collin Morikawa had an incredible surge, but just when someone like Justin Rose or Cameron Young reached equal footing with Rory the intensity of it all proved too much and their games faded. Even the great Scottie Scheffler, who became the first player in Masters record books that date all the way back to 1942 to go bogey-free in the third and fourth round of the tournament, was no match.

Time has shown us that only one man is fit to carry the burden that making this kind of history demands. Only one player of this generation, only one European across the history of the world, has proven capable of living up the legend that so many were imploring them to be.

Rory McIlroy, this and last year’s Masters Champion, is that player. He is the greatest European player of all time beyond any doubt at this point and his super strength was just amplified. He has all of the individual accomplishments, all of the bells and whistles, leads his generation with individual major titles won at six now, and officially has multiple green jackets in his locker at Augusta National Golf Club. There is nothing that anyone has that he needs. He has it all.

Congratulations to Rory. Who knows what he will do next?

#Rory #McIlroy #repeats #Masters #Champion #officially #greatest #European #player

Rory McIlroy stands alone. And then some.

A year ago the anointed one from Northern Ireland conquered Augusta National at long last. As his playoff-clinching putt sank on 18 it forever altered the history of professional golf. McIlroy joined the ranks of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods as the only players to complete the Career Grand Slam.

On Sunday some more gates of history unlocked for Rory. By defending his title as Masters Champion with a victory, one that came with a few less dramatic twists than 2025, he joined Jack, Tiger, and Nick Faldo. Rory is amassing entry keys to the most exclusive clubs that the world of golf has to offer.

Rory was already the lone European to complete the Career Grand Slam and he now joins Faldo as the other to defend at Augusta National of all places. He is more than just the greatest golfer of his generation. He is unquestionably the greatest European player of all time.

Many posited that Rory’s first Masters win was poetic with regards to the overall path that he took to the iconic green jacket. It was chaotic. Emotional. Devastating. Enthralling. Captivating. A similar argument can be made that Rory’s defense of it was also true to his career form.

Consider that Rory held at least a share of the lead after each and every round of this year’s Masters. He has quite literally never finished a competitive Masters round as a Masters Champion without at least being tied for the lead.

This speaks to how his breakthrough empowered him. Winning at Augusta at long last very clearly unleashed Rory in a way that made him untouchable relative to his peers. This April Sunday at Augusta National did not feature the drama that last year did as it was the field who bowed to the mounting pressure… not Rory.

It was a matter of chasing down Rory for everyone else. Someone was going to have to rip that green jacket off of his shoulders and the fight to even get their hands around his shoulders proved too much for everyone. Tyrrell Hatton made a noble race of it all, Collin Morikawa had an incredible surge, but just when someone like Justin Rose or Cameron Young reached equal footing with Rory the intensity of it all proved too much and their games faded. Even the great Scottie Scheffler, who became the first player in Masters record books that date all the way back to 1942 to go bogey-free in the third and fourth round of the tournament, was no match.

Time has shown us that only one man is fit to carry the burden that making this kind of history demands. Only one player of this generation, only one European across the history of the world, has proven capable of living up the legend that so many were imploring them to be.

Rory McIlroy, this and last year’s Masters Champion, is that player. He is the greatest European player of all time beyond any doubt at this point and his super strength was just amplified. He has all of the individual accomplishments, all of the bells and whistles, leads his generation with individual major titles won at six now, and officially has multiple green jackets in his locker at Augusta National Golf Club. There is nothing that anyone has that he needs. He has it all.

Congratulations to Rory. Who knows what he will do next?

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Rory McIlroy overcame early stumbles and a late scare to win the Masters on Sunday, capturing his sixth major title to become only the fourth back-to-back champion at Augusta National.

The World No. 2 from Northern Ireland made a double bogey at the fourth and a bogey at the sixth, but responded with four birdies in the next seven holes and hung on after woeful late tee shots to win a second green jacket and a record top prize of $4.5 million.

McIlroy became the first consecutive Masters champion since Tiger Woods, firing a final round one-under-par 71 to finish on 12-under-par 276 and defeat top-ranked Scottie Scheffler by one stroke.

A year after winning his first Masters to complete a career Grand Slam and snap a 10-year major win drought, McIlroy pulled off a wire-to-wire triumph.

“I just can’t believe I waited 17 years to get one green jacket and you know I get two in a row. It’s just sort of the way,” McIlroy said.

“I think all of my perseverance at this golf tournament over the years has really started to pay off.”

Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley placed the green jacket on McIlroy, a role usually reserved for the prior year’s Masters winner.

McIlroy seized a 36-hole Masters record six-stroke lead only to play the weekend at level par.

“It was a tough weekend. I did the bulk of my work on Thursday and Friday,” McIlroy said. “But just so, so happy to hang in there and get the job done.”

McIlroy, third-from last in driving accuracy for the week, saved par at 15 from trees but sent his tee shot at the 18th over right trees to a spot near the adjacent 10th fairway.

With a victory at risk, McIlroy curled a dramatic approach around the pines and into a greenside bunker, then blasted onto the green to 12 feet and two-putted for bogey to secure the triumph.

“It’s nice to have that two-shot cushion instead of the one like I had last year,” said McIlroy, who needed a playoff to win in 2025.

McIlroy, 36, yelled with joy and lifted his arms into the air after the triumph and hugged daughter Poppy and wife Erica after walking off the 18th green where she embraced his parents.

Scheffler, a four-time major winner seeking his third Masters victory in five seasons, was on 277 after shooting a 68 to complete a bogey-free weekend.

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

England’s Tyrrell Hatton and 45-year-old Justin Rose and Americans Russell Henley and Cameron Young shared third on 278.

Rose, the 2013 US Open champion, settled for another near miss after three runner-up Masters finishes.

“I felt like there was an opportunity to do better, so obviously that’s frustrating for sure,” Rose said.

Rose birdied four of the last five holes on the front nine and led on 12-under but bogeys at 11 and 12 moved McIlroy into the lead to stay.

McIlroy sank a seven-foot birdie putt at the par-three 12th after an impressive tee shot, then added an 11-foot birdie putt at the par-five 13th to seize a three-stroke lead.

“I think the tee shot on 12 and then the tee shot on 13, just to give me the option to go for the green in two,” were the day’s key shots.

“I made a really good committed swing off the 13th tee, and that enabled me to go for the green in two and to make a birdie there, following the birdie on 12. That was massive,” he said.

Four pars and the closing bogey followed to produce the victory.

Published on Apr 13, 2026

#Rory #McIlroy #wins #consecutive #Masters #titles #joins #Tiger #Woods #unique #record">Rory McIlroy wins consecutive Masters titles, joins Tiger Woods for unique record  Rory McIlroy overcame early stumbles and a late scare to win the Masters on Sunday, capturing his sixth major title to become only the fourth back-to-back champion at Augusta National.The World No. 2 from Northern Ireland made a double bogey at the fourth and a bogey at the sixth, but responded with four birdies in the next seven holes and hung on after woeful late tee shots to win a second green jacket and a record top prize of .5 million.McIlroy became the first consecutive Masters champion since Tiger Woods, firing a final round one-under-par 71 to finish on 12-under-par 276 and defeat top-ranked Scottie Scheffler by one stroke.A year after winning his first Masters to complete a career Grand Slam and snap a 10-year major win drought, McIlroy pulled off a wire-to-wire triumph.“I just can’t believe I waited 17 years to get one green jacket and you know I get two in a row. It’s just sort of the way,” McIlroy said.“I think all of my perseverance at this golf tournament over the years has really started to pay off.”Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley placed the green jacket on McIlroy, a role usually reserved for the prior year’s Masters winner.McIlroy seized a 36-hole Masters record six-stroke lead only to play the weekend at level par.“It was a tough weekend. I did the bulk of my work on Thursday and Friday,” McIlroy said. “But just so, so happy to hang in there and get the job done.”McIlroy, third-from last in driving accuracy for the week, saved par at 15 from trees but sent his tee shot at the 18th over right trees to a spot near the adjacent 10th fairway.With a victory at risk, McIlroy curled a dramatic approach around the pines and into a greenside bunker, then blasted onto the green to 12 feet and two-putted for bogey to secure the triumph.“It’s nice to have that two-shot cushion instead of the one like I had last year,” said McIlroy, who needed a playoff to win in 2025.McIlroy, 36, yelled with joy and lifted his arms into the air after the triumph and hugged daughter Poppy and wife Erica after walking off the 18th green where she embraced his parents.Scheffler, a four-time major winner seeking his third Masters victory in five seasons, was on 277 after shooting a 68 to complete a bogey-free weekend.“Over the weekend I put up a good fight, did a lot of good stuff in order to give myself a chance and ultimately came up a couple shots short,” Scheffler said.England’s Tyrrell Hatton and 45-year-old Justin Rose and Americans Russell Henley and Cameron Young shared third on 278.Rose, the 2013 US Open champion, settled for another near miss after three runner-up Masters finishes.“I felt like there was an opportunity to do better, so obviously that’s frustrating for sure,” Rose said.Rose birdied four of the last five holes on the front nine and led on 12-under but bogeys at 11 and 12 moved McIlroy into the lead to stay.McIlroy sank a seven-foot birdie putt at the par-three 12th after an impressive tee shot, then added an 11-foot birdie putt at the par-five 13th to seize a three-stroke lead.“I think the tee shot on 12 and then the tee shot on 13, just to give me the option to go for the green in two,” were the day’s key shots.“I made a really good committed swing off the 13th tee, and that enabled me to go for the green in two and to make a birdie there, following the birdie on 12. That was massive,” he said.Four pars and the closing bogey followed to produce the victory.Published on Apr 13, 2026  #Rory #McIlroy #wins #consecutive #Masters #titles #joins #Tiger #Woods #unique #record

Deadspin | Dallas Fuel run table at OWCS NA Stage 1, beat Spacestation in grand final  Overwatch Champions Series   Dallas Fuel completed their perfect run through the Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1, taking down Spacestation Gaming 4-1 in the grand final on Sunday.  The Fuel beat Spacestation for the second straight day after prevailing 3-1 in the upper-bracket final on Saturday. Spacestation recovered, sweeping Team Liquid 3-0 earlier in the day Sunday in the lower-bracket final.  Dallas took home ,000 while Spacestation settled for the runner-up prize of ,000. But both teams will receive berths in the OCS Champions Clash, scheduled for May 22-24 in Tokyo.  The Overwatch 2 online competition, with a prize pool of ,000, began with six teams playing a regular season with a round-robin format.  The top four teams advanced to the regional playoffs, and all sealed berths in North America Stage 2. All playoff matches were first-to-three except for the grand final, which was first-to-four.  On Sunday, Spacestation barely let Team Liquid on the scoreboard — taking Busan Control 2-0, Blizzard World Hybrid 3-1 and Aatlis Flashpoint 3-0.  Then they ran into a Dallas Fuel team that went 5-0 in the regular season, dealing Spacestation their only loss in the early phase.  The Fuel opened the grand final by winning 2-0 on Busan Control and 2-1 on Midtown Hybrid. Spacestation answered with a 3-1 victory on Rialto Escort, but it wasn’t enough to turn the tide. The Fuel took Suravasa Flashpoint 3-2 and clinched the championship with a 142.41m-7.48m blowout on Esperanca Push.   Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1 prize pool  1. Dallas Fuel — ,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2  2. Spacestation Gaming — ,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2  3. Team Liquid — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2  4. LuneX Gaming — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2  5-6. Extinction, Disguised — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2 promotion/relegation  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Dallas #Fuel #run #table #OWCS #Stage #beat #Spacestation #grand #finalOverwatch Champions Series

Dallas Fuel completed their perfect run through the Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1, taking down Spacestation Gaming 4-1 in the grand final on Sunday.

The Fuel beat Spacestation for the second straight day after prevailing 3-1 in the upper-bracket final on Saturday. Spacestation recovered, sweeping Team Liquid 3-0 earlier in the day Sunday in the lower-bracket final.

Dallas took home $30,000 while Spacestation settled for the runner-up prize of $15,000. But both teams will receive berths in the OCS Champions Clash, scheduled for May 22-24 in Tokyo.

The Overwatch 2 online competition, with a prize pool of $75,000, began with six teams playing a regular season with a round-robin format.

The top four teams advanced to the regional playoffs, and all sealed berths in North America Stage 2. All playoff matches were first-to-three except for the grand final, which was first-to-four.

On Sunday, Spacestation barely let Team Liquid on the scoreboard — taking Busan Control 2-0, Blizzard World Hybrid 3-1 and Aatlis Flashpoint 3-0.

Then they ran into a Dallas Fuel team that went 5-0 in the regular season, dealing Spacestation their only loss in the early phase.


The Fuel opened the grand final by winning 2-0 on Busan Control and 2-1 on Midtown Hybrid. Spacestation answered with a 3-1 victory on Rialto Escort, but it wasn’t enough to turn the tide. The Fuel took Suravasa Flashpoint 3-2 and clinched the championship with a 142.41m-7.48m blowout on Esperanca Push.

Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1 prize pool

1. Dallas Fuel — $30,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2

2. Spacestation Gaming — $15,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2

3. Team Liquid — $12,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2

4. LuneX Gaming — $8,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2

5-6. Extinction, Disguised — $5,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2 promotion/relegation

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Dallas #Fuel #run #table #OWCS #Stage #beat #Spacestation #grand #final">Deadspin | Dallas Fuel run table at OWCS NA Stage 1, beat Spacestation in grand final  Overwatch Champions Series   Dallas Fuel completed their perfect run through the Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1, taking down Spacestation Gaming 4-1 in the grand final on Sunday.  The Fuel beat Spacestation for the second straight day after prevailing 3-1 in the upper-bracket final on Saturday. Spacestation recovered, sweeping Team Liquid 3-0 earlier in the day Sunday in the lower-bracket final.  Dallas took home ,000 while Spacestation settled for the runner-up prize of ,000. But both teams will receive berths in the OCS Champions Clash, scheduled for May 22-24 in Tokyo.  The Overwatch 2 online competition, with a prize pool of ,000, began with six teams playing a regular season with a round-robin format.  The top four teams advanced to the regional playoffs, and all sealed berths in North America Stage 2. All playoff matches were first-to-three except for the grand final, which was first-to-four.  On Sunday, Spacestation barely let Team Liquid on the scoreboard — taking Busan Control 2-0, Blizzard World Hybrid 3-1 and Aatlis Flashpoint 3-0.  Then they ran into a Dallas Fuel team that went 5-0 in the regular season, dealing Spacestation their only loss in the early phase.  The Fuel opened the grand final by winning 2-0 on Busan Control and 2-1 on Midtown Hybrid. Spacestation answered with a 3-1 victory on Rialto Escort, but it wasn’t enough to turn the tide. The Fuel took Suravasa Flashpoint 3-2 and clinched the championship with a 142.41m-7.48m blowout on Esperanca Push.   Overwatch Champions Series’ North America Stage 1 prize pool  1. Dallas Fuel — ,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2  2. Spacestation Gaming — ,000, qualifies for Champions Clash, NA Stage 2  3. Team Liquid — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2  4. LuneX Gaming — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2  5-6. Extinction, Disguised — ,000, qualifies for NA Stage 2 promotion/relegation  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Dallas #Fuel #run #table #OWCS #Stage #beat #Spacestation #grand #final

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