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The Phil Mickelson advice that helped Rory McIlroy win the Masters

Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy during a 2020 Zozo Championship practice round.

Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy during a 2020 Zozo Championship practice round.

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When Rory McIlroy won the Masters last April, dropped to his knees and started to sob, you could sense the enormity of the moment. McIlroy had waited his whole life for this, to win the tournament that had alluded him for years.

He held a four-shot lead after 54 holes in 2011 but imploded on Sunday, shooting 80 and tying for 15th. He had seven top 10s since then, but never a win, not until last year, when McIlroy outlasted Justin Rose in a playoff to win the green jacket and complete the career Grand Slam.

And with winning the Masters, you get a pre-Masters press conference, like McIlroy did virtually on Wednesday with a handful of reporters. One of the questions he was asked was what he learned about how to win the Masters by winning the Masters.

His answer? The importance of staying aggressive. And he even gave an assist to Phil Mickelson.

McIlroy said he played a practice round with Mickelson, a three-time Masters champ, about 15 years ago and Mickelson told him, “Rory, one of the reasons I love Augusta National is because I feel I can be so aggressive here.”

“I remember thinking, ‘What does he mean?'” McIlroy said. “I feel the opposite. I feel I can’t be aggressive here because there’s so many bad places to miss. But Phil had so much — still has, probably — faith in his short game that if he does miss an approach shot by being aggressive, he still feels he can get that ball up and down. I would say by becoming a better putter and by maybe working on my short game a little bit and becoming better around the greens, that probably allowed me to become more aggressive with my approach play at Augusta.”

McIlroy said that over the years, the demands of Augusta National have made his approach play more tentative, and that’s when you leave yourself in bad spots. But when he learned to start playing more aggressively, it paid off.

He could even look back at his final round last year and find examples. He piled up birdies while being aggressive on the front nine, but once he got the lead and got to the back nine, he changed the way he played.

“The first time that my mindset or my tactics went a little bit defensive, like trying to protect the lead, that’s when I got into trouble,” McIlroy said. “Obviously what happened on 13 (double bogey) and on 14 (bogey), and when I got to 15, again, I needed to be aggressive. I needed to make a birdie again, and I was able to do it. So there’s probably a lesson in there somewhere of not taking your foot off the gas. I thought I was sort of doing the smart thing by playing 13 as a three-shotter and trying to protect the lead that I built. But in hindsight, everything that went well for me that day and that week was when I played aggressively, when I went for my shots. That’s probably the lesson to learn.”

It all worked out well for McIlroy, who, despite making bogey on the 72nd hole, birdied the first playoff hole to win. His next challenge begins a few weeks from now: defending that green jacket.

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