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    Home»Golf»Rory McIlroy’s Irish Open win was reminder of what he’s been telling us
    Golf

    Rory McIlroy’s Irish Open win was reminder of what he’s been telling us

    Lajina HossainBy Lajina HossainSeptember 8, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Rory McIlroy's Irish Open win was reminder of what he's been telling us
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    Twenty-seven feet, 10 inches. That was what stood between Rory McIlroy and a playoff on Sunday at the Amgen Irish Open at The K Club. That’s all it took to be reminded that McIlroy is capable of delivering what no one else in golf can at the moment.

    It’s also what it took to understand the message he has been trying to send since long before his career year began.

    At 36 years old, McIlroy is no longer the brash, young superstar with a lot of runway in front of him. He has been one of golf’s leading men for almost two decades now. His name has been the lead story at every major for at least 11 years unless Tiger Woods is in the field. He has accomplished more than a boy from Northern Ireland could have ever dreamed of. He has been telling us that his priorities in the game are changing, or at least, narrowing.

    In January, McIlroy revealed he had three goals to achieve before hanging up his competitive spikes. He understands that while he’s still in his prime, the shadows are longer than they have ever been. There is only so much sand in his hourglass. The Masters, an away Ryder Cup and an Olympic medal. He has preached about playing a more global game, taking his talents to places that rarely get to see him. He wants to play less and play where he wants, at the venues he wants, for the trophies he wants. What he deems important is what matters, and the rest is the rest.

    When McIlroy won the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam in April, he had already started the season by winning a second Players Championship and a victory at an iconic venue in Pebble Beach.

    A lull followed, brought on by the expected malaise of a superstar athlete that had finally summited the peak he’d long focused on. He talked about searching for motivation but also about wanting to soak in a lifelong achievement and enjoying a feeling that only comes once. He sent a surge through his home country during a weekend charge that came up short at the Open Championship, but he left Royal Portrush gliding on air in a way he hadn’t since exorcising his demons at Augusta National.

    That week at home filled McIlroy’s golf soul. This week, back home in Ireland, was another reminder that Rory McIlroy is different — in what he can deliver, in his understanding of his place in the game and in what he now views as important and fulfilling.

    On Saturday at The K Club, after a frustrating round that left him a few shots off the pace, McIlroy flipped a ball to a young girl in the crowd and sent her into an uncontrollable state of joy.

    “It’s amazing to think that a little random small thing of throwing a ball to someone [can bring joy],” McIlroy told Off The Ball after his playoff win on Sunday at The K Club. “I don’t know why but the enjoyment I give people because I play golf or the way I play golf or for whatever reason, but I don’t take it for granted. I know that not everyone gets the support that I do. I feel very fortunate that I get to experience it.”

    Saturday’s gesture was the appetizer for what McIlroy delivered Sunday, 27-feet, 10-inches from the 18th hole at K Club. He needed eagle to tie Joakim Lagergren and force a playoff. Last year, McIlroy had a putt on the 72nd hole at Royal County Down to force a playoff with Rasmus Hojgaard. It hung on the lip and didn’t drop to deliver a final gut punch in a season that included McIlroy’s devastating loss at the U.S. Open.

    But this year is different. So, of course, McIlroy stared it down, stood over it, and poured it right in the heart, sending all of The K Club into a state of delirium.

    At that moment, as young Irish boys and girls celebrated with their parents and his countrymen chanted his name as he walked to scoring, Rory McIlroy had already won the Irish Open regardless of the outcome. The electricity he sent through the golfing world with one roll is something unique to him at this moment. The moments he delivered for those who packed the fairways to watch him are priceless.

    That is something not lost on the five-time major winner. At times, it seems he still can’t believe he gets to be this Rory McIlroy, the one whose dreams all came true.

    “I feel just so lucky that I get to do this, I get to do this in front of these people,” McIlroy said after defeating Lagergren on the third playoff hole. “The support has been absolutely amazing all week.

    “This is absolutely incredible. I love coming home. I love playing in this atmosphere. Yeah, these are — moments like this, these are the things you’re going to remember well after your career is over. This is a really special day.”

    It was a day and a week that underscored what McIlroy has long tried to tell us as his hair started to grey. Certain things, moments and tournaments matter more. A student of history, McIlroy has long held national opens in high regard. It’s why he plays the Canadian Open every year, as well as the Scottish and the Irish. It’s why he’ll travel to Australia these next two Decembers for the Australian Open.

    “It’s really important. I think I’ve made it well known what I think of national opens,” McIlroy said at the 2024 RBC Canadian Open. “I think that they’re the oldest championships in our game and I think they’re very, very important. I’m very proud of the fact that I’ve won quite a few of them.

    “The opens definitely mean something else,” he later said.

    As Rory McIlroy stood over his 27-foot, 10-inch eagle putt on Sunday and sent it toward the hole like a lit fuze about to strike a pound of golf dynamite, what he’d been saying all along became clear.

    McIlroy has been in need of motivation, of another goal, since his Masters victory. That will be a constant, as it is with all elite athletes. There’s the next one. But just as he did at the Open at Royal Portrush, he found it where he always said he would: in the places and moments that mean something different. Those he deems special. The ones that speak to the part of the soul that makes Rory McIlroy the Rory McIlroy that caused an entire country to levitate once again on Sunday.

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    Lajina Hossain
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    Lajina Hossain is a full-time game analyst and sports strategist with expertise in both video games and real-life sports. From FIFA, PUBG, and Counter-Strike to cricket, football, and basketball – she has an in-depth understanding of the rules, strategies, and nuances of each game. Her sharp analysis has made her a trusted voice among readers. With a background in Computer Science, she is highly skilled in game mechanics and data analysis. She regularly writes game reviews, tips & tricks, and gameplay strategies for 6up.net.

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