Jack Nicklaus offers Rory McIlroy blunt advice before the Masters. The defending champion takes the Golden Bear’s words to heart.
There are few voices in golf that carry more weight than Jack Nicklaus. So when the 18-time major champion offers guidance to a fellow competitor at Augusta National, it pays to listen—and Rory McIlroy did exactly that.
Before his opening round at the Masters Tournament, McIlroy received some characteristically direct counsel from Nicklaus at the practice facility. The message was simple but unmistakable: “No f—ing double bogeys.”
The Golden Bear’s Diagnosis
Apparently, Nicklaus had noticed a pattern in McIlroy’s play during the previous year’s event. According to the defending champion, he had made too many double bogeys at Augusta in 2025—a costly mistake at a course where precision and avoiding big numbers are paramount.
When asked about the advice during his interview in Butler Cabin after his opening round, McIlroy confirmed the exchange. “When Jack Nicklaus gives you direction, you must take it,” he noted, acknowledging that there was no debating the point with one of golf’s greatest players.
Words That Resonate
The moment underscored the ongoing relationship between Nicklaus and the modern generation of golfers competing at the PGA Tour. Even at a major championship with the world’s best players, the lessons from golf’s greatest champion remain relevant and, as McIlroy confirmed, “pretty accurate.”
Double bogeys at Augusta don’t just cost strokes—they disrupt momentum and compound pressure. It’s the kind of practical insight that only someone who has won the Masters six times can truly appreciate. For McIlroy, seeking his second green jacket, taking Nicklaus’s words to heart offered a clear pathway: stay disciplined, avoid the big mistakes, and let the rest of the game follow.