Rory McIlroy birdied the 72nd hole to beat Patrick Reed by a single stroke at the Dubai Desert Classic to win his 15th DP World Tour title.
The World No.1 got up-and-down from 92 yards on the final hole to win the iconic jug for the third time in his career and taste victory in his first start of a calendar year for the first time in his career.
After taking a three-stroke lead into Monday’s final round, he carded a three-under-par 69 to finish at 19-under-par with rounds of 66, 70 and 65 earlier in the week.
Reed charged to the top of the leaderboard midway through the back nine with five birdies and an eagle in his first 13 holes, but a bogey on the 16th dropped him back tied with Rory McIlroy after he was forced to chip out from a pulled drive down the left.
That pegged him back to 17-under-par, and he was unable to capitalise on the drivable 17th following a wayward tee shot, eventually making a good par save.
McIlroy started with eight consecutive pars before three birdies in the space of five holes between the 9th and 13th. He dropped a shot on the par-3 15th but surged ahead once again after finding the edge of the 17th with his drive and two-putting for a birdie to go one clear with the iconic par-5 18th to play.
Playing in the group ahead, Reed found the green in two with a stunning hybrid, towering over the flag to leave around 30ft for eagle. From there he two-putted for the easiest of birdies to card a 65 and force McIlroy to make a four to win.
McIlroy’s drive leaked right into rough just lining the water to leave an awkward second shot, and from there he laid up to 92 yards and wedged it to around 10ft before holing a slippery left-to-righter for the title.
With his 15th DP World Tour title and first Rolex Series win, McIlroy wins a cheque of $1.53m and cements his position at the top of the Official World Golf Ranking.
The early week proceedings in Dubai were dominated by talk, and controversy, around Patrick Reed and Rory McIlroy’s ‘exchange’ on the driving range where McIlroy appeared to ignore Reed before the American flicked a LIV Golf tee on the ground. Dubbed ‘teegate’, McIlroy said he ignored Reed due to the LIV subpoena he received on Christmas Eve, with Reed saying the Northern Irishman acted like “an immature little child.”
Reed was involved in more controversy on Sunday during the third round when his golf ball got stuck up a palm tree on the 17th hole. Reed and a referee managed to identify it, although there were reports that he was…
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