Ex-Masters champions handed big bucks even though they didn't compete
Fifteen former Masters champions collected $25,000 each at Augusta National this year simply for attending the tournament, while Rory McIlroy claimed his sixth major title

Fifteen former Masters champions collected $25,000 each at Augusta National this year simply for attending the tournament, while Rory McIlroy claimed his sixth major title

PGA Tour pro Michael Kim agreed Rory McIlroy had an Augusta National access edge ahead of the 2026 Masters — before contradicting himself by admitting he had opportunities to practice there but chose not to

One of Rory McIlroy's fellow competitors at The Masters is hitting back at the idea the back-to-back champion gained an unfair advantage by playing more at Augusta National.

Rory McIlroy sparked controversy at the Masters by practicing at Augusta National in the weeks leading up to the event. Did he gain an unfair advantage? Competitor Micheal Kim chimed in on the debate at tournament’s end. In doing so, he revealed a loophole for unlimited course access which he did not exploit. The discussion […] The post Masters Golfer Reveals Loophole For Unlimited Course Access Amid Practice Controversy, And Why He Won’t Exploit It appeared first on BroBible.

Despite falling short of the green jacket, Scottie Scheffler etches his name into the history books with a remarkable performance.

Scottie Scheffler shares frustrations with Augusta National for changing conditions after second-place Masters finish sportingnews.com

Despite finishing in a tie for 38th place, Haotong Li managed to put together one of the most memorable weeks in modern Masters history. Rory McIlroy winning his second consecutive green jacket is the lead storyline out of the 2026 edition of the tournament, but Li's efforts should get a special place in the history books as well.Li, a four-time winner on the DP World Tour, qualified for the 2026 Masters by finishing T-4 in the 2025 Open Championship and was making what was his third start at Augusta National in his career. Things got off to a magical start for the 30-year-old, but then a toilet got involved, some wayward shots were hit, and the man from China cost himself a huge chunk of change during Sunday's final round.READ: Masters Parting Thoughts: Rory's Memory, A Bad Broadcast, And The Passage Of TimeFollowing rounds of 71-69 to put himself in a tie for seventh heading into the weekend, Li explained that he had spent Thursday night and Friday morning on the toilet due to what we can only assume was a battle with food poisoning. He even admitted he thought he'd pull out of the tournament on Friday, but he stuck it out and shot 3-under in the second round.He hit copy-paste on Saturday with another round of 3-under and found himself paired with World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler on Sunday, just four shots behind the leaders. Li played his opening 11 holes of the final round at even par, and seemed well on his way to a Top 12 finish to earn an automatic invite into the 2027 Masters as well as a sizable payday.But then he had to play the 12th and 13th holes, and that did not go well. He found the water with his teeshot on the Par 3 12th before walking off the green with a triple bogey. Although his name was still in the Top 20 on the leaderboard at that point, things were officially bad, but quickly got far, far worse.Li went for the Par 5 13th green in two, pulled his fairway wood left, and his golf ball appeared to hit a rock in the creek that runs along the hole, pushing his ball deep into the pine trees and azaleas. It looked as if he was transported from Augusta National to a random forest in East Georgia.Somehow, he was able to find his golf ball in the shrubbery. He attempted to hit it, failed, took a penalty, and eventually hit an approach shot long of the green before proceeding to putt his ball into the creek. Yes, putt. It was an adventure that ultimately ended with him taking a 10 on the hole.READ: No More Questions, Only Overwhelming Comfort In Rory McIlroy’s New Augusta EraLi managed to play his final five holes at even par before signing for a final round 80. He went from standing on the 12th tee at 7-under for the tournament to closing his week out at 1-over.If Li had managed to play the final seven holes of his final round at even par, he would have finished in a tie for 11th and earned more than $500,000. Instead, he finished just inside the Top 40, will have to find a way to qualify for next year's Masters, and took home just over $105,000.Li may have become a bit of a cult hero of the Masters with his efforts and memorable adventure around Amen Corner, but man, was it ever costly.


An original 2016 edition of the Masters gnome was just auctioned off.

And just like that, another Masters is gone. If you're like me, there is a moment every Masters Sunday, amidst all the inevitable and glorious chaos, when a brief feeling of dread takes over. The golf is phenomenal, the scenes are familiar, the leaderboard is tight, but you know you're running out of time.Running out of time to watch the best golfers in the world play the greatest golf course in the world, and running out of time in the game called life. In the grand scheme of things, golf is just a sport that doesn't matter, the Masters is just four days on a calendar, and Augusta National is an adult version of Disney World. At least, that's the cynical way of looking at it.When you look at the Masters on a slightly deeper, more meaningful level, it's still just a golf tournament, but it's also a clock, and one that never stops ticking.Author and ESPN writer Wright Thompson put it best during a recent appearance on ‘Golf Stuff' while describing what the Masters truly is: "The winners come and go, but the ability to mark the passage of time is the thing to me."Simple, but powerful. So much happens in life between each playing of the Masters. You lose people, you gain people, you struggle, you thrive, you have wins, and you have losses. Then, that first full week of April arrives. All feels right for four days despite the clock still ticking, and while the feeling of dread always comes late on Sunday, the feeling of appreciation defeats it every single time.Alright, now that you've unknowingly allowed me to get all emotional, we can get into the golf. Rory McIlroy won the Masters, again. He's now not only a legend of the game, but a Masters legend as well.READ: No More Questions, Only Overwhelming Comfort In Rory McIlroy’s New Augusta EraWe also have to talk about the CBS broadcast on Sunday, because for the first time in my lifetime, I think ‘bad’ is the proper word to describe it.You can find Mark Harris on X @itismarkharris, and you can also email him at [email protected] the handful of players who began Sunday's final round with a chance of winning a green jacket, Rory McIlroy had them all beat in the category of experience on the grounds of Augusta National. This year marked his 18th appearance in the Masters, and it goes without saying that winning the tournament a year ago was another tool in his toolbox. Having experience and using it are two separate things, however. It should come as no surprise that the career grand slam winner knew how and when to use it during the final round.During his round of 73 on Saturday, McIlroy played Amen Corner 3-over par. On Sunday, he played it five shots better, and it was jump-started with a birdie on the Par 3 12th hole, a stage he conquered by leaning on a tip he was given more than 15 years ago."It was in off the left. That was where the wind was," McIlroy explained. "I waited -- this is going back to one of my first-ever practice rounds here. I played a practice round with Tom Watson in 2009, and he said to me on the 12th tee he always waited until he felt where the wind should be and then just hit it. You know, just hit it as soon as you can."That's what I did on 12. It was all over the place. When I stood up on the tee, it felt like it was off the right, and I looked at the 11th flag, it was blowing right to left. But I was patient, and I waited to feel where the wind should have been coming from, and I knew it was just a perfect 3/4 9-iron."Perfect, indeed. McIlroy hit his tee shot to inside eight feet and rolled in the birdie putt. We can talk about his speed and distance off the tee, his list of career accomplishments, and abilities with a club in his hand, but McIlroy possesses the wherewithal to think back on a moment from a 2009 practice round may legitimately be a one-of-one characteristic. Complaining about the broadcast is the typical, cliché thing to do each week throughout the PGA Tour season. While I personally think the criticism is overblown when it comes to the broadcasts of regular PGA Tour events, the Masters and CBS typically put together the best broadcast of the year, and any complaints in the past are just doing too much.However, this year's broadcast was noticeably bad.The early coverage of the final few groups on Sunday was legitimate minutes (plural) behind the online leaderboard, and even the leaderboard on the broadcast jumped the gun occasionally before even showing the player finish the hole they were on. We missed multiple shots from Sam Burns on the second hole until CBS finally showed him airmailing the green; Scheffler's birdie attempt on the second hole wasn't shown live; and Justin Rose's bogey on the third hole was a mere mention. Those are just the immediate examples that come to mind.The broadcast did manage to settle in throughout the afternoon, but then came the abomination on the 72nd hole.Cameron Young hit his teeshot left off the tee while McIlroy blocked his tee ball about 100 yards right of the fairway, and it was as if CBS had never seen two players on opposite sides of the finishing hole.Viewers had no idea where McIlroy's second shot ended up. While the focus has largely been on that specific camera and broadcast blunder, the fact that we also had no clue where Young's approach shot finished was even more inexplicable. Young simply hit his second shot left of the green, yet viewers didn't know that until the broadcast showed him approaching his golf ball.For a solid 30 seconds, viewers didn't know where the golf balls of the two players in the final pairing of the Masters were as they were playing the final hole.On-course analyst Dottie Pepper was fantastic as usual, and Jim Nantz did make up for the broadcast's many blunders with an emotional moment after McIlroy closed things out, but wow, nobody could have seen that type of afternoon coming from the CBS crew.You can find Mark Harris on X @itismarkharris, and you can also email him at [email protected].

Rory McIlroy made history at Augusta National by becoming just the fourth player to ever win back-to-back Masters tournaments. He was strategic in his pursuits of a second Green Jacket. The golfer passed up payday opportunities at other PGA Tour events in order to prepare. In doing so, he gained an advantage over the field. […] The post Rory McIlroy Passed On $5 Million In Potential Payouts To Gain Advantage At The Masters appeared first on BroBible.

Rory McIlroy successfully defended his Masters title at Augusta National, joining an elite group of just four golfers to win consecutive green jackets, as Donald Trump praised the champion

This is not going to sit well with other golfers.

McIlroy is the second male golfer to win back-to-back Masters.


Following Rory McIlroy's Masters triumph at Augusta National, which saw him win his second green jacket, U.S. President Donald Trump has shamelessly tried to make himself the center of attention

Rory McIlroy was filled with unbridled emotion as he sank the winning putt Sunday for back-to-back Masters glory. It’s a shame fans tuning into the CBS broadcast couldn’t see it. McIlroy converted on a short putt from just inches away from the par-4 18th hole to win his second green jacket at Augusta National Golf … The post CBS is getting flamed for botching final shot of Rory McIlroy winning Masters appeared first on Larry Brown Sports.

RIATH AL-SAMARRAI AT AUGUSTA NATIONAL: Rory McIlroy has won the Masters again. And just like the last time, all of 364 days ago, it was truly magnificent.

ISABEL BALDWIN AT AUGUSTA NATIONAL: Even though he started the day four shots back of Rory McIlroy, there was belief that Scheffler could still be the one slipping into the green jacket.

After breaking a 16 year drought at Augusta National just a year ago, Rory McIlroy claimed his second green jacket and received the love of his family and friends.

Scottie Scheffler came up just short of another green jacket, but his performance at Augusta National still etched his name into Masters history. The world No. 1 finished one shot behind Rory McIlroy at 12 under, settling for runner-up in the 2026 Masters. While McIlroy claimed the spotlight with his second straight win, Scheffler’s historic […] The post Scottie Scheffler Makes Masters History Despite Falling Short to Rory McIlroy appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Rory McIlroy won the Masters on Sunday, marking his second consecutive title. From 17 years without a win at Augusta National to the fourth-ever back-to-back champion, McIlroy is in an elite circle. But he knows that he hasn’t made these massive wins easy on himself or those supporting him. "I don't make it easy. I […] The post Rory McIlroy makes obvious statement about his Masters, major championship process appeared first on ClutchPoints.

What are we all going to talk about next year? That was the question Rory McIlroy asked inside the media center at Augusta National a year ago after finally sliding on the green jacket. The question was purely sarcastic, but not exactly a joke. For 10 straight Aprils, the golf world as a whole, including McIlroy himself, had obsessed over whether the Northern Irishman would ever win The Masters to complete the career grand slam. It turned out that the 11th time was the charm as he cemented himself as a legend of the game, becoming just the sixth player of the modern era to complete the feat.Before McIlroy could even leave the property that Sunday night a year ago and drive down Magnolia Lane as a Masters champion for the first time, a new and fair question had already been posed: With seemingly nothing else left to accomplish in the game, what version of McIlroy would we get moving forward?It may feel like a ridiculous question to pose about a player in his mid 30s who may potentially only now be reaching the peak of his powers. But we're also discussing a player who developed serious scar tissue trying to accomplish one singular thing every spring for a decade, and he finally managed to cross that finish line.The most difficult piece of the new question McIlroy faced was that it could only truly be answered 365 days later at this year's Masters. Another long wait for an answer to a new, exhausting question that could only be answered by his play across 72 holes, and what position the name McIlroy fell on the leaderboard of the grandest tournament in the sport, yet again.With his name ultimately finishing at the top, and in the manner in which he put it there, no more questions need to be asked. We shouldn't be allowed to ask them. No more questions when it comes to McIlroy and The Masters, not unless they're about how many more times he could win at Augusta National. That's a perk of becoming just the fourth player ever to defend their Masters title successfully.It's mesmerizing to write that about a player who had ghosts lurking around every corner of the sprawling property for more than 10 years. Now, that player has won consecutive Masters and even looked as comfortable as one can be at Augusta National while winning his second.He's always had the game to win The Masters. He had the game to do it when he was just 21-years-old in 2011 and gave up a four-shot lead heading into the final round. He finished inside the Top 10 seven times between 2014 and 2022 before checking the box in 2025.This 2026 Masters version of Rory was something new, however, and not just because he threw on a green jacket and was allowed in every room inside the clubhouse during this tournament week. No, this Rory was comfortable, even when the going got tough.McIlroy woke up Saturday with a six-shot lead – the largest 36-hole lead in the history of The Masters – and looked like a giant strolling the fairways of Augusta with his patented strut. Eleven holes into his third round, and that six-shot advantage was gone after a water ball and double bogey on the Par 4 11th. An ugly bogey on the following hole, and the familiar ghosts started to peek their heads around the trees, focused on one man and one man only.It's so easy to look at McIlroy's third round, see him play Amen Corner 3-over par, and see his score of 73 as a complete disaster. Scottie Scheffler and Cameron Young each shooting a pair of 65s on the same day made the 73 look that much worse, but McIlroy righting the ship and playing his final five holes Saturday 1-under was a tiny, yet much-needed victory that kept him afloat before ultimately winning the golf tournament by a single shot over Scheffler on Sunday.While comfortable would be the last word you would use to describe McIlroy on Saturday, it would be among the first you would use to describe him across the final stretch on Sunday. This isn't the type of comfort you get by simply playing in your 18th Masters, as McIlroy was this week, but a comfort one only achieves by winning at this place.That 3-over run around Amen Corner on Saturday was almost completely erased Sunday as he made the loop in 2-under. The pair of birdies he picked up on the 12th and 13th holes began to shut the door on the group of chasers, but it was the comfort on the 16th and 17th holes that could be felt by anyone with eyes on what was taking place.McIlroy airmailed the green on the Par 3 16th, putting him in a unique spot that could easily make even a past champion look foolish. He responded by cozying up a putt from off the green to within just a couple of inches to tap in for a par.On 17, McIlroy missed the green with his approach shot from the fairway, just 153 yards from the pin. A second consecutive swing with a short-iron in hand that put him in a peculiar spot while trying to hold onto the lead. He responded by hitting a chip shot to 2 feet, leaving him with another tap-in par.Then came the nervy tee shot on the closing hole, one that could have turned into disaster with McIlroy missing with his tee ball way right, but the experience of conquering that stage kicked in after getting a lucky break and closing things out.Comfort in abundance.Nothing was stress-free for McIlroy on Sunday or at any point throughout the week. That stress doesn't go away because you've accomplished the grandest feat in the modern game and have a green jacket with the Masters logo on it. The stress evolves, it changes, but it never goes away, not in this game.The questions are done being asked of Rory and the Masters. We'll just play witness to what he delivers in the coming years to what feels like a new home, and a rather comfortable one at that.

There are certain truths in golf that seem to arrive every April. The Masters does that. It strips away fluff. It does not care about branding, hot takes or lazy nostalgia. It asks the best players in the world to hit every kind of shot under the heaviest kind of pressure and then it tells us ...
