The last time we saw Rory McIlroy, he talked of the malaise that had come after winning the 2025 Masters to complete the career Grand Slam. The win, such a monumental achievement that was a lifetime in the making, had seemingly left McIlroy facing an existential question that often comes after summiting a mountain: What now?
“I don’t know if I’m chasing anything,” McIlroy said at the 2025 U.S. Open. “I would certainly say that the last few weeks I’ve had a couple weeks off, and going and grinding on the range for three or four hours every day is maybe a little tougher than it used to be. You have this event in your life that you’ve worked towards and it happens, sometimes it’s hard to find the motivation to get back on the horse and go again.”
“Look, you dream about the final putt going in at the Masters, but you don’t think about what comes next,” McIlroy said at Oakmont. “I think I’ve always been a player that struggles to play after a big event, after I win whatever tournament. I always struggle to show up with motivation the next week because you’ve just accomplished something and you want to enjoy it and you want to sort of relish the fact that you’ve achieved a goal. I think chasing a certain goal for the better part of a decade and a half, I think I’m allowed a little bit of time to relax a little bit.”
Human beings are not wired to find fulfillment in checking one box. History is littered with titans of sport, industry, science, etc., who have dedicated their lives to a pursuit, caught the car they’ve been chasing, and then been filled with an emptiness when the immediate glow fades and they don’t continue to float above the world they seemingly tamed.
Lydia Ko found something similar after she won the gold medal last summer to punch her ticket to the LPGA Hall of Fame. The search always continues. You just have to find what’s next.
“I think I thought my life or maybe the way I thought about myself would change when I got in the Hall of Fame and did a lot of the things I wanted to do before it actually happened, and I’m sure Rory is thinking the same in similar parts, where everybody was like, oh, Masters is the one he was missing. Like what if? And then he did it,” Ko said at the 2025 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. “And as much as I’m sure he’s so happy and relieved, he’s just as good the day before, like before he won it.
“I think that’s what I kind of came to peace with. I think sometimes when it’s right there in front of you and see all these statistics, you feel like you should do more. I think that some of the things we’ve already gotten, we take for granted. I think that’s what I realized most, and that’s what made me realize I’ve still got to go out there and practice and put in the time to play well the week after.”
Rory McIlroy discusses strengths of Scottish Open as event
McIlroy’s Travelers Championship was tension-free, and then he faded out of sight. He headed to London with his wife and daughter to their new home in Wentworth. He took time for himself. To digest, to recalibrate, likely to fully soak in what he’d achieve and think about where his next North Star will take him.
He arrived this week at the 2025 Genesis Scottish Open with a new haircut — one that didn’t achieve the goal of hiding his greying hair — and the benefit of time and space to give him some perspective on the “what’s next” conundrum.
“I think I do feel a little clearer,” McIlroy said before the tournament at the Renaissance Club began. “It’s amazing what ten days or two weeks of just a little bit of detachment can do for you, and sitting there being with your own thoughts for a while. I don’t want that to be my last great moment in the game. There’s plenty more that I can do. I feel like I’ve kept banging on this drum all of this year, I feel like I’m a better player now than I ever have been. And there’s so many opportunities that lie ahead, and whether that’s Portrush next week or The Open going back to St Andrews or a U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. There’s all these great venues that all the greats have won on, and I’d love to add my name to those lists, as well.”
McIlroy’s place in golf’s pantheon is already secured. But as a student of history, he understands the meaning that comes with winning at golf’s cathedrals. It’s why his 2022 Open Championship defeat at St.Andrews left him burying his head into his wife’s shoulder. This year’s win at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am gave him a win at the famed seaside course, but now he has the U.S. Open in 2027 on his radar.
For McIlroy, now the goal is not one win or one moment, but several more crowning achievements that will put his name alongside other greats who have won at venues that are etched into golf history.
With that renewed focus, McIlroy immediately put himself in contention at the Renaissance Club.
He opened with rounds of 68, 65, and 66 to share the 54-hole lead with Chris Gotterup. With the Open Championship in Northern Ireland at Royal Portrush looming next week, McIlroy’s ball flight, iron play and putting were dialed in along the coast of the North Sea. He looked very much like the player who dominated the first part of the season before the Augusta hangover kicked in.
“It’s my first realistic chance to win after the Masters, and I’ve had a great season,” McIlroy said Saturday in Scotland. “I won at Pebble. I won the Players. I said this, when you do something that you’ve been dreaming your whole life to do, it was a huge moment in my life, my career. I think I just needed that little bit of time. And to be back here for last couple weeks, and feel like I could actually digest all of it, I feel like I came to this tournament with renewed enthusiasm and excitement for the rest of the year.”
But McIlroy’s superpower, his driver, was off this week. He lost 0.094 shots off the tee this week, and when his putter went cold Sunday, with the help of some bumpy greens, he could not keep pace with Gotterup, who won by two to claim the biggest win of his young career.
As McIlroy and Gotterup signed their scorecards, the five-time major champion, who has spent the last few weeks trying to process the steps after a life-changing moment, patted Gotterup, who had just secured a monumental victory of his own, on the back to signal a job well done.
While the title evaded him, Rory McIlroy found what he needed in “golf country.” His game, his mindset and the path forward.
“It’s been a great week,” McIlroy said after his T2 finish. “I’m really happy with where my game is; the way I played over the weekend; the shots that I hit, how I controlled my ball flight. It has been a great week. Missing the trophy, that’s about it.
“No frustration, really. I’m really happy with where everything is,” McIlroy continued later. “Looking forward to getting to Portrush tonight and getting out onto the golf course early tomorrow and just turning my attention to that. But I feel like I’ve gotten out of this week everything, really, that I wanted.”
And with that, Rory McIlroy, career Grand Slam winner, finally turned his attention to the next mountain to climb, with the one he finally summited in April still visible in his rearview mirror.
;)
Josh Schrock
Golf.com Editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf.com. Before joining GOLF, Josh was the Chicago Bears insider for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered the 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and UO alum, Josh spends his free time hiking with his wife and dog, thinking of how the Ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become semi-proficient at chipping. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and never lose faith that Rory McIlroy’s major drought will end (updated: he did it). Josh Schrock can be reached at josh.schrock@golf.com.