The golf displayed by the trio—along with others such as Justin Rose, who shot a Sunday 60 despite three bogeys, including one at the final hole—made McIlroy ...
A pitch-in for birdie from the rough at the sixth and a gap wedge on the seventh to three feet. Interestingly, McIlroy carries just two wedges aside from his pitching wedge, a 54- and 60-degree, but he used them well enough to rank second for the week in scrambling. A 27-footer for birdie at the first, an iron from 196 yards to four feet at the fourth.
Rory McIlroy hit a superb final round of 62 to retain his RBC Canadian Open title. McIlroy, who started the day in a share of the lead with Tony Finau, ...
Rory McIlroy Claims Enthralling RBC Canadian Open - The 33-year-old produced an eight-under-par final round of 62, as he secured his 21st PGA Tour title.
Now a freelance writer for Golf Monthly and the PGA, he covers all aspects of the game, from Tour news to equipment testing and buyers’ guides. Unfortunately for Rose, he couldn't get up-and-down, with the the 41-year-old just missing his par putt as he tapped-in for a stunning 60. However, thanks to an eight-under-par round of 62, it was Rory McIlroy who rose to the top, with the 33-year-old picking up his 21st PGA Tour title.
Rory McIlroy admitted that overtaking Greg Norman in the PGA Tour's all-time victory standings was added motivation in his successful title defence at the ...
"I went out with a lead and had to shoot eight under to get the job done, so the depth of talent on this Tour is really, really impressive. It's a similar style of golf and it will probably be a similar setup in some ways. Then, look, I alluded to it, I had extra motivation of what's going on across the pond. McIlroy after his two-shot victory in Canada: "The guy [Greg Norman] that's spearheading that [LIV Golf] Tour has 20 wins on the PGA Tour and I was tied with him. I think going up against the best and beating the best is always makes it extra special. "I wanted it a lot," McIlroy admitted after his win.
That is one more than Norman, the CEO of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Invitational Series, whose maiden tournament finished on Saturday. The PGA Tour has suspended ...
Rose, who finished in a tie for fourth with Sam Burns, had been on track to break 60 only to bogey the last in a round which featured three eagles and seven birdies. McIlroy, who started the day in a share of the lead with Tony Finau, hit 10 birdies in his eight-under-par round to finish two shots clear of the American on 19 under and land his 21st PGA Tour crown. Victory was the Northern Irishman’s first of the year and he said: “I think after Covid I just needed a complete reset, sort of rededicated myself to the game a little bit, sort of realised what made me happy and this makes me happy.”
How to watch the 2022 RBC Canadian Open on Sunday, June 12, including complete Round 4 TV schedule, streaming times and more.
Sign up for an account to get into the action today. Fans can also stream the final round Golf Channel TV coverage on golfchannel.com. SIGN UP FOR PGA TOUR LIVE ON ESPN+ TO STREAM THE ENTIRE 2022 RBC CANADIAN OPEN ONLINE How to bet on the RBC Canadian Open It’s a dream Sunday setup in terms of action and drama, and we are here for it. How to stream RBC Canadian Open Round 4 online How to watch RBC Canadian Open Round 4 on TV SIGN UP FOR PGA TOUR LIVE ON ESPN+ TO STREAM THE ENTIRE 2022 RBC CANADIAN OPEN ONLINE You can stream the final round of the 2022 RBC Canadian Open via PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ from 10:30 a.m.-6 p.m. ET on Sunday, which includes featured group coverage. 2022 RBC Canadian Open live coverage: How to watch the final round on Sunday Below you will find everything you need to watch the final round of the 2022 RBC Canadian Open. The final round of 2022 RBC Canadian Open begins Sunday morning at St. George’s Golf & Country Club. Here’s what you need to know to watch the final round on TV or online.
Four-time major winner McIlroy and world number 18 Tony Finau are tied atop the leaderboard at 11-under.
Thomas took a moment on Saturday to praise the Canadian Open as an example of what those joining the LIV Series were missing. After a week of verbal sparring and threats between the PGA Tour and the controversial Saudi-backed LIV Series, the spotlight was on golf on Saturday with the Canadian Open underscoring the quality gap between the two Tours. The Canadian Open showcased the quality the breakaway LIV Golf Invitational Series could not match on Saturday, with defending champion Rory McIlroy sitting atop a glittering leaderboard featuring three of the world's top 10.
Tony Finau, Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas and Sam Burns are all in the top going into the final round in Canada, which should make for a tremendous final 18 holes ...
It's only happened multiple times in the same SEASON 3 times.— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGolf) June 12, 2022 A bogey on the par-3 16th was followed up by a birdie on the par-4 17th by Justin Rose. A par on the final hole will get him in at 11 under and good for a 59. Meanwhile, McIlroy and Thomas are on the putting surface No. 12 with Finau in tight for a big birdie opportunity. He still has a par 5 in front of him and could threaten Rose for round of the day. Connecting from distance, McIlroy is now 8 under on the day and has opened up a three-stroke lead. Lost in the theatrics of Justin Rose shooting 60 was Rory McIlroy 3-putting for bogey. RORY 😱— GOLF on CBS ⛳ (@GOLFonCBS) pic.twitter.com/UgKclZGBIH June 12, 2022 Hole-by-hole data is available for every round of 60 since 1990. Commissioner Jay Monahan joined the final-round broadcast to discuss the state of golf and the PGA TOUR.— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) pic.twitter.com/UhvtDcHiup June 12, 2022 Rose is the only player in the group to bogey the last hole of his round.— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGolf) https://t.co/W0eMaI8jWw June 12, 2022 Keep it locked here as CBS Sports will be keeping track of everything with live updates and analysis throughout Round 4. Rose made 3 bogeys today, the most in PGA Tour history by a player in a round of 60 or lower— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGolf) https://t.co/bR2lvfGB2c June 12, 2022
Justin Rose narrowly missed out on posting the lowest round in PGA Tour history during a remarkable final round at the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto.
Those are the things that do happen and it's amazing how those situations present themselves right at the end." Rose followed a 20-foot birdie at the 10th with a 30-foot eagle at the par-five next, before a tap-in birdie at the 12th and six-foot gain at the 14th took him to nine under for the round with four holes still to play. "You're really just playing the last hole -- I never shot 59 before - so it would have been a lovely footnote on the week.
The overall purse at St. George's Golf & Country Club in Toronto was $8.7 million with the winner, Rory McIlroy, earning $1.566 million for his victory.
T-35: Ryan Moore, 277/-3, $39,730 T-35: Justin Lower, 277/-3, $39,730 T-35: Nick Hardy, 277/-3, $39,730 T-35: Adam Hadwin, 277/-3, $39,730 T-35: Ryan Armour, 277/-3, $39,730 For his win, McIlroy claimed a prize money payout of $1.566 million from an overall purse of $8.7 million.
The 10-time winner on the PGA Tour made three eagles, seven birdies, five pars and two bogeys to get to 11 under through 17 holes during the final round of the ...
Instead, he two-putted for bogey and the most-disappointing 10-under 60 in golf history (which set a course record, an RBC Canadian Open record and a personal best). The lowest score in relation to par in Tour history is 13 under, achieved four times, most recently in 2017 by Adam Hadwin at the CareerBuilder Challenge. Jim Furyk is the lone player to ever shoot two sub-60 rounds, and is the only player to ever shoot a 58, doing so at the 2016 Travelers Championship. Officially on 59—or even 58—watch, Rose was looking to become the 13th player to sign for a sub-60 round in Tour history, and the first since current world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler shot a 12-under 59 in the second round of the 2020 Northern Trust. That is until Rose airmailed his approach to the 18th green.
Golf expert Martin Mathews looks ahead to the final round of the RBC Canadian Open and he's not straying far from the top of the leaderboard.
Both though it should be said looked edgy at times on Saturday and I am just having a hard time picturing all of the big four stalling to open the door for one of them. Burns appears to have the winning knack right now and with three each way places on offer I am happy to play him alongside McIlroy. We are committed in our support of safer gambling. As we know though following up one great round with another is tough and with plenty of question marks around his ability to close out in this position still he is not for me. Thomas like Finau had started slowly this week however a Saturday 63 vaulted him in to contention. Ultimately though my hunch is that this will be McIlroy’s day and I suspect JT may just have his eye on next week’s trip to Brookline.
Rory McIlroy saved the best for last as he shot his low round of the week to claim victory at the Canadian Open.
Finau closed with a 64, as did Justin Thomas, who was third on 15 under, while Justin Rose hit the best round of the day, a 10-under 60 earning him a share of fourth place, a shot further back, Rory McIlroy saved the best for last as he shot his low round of the week to claim victory at the Canadian Open, and in the process defended a title for the first time on the PGA Tour. But the county Down man steadied the ship, finishing with two birdies to get around in 62 and win by two shots from Tony Finau.
Rory McIlroy has retained his Canadian Open title in Toronto, finishing on -19, two shots clear of Tony Finau.
You’ve got JT and Tony, two of the best players in the world right alongside me and the way the wind was the last couple of days the golf course obviously played a lot easier than I did the first two days. "So I knew that five, six, seven under was going to be the score I needed to get the job done. I knew I had to go out there today and play really really well. “So I just put the work in. The best players in the world are here at the RBC Canadian Open, with millions of fans watching, and in this game, it’s true and pure competition that creates the profile in the presence of the world’s greatest players.” It’s my 21st PGA tour win, one more than someone else,” McIlroy said in what seemed a thinly veiled reference to LIV Golf’s Greg Norman.
Rory McIlroy shoots an eight-under 62 to win the Canadian Open by two shots — then dunks on Greg Norman, the LIV CEO, afterward.
McIlroy is at 19-under, Thomas is at 16-under, and Finau, Clark and Rose are at 15-under. — Thomas bogeys the 494-yard, par-4 17th, and McIlroy birdies it after hitting his third shot to 2 feet, and McIlroy takes a two-shot lead. McIlroy’s at 16-under, and Clark, Finau and Thomas are at 14-under. Through 12 holes, McIlroy is eight-under, and through 17 holes, Rose is at 11-under. — McIlroy bogeys the 189-yard, par-3 16th, and his lead is gone. — McIlroy birdies the 530-yard, par-5 11th after hitting his third shot to 19 inches, Thomas also birdies, and McIlroy continues to lead by two. — McIlroy birdies the 436-yard, par-4 7th after hitting his approach to 3 feet, and he takes a two-shot lead. — Finau birdies the 436-yard, par-4 5th after hitting his approach to 4 feet, and he moves back into a share of the lead. — McIlroy birdies the 476-yard, par-4 4th after hitting his approach to 3 feet, and he takes a one-shot lead. — McIlroy birdies the 376-yard, par-4 1st on a 26-foot putt, and he takes a one-shot lead. — Tony Finau and Rory McIlroy lead by two shots entering the final round. After 16 holes, McIlroy and Thomas were tied.
McIlroy heads to the US Open having won the RBC Canadian Open for a second time and secured his 21st PGA Tour title; England's Justin Rose finishes tied fourth ...
McIlroy missed a close-range birdie chance at the 15th and failed to get up and down from the greenside bunker to save par at the 16th, where Thomas scrambled a three to grab a share of the lead, only for the four-time winner to respond with a close-range birdie at the par-four next. A 40-foot birdie at the 12th was a sixth in seven holes for McIlroy to briefly move him three ahead with six to play, only for him to miss from three feet at the par-three next and see his lead cut to one again when Thomas birdied the 14th. Thomas went on a four-birdie run from the sixth to get to 14 under, while Finau match the PGA champion's birdies at the ninth to join Clark in a three-way tie for second, as McIlroy got up and down from a greenside bunker to pick up a shot on the same hole and reach the turn two ahead.
Rory McIlroy won the PGA Tour's 2022 RBC Canadian Open, defending his title from 2019, the last time the event was played.
He had a good finish at Colonial, had another good finish here. Like Tony’s struggled a little bit the last sort of six to 12 months, but he seems to have really turned it around. I went out with a lead and had to shoot 8-under par to get the job done. “It gives you a lot of confidence to know that, just to see where your game stacks up against the best. Finau knocked in a 40-footer for birdie on the last to finish at 17 under. But he missed a four-footer on 13 and a two-footer on 16 to fall back into a tie. I played great; he just played a couple shots better.” He shot 29 over the front nine – the first 29 on either the front or back nine in his career. “After COVID, I needed a total reset,” McIlroy said. And he had to dig deep to overcome a lull. In 2019, McIlroy closed with a 61 to win the Canadian Open by seven shots. So that was really cool for me, just a little sense of pride on that one.”
Somehow, the post-round interview from his 21st PGA Tour win was even better than the win itself. The finale in Canada was a resounding answer to this week's ...
Congratulations, Rory—well done! He finished top 15 from tee to green and in driving distance, both of which will be massive next week as he tries for his second major of both the season and his career. T18. Scottie Scheffler (-7): The Masters champion had one bad day (he shot 1 over on Saturday and faded hard going into the last day). Like J.T., there are still positives to take away. 3. Justin Thomas (-15): It was much of the same for J.T. as it was for Finau. The PGA Championship winner gained over four strokes per round on the week and finished five shots ahead of the T7s, and it felt like he never really had a chance on Sunday. Still, he'll go to The Country Club next week looking for his second straight major, and I'm not sure his confidence has ever been higher. Finau and Thomas both shot that number to McIlroy's 62, and Finau made a monster putt at the last to do so. Nobody knows how the next few years are going to go or who's going to win the tussle for regular season supremacy between LIV Golf and the PGA Tour. Those organizations will be embroiled in that battle for a long time. He also noted that he now has 21 PGA Tour wins, which is "one more than someone else." LIV Golf is a rival to the PGA Tour and one that has a lot of folks concerned. He hit seven approaches (all from over 100 yards) inside 5 feet and lost strokes putting on a day in which he he shot 62. Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas put on an absolute show during a week when the PGA Tour desperately needed it at the 2022 RBC Canadian Open. McIlroy shot 62 to finish at 19 under, defeating Tony Finau by two strokes and Justin Thomas by three. The finale in Canada was a resounding answer to this week's LIV Golf debut event in London, which garnered momentum and handed out $25 million to its 48-player field on Saturday after the first of eight 54-hole events. McIlroy, who played with Thomas and Finau in the final threesome, came out of the gates completely on fire.
Defending champion Rory McIlroy earns his 21st PGA Tour win with his victory Sunday at RBC Canadian Open, which was held for first time since 2019.
Finau knocked in a 40-footer for birdie on the last to finish at 17 under. Justin Rose made a run at a sub-par 60 round and was actually 11 under through 15 holes and three pars away from a 59. And he shot 29 over the front nine – the first 29 on either the front or back nine in his career. He finished at 15 under. In 2019, McIlroy closed with a 61 to win the Canadian Open by seven shots. It was the first time in 15 attempts that he defended a title.
Moments after McIlroy knocked in the winning putt for his 21st Tour win, he took a dig at Greg Norman.
For more information about cross-device matching, please visit the Network Advertising Initiative or the Digital Advertising Alliance. If you opt out of cross-device tracking for advertising purposes, we may still conduct cross-device tracking for other purposes, such as analytics. Information may still be collected and used for other purposes, such as research, online services analytics or internal operations, and to remember your opt-out preferences. Ad Selection and Delivery Cookies: These Cookies are used to collect data about your browsing habits, your use of the Services, your preferences, and your interaction with advertisements across platforms and devices for the purpose of delivering interest-based advertising content on the Services and on third-party sites. Social media platforms have the ability to track your online activity outside of the Services. This may impact the content and messages you see on other services you visit. Connected Devices: For connected devices, such as smart TVs or streaming devices, you should review the device’s settings and select the option that allows you to disable automatic content recognition or ad tracking. Browser Controls: You may be able to disable and manage some Cookies through your browser settings. Flash cookies need to be deleted in the storage section of your Flash Player Settings Manager. Third-party sites and services also use interest-based Advertising Cookies to deliver content, including advertisements relevant to your interests on the Services and third-party services. They are also used to recognize you and provide further insights across platforms and devices for the above purposes. You should read the Privacy Policy and this Notice for a full picture of NBCUniversal’s use of your information. Measurement and Analytics: These Cookies collect data regarding your usage of and performance of the Services, apply market research to generate audiences, and measure the delivery and effectiveness of content and advertising. You can set your browser to block these Cookies, but some parts of the site may not function properly.
How to Watch the RBC Canadian Open, Round 4: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times. June 12, 2022. By Staff , PGATOUR.COM. SHARE ON · Top 10. All- ...
Featured Groups FEATURED GROUPS Featured Holes • Featured Groups: traditional PGA TOUR LIVE coverage of two concurrent featured groups
The Hollywood star brought his A-game today and absolutely needed to as he held off stiff competition.
I sorta re-dedicated myself to the game a little bit and realised what makes me happy. "And this makes me happy. So I've just put the work in.
Rory McIlroy won the RBC Canadian Open on Sunday and gave the PGA Tour a strong response to the start of the Saudi-funded LIV Golf Invitational, ...
Finau holed a 40-foot birdie putt on the 18th for a 64 to finish second alone. Thomas pushed him to the end at St George’s Golf & Country Club, and the tournament effectively ended on the 17th hole. McIlroy had his first title defence on the PGA Tour, even if he had to wait for it.
Rory McIlroy won the RBC Canadian Open on Sunday, closing with an 8-under 62 to win a wild race to the finish with Justin Thomas and Tony Finau at St.
"I never shot 59 before, so it would have been a lovely footnote on the week." He bogeyed the 16th, hit to 2 feet on 17 for birdie, then went over the green on 18 and missed an 18-foot par putt. "But right now I just want to enjoy this and focus on this." I went out with a lead and had to shoot 8-under par to get the job done. "I feel like it's getting tougher and tougher to win on the PGA Tour," McIlroy said. McIlroy had his first title defense on the PGA Tour, even if he had to wait for it.
The Irish golfer took home his second consecutive victory at the Canadian Open and added a nice paycheck in the process.
Ryan Moore, 277/-3 Justin Lower, 277/-3 Nick Hardy, 277/-3 Adam Hadwin, 277/-3 Ryan Armour, 277/-3 That money is a bit less than some of the higher-end tournaments and golf majors, but still a hefty sum nonetheless.