Masters
Masters Gnome Sells for Record $28K As Collectible’s Future in Doubt
An original 2016 edition of the Masters gnome was just auctioned off.
Fan At Masters Accused Of Wearing ‘Inappropriate’ Outfit – The Spun
Fan At Masters Accused Of Wearing ‘Inappropriate’ Outfit The Spun
“Rory McIlroy Didn’t Really Wanna Talk to Me” – Cameron Young Reveals What Happened on the Final Day of the Masters at Augusta – Sportskeeda
“Rory McIlroy Didn’t Really Wanna Talk to Me” – Cameron Young Reveals What Happened on the Final Day of the Masters at Augusta Sportskeeda
Caitlin Clark and Lexie Hull Win Fans’ Hearts With Cute White and Beige Outfits After Reunion Becomes Official
Caitlin Clark and Lexie Hull posed for photos before watching the final round of the Masters in Augusta.
Masters Parting Thoughts: Rory's Memory, A Bad Broadcast, And The Passage Of Time
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 Passed On $5 Million In Potential Payouts To Gain Advantage At The Masters
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.
Donald Trump sends message to ‘legend’ Rory McIlroy after Masters win as President was spotted at UFC event
PRESIDENT Donald Trump is full of praise for Rory McIlroy after his historic Masters win. Trump, 79, is hailing the Masters winner after being spotted at a UFC event. The…
Golf Fans Fume As CBS Completely Botches Dramatic Masters Finish
Love him or hate him, Rory McIlroy is what golf needs right now. Every sport needs a villain (or hero, depending on where you stand), and Rory has beautifully filled those shoes. He's now a back-to-back Masters champion, and both times have come with a heaping helping of drama. Of course, Sunday's final hole was bungled so badly by CBS, I'm not sure anyone fully appreciated this one. For those who missed it, Rory needed a simple bogey on 18 to win his second straight Masters. Easy, right? Wrong! He sliced one off the tee worse than I do at my local muni, and found himself in the woods with a tight little window to the green. The drama was there, again. Last year, he folded – and then unfolded. What would happen this time around? Would we get a Scottie-Rory playoff at Augusta? It was certainly on the table, depending on how McIlroy's next shot went. It was perfectly set up for CBS. Another ‘Masters Moment.’ We were all on the edge of our couches, fresh off an incredible Sunday nap. And then … we missed it. We missed all of it, because CBS had NO idea where the ball went. Here's the clip of Rory's second shot, which starts around the 4:07 mark:Amazing, isn't it? I watched it live, obviously, but it's even worse seeing it again today. CBS and Augusta have been partners forever. Trust me, Jim Nantz told us a billion times this weekend. They've had a longstanding partnership that's been pretty terrific. But this is just inexcusable. That was, easily, the biggest shot of the tournament, and they completely botched it. NOBODY knew where Rory's ball was. The camera operators had no clue, Jim Nantz had no clue, although he ventured a guess that it was somewhere "around" the green. Dottie Pepper said the "8 iron" was on the way. Trevor Immelman noted that it sounded "solid." Things really spiraled after, because not only did the broadcast have no clue where Rory's shot landed … they were equally confused by Cam Young's approach! Hell, they didn't even show Young's shot tracer. The camera just stayed on him the whole time. Jim said, "He hated it," and then we went back to the aerial shot of the 18th green with no mention of where either shot actually landed. It was a full 90 seconds until we FINALLY saw one single golf ball in the bunker. Again, just stunning. But wait – as they say – there's MORE:That's Rory's winning putt, by the way. Yes, it went in. You would have no earthly idea by the angle, but I promise, it went in. CBS could have picked so many ways to show the final putt, and they chose Rory McIlroy's ass. Just stunning. Look, shooting golf ain't easy. I get that, completely. You're trying to track a tiny white ball in the air, going against a giant white sky, traveling hundreds of yards. But, again, this was not CBS's first rodeo. As Jim Nantz noted, this was their 70th year together – the longest-running relationship in sports. You sort of run out of excuses when you hit the 7-decade mark. CBS whiffed Sunday when all eyes were on them. Let's hope that doesn't become a tradition unlike any other.
Rory McIlroy was wearing astonishing $268,000 fashion item as he lifted Masters
As Rory McIlroy lifted the Masters trophy for the second time in as many years on Sunday, the crowd erupted at Augusta, but several eagle-eyed fans quickly picked up on something he was wearing
Rory McIlroy Gave Cameron Young the ‘Bryson DeChambeau Treatment’
On a golf course, silence can convey a lot, particularly when the stakes are as high as they are at the Masters. Additionally, that silence usually signals business when Rory McIlroy is in the final pairing. That’s exactly what Cameron Young experienced during the final round at Augusta National in ...
Rory McIlroy's caddie's astonishing career earnings after huge Masters windfall
Rory McIlroy's caddie Harry Diamond may have seen his career earnings climb north of $10 million on Sunday following McIlroy's second straight Masters win at Augusta
Donald Trump makes Rory McIlroy statement immediately after Masters win
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
Rory McIlroy’s mom had epic purse that foretold 2026 Masters championship
Rory McIlroy has won his second straight Masters, with a one-stroke victory on Sunday. After the event, McIlroy thanked his parents, who were in attendance for the event. While most fans were focused on the play of McIlroy, some noticed the accessory his mom, Rosie, was holding, which paid tribute to her son, according to […] The post Rory McIlroy’s mom had epic purse that foretold 2026 Masters championship appeared first on ClutchPoints.
Winnie Cooper & D.J. Tanner Are Now In Their 50s & Haven't Lost A Step, A Wild Jets Stat & Masters Meals!
Plus: An incredible stat about the Jets and Rory McIlroy.
Scottie Scheffler raises 'unequal firmness' complaint at Augusta after Masters loss – Sportskeeda
Scottie Scheffler raises 'unequal firmness' complaint at Augusta after Masters loss Sportskeeda
Rory McIlroy will finally get his Masters wish one year on after second win
Rory McIlroy was able to repeat history over the weekend as he claimed his second straight Masters title, providing him the chance to enjoy some of the same perks in 2027 as he did this year
Eagle-eyed fans spot heartwarming detail on Rory McIlroy's mom's purse as she watched him win Masters
The Northern Irishman etched his name into the history books once again after winning the 2026 Masters in emphatic style and retaining his title from last year.
Donald Trump puts himself at center of Rory McIlroy's Masters triumph with shameless plug
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
Cameron Young's bid for Masters glory began at church and ended at Amen Corner as Rory McIlroy holds off American rival
DANIEL MATTHEWS AT AUGUSTA: Even on Masters Sunday, even with a share of the lead, mass came first. There was only one issue: Young and his family weren't sure where to go.
Furious fans rip into 'horrendous' CBS coverage of the Masters after missing Rory McIlroy's final shots at Augusta
While Rory McIlroy was busy making history, fans were left fuming as CBS repeatedly lost sight of the ball during the most critical moments of Sunday afternoon.






















