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How, not what, McIlroy does, makes him golf’s successor to Ballesteros | Ewan Murray

about 10 hours ago
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Levels of greatness need not always be defined by numbers,Nick Faldo’s six majors to Rory McIlroy’s five prior to events at Augusta National on Sunday gave the Englishman the edge in the eyes of many in respect of Europe’s finest ever golfer,That McIlroy had already won the career grand slam of majors, therefore passing every test his sport has to offer, meant he was more worthy of the crown,Those who want to add Harry Vardon and a bygone age to the conversation should check the Jersey man’s scoring for his septet of major wins,It is the nature of McIlroy’s achievement that sets him apart.

Retaining the Masters for major No 6 places McIlroy in lofty company – Faldo, Phil Mickelson and Lee Trevino.He is suddenly one shy of Arnold Palmer.Gary Player and the non-US record of nine is a legitimate goal.Yet watching McIlroy right until the final hole at Augusta National served as a reminder that it is the addictive, thrilling style of his output that is worthy of the highest praise.The Northern Irishman was half a hole from Masters glory, shunting galleries back 50 yards so he could visualise a recovery shot from a forest.

Love or loathe McIlroy, you simply cannot take eyes off him,Faldo raced to meet McIlroy in the aftermath of his one-shot triumph, handing the 36-year-old a note about joining the back-to-back Masters-winning club,Faldo had spent much of the week making gauche references to 1996, when he overhauled Greg Norman’s six-shot lead,Faldo’s achievement 30 years ago was superb, his dismantling of Norman a Masters epic, yet it never led to adulation,Faldo was the grindsman who got the job done, whose awkwardness in public was emphasised by his remarkable 1992 Open-winning speech at Muirfield.

Faldo was rightly respected but never loved, certainly outside golf.McIlroy’s journey, from humble roots on the outskirts of Belfast, resonates widely.His struggle between 2014 and 2025 to win a fifth major and the Masters in particular struck chords with people who have no interest in week-to-week golf.He is the sport’s most relatable superstar.“If you put the hours in and work on the right things, eventually it will come good for you,” Mcllroy said.

This not only looks and sounds so blissfully simple but belies McIlroy’s concerted, obvious frustrations when Augusta could not be conquered.There is electricity wherever he walks.This Masters summed that up.From establishing a six-shot lead, to handing that advantage back to the field, to three-putting the 4th hole on Sunday from 9ft, to arrowing a stupendous nine-iron right at the flag of the iconic 12th to the brush with danger at the last.Watching McIlroy is exciting and exhausting.

Rafa Nadal, who has no reason to offer deference easily, seemed borderline obsessed with him at Augusta, the Spaniard scurrying into position for each and every shot.“I don’t make it easy,” said McIlroy in the aftermath.“I used to make it easy back in my early 20s when I was winning these things by eight shots.” The US Open of 2011 and US PGA Championship of 2012 were captivating in their own way.The Masters is typically a tighter affair, having been won by five shots only once in McIlroy’s career.

That version, in 2020, saw conditions distorted by a November staging.McIlroy won the Green Jacket for a second time while tied 52nd for driving accuracy out of 54 players who made the cut.He hit only 31 of 56 fairways.This conjures comparisons with Seve Ballesteros, a hero of European golf, who was famed for his escapism.McIlroy has that, plus imagination, creativity and a resilience when the going gets tough that is often underappreciated.

When not at his best, having already won the Masters and watching Justin Rose surge two shots ahead of him on Sunday’s back nine it would have been easy for McIlroy to wilt.Instead, Rose faded under pressure as McIlroy jabbed back.Confirmation of victory brought unbridled joy for McIlroy as opposed to the emotional outpouring of 2025.At the Ryder Cup, McIlroy was front and centre.He was a target for American fans and the beating heart of the European team.

That event and majors are what continue to stimulate him,He is captivating viewing and a must-listen at them all,Scottie Scheffler is deservedly the world No 1 on the rankings system yet it is McIlroy who moves needles like no other,The PGA Tour need not have bothered asking Tiger Woods to head up a committee aimed at reshaping its schedule; executives should simply have asked McIlroy where and when he is willing to play,He is that fundamental to golf’s popularity.

A tale does the rounds at Western Gailes golf club on Scotland’s west coast, relating to the 18-year-old McIlroy’s visit for a practice round before an amateur event in 2007.The starter had been adamant McIlroy could play from the opening, par-four tee with the shot into the wind and the group ahead on the green.McIlroy believed he should wait and stood his ground.“I’ll give you a wave if the eagle putt goes in,” McIlroy said to the starter after his drive finished 30ft from the cup.Minutes later, a thumbs up from McIlroy and a smile from a club employee 300-odd yards away.

An entertainer from the very start,
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Sussex baby deaths inquiry will fail to learn lessons after excluding families, Streeting warned

An inquiry into the preventable deaths of babies in Sussex will fail to learn the lessons as it “systematically” excluded dozens of families, Wes Streeting has been warned before a meeting with bereaved parents.The health secretary has ordered a review of nine infant deaths at the University Hospitals Sussex NHS foundation trust amid maternity scandals across England. However, families are calling on Streeting to expand the investigation to all those who died and might have survived with better care.To date, the families of more than 60 babies who died between 2019 and 2023 have expressed concerns about their care, although the true figure is expected to be higher.Dr Marija Pantelic, a public health expert whose baby Sasha died in the care of UH Sussex in January 2022, said the narrow scope and opt-in nature of the review was dangerous and potentially harmful as it would be based on the experiences of an “overwhelmingly white and British” group of parents

about 15 hours ago
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AI to predict how bowel cancer patients will respond to new NHS drug

A new AI-driven way of identifying how patients with advanced bowel cancer will respond to a drug that was recently introduced by the NHS has been announced.Researchers at London’s Institute of Cancer Research and the RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences in Dublin have developed the method with the goal of sparing potentially thousands of patients from being given drugs that would be ineffective in fighting their cancers.In the UK alone, nearly 10,000 cases of advanced bowel cancer are identified every year, with young adults seeing a particular rise in diagnoses. Bowel cancer has the second highest mortality rate of any cancer, behind only lung cancer, and while survival rates can be as high as 98% when caught early, the five-year survival rate for advanced bowel cancer can be as low as 10%.The study tracked 117 European bowel cancer patients who had been treated with chemotherapy and bevacizumab, a drug that was approved by the NHS in December

about 18 hours ago
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More than a fifth of UK’s ‘austerity children’ scarred by poverty, study says

More than a fifth of all “austerity generation” British children have been scarred by poverty for at least half their childhood, a direct legacy of the welfare benefit cuts imposed by Conservative governments in recent years, research reveals.The proportion of children born after 2013 who spent at least six of their first 11 years of life in hardship surged after ministers froze working age benefits levels and imposed policies such as the two-child limit, it found.Austerity policies, which drastically shrank annual welfare spending by tens of billions a year and took thousands of pounds a year out of low-income family budgets, effectively pitched hundreds of thousands more children into sustained poverty.The University of Oxford study said the austerity-era growth in children exposed to poverty for most of their formative years was a “significant social problem” that would cause long-term harms to their health, education and life chances.The study’s co-author, Selçuk Bedük, said the post-2013 austerity cuts to welfare increased both the numbers of children experiencing poverty and the time they spent in it

about 22 hours ago
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Private firms providing services to NHS made £1.6bn profit in two years, research finds

Private firms providing services to the NHS including healthcare and consultancy have made £1.6bn in profits over the last two years, research reveals.The findings – on the basis of contracts worth £12bn – have prompted claims of “scandalous” profiteering, concern that the health service is being “taken for a ride” and calls for ministers to impose a cap on maximum profit levels.The £1.6bn in profits made in 2023-24 and 2024-25 would have been enough to pay for 9,178 doctors or 19,428 nurses during that time, according to the Centre for Health and the Public Interest

about 22 hours ago
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‘I just want to feel like me again’: the women still waiting for breast reconstruction years after lockdown

At the height of Covid, hundreds of cancer patients had mastectomies without the reconstruction that would normally accompany them. They would eventually get the surgery, they were told – but for many that promise feels more meaningless by the dayEvery time she lifts her arms to get dressed or hang out her washing, Julie Ford gets a painful reminder of one of the most terrifying experiences of her life. At 7am one day in April 2021, she had gone into hospital, alone and wearing a mask, to have her right breast and lymph nodes removed in a bid to stop breast cancer from spreading. Later that day, still groggy from the anaesthetic, in pain and with surgical drains hanging from both sides of her chest, she had staggered to the door with the help of two nurses. She was eased into a friend’s car and driven home to fend for herself

about 23 hours ago
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Iran war could plunge 32 million into poverty, says United Nations

More than 32 million people worldwide could be plunged into poverty by the economic fallout from the Iran war, with developing countries expected to be hit hardest.In a report issued amid doubts over a fragile ceasefire, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said the world was facing a “triple shock” involving energy, food and weaker economic growth.The agency tasked with tackling poverty said the conflict was reversing gains in international development, with the impact expected be felt unevenly across regions.Alexander De Croo, administrator of the UNDP and former prime minister of Belgium, said: “A conflict like this is development in reverse. Even if the war stops, and a ceasefire is obviously very very welcome

about 23 hours ago
technologySee all
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‘It feels as if I’ve made a new best friend’: my experiment with AI journalling

1 day ago
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Dr TikTok: patients diagnose chronic illnesses with anonymous commenters’ help

1 day ago
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AI companies know they have an image problem. Will funding policy papers and thinktanks dig them out?

1 day ago
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‘Too powerful for the public’: Inside Anthropic’s bid to win the AI publicity war

2 days ago
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‘It has your name on it, but I don’t think it’s you’: how AI is impersonating musicians on Spotify

3 days ago
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home targeted with molotov cocktail

3 days ago