Masters 2026: Free of his Augusta burden, Rory McIlroy posts another dominant round to hold six-shot lead
· Yahoo Sports
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Imagine if Rory McIlroy had lost last year.
Imagine if his miraculous Sunday approach on 15 found the water. Imagine if his winning putt in the playoff lipped out. Imagine if any of a thousand little things had gone wrong, and then imagine what we’d be talking about this year, right now.
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Instead, we’re talking about a man striding toward history with a five-shot lead.
Rory, of course, won the Masters last year, in one of the most dramatic and heartfelt moments in this tournament’s history. And so he returned to Augusta not with the crushing burden of expectation, but with the freedom to chase a mark only three other men have achieved: back-to-back Masters.
Chasing the second comes with a whole lot less pressure than chasing the first. McIlroy claimed a share of the lead on Thursday, then held it on Friday afternoon, radiating chill as he carded a 7-under 65. He birdied three holes in a row right at the start of his round, then calmly shrugged off bogeys at 5 and 10. As private planes and drones buzzed overhead, he slapped hands with patrons on the crowded walkways between holes.
McIlroy kept his emotions — both positive and, rarely, negative — in check, proceeding from hole to hole with casual but constant focus. And the closer he grew to the clubhouse, the more he pressed on the gas. He birdied the 12th, 13th, 15th, 16th and 17th, that on a chip-in from off the green that sent the patrons into a delirious frenzy.
Roars for Rory after a chip-in birdie on No. 17. #themasterspic.twitter.com/g7dWFVTIf4
— The Masters (@TheMasters) April 10, 2026
Then he birdied 18, going from tied for the lead on the 11th to a six-shot advantage heading into the weekend. It’s the largest lead in Masters history heading into Round 3.
“I feel so much more relaxed,” McIlroy said earlier this week. “I know that I'm going to be coming back here for a lot of years, going to enjoy the perks that the champions get here. It doesn't make me any less motivated to go out there and play well and try to win the tournament, but yeah, just more relaxed about it all.”
Yes, McIlroy still must hold off Patrick Reed (-6), Sam Burns (-6), Tommy Fleetwood (-5) and Justin Rose (-5) — who came within one playoff hole of taking McIlroy’s jacket for himself — but really, that’s only part of McIlroy’s challenge this week. He’s also now pursuing golf’s legends, men like Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Nick Faldo — the only three players ever to win Masters tournaments back-to-back.
So how exactly would McIlroy go about winning back-to-back majors? One of the men who’s done it before shared some wisdom on Thursday morning.
“The key, obviously, is to win two years in a row. That's the first thing,” Nicklaus joked. “I think Rory is the only one that's got a chance to do that this year.”
Nicklaus apparently gave McIlroy some more private, and pointed, advice: “No f—ing double bogeys.” McIlroy made four double bogeys, including two in the final round, last year and still managed to win the green jacket. This year, his card is clean through two rounds.
If he hadn’t won last year, the pressure this weekend would be unimaginable. McIlroy’s every swing, every putt, every movement would be under a white-hot spotlight, dissected in front of the world. But he won, and that means he can dream bigger dreams.
Now, imagine if he wins two.