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Follow Mail Sport's live blog for the latest leaderboard and updates from the final round of The Masters 2025 at Augusta National.
You know, some of the golf I've played this week has been probably the finest of my career, tee-to-green, and even on the greens at times. So the only thing I can point to was sort of back nine yesterday with the putter where I kind of let a few too many get away easily, and I felt like starting the day that that was kind of, possibly, going to cost me in the sense that I felt a little bit too far back. I mean, seven back starting the day.
Then something happened, for sure, around the middle of round. I just kind of went into the place that you dream about going to. I felt so good with my game. Felt so good with my mind. I began to sense that I was playing my way into the tournament. I was laser focused out there.
And then, you know, really didn't look at a leaderboard all day until the 18th green, and realized that that putt -- I could hear from the crowd on 17 that I was right, right in the mix, and then on 18, I figured Rory was behind me. I needed to make that putt to kind of give myself some hope.
So it's the kind of putt you dream about as a kid, and to have it and hole it, it was a special feeling. And unfortunately, the playoff, they always end so quickly. You know, that's sudden death. You don't really get an opportunity. If you're not the guy to hit the great shot or hole the great putt, it's over.
So I felt like, that's the nature of sudden death. But not really anything I could have done more today.
Over to my left, my family, my team. They've been on this journey with me the whole way through. They know the burden that I've carried to come here every year and try and try and try again and the one thing I would say to my daughter Poppy who is sitting over there is to never give up on your dreams - never ever give up on your dreams.
Keep coming back, keep working hard and if you put your mind to it you can do anything.
It's an honour of a lifetime to be standing here and I've dreamt about this moment for so long. I can't wait to be here again next year in Scottie's position, hopefully putting the green jacket back on myself.
This is by far the greatest golf tournament in the world. I'm from a place where I might get criticised for saying that. I go back to watching this tournament with my father when I was seven or eight years old. Watching Tiger Woods do what he did in 1997, that was my inspiration to try to become what I am today.
To think I'm up here wearing this Green Jacket - it's a dream come true. My dreams have been made today.
We've just seen the most amazing piece of history ever. We're honoured that we are up here.
I was up here for 19 and you probably heard me on Sky just now and I blerted out that was the greatest... We'll never see a scene like that at Augusta.
I think it tops it. For a man to do that after what he went through. But for a man to go through what he went through. An 11-year gap. And the ringer he put us all through today, but to make it to join the other five legends [as a Career Grand Slam winner] he's a legend. How cool is that. At 35-years-old he's a legend.
He just about did everything that we didn't say at the start of the day. He's got to plot his way around the golf course and hit the right tee shots and score on all the par fives. Didn't do any of that. And then made an absolute pickle of two shots on 13 and 18 and on the 72nd hole.
We're blessed. We've seen history. A remarkable, remarkable achievement.
It feels incredible. This is my 17th time here and I started to wonder if it would ever be my time. I’m wondering what we’re all going to talk about going into next year’s Masters! I’m honoured, thrilled and proud to call myself a Masters champion.
When I hit the wedge into the creek on 13th I felt like I did a really good job of bouncing back. I was really nervous going out. It was almost like the double bogey at the first calmed my nerves a bit. I couldn’t be more proud of myself being able to bounce back.
It was 14 years in the making after the four-shot lead in 2011. There was a lot of pent-up emotion that came out on the 18th green. A moment like that makes all the close calls worth it. I want to say hello to my mum and dad back in Northern Ireland.
I can’t wait to see them next week and celebrate this with them.
Yeah, I think I hung really tough this week. I think today was another good example of where I wasn't giving myself as many opportunities as I'm used to, but holed some really key putts and really hung in there.
You look at the par save I had on 2, I'm not going to make par on that hole if I'm getting overly frustrated with my poor swing off the tee. Same thing kind of goes for I made a huge par putt there on 11, too. Hit a decent iron shot but barely off and all of a sudden in a really hard spot to get up-and-down.
The margins on this golf course are really small, and so I've got to be on top of my game if I'm going to be hitting it on the right shelf mand this week I was just a touch off.
Yeah, I think he's more than deserving of having that honor. He's obviously in control. As we all know, anything can happen now. He's just hit it right on 11 so he's got to navigate that situation and then navigate the 12th and the 13th.
If he gets to 14 with a decent lead, with the way he's driving the ball and the way he's striking his irons, he should be in pretty good position.
But the thing is you just saw Rosey I think just went birdie-birdie-birdie on 11, 12, 13, and then 14 and 15 are very birdieable pins today.
It's almost like if I were Rory I'd wish that the pins were harder and it was playing a little harder at this point because he's not going to be able to take the foot off the gas, and I believe he knows that.
If he can escape 11 and 12 with two pars, he should be in pretty good shape.
Yeah, best players in the world here, small field, and it's -- I think the thing is, it's got to be one of the most mentally challenging courses.
I had a chat with my caddie Bo walking up 18, and I just asked him if it's more of a mental or a technical battle here. Obviously you need to be on with your game, but I think the mental has to be right up there.
I think the best top players mentally are going to be at the top of the leaderboard, which I think they are. That leaderboard up there is very -- has a lot of major champion winners and guys who have played well over the past whatever years.
A lot of learning to do. I'm really early in the stages of hopefully my career at Augusta, so I can't wait for whatever the next few years have in store.
Going back to the major championships, I've just learned. It takes experience to feed off of that energy, you know, when you're going super low and you're feeding off of your partner. When I'm out there filming, you have to learn how to like control yourself and settle down, okay, all right, we have to make birdie on the next hole, we have to do this, whatever it is.
It's the same situation out here where you're just, essentially, feeding off of the Patrons, and then you go, all right, I have to settle in, I have to hit this next shot. It's a lot of, like, reacting and being who I am, which is, you know, you guys can make -- you guys can say whatever you want, but I'm just a little different.
And then off of that, I just settle back in and go, all right, this is the next shot. I have to execute it to the best of my ability. So it's a lot of outward expression, and then I go, all right, that's enough and I focus back in.
These are busy weeks, and by the time I get home and get dinner and shower, it's like, you know -- again, it's either a toss-up between a show or a book. I think right now I'd just rather watch the show.
And then this morning, you know -- I'm sure it will be a similar tee time tomorrow as it was today. So I watched a little bit of Premier League football this morning, and then I actually watched "Zootopia" with Poppy. Very, very good movie if anyone's interested.
And then by that time, I try to get to the golf course three, three and a half hours before I play, and then I feel like those three hours when I get here go pretty quick from locker room, up to the gym, warm up, back here, back in the locker room, food, shower, get ready, go to the range. I feel like that three hours goes really, really quickly.
It's just that trying to fill that time between sort of 7:00 and 10:30 before heading to the golf course. You know, thankfully there are some good options. But the one thing I've tried to do a good job of this week is just not being on the phone and just trying to stay clear of that and do other things.
I've done this a few times now, and I know when my limit is. Definitely the most important thing is going back and relaxing and having a fun, enjoyable night. You know, just hanging out with my friends and family, and just being myself.
You know, keep being myself. When I'm more of myself, I feel like I can keep going no matter what. It's the times where you have to put on a face or do something or whatever that you don't feel like you can keep going. So for me, the more I can just be myself, the longer I can go.
Well, you're always learning because weather dictates things. Weather has dictated that there's new greens out there, and so now you have to re-learn those greens. There was a couple pin placements today that I don't know if I've ever seen.
So yeah, you're always trying to get information. But as you get older that information doesn't do as good as it used to.
I think just knowing that I can be in this situation and still play really good golf. I think I teed off in the second or third to last group last year, and it was really cool to feel all the buzz and feel all the excitement and nerves and still able to go out and shoot a good score.
So hopefully we can do that tomorrow again and see where it ends up.
I mean, it's been -- I've had it a few days this year. If I go back to it, you'd have to go back to my results. I haven't played a ton. It's not like I'm playing that much. I'm 49, so I'm not playing quite as much as I used to.
But I had some days out on the West Coast, Sony, where I was right there three two or three days. I played well at Torrey. I don't play way well at Torrey. So opportunities is what I'm saying.
I don't hit the ball far enough to compete on some of these venues, but it doesn't mean I can't have a decent finish. It doesn't mean I can't make cuts. It doesn't mean I can't still do it.
I don't know. Today was an extreme, obviously, example of the fruits of my labor showing up.
Fortunately Sunday mornings are good for sport. I watched Carlos Alcaraz in the tennis in Monte Carlo. I watched a little bit of soccer, a little bit of F1. So I just tried to keep myself distracted with other sports I guess
But once you get to the golf course, things sort of settle down. You get into your routine and you get going and you do what's familiar which is comforting and, yeah, that's all I've been doing. That's my strategy for the day and just trying to show up with the attitude I've shown up with over the first three days.
I was maybe - ignorance is bliss - I was young I was 21 I didn't sleep great on Friday or Saturday night relative to how I was sleeping then - those would be great nights to sleep now with kids. But, you know, I was up early and I tried to just have some fun, be lively and talk.
You know you want to be quiet because you're thinking about the day, but in general it's just better to break out of that and be yourself. I just went through my routine, I came out here [the practice area] early, I was putting incredibly that week and continued that on Sunday.
The start of the round was a huge deal, Rosey [Justin Rose] came out firing... but I poured it on top after the first three holes to go on top to get that early start. Those first five holes are a big deal here and you don't get a lot of credit, because you saw what Rory did yesterday, where he's five-under through six, but you could easily be two over through those first five without hitting too many bad shots. There's a big difference in those first-five holes, and as we look to those leader groups that will be a big deal.
I'll have some dinner. Maybe try to make it through the second episode of the third season of "Bridgerton." Fell asleep during episode 1 last night. And that's it.
Yeah, sort of put the phone away. Don't look at it. Try not to look at it until tomorrow night.
Yeah. I mean, for me, it's going to be practising a little bit before it gets dark. Eating. Looking at my phone. I don't have a problem with that.
And just getting treatment on my body. Relaxing as much as possible. Watching a movie, probably, tonight. A fun movie. I don't know, what's tonight -- oh, it will probably be a James Bond movie or something like that. That will be fun. I love James Bond movies.
Tomorrow morning, I'll probably go to bed late and get up around 10:00, 10:30 and see how the course is playing and go from there.
Honestly, I don't know. At times I felt good, at times I felt bad. I just couldn't really get anything going. I think I ended up with even, which felt like I had to scramble a lot today, actually.
I got off to a good start today, but after that I didn't really feel like I gave myself enough opportunities, and the opportunities that I did have, I didn't really quite take advantage of.
Today and yesterday were days where I could have shot myself out of the tournament. I battled really hard both days. Today I made some great up-and-downs. I think I only had two bogeys for the day, which some of the spots I put myself in I felt like was a decent job of only making two bogeys.
Going into tomorrow, have a good front nine and start moving my way up the leaderboard and you never know what can happen on the back nine. Just going out tomorrow, just try to get off to a good start, and maybe start like today, just hole a few more putts.