McIlroy writes his legend with a historic two-time championship in Augusta

Rory McIlroy enters golf history by winning his second consecutive Masters and completing his career Grand Slam.

McIlroy makes history: Grand Slam and two-time Masters championship

Rory McIlroy has just joined an elite club. He first became the sixth player to complete the career Grand Slam. Now, he is only the fourth to win the Masters two years in a row.

Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods are the only other players who belong to both clubs. A legendary trio, without a doubt.

RelatedMcIlroy forges his legend with a second consecutive green jacket

If joining the first group was already difficult—11 years of trying to get that last stretch—winning his second green jacket was a stark reminder: getting to the top is one thing, staying there is another entirely.

“I thought last year it was very difficult to win because of trying to win the Masters and the Grand Slam,” McIlroy said. “And this year I realized that it’s just very difficult to win the Masters.”

How did you do it?

Last year, after fulfilling that dream, he fell into a rut. The questions about ‘what now?’ They irritated him. I just wanted to enjoy the moment. He finally got back on track at the Irish Open.

This time, it seems that motivation will not be a problem.

“I felt like the Grand Slam was destiny, and I realized it wasn’t,” McIlroy said after closing out another crazy Sunday at Augusta with a one-stroke victory over Scottie Scheffler.
“I just won my sixth major… I don’t want to put a number on it, but I feel like this win is just… part of the way.”

The conversation about how many majors he will win began long before his first Masters. He won his first major in 2011, breaking records. That led Padraig Harrington to say:

“If you’re going to talk about someone challenging Jack’s record, there’s your man.”

Nicklaus has 18 majors. Woods has 15. McIlroy has six, tied with greats like Nick Faldo and Phil Mickelson.

Fred Couples joined the chorus this week:

“Rory might never lose this again after last year… She could really win five more of these.”

Easy, right? McIlroy responds with a smile:

“Yeah, I don’t make it easy… I used to make it easy in my early 20s, when I won these things by eight strokes.”

He still holds records for margin of victory. But now he knows the truth:

“No, it’s just difficult. It’s difficult to win golf tournaments, especially here.”

An ending to remember

It wasn’t easy a year ago, when he lost leads and beat Justin Rose in a tiebreaker. It wasn’t this time either.

He lost a six-stroke lead on Saturday. He then was two shots behind on two different occasions during the final round.

Scheffler was within reach but made 11 consecutive pars. Young had opportunities and didn’t capitalize on them.

McIlroy was also on the limit: a wedge right at the 15th, a spectacular save at the 17th, and a dangerous drive at the 18th.

It ended with more joy than relief — a big difference from last year. The only tears were when talking to his parents, who almost didn’t come so as not to ‘jinx’ him.

With a final bogey that he could afford, he sealed the victory by one stroke over Scheffler, the world number 1.

“I’ve competed against him for a long time,” Scheffler said of McIlroy, “and you don’t win the amount of tournaments he’s won here without being pretty resilient.”

The plan forward

McIlroy is the first player since Adam Scott in 2013 to take three weeks off before winning the Masters. That strategy seems to stick.

“I think it’s a good model,” McIlroy said. “When I talked to Jack Nicklaus… he went the week before and simulated a tournament. I think it’s definitely a good way to prepare.”

The next major starts on May 15. Another stop on this extraordinary path.

Sweden beats Tunisia 5-1 and leads Group F

With a double from Yasin Ayari, the Scandinavians dominated in Monterrey.

Sweden achieved a resounding victory at the Monterrey Stadium. The Scandinavian team defeated Tunisia 5-1 with a solid performance from start to finish.

Party development

The game tilted quickly. In the 7th minute, an error by goalkeeper Mouhib Chamakh allowed Yasin Ayari to open the scoring after a series of rebounds. That goal was the first in a World Cup at the Monterrey Stadium.

Tunisia tried to respond. Anis Slimane had a clear chance, but goalkeeper Kristoffer Nordfeldt prevented the tie. The Swedish response was immediate: in the 30th minute, Viktor Gyökeres assisted Alexander Isak, who scored to make it 2-0.

Before the break, Tunisia scored. Omar Rekik won over the top after a serve from Hannibal Mejbri and scored with a header. The 2-1 score left hope for the Africans.

Second half and lead

In the second half, another Tunisian defensive error allowed Gyökeres to score 3-1 in the 50th minute. Mattias Svanberg, from Wolfsburg, extended the score in the 86th. In added time (90+6), Ayari sealed his double and the final 5-1.

Sweden managed possession and secured three points that put them at the top of Group F. In the next round, the Scandinavians will face the Netherlands, while Tunisia will seek to recover against Japan.

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Pumas: without explanation the departure of Efraín Juárez

Surprise resignation of Efraín Juárez. Guillermo Martínez avoids giving his opinion and talks about his future.

Resignation without farewell

A few days ago, the Pumas captured the attention of Mexican soccer by making the departure of Efraín Juárez from the bench official. The technical director decided not to continue leading the National University Club and resigned, even though he still had six months left on his contract and even the possibility of extending it.

However, differences with the sports vice presidency, headed by Antonio Sancho, led him to step aside. The Auriazul youth player left unexpectedly and, until now, has not given an explanation. He has not even dedicated a farewell message to the university fans on social networks.

Keylor Navas has already said goodbye to Efraín Juárez publicly, dedicating a publication to him.

What motivated the resignation?

Guillermo “Memote” Martínez was questioned about Juárez’s departure, but he avoided commenting.

“It is something that, really, I would not like to comment on because I do not know 100% of the context of how things happened… the focus is right now here on the Mexican National Team,” he declared.

In an interview with TUDN, the forward trusted that the university board will find a solution.

“I think that our directive is also capable of resolving this type of situation and we will see what happens,” he mentioned.

Regarding his contractual situation, Martínez commented that he still has a relationship with Pumas, although it is about to expire; His representative is already negotiating.

“I still have a contract, it is about to expire, but I think they are already in those talks to see what happens. We will see what sounds good to us; on a personal level, let’s see what comes,” he expressed.

“Memote” arrived at the club in December 2023 – he is about to turn three years old – and has played 92 games, 31 goals and two assists.

Pumas: sin explicación la salida de...

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Hamilton breaks drought and wins with Ferrari in Spain

Hamilton won again after almost two years and is now second in the championship.

Hamilton returns to glory with Ferrari

The Spanish Grand Prix left an image that has not been seen since 2021: Lewis Hamilton standing at the top of the podium. The seven-time world champion broke a drought of almost two years without victories and achieved his first victory with Ferrari, the 106th of his career.

Hamilton dominated the race at the Montmeló Circuit, in front of an all-English podium: George Russell (Mercedes) was second and Lando Norris (McLaren) closed the top three.

The victory also marked the end of dominance for Mercedes, which had won the last six races — five with Kimi Antonelli and one with Russell.

The championship is tightening

Kimi Antonelli, leader of the championship with 156 points, could not finish due to a failure in his car. His lead was reduced: Hamilton is now second with 115 points, 41 points apart, and Russell third with 106.

Mexican Sergio ‘Checo’ Pérez continues without scoring this season.

This is how the championship goes after Barcelona:

  • Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) 156 pts
  • Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 115
  • George Russell (Mercedes) 106
  • Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 75
  • Lando Norris (McLaren) 73
  • Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 68
  • Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 55
  • Pierre Gasly (Alpine) 41
  • Isack Hadjar (Red Bull) 34
  • Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) 28
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