Saturday, 19th April, 2025

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South Korea’s Sungjae Im savoured a career third top-10 at the Masters Tournament as Rory McIlroy rewrote golf history with a nerve-jangling playoff victory which made him only the sixth golfer to complete the career Grand Slam.

The 27-year-old Im posted a closing 3-under 69 on a memorable Sunday at Augusta National to finish as the leading Asian golfer in tied fifth on 7-under 281, four shots back of McIlroy who dramatically prevailed over Justin Rose with a birdie 3 on the first extra hole at the 18th to earn his first Masters title and the coveted green jacket.

The Northern Irishman, who arrived at Augusta National on the back of two victories this season, joined an illustrious club comprising of Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only men who have won all four major championships. He signed for a closing 73 which included two double bogeys and a closing bogey in regulation but prevailed with some gutsy golf including a glorious approach to four feet in extra time for the well-earned title.

Im has now matched Korean trailblazer K.J. Choi who also has three career top-10s at the Masters, a run which has given him added fuel to keep dreaming of winning the prestigious tournament in the near future.

“It was a good week and finishing top-5, it shows that I’m able to compete here,” said Im, who was runner-up in 2020 and T8 in 2022. “The golf course is so difficult and I managed to play well and keep the mistakes to a minimum. I really love coming back to play here and look forward to next year and having another go again. Rory made his dream come true today and hopefully my time will come one day. I can only keep working hard to get better.”

In what was his sixth Masters start, the two-time PGA TOUR winner has slowly learned to master the intricacies of Augusta National. He sank four birdies and a magical eagle on the 13th hole by largely producing shots that require intimate knowledge of how the ball would react on the treacherous Augusta National greens. On the 7th hole, he spun his approach back to four feet for his second birdie of the day, and a long iron approach into the par-5 13th hole was pure class as his ball landed on the green and fed off the slope to within five feet of the pin.

“The eagle on 13 was definitely a highlight and it was good to save par from the bunker on the last hole as well,” said Im, who has three top-5s this season and will rise to 15th place on the FedExCup standings.  “Last year (when he missed the cut), my feeling was not very good, and then my game was not up there, but this year is kind of different. I was under par from the first day, so I feel good about that.”

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama, the 2021 Masters champion, shot the joint low round of 66 to finish T21 alongside another Korean, Byeong Hun An who carded a final round 71. Tom Kim closed with a 79 for T52.

McIlroy made it a heart-stopping day as his overnight two-shot lead evaporated on the very first hole which he double-bogeyed, but the World No. 2 brilliantly fought back with four birdies to seemingly take control of the tournament. He then nervously dropped four shots over the next four holes, including a double on the par-5 13th hole with a wedge in hand, before fighting back once again with two wonderful birdies on the 15th and 17th holes. With a one-shot lead playing 18, McIlroy had a 5-foot par putt for the win but missed. After shruggling off the disappointment, a precise wedge approach to four feet in the first extra hole sealed the deal for McIlroy as Rose, who had charged into contention with a 66, agonizingly missed his own birdie chance earlier from 16 feet.

“It’s a dream come true. I have dreamt about that moment for as long as I can remember.  There were points in my career where I didn’t know if I would have this nice garment over my shoulders, but I didn’t make it easy today. I was nervous. It was one of the toughest days I’ve ever had on the golf course,” said McIlroy, whose major wins include the 2011 U.S. Open, 2012 PGA Championship, 2014 Open Championship and 2014 PGA Championship.

Final-Round Notes – Sunday, April 13, 2025

Sunday weather: Mostly sunny. High of 71. Wind NE 3-6 mph in the morning switching to W 4-8 mph in the afternoon.

Final Leaderboard

Pos.        Player                    R1           R2           R3           R4           Total

1              Rory McIlroy*       72            66            66            73            277 (-11)

2              Justin Rose            65            71            75            66            277 (-11)

3              Patrick Reed         71            70            69            69            279 (-9)

4              Scottie Scheffler  68            71            72            69            280 (-8)

*Defeats Justin Rose with a birdie-3 on the first playoff hole (No.18)

Playoff Notes

  • Rory McIlroy defeats Justin Rose with a birdie-3 on the first playoff hole (No. 18)
  • 18th playoff in Masters history: most recent, 2017, Sergio Garcia defeated Justin Rose with a birdie-3 on the first playoff hole (No. 18)
  • Third Masters playoff in a row to feature all international players: 2013/Adam Scott def. Angel Cabrera, 2017/Sergio Garcia def. Justin Rose
  • PGA TOUR playoff records: Rory McIlroy (4-2), Justin Rose (1-4)
  • McIlroy’s second playoff this season: defeated J.J. Spaun at THE PLAYERS Championship
  • Fourth playoff on TOUR this season: Sony Open in Hawaii, Mexico Open at VidantaWorld, THE PLAYERS Championship

Rory McIlroy: Winner, Augusta Masters

Rory McIlroy (Won/-11)

  • Wins his first Masters Tournament, fifth major championship and 29th PGA TOUR title in his 263rd PGA TOUR start aged 35 years, 11 months, 9 days
  • Completes career Grand Slam, joining Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods:

90 years after Gene Sarazen/1935 Masters

60 years after Gary Player/1965 U.S. Open

25 years after Tiger Woods/2000 Open

  • Fifth major championship victory: T15 all-time with Seve Ballesteros, James Braid, Brooks Koepka, Byron Nelson, J. Taylor, Peter Thomson
  • 29th PGA TOUR victory: T17 all-time with Harry Cooper, Gene Littler, Lee Trevino
  • Earns 750 FedExCup points and extends his lead in the FedExCup standings
  • In his 17th Masters appearance, marks second-most attempts to earn first Masters title: Sergio Garcia/Won 2017 Masters in 19th start
  • 21st player to win five or more major championship titles
  • Third player to come from seven strokes back after the first round to win the Masters (Nick Faldo/1990, Tiger Woods/2005)
  • 11 years since his last major championship victory (ties five players for longest all-time between major championship wins, most recent: Tiger Woods/2008 U.S. Open – 2019 Masters)
  • Third player to win THE PLAYERS Championship and the Masters Tournament in the same year: Tiger Woods (2001), Scottie Scheffler (2024)
  • Joins Nick Faldo (1990) as only players to win the Masters with double bogey or worse on first hole of final round
  • First player from Northern Ireland to win the Masters; 13th different country with at least one Masters champion
  • Converts for the 12th time in his 20th 54-hole lead/co-lead in individual stroke play events on TOUR
  • Wins with the 54-hole lead/co-lead at the Masters for the first time (T15/2011); now 5-for-7 converting the 54-hole lead/co-lead in major championships
  • FedExCup leader is the only multiple winner this season (AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, THE PLAYERS Championship, Masters Tournament)
  • International players have won 11 of the first 16 events on TOUR this season: Hideki Matsuyama/Japan, Nick Taylor/Canada, Sepp Straka/Austria, Rory McIlroy/Northern Ireland/3, Thomas Detry/Belgium, Ludvig Åberg/Sweden, Karl Vilips/Australia, Viktor Hovland/Norway, Min Woo Lee/Australia
  • For the ninth consecutive year the champion played in the final group on Sunday

Justin Rose (2nd/-11)

  • Joins Ben Hogan (1942, 1954) as the second player in Masters history to lose in a playoff twice (lost to Sergio Garcia/2017)
  • 2018 FedExCup champion moves to No. 9 in the FedExCup standings
  • Projected to move from No. 39 to No. 12 in the Official World Golf Ranking
  • Held 18- and 36-hole solo lead; no first-round leader has won on TOUR in 16 starts this season
  • Owns eight top-10s in 20 Masters appearances, including three runner-up finishes; was T2 to Jordan Spieth in 2015 and lost a playoff to Sergio Garcia in 2017
  • Three top-10s in seven PGA TOUR starts this season (T3/AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, T8/Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, P2/Masters Tournament)
  • Was attempting to join Nick Faldo (1989, 1990, 1996) and Danny Willett (2016) as Masters winners from England

Miscellaneous Notes

  • Patrick Reed (3rd/-9) posts his best finish in a major championship since his Masters victory in 2018
  • Scottie Scheffler (4th/-8) records fourth consecutive top-10 finish at the Masters (Won/2024, T10/2023, Won/2022)
  • Last year’s runner-up, Ludvig Åberg (7th/-6) closes with bogey, triple bogey for top-10 finishes in each of his two Masters appearances
  • Max Homa (T12/-4), who entered this week off five consecutive missed cuts, posts best finish on TOUR since 2024 Truist Championship (T8); finished T3 at 2024 Masters Tournament.

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