Rory McIlroy announced on 1 July 2026 that he will cut his PGA Tour starts to under 15 events this season, a move that could leave him under‑cooked for the PGA Championship, U.S. Open and Open Championship, analysts warn.
Why is McIlroy changing his schedule?
After clinching the Masters in 2025 and completing the career Grand Slam, the 37‑year‑old felt he could afford to be choosier with his weeks. He plans to focus on a handful of high‑profile PGA events—Pebble Beach, Riviera, Bay Hill and TPC Sawgrass—then travel to national opens worldwide. The shift gives him more freedom but also means fewer competitive rounds before the three remaining majors.
How could the new routine affect his major chances?
McIlroy’s typical early‑year rhythm runs from February through April, keeping him sharp for Augusta. Since the Masters, he has entered only four tournaments: the Truist Championship before the PGA, the Memorial ahead of the U.S. Open, and the Genesis Scottish Open the week before The Open. With just one event between the U.S. Open and The Open, he risks arriving at the links without the tournament‑ready edge his rivals enjoy.
Who else is staying busy?
Scottie Scheffler logged seven events after the Masters, Matt Fitzpatrick eight, and Cam Young seven. Their packed schedules give them more rounds to fine‑tune swing mechanics and course strategy. McIlroy’s lighter slate could leave him “undercooked,” as some commentators put it, when the pressure mounts at the final three majors each year.
What does this mean for his legacy?
McIlroy already boasts 30 PGA Tour wins, 21 DP World Tour titles and six majors. Adding more national opens would broaden his trophy cabinet, yet the gamble is whether he can still capture additional majors. If he wins The Open next week, the theory collapses. Otherwise, the next five years may reveal whether a leaner schedule fuels or hinders his quest for more green‑jacket glory.