Rory McIlroy reminded the world why he’s still one of the sport’s biggest box-office draws, delivering a jaw-dropping, walk-off moment on Sunday at the Amgen Irish Open, sinking a 28-foot eagle putt on the 18th hole to force a playoff — and then icing the victory on the third playoff hole against Sweden’s Joakim Lagergren.
This wasn’t just a win. It was vintage McIlroy: dramatic, emotional, and undeniably epic.
Trailing by two shots as he approached the par-5 18th, McIlroy knew he needed something special. Lagergren, who had just dropped an eagle of his own on the 16th, had momentum and a one-shot clubhouse lead after narrowly missing a second eagle on 18.
Rory McIlroy Sets the Crowd on Fire
His eagle putt from nearly 30 feet sent the gallery into a frenzy, forcing extra holes and turning an already compelling afternoon into an instant classic. After matching pars over the first two playoff holes, it was a misstep by Lagergren that gave McIlroy the edge — and the four-time major champion pounced, claiming his second Irish Open title in front of an adoring home crowd at the K Club.
The putt. The result. The noise. The celebration.
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) September 7, 2025
Rory McIlroy’s eagle putt at the 72nd hole will go down in history 🤩#AmgenIrishOpen pic.twitter.com/yf8bzNmNUW
“I just feel so lucky that I get to do this in front of these people,” McIlroy said afterward, visibly emotional. “The support has been amazing all week. So happy I could play the way I did this week and get the win.”
This was McIlroy’s first Irish Open appearance since he won the Masters in April — a victory that completed the career Grand Slam and ended years of major frustration. But there was no post-Masters slump here. Instead, Rory McIlroy delivered one of the most thrilling finishes of the year, showing he’s not coasting into the offseason — he’s still hunting wins.
Elsewhere on the leaderboard, Angel Hidalgo nearly made history with a 12-birdie round on Saturday — tying the DP World Tour record for most birdies in a single round — before finishing T-3 at 15-under, alongside Rafa Cabrera-Bello, who narrowly missed a birdie on 18 that would’ve tied him for the lead.