Rory McIlroy. Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

The 'stars are aligning' for Rory McIlroy to win the 2024 PGA Championship

If history is any indication, Rory McIlroy is going to win the 2024 PGA Championship this week to finally snap his 10-year major drought.  

Let's rewind to 2014. A 25-year-old McIlroy, who already had two major championships under his belt, won the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool Golf Club to check off three legs of the career Grand Slam. 

He returned to the United States and won his next start at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. A week later, he won the PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club for his third straight victory and his fourth major championship. 

Sound familiar? It should.

A few weeks ago, McIlroy teamed up with fellow Irishman Shane Lowry to win the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. He returned to the course last week and won the Wells Fargo Championship thanks to a blistering 6-under 65 in the final round. 

Coming off two straight victories, the 35-year-old will go for three in a row this week at the PGA Championship at — you guessed it — Valhalla. 

This is the first time since that 2014 run that McIlroy has won two straight starts entering a major championship. 

"I really got some confidence from New Orleans, winning with Shane. And then, yeah, coming into this week at a golf course that I'm comfortable at, my golf swing feels a lot more comfortable than it has," McIlroy told CBS' Amanda Balionis after his win at Quail Hollow Club. "Going to a venue next week where I've won, it feels like the stars are aligning a little bit. But I've got a lot of golf to play and a lot of great players to try to beat next week, but going into the next major of the year feeling really good about myself."

As he should. McIlroy played brilliantly at Quail Hollow, as he led the field in strokes gained from tee to green and ranked eighth in the field in strokes gained from putting. 

Now, he returns to a golf course that fits him perfectly. Valhalla is a bomber's track that demands length off the tee and stellar long-iron play, which just happen to be McIlroy's biggest strengths. 

If there was ever a time for this inexplicable, 10-year major drought to end, it would be this week. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Oilers crush Panthers in Game 4, stay alive in Stanley Cup Final
Dodgers ace leaves game against Royals due to triceps tightness
Sam Mayer uses overtime restart to win Xfinity Series' return to Iowa
Liberty forward pushes herself into MVP conversation with big game vs. Aces
Tiger Woods makes big admission about his U.S. Open future
Cubs P 'Mike' Imanaga continues hot start vs. Cardinals
Celtics' All-Defensive guard reportedly could replace Kawhi Leonard on Team USA
Tee Higgins' contract decision adds pressure on Bengals in 2024
One-time Defensive Player of the Year open to reunion with former team
College baseball has become too regional for its own good
Three Padres prospects who should be untouchable in trade talks
Connor McDavid's history-making night helps Oilers stave off elimination
Astros scratch Justin Verlander as nightmare season continues
Watch: Oilers chase goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky from Game 4
Watch: Rockies third baseman takes advantage of Pirates laziness' to steal home
Pirates place young catcher on concussion IL
Watch: Game 4 of Stanley Cup Final gets off to chaotic start
Rockies 1B, former NL MVP diagnosed with internal oblique strain
NBA insider shares update on J.J. Redick's candidacy for Lakers HC job
Nationals hurler DJ Herz makes impressive history in third career start