Poging GOUD - Vrij
Can Rory find happiness after Mastering the ultimate golf comeback?
Scottish Daily Express
|April 19, 2025
IN THE end, it was a gentle putt that finally won him a Green Jacket after years of trying. Mcllroy's Masters Moment, as it's been dubbed, came at the end of a nail-biting four-day competition and sudden death play-off in which the Northern Irishman defeated England's Justin Rose.
Besides the joy, there was another emotion etched across Rory McIlroy's face as he fell to his knees, sobbing into the green: the lifting of years of crushing pressure, repeated spells of underachievement, and the final vanquishing of the chorus of naysayers who predicted he would never complete the Grand Slam.
Welcomed into the firmament of true golfing greats, world leaders were off the mark quickly to hail a man whose refusal to give up must now surely define his legacy as much as his other tournament wins. King Charles, Sir Keir, President Trump and the Taoiseach were just a few of those queuing up to hail McIlroy's superb victory - and yes, he is probably in line for a knighthood, too, joining fellow great Sir Nick Faldo.
Not only that, but his wife and daughter were there to take it all in and savour the occasion. Poppy, four, sank an "incredible" putt during the pre-competition fun in an omen of things to come.
How far the County Down man must have felt he had travelled: from a wonder kid who showed off his skills by chipping balls into a washing machine, to a young pro with the world at his feet... followed by years of frustration and personal travails, then becoming just the sixth golfer in history to complete a career grand slam.
Mad celebrations in his hometown at the Holywood Golf Club also followed, but even the club's lady captain Ruth Watt gave voice to what many other fans had feared.
"We thought he had thrown it away", she told the BBC about his last-minute jitters, "but it was an unbelievable finish".
Back in 2020, McIlroy sounded like someone ready to walk away from the game entirely, confessing he was "going through the motions" as his years-long slump worsened. "I want to get an intensity and some sort of fire, but I just haven't been able to," he said glumly.
Dit verhaal komt uit de April 19, 2025-editie van Scottish Daily Express.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Scottish Daily Express
Scottish Daily Express
Beer brings new hop for dementia group
A GROUP of people with dementia have launched their own beer - with hops they grew themselves.
1 min
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
Study says price rules could cut smoking deaths
SMOKERS could face a minimum pricing policy similar to that imposed on drinkers.
1 mins
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
REDS BACK IN BUSINESS
FOR an hour, it was a familiar tale of one particular man holding back a red tide, of one goalkeeper revelling in this classic fixture.
2 mins
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
CALL FOR PROBE INTO MATERNITY SERVICES
SCOTTISH Labour has called for a national investigation into the state of maternity and neonatal services in Scotland following a series of alarming inspection reports.
1 min
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
SCOTLAND NHS 'ON LIFE SUPPORT' IN FISCAL CRISIS
Auditor reveals that two health boards needed loans just to break even last year
3 mins
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
DARCY DEMANDING KYBOSH OF KIWIS
Time for Scots to finally end the All Blacks hoodoo
2 mins
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
Cathedral's rare peregrine falcon chicks were poisoned
RARE peregrine falcon chicks that died after hatching at a cathedral were poisoned, tests have revealed.
1 min
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
Arise, Sir Becks..
'Proudest moment' as star knighted
1 min
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
MAX RECORD TOPS PRAGUE HIT PARADE
IT was a record-breaking night and a recordequalling night for Arsenal.
2 mins
November 05, 2025
Scottish Daily Express
A Caribbean clean-up
COMMUNITIES and wildlife in the Caribbean are the first to benefit from world-first, sustainable technology that transforms Sargassum seaweed into eco-friendly materials, enabling a major blight to become blue gold.
2 mins
November 05, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
