Josh Berhow
Rory McIlroy tees off on the 10th hole during the final round of the Players Championship on Sunday at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
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Rory McIlroy had 73 feet of green in front of him, and he needed to get down in two putts. Playing the par-4 18th at TPC Sawgrass’ Stadium Course, McIlroy was deadlocked at 12 under with J.J. Spaun, who was in the group behind him.
It was a near certainty one of these two players was going to win the Players Championship, the PGA Tour’s marquee event, and take home the $4.5 million winner’s check.
But first, McIlroy had to two-putt from 73 feet. Otherwise, it was Spaun’s to lose. The lag putt left him 4 feet to clean up for par — and nothing from this distance is guaranteed, we have learned — but when McIlroy knocked in the 4-footer, all the pressure was on the man behind him.
Spaun found the pine straw off the tee, the green on his approach and had 31 feet to win. No dice. He came up three rotations short.
After 72 holes, a Monday playoff is set to decide the winner of the 2025 Players Championship. McIlroy and Spaun will return to TPC Sawgrass for a 9 a.m. ET tee time on Monday for a three-hole aggregate playoff.
One of them is going to win.
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On one side is Spaun, 34, who is after his second PGA Tour win in his 228th career start. On the other is McIlroy, who is looking for his second in three starts — and 28th overall.
McIlroy (68) and Spaun (72) finished at 12 under, with three others behind them at 10 under.
The playoff would have started on Sunday night, but the final round was delayed four hours due to early afternoon thunderstorms.
Spaun, a self-proclaimed journeyman, entered the day with the 54-hole lead at 12 under. Bud Cauley was one back at 11 under, Lucas Glover and Alex Smalley at nine under, and three others — including McIlroy — at eight under.
Of those seven players, Glover had won a U.S. Open, and McIlroy, of course, has his Hall-of-Fame resume (27 PGA Tour wins and four majors), but the other five had combined for just five career Tour victories, and four of those were from Akshay Bhatia and Corey Conners (two each).
Surely it was McIlroy’s tournament to lose, right? Or perhaps to win?
He played like it out of the gate. Analyst Brad Faxon, who works with McIlroy, said his range warmup Sunday was one of the best he’s seen from him. McIlroy then promptly birdied the 1st and eagled the 2nd.

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Of course everyone in the field noticed — the most dangerous player in contention made a lethal move a mere 30 minutes into the tournament. McIlroy bogeyed the 7th but got it back with a birdie on 8.
Through nine holes, McIlroy and Spaun were tied at 11 under, leading Bhatia by one and Hoge, Walker and Cauley by two. A large group was at seven under, but it appeared the winner would be one of the aforementioned six.
The wind and rain started to pick up as the final groups started their back nine, and right when it did McIlroy took the solo lead at 12 under — rolling in an 11-footer to birdie the par-5 11th hole.
The horn blew a few minutes later at 1:15 p.m., and play resumed at 5:15 p.m.
McIlroy wasted little time. Four hours after he teed off on 12, McIlroy returned to hit his approach from 91 yards. He spun it back to 14 feet and rolled in his second straight birdie. At the same time behind him, Spaun made a mess of 11 and eventually made bogey.
The lead was three, but McIlroy missed the fairway on 14 and made bogey while Spaun, in the group behind him, made birdie. McIlroy then missed a birdie opportunity from inside 6 feet on 15, which would have given him more breathing room.
McIlroy also missed birdies of 12 and 14 feet, respectively, on 16 and 17, and Spaun had a mere tap-in for his birdie on the par-5 16th, which tied him at 12 under with McIlroy. After Spaun made a long two-putt par on 17, he looked on from the 18th tee as McIlroy walked on the green up ahead.
McIlroy secured his two-putt, which meant birdie would win. Spaun hit his putt on a good line but it came up just short.
It was a long day on Sunday at TPC Sawgrass, with an early start, a four-hour delay and late finish. But there’s still more golf to come Monday. We have a Players champion to crown.

Josh Berhow
Golf.com Editor
As GOLF.com’s managing editor, Berhow handles the day-to-day and long-term planning of one of the sport’s most-read news and service websites. He spends most of his days writing, editing, planning and wondering if he’ll ever break 80. Before joining GOLF.com in 2015, he worked at newspapers in Minnesota and Iowa. A graduate of Minnesota State University in Mankato, Minn., he resides in the Twin Cities with his wife and two kids. You can reach him at joshua_berhow@golf.com.