Masters 2026: Rory McIlroy has lost control of his golf swing. Can he get it back?
· Yahoo Sports
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The signals were there. Subtle, and hard to spot, but flashing. By Saturday evening they were loud and screaming.
Rory McIlroy has lost control of his golf swing. His third-round 73 transformed his six-shot lead into a co-lead. Yet the fate of the 2026 Masters is still firmly in his hands.
Visit biznow.biz for more information.
The question now is: Can he have one without the other?
Adam Glanzman
All week Rory McIlroy has had a singular goal. "My little mantra to myself was keep swinging; keep swinging hard at it even if you're not hitting fairways, just keep swinging," he said after his second-round 65. "Over the years ... my mindset hasn't been keep swinging. It's been guided, tentative."
That attitude vaulted Rory to the top of the leaderboard at the 2026 Masters—12-under and six strokes ahead of his nearest competitor. But he ranked second-to-last in driving accuracy and lost strokes gained off the tee through two rounds.
But McIlroy is a smarter golfer than he used to be, and through a clever patchwork of deep course knowledge, intense preparation, and good recovery strategy, Rory raced into the lead.
During his warmup ahead of the third round, something seemed to change.
An early warning signSpin axis is an advanced golf term that measures the tilt of the ball as it flies through the air. Think of it like the Earth spinning at a slight angle—the golf ball does the same thing.
Adam Glanzman
When the golf ball is hit with a closed clubface, the spin axis tilts left, which makes the ball draw to the left.
When the golf ball is hit with an open clubface, the spin axis tilts to the right, which makes the ball fade to the right.
The Masters is tracking that data point as part of its Range Tracker function this week. At the start of the week, Rory's average spin axis on shots over 250 yards was almost exactly zero—+0.35 degrees, to be exact.
With his irons, it was a hair more: +1.82 on shots between 100 and 220 yards.
In short, the ball was flying mostly straight, with a baby fade with his irons.
But by Saturday, things looked different.
On Friday, his average spin axis on his iron shots had inched negative for the first time. During his Saturday warmup, his average stood at −0.62 degrees with his irons, −1.57 degrees with his longer irons, and −2.75 degrees with his driver. At times, the spin axis on his irons reached as far as —5 degrees.
There's nothing inherently wrong—plenty of good players have numbers that look like this. The issue is the unpredictability. A four-degree shift in spin axis is severe at the professional level.
A ball flight that had started as the gentlest of fades earlier in the week had turned into one that would jerk sharply left at a moment's notice. On Saturday, it reared its ugly head. He missed iron shots left of the green on the third, fourth, sixth, into the water on the 11th, and left again on 12th. More left misses with his driver followed.
Rory's race to fix itWhy is this happening?
Adam Glanzman
That's the question McIlroy set about answering on the range after his round.
"A couple of them were because of the lies that I had, but yeah, I was trying to hit a draw into the pin on the sixth hole and I just overdid it," McIlroy said. "Then on 12 I had a bit of an awkward yardage—I was trying to hit a three-quarter held wedge and just my body stopped and it went left on me. I think for me it's just about keeping my lower body moving. If I can just get my lower body moving through impact, then that should fix it. But I am going to go and hit a few balls on the range to neutralize the ball flight a bit."
Coaches often point to a recurring issue within Rory's golf swing where his hands push out and up aggressively on the takeaway. When this happens, it rolls the clubface open and pushes his hands up. As they come down, the combination of hands traveling steeply and the clubface rolling back closed can shut the face—sending the ball aggressively left.
McIlroy, speaking after his round, said he thinks a more aggressive lower-body action could counteract this tendency ahead of Sunday's final round.
It's a different solution than he settled on in the offseason a year ago, when McIlroy had tackled the root cause with intense focus on a takeaway drill to stop that initial out-and-up movement of his hands.
That kind of technical work hasn't been a priority since his crowning achievement at the Masters last year, and to those within coaching circles, that doesn't come as a surprise.
View this post on Instagram
"Rory works on his golf swing when he decides to work on his golf swing," one coach with connections to the McIlroy camp said. "For Rory, it's not always his main focus, and that can be a problem."
It is indeed the problem he faces on Sunday at Augusta National.
Whether he can cobble together a quick solution will determine whether he slips the green jacket on once again.