Rory McIlroy secured his place in golfing folklore on Sunday evening by claiming consecutive Masters titles.

The Holywood joined an exclusive club alongside Jack Nicklaus (1965 and 1996), Sir Nick Faldo (1989 and 1990) and Tiger Woods (2001 and 2002) as one of the select few to successfully defend the green jacket at Augusta National. The victory earned McIlroy £3.4million ($4.5m) for capturing the opening major of the season.

A year earlier, he needed a play-off to complete his career grand slam after dropping a shot on the 18th hole, ultimately prevailing over Justin Rose at the first additional hole.

Though the opening six holes proved challenging, with McIlroy falling two shots behind, he regained the composure that had delivered him a substantial six-stroke advantage following the second round.

Tyrrell Hatton posted an impressive 66 to reach 10 under par, while two-time winner Scottie Scheffler – following 12 straight pars – birdied the 15th and 16th to emerge as a potential threat, though his 68 left him at 11 under, insufficient to seriously challenge McIlroy’s position, reports the Irish Mirror.

Rose, once again McIlroy’s primary challenger at the top of the leaderboard, faltered at Amen Corner, relinquishing his slender lead before a dropped shot at the 17th extinguished his hopes, his 70 leaving him amongst the group on 10 under.

Mindful of the previous year’s close call, McIlroy maintained unwavering focus, parring the following four holes to arrive at the 18th tee with a two-stroke cushion. Yet the drama persisted throughout – consistent with his wayward driving all week, he once again found himself amongst the Georgian pines on the right, necessitating a sweeping hook shot that eventually settled in the greenside bunker. His recovery shot landed within 15ft, and he two-putted to secure his second green jacket with a closing 71, finishing on 12-under par.

While McIlroy displayed clear emotion, there were none of the tears or dramatic outpouring witnessed 12 months earlier. Instead, he savoured the triumph quietly alongside family and friends gathered behind the 18th green.

The foundations were established during the opening rounds, but the real test arrived over the weekend, where scores of 73-71 demonstrated the immense weight of expectation bearing down on him – though he maintained his composure throughout.

His resurgence began with consecutive birdies at the seventh and eighth holes, moving him to within one stroke of Rose, who was playing two groups in front on 12-under par.

The pivotal moments unfolded at Amen Corner – the treacherous section that had proved so destructive on Saturday when he surrendered a commanding six-shot overnight lead.

Twelve months earlier, the 11th hole had sparked Rose’s back-nine birdie blitz during his 66, but this time the Englishman faltered at golf’s most unforgiving hole, his wayward approach dropping him level with McIlroy on 11-under par.

Another errant shot resulted in a second consecutive bogey, surrendering the outright lead back to McIlroy, who had evidently learned from Saturday’s mistakes by navigating safely past the water hazard at the 11th. Then, within mere moments shortly before 5.30pm local time, the tide turned dramatically in McIlroy’s favour.

A magnificent approach shot to the par-three 12th landed McIlroy within seven feet of the pin, securing his fourth birdie of the round. Meanwhile, Rose had been eyeing a potential eagle after positioning his second shot within 30ft on the par-five 13th. His attempt, however, rolled eight feet past the cup, and compounding his frustration, he missed the return birdie putt.

This handed McIlroy a two-shot cushion with two par fives still to play. He seized the opportunity at the 13th – the very hole where he’d double-bogeyed in last year’s final round – stretching his advantage to three strokes.

Rose fought back with a birdie at the 15th, reducing the gap to two shots. He was then matched by two-time champion Scottie Scheffler, who, after 12 straight pars, fired consecutive birdies to join the chase. However, neither could mount a meaningful late challenge.

McIlroy nearly replicated his own ‘Tiger’ moment at the 16th after his ball ran onto the back fringe. Choosing to putt rather than chip as Woods famously did, the ball tracked at a steep angle down the slope, stopping inches from the cup.

The danger had passed, and even a dropped shot on the final hole couldn’t dampen the celebrations that ensued.

Masters full prize money breakdown:

1st — $4,500,000 — Rory McIlroy

2nd — $2,430,000 — Scottie Scheffler

3rd — $1,530,000 — Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Henley, Justin Rose, Cameron Young ($1,080,000 each)

4th — $1,080,000

5th — $900,000

6th — $810,000

7th — $753,750 — Collin Morikawa, Sam Burns ($725,625 each)

8th — $697,500

9th — $652,500 — Max Homa, Xander Schauffele ($630,000 each)

10th — $607,500

11th — $562,500 — Jake Knapp

12th — $517,500 — Jordan Spieth, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed, Patrick Cantlay, Jason Day ($427,500 each)

13th — $472,500

14th — $427,500

15th — $405,000

16th — $382,500

17th — $360,000

18th — $337,500 — Maverick McNealy, Viktor Hovland, Matt Fitzpatrick ($315,000 each)

19th — $315,000

20th — $292,500

21st — $270,000 — Wyndham Clark, Ludvig Åberg, Keegan Bradley ($252,000 each)

22nd — $252,000

23rd — $234,000

24th — $216,000 — Chris Gotterup, Adam Scott, Sam Stevens, Brian Campbell, Matt McCarty, Michael Brennan ($182,250 each)

25th — $198,000

26th — $180,000

27th — $173,250

28th — $166,500

29th — $159,750

30th — $153,000 — Alex Noren, Harris English, Shane Lowry ($146,250 each)

31st — $146,250

32nd — $139,500

33rd — $132,750 — Tommy Fleetwood, Dustin Johnson, Brian Harman, Ben Griffin, Gary Woodland ($121,500 each)

34th — $127,125

35th — $121,500

36th — $115,875

37th — $110,250

38th — $105,750 — HaoTong Li, Ryan Gerard, Jon Rahm ($101,250 each)

39th — $101,250

40th — $96,750

41st — $92,250 — Justin Thomas, Kristoffer Reitan, Sepp Straka, Nick Taylor, Jacob Bridgeman ($83,250 each)

42nd — $87,750

43rd — $83,250

44th — $78,750

45th — $74,250

46th — $69,750 — Sungjae Im

47th — $65,250 — Si Woo Kim

48th — $61,650 — Aaron Rai

49th — $58,500 — Marco Penge, Corey Conners ($57,600 each)

50th — $56,700

51st — $55,350 — Kurt Kitayama

52nd — $54,000 — Sergio Garcia

53rd — $53,100 — Rasmus Hojgaard

54th — $52,200 — Charl Schwartzel

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