The Jerusalem Post

McIlroy scorching on back nine to end drought

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Rory McIlroy staged a spectacula­r back-nine charge to claim a three-shot victory at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al on Sunday, collecting his first PGA Tour win since 2016 and putting himself among the red-hot favorites for the US Masters.

Two back of overnight leader Henrik Stenson when the day began, McIlroy overhauled the Swede with a brilliant error-free final round eight-under 64.

The Northern Irishman hit five birdies over his last six holes, including a nerve-wracking clutch 25-foot birdie at the 18th to clinch his first PGA Tour title since the 2016 Tour championsh­ips.

“I kept saying the last few weeks, I wasn’t that far away and it just takes something to click into place,” McIlroy said in a greenside interview. “Something clicked into place with my game and obviously something clicked into place in my putting and this is the result.”

McIlroy arrived in Orlando with plenty of concern over the state of his game having missed the cut in two of his four PGA Tour starts this year with his best result a tie for 20th.

After Sunday’s round, though, the Northern Irishman was right back in the conversati­on about who will win next month’s Masters at Augusta, where he will have another chance to complete his collection of all four major titles.

McIlroy strung together four consistent subpar rounds for an 18-under 270 total and a three shot victory over American Bryson DeChambeau (68). Briton Justin Rose (67) finished alone in third while Stenson (71) faded to fourth.

Tiger Woods, an eight-time winner at Bay Hill, had a 69 to cap another solid comeback effort and finished in a tie for fifth.

McIlroy’s dramatics overshadow­ed another patented charge from Woods, who had put himself within one shot of the lead with four to play.

Decked out in his familiar final round red, Woods mixed six birdies with a single bogey through his opening 13 holes but watched his charge fizzle with back-to-back bogeys at 16 and 17.

While it was disappoint­ing end to promising week, the 14-time major winner will take away plenty of positives as he looks ahead to next month’s Masters.

Still in the early stages of his comeback from spinal fusion surgery and years of back issues, Woods result offered more evidence that he is getting close to his old form coming on the heels of a runner-up finish last Sunday at the Valspar.

“I’m starting to piece it together, tournament by tournament, and each tournament’s gotten a little crisper and a little bit better,” Woods told Golf Digest in Florida.

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