Rory McIlroy claimed his second consecutive Masters title at Augusta National, edging Scottie Scheffler by one stroke with a closing bogey on the 18th. Unlike the cathartic sobs of his 2025 victory after a 14-year major drought, this win sparked pure jubilation as he screamed skyward and embraced loved ones, now boasting six majors.
As defending champion from his emotional 2025 Masters breakthrough—which ended a long quest but led to post-victory depression—McIlroy arrived freer, buoyed by an Irish Open win and Ryder Cup contribution. He surged to a six-shot lead through early rounds in 2026, weathered a weekend collapse, and sealed back-to-back green jackets as only the fourth player in history (joining Woods, Faldo, Nicklaus). Officials confirmed the one-stroke win over Scheffler after Sunday's final round. On the 18th, McIlroy tapped in for bogey to secure victory, then erupted in delight—head high, roaring, laughing with caddie Harry Diamond, and hugging wife, daughter, parents, and friends with arms aloft. No shock or recalibration this time, just unfiltered joy. Reflecting afterward, McIlroy addressed last year's malaise: "Good things come to those who wait, maybe. Just keep going. If you put the hours in and work on the right things, eventually it will come good for you." He elaborated, "I felt like the grand slam was the destination, and I realized it wasn’t. I’m on this journey... I’ve waited so long to win the Masters, and all of a sudden I win two in a row. I still want to enjoy it... I don’t think I’ll go through that lull." This triumph caps a dominant defense; for round-by-round details, see prior coverage.