Aus Open seals huge Rory coup
Golf Australia officials feared Rory McIlroy's Masters breakthrough could have undone years of talks about luring him back to the Australian Open and made him 'unattainable'.
But a lingering desire to play tournament golf on the Melbourne sandbelt for the first time was enough for McIlroy to stay 'true to his word'.
The world No.2 will play the 2025 Australian Open at Royal Melbourne from December 4 and then back up in 2026 at Kingston Heath in a major coup, with the event reverting to a stand-alone tournament after three years of playing the men's and women's Opens on the same course at the same time.
'Thankfully, the conversation was happening before the Masters,' GA boss James Sutherland said on Wednesday.
'We did have a moment there where, when he won the Masters, thinking, what are the implications of this? Maybe he's going to get offers from all over the world, and maybe the numbers will be different, and all of that sort of thing.
'But fortunately, Rory has been completely true to his word. He has for a long time expressed a desire to come here and play on the sandbelt, and the attraction of that would appear to be absolutely genuine.
'He has always said he wants to play tournament golf here. That conversation has been going on for a long time, and fortunately, nothing changed when he won the Masters.
'It just became an even more compelling proposition.'
McIlroy collected his maiden green jacket at Augusta in April to complete the career grand slam.
The 35-year-old, and world No.2, last played the Australian Open in 2014 when he defended the Stonehaven Cup the year after he went head-to-head with Adam Scott in 2013 to eventually be crowned champion.
'I'm proud to be committing to the Australian Open for the next two years, especially with it being played on the world-class Melbourne sandbelt, somewhere I've always wanted to play professionally' McIlroy said.
'The success of the Australian Open is important for the global game, and I'm incredibly confident it will thrive again this year, especially with it being staged in one of the world's great sporting cities and on two of the finest golf courses in the world over the next two years: The Royal Melbourne Golf Club and Kingston Heath Golf Club.
'Melbourne is known for being one of the world's great sporting cities and I can't wait to be part of that atmosphere and soak in everything it has to offer, both on and off the course.'
It's a huge fillip for the tournament, which is moving back to a stand-alone event after three years playing as a dual-gender event, alongside the women's Australian Open, which received mixed reviews from players including Cam Smith.
Adam Scott is set to return after skipping last year's event at Kingston Heath, with Sutherland hopeful the quest for world ranking points, and spots in the British Open for the top three finishers, could lure more big names.
'The DP World Tour provides a whole lot of European Tour players that will join us,' he said.
'But I think also in amongst the LIV ranks, there are a whole lot of players that will want to increase their rankings.
'The top three placegetters in the Australian Open every year get a spot in the Open Championship, and that itself is an attraction for anyone that's outside of the top rankings.
'We are committed to elevating the status of our national championship, and this announcement is a significant step in that direction.'
McIlroy will head to Melbourne after playing out the PGA Tour season and then Ryder Cup in September.
The men's Australian Open will follow the BMW Australian PGA Championship, with both events again co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour and the Challenger PGA Tour of Australasia.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rory McIlroy a laughingstock after PGA Tour career worst
The post Rory McIlroy a laughingstock after PGA Tour career worst appeared first on ClutchPoints. Almost two months ago, Rory McIlroy completed his quest for a career grand slam, winning the Masters Tournament. That was already his third win of the 2025 season. McIlroy won both the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and the PLAYERS Championship. It appeared his game had finally reached another level. Advertisement With six days until the U.S. Open tees off at Oakmont, that no longer seems the case. McIlroy flamed out at the PGA Championship and controversially opted not to speak to the media after each round. The Northern Irishman then skipped Jack Nicklaus' Memorial Tournament, which turned heads. This week, he was back on the course at the RBC Canadian Open, an event he has won twice. Not only did the familiarity with TPC Toronto not help get his game back on track, but he is having the worst tournament of his PGA Tour career. McIlroy carded a 1-over 71 on Thursday. That placed him below the projected cut line entering the second round but only by a couple of strokes. Then Friday happened. Advertisement With three holes to play, McIlroy sits at 9-over for the tournament. He is 150th in the field out of 153 golfers. The worst 36-hole finish of McIlroy's career was a tie for 142nd, per Underdog Golf. He will undoubtedly be heading home early. As his round played out, fans took to social media with some truly wild reactions. 'Rory McIlroy has (understandably) mentally checked out following his Masters win. Such a shame considering the form he was in pre-Augusta.,' one fan posted on X, formerly Twitter. Even Barstool Sports' Riggs could not contain himself. 'Rory F***ing McIlroy you are an emotional rollercoaster what is wrong with you I love you so much.' Advertisement Following four straight pars to begin his round, everything went off the rails on the par-4 5th. The five-time major champion carded a snowman eight for a quadruple bogey. From there, he bogeyed 8, 10, and 13 while double-bogeying the par-3 12th. He made his first birdie of the day on 15, prompting the most perfect troll reaction ever. Barring some double eagles coming in, this will mark the worst 36-hole finish of McIlroy's career, just in time for the U.S. Open. Related: Rockies' Scottie Scheffler quip after ending 57-series sweep drought

5 hours ago
McIlroy tumbles out of Canadian Open with a 78. Champ takes 2-shot lead into the weekend
CALEDON, Ontario -- Masters champion Rory McIlroy tumbled out of the RBC Canadian Open on Friday with his worst round in nearly a year, with Cameron Champ taking a two-stroke lead into the weekend in the final event before the U.S. Open. McIlroy shot an 8-over 78, making a mess of the fifth hole with a quadruple-bogey 8 in his highest score since also shooting 78 last year in the first round of the British Open. He had a double bogey on No. 11, four bogeys and two birdies. 'Of course it concerns me,' McIlroy said. 'You don't want to shoot high scores like the one I did today. Still, I felt like I came here obviously with a new driver thinking that that sort of was going to be good and solve some of the problems off the tee, but it didn't.' At 9 over, the two-time Canadian Open winner was 21 strokes behind Champ on the rain-softened North Course at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley. 'Obviously, going to Oakmont next week, what you need to do more than anything else there is hit fairways," McIlroy said. "Still sort of searching for the sort of missing piece off the tee.' Champ had four birdies in a 68 in the morning a day after opening with a 62. He was at 12 under, playing the first 36 holes without a bogey. 'It's firmed up a little bit, but fairly similar to yesterday,' Champ said. 'The fairways I feel like were firming up a little bit. The greens slightly, but pretty close to how they were yesterday.' The three-time PGA Tour winner got one of the last spots in the field after being the eighth alternate Friday when the commitments closed. 'I definitely didn't think I was getting in,' Champ said. Andrew Putnam was second after a bogey-free 62 on the course hosting the event for the first time. He won the 2018 Barracuda Championship for his lone tour title. 'I hit a lot of fairways, hit a lot of good iron shots, too, and my putter was on fire,' Putnam said. 'Pretty much did everything right. Didn't really make many mistakes.' Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark, tied for the first-round lead with Cristobal Del Solar after a 61, had a 70 drop into a tie for third at 9 under with Canadians Richard Lee (64) and Nick Taylor (65) and France's Victor Perez (65). Taylor won the 2023 event at Oakdale. 'Hung in there,' Taylor said. 'Making a birdie on the last was important to end the day nicely.' Del Solar was 8 under after a 71. Shane Lowry (68) also was 8 under with Ryan Fox (66), Jake Knapp (69), Sam Burns (66) and Matteo Manassero (65).
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rory McIlroy Claims Scottie Scheffler Treated Differently After 'Leaked' Golf News
Rory McIlroy Claims Scottie Scheffler Treated Differently After 'Leaked' Golf News originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Rory McIlroy opted to skip media availability during the PGA Championship and is breaking his silence on his decision to remain quiet during the major. Ahead of the RBC Canadian Open, McIlroy was candid about his decision not to speak to the media. Advertisement McIlroy admitted to being frustrated that news was "leaked" about the golfer being forced to switch drivers because of a compliance issue. The star golfer pointed to Scottie Scheffler also being in violation while his name was initially the only one in the news. McIlroy was quick to point out that he wanted to "protect Scottie" but was still frustrated that he was the main person mentioned. Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy react during the green jacket ceremony after the final round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Goodale-Imagn Images "Yeah, and also, the driver stuff, I was a little pissed off because I knew that Scottie's driver had failed on Monday, but my name was the one that was leaked," McIlroy told reporters on Wednesday. "It was supposed to stay confidential. "Two members of the media were the ones that leaked it. And again, I didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted either, because there's a lot of people (I'm trying to protect). I'm trying to protect Scottie," McIlroy continued. Advertisement "I don't want to mention his name. Trying to protect TaylorMade. I'm trying to protect the USGA, PGA of America, myself." McIlroy went on to elaborate that Scheffler receiving a similar decision that was "not my information to share." As the PGA Championship went on, news eventually emerged that Scheffler had also been forced to switch drivers. "With Scottie's stuff, like that's not my information to share," McIlroy added. "I knew that that had happened, but that's not on me to share that. And I felt that process is supposed to be kept confidential, and it wasn't for whatever reason." McIlroy will attempt to tune up his game for the U.S. Open this week at the RBC Canadian Open. Scheffler opted to skip the event and instead focus on preparation for the U.S. Open. Advertisement Golf fans will have to wait until the U.S. Open for McIlroy and Scheffler to once again share the links. Related: Scottie Scheffler News Emerges on Tuesday After Memorial Win This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.