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Rory McIlroy survives tight finish to defend title at RBC Canadian Open

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After what was a wild and โ€œunfortunateโ€ week for golf, Rory McIlroy survived a star-studded field in Toronto on Sunday afternoon.

McIlroy posted a final-round 62 at St. Georgeโ€™s Golf and Country Club to successfully defend his title and claim the RBC Canadian Open.

โ€œItโ€™s incredible. Playing with Tony [Finau] and JT [Justin Thomas] today, two of the top players in the world, and all of us playing the way we did,โ€ McIlroy said on CBS. โ€œI think the worst score was 6-under par. This is a day Iโ€™ll remember for a long, long time."

McIlroy, who has been perhaps the loudest critic of the LIV Golf Invitational Series, couldnโ€™t help but throw in a shot at the controversial golf leagueโ€™s CEO Greg Norman.

โ€œ21st PGA Tour win, one more than someone else," he said. "That gave me a little extra incentive today. Really happy to get that done."

McIlroy led nearly the entire way Sunday after he started with a share of the lead with Tony Finau. He made five birdies on the front nine, and then started his back nine with three straight birdies to get to 8-under on the day.

Yet a bogey at the par-3 13th opened the door for the rest of the field, and McIlroy lost his lead briefly at the 16th after he landed in the bunker on the par-3 and then narrowly missed his par putt. Justin Thomas saved his par, which sent them to the 17th tied up at 17-under on the week.

Thatโ€™s when McIlroyโ€™s wedge game again came in handy. McIlroy landed his approach on the 17th just 2 feet from the hole from 125 yards out, which set up a tap-in birdie to get back to 18-under.

Thomas, on the other hand, missed his par putt and dropped back down, which resulted in a two-shot swing and gave McIlroy a two-shot lead headed into the final hole. It marked Thomasโ€™ first bogey in 34 holes.

McIlroy birdied the 18th to take his two-shot win.

The win marked the 21st of McIlroyโ€™s career and his second this season, following his victory at The CJ Cup. He has eight top-25 finishes on the season, including a runner-up finish at The Masters and an eighth-place finish at the PGA Championship. McIlroy is fourth in the FedExCup standings.

Finau finished second with a final-round 64 thanks to a huge birdie putt to close out his day. Thomas took third at 15-under after his bogey-bogey finish.

Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy successfully defended his 2019 win in Toronto on Sunday, and picked up his second win of the season. (Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

Justin Rose just misses 59

Justin Rose was in a perfect position to make PGA Tour history Sunday afternoon.

Yet at the 18th, with a 59 in sight, Rose stumbled.

Rose was sitting at 11-under par with one hole to go Sunday, which would have made him the 13th player in Tour history to shoot a 59 or better. Rose missed the final green with his approach, and then had to two-putt for bogey.

Though that bogey was disappointing, and was one of two he made in his final three holes of the day, Roseโ€™s final round was tremendous. He made three eagles, including a wild one to start his day, and had seven birdies in his round to finish 10-under 60.

He matched an RBC Canadian Open record and tied his career-low while jumping up 15 spots on the leaderboard to grab a fourth-place finish.

While his stumble was avoidable, itโ€™s hard to criticize the round that Rose put together โ€” but that doesn't mean Rose isn't upset with himself.

"I'm totally disappointed, yeah," he said. "Because you know what's at stake, for sure. You're really just playing the last hole โ€” I never shot 59 before โ€” so it would have been a lovely footnote on the week. I don't know how much was in my control or not, but I could have made we were right in between two clubs and a decision and I went the wrong way on a decision and paid the price for it."

Justin Rose of England
Justin Rose nearly carded a 59 on Sunday at the RBC Canadian Open. (Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)
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