
Rory McIlroy may have completed the career Grand Slam in 2025, but there is a growing sense he might not reach double digits in major titles.
McIlroy’s rise was rapid. By the end of 2014, he had already collected four majors after breaking through in 2011.
The wait for his next was a long one. It took 11 years before he finally added another at Augusta, and while it was an emotional story, it also highlighted just how much time had passed between wins.
Tiger Woods sits on 15 majors and Jack Nicklaus still leads the way with 18, so even after completing the Slam, McIlroy remains well short of those historic numbers.
Before the 2014 PGA Championship – which Rory went on to win – Nicklaus made a prediction about his future. Looking back now, it seems clear that things have not quite played out as expected.
Back in the early 2010s, McIlroy’s potential seemed limitless. There was a sense he might one day break every record in sight.
And while there is no question he has put together an impressive career, the major haul has not quite matched those early expectations.
McIlroy has fallen well short of the prediction Jack Nicklaus made in 2014, and it appears highly improbable that he will ever meet it.
“I think Rory has an opportunity to win 15 or 20 majors or whatever he wants to do if he wants to keep playing,” Nicklaus said at the time.
“It depends on what he feels his priorities are and that’s his call.
“I think Rory is an unbelievable talent.
“I love his swing, I love his rhythm. He’s got a little swagger there, it’s a little bit cocky, but not offensive. I like that. I like the self-confidence in a young man.
“He’s got an unbelievable amount of speed in his golf swing, he obviously hits the ball a heck of a long way.
“And he hits in there consistently and how he controls it.”
Let us not overlook what 2025 meant for Rory McIlroy.
It was a massive year, and he finally won the career Grand Slam. But even with all the attention around it, he still added just one major to his total.
Claiming the Masters was a huge achievement, no doubt. But that leaves him with five majors, still a long way from matching Nicklaus’s prediction of 15 or more back in 2014.
| Year | Tournament | Winning score | Margin | Runner(s)-up |
| 2011 | U.S. Open | −16 (65-66-68-69=268) | 8 strokes | Jason Day |
| 2012 | PGA Championship | −13 (67-75-67-66=275) | 8 strokes | David Lynn |
| 2014 | The Open Championship | −17 (66-66-68-71=271) | 2 strokes | Rickie Fowler, Sergio Garcia |
| 2014 | PGA Championship | −16 (66-67-67-68=268) | 1 stroke | Phil Mickelson |
| 2025 | Masters Tournament | −11 (72-66-66-73=277) | Playoff | Justin Rose |
At 36, there is still time on his side, but he needs to add at least one more title in 2026 and then keep that pace up if he even wants to get close to double digits.
Even so, whether McIlroy reaches ten majors or not will not change what he means to the sport. His place among the game’s greats is already secure.
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