Rory McIlroy spikes ‘fifth major’ allegations, makes surprising NFL admission

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com
|
|

Rory McIlroy (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Irish Golfer & GOLF.com

Feature Interviews

Latest Stories

If you needed any evidence of how quickly things can change on the PGA Tour, you needed only to be within shouting distance of a window on Tuesday afternoon at Pebble Beach.

As the golf world settled into the first event of the post-Super Bowl season, Pebble Beach settled into its typical early-February weather volatility. Beautiful, blue skies on an unusually mild morning quickly ruptured into dark gashes of grey, as the wind swelled loud enough to rattle the glass on Pebble Beach’s newly renovated golf lodge.

This was the environment as Rory McIlroy stepped to the lectern to speak for the first time in the United States in 2026. The reigning Masters (and Pebble Pro-Am) champ arrived, as usual, with a laundry list of hot-button golf topics to address — but this year the biggest of them surrounded a rival league of much different proportions: The NFL, which just wrapped its final event of the season just an hour up the road from Pebble Beach in Santa Clara, Calif.

As with most years, the Super Bowl provided the golf world with a stark reminder of the NFL’s power over the American sports audience. But unlike most years, this year’s Super Bowl arrived at a time of heightened interest in the NFL at PGA Tour headquarters, where former NFL executive Brian Rolapp is eyeing a change agenda to model the Tour after its football counterparts.

In the world floated by Rolapp, the Tour season could begin here, in Pebble, the week after the Super Bowl — ceding the early winter to football but claiming the spring and summer months as the glut of the Tour schedule. That change wouldn’t be all that different for McIlroy, who traditionally begins his year by playing a handful of events in the Middle East as part of the DP World Tour, but it would mark a massive shift for the rest of the Tour, which has traditionally started shortly after the new year.

At Pebble, the question facing McIlroy was the same as the question facing the Tour in early 2026: How much of the NFL is worth stealing, and how much of the old PGA Tour is worth keeping?

But the more McIlroy talked about football, the more a deep irony began to shine through: The guy tasked with being the missionary for pro golf’s footballification? He’s not a football fan. Like at all.

“No, I think, yeah, football is —,” McIlroy said, pausing. “I’ve tried really hard with football. Like I’ve tried really hard.”

“I could watch a game of cricket for five days and be mesmerized,” McIlroy said. “I think I just — I didn’t grow up with it, so that’s why I maybe don’t take to it quite as naturally.”

Stay ahead of the game. Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest Irish Golfer news straight to your inbox!

More News

Leave a comment


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy & Terms of Service apply.