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Comparison may be the thief of joy, but if you were lucky enough to wind up in the gallery on each of the last two Masters Sundays, it was only natural to spend a little while exploring the parallels.

On each of the last two Masters Sundays, Rory McIlroy stepped to the first tee cast at the center of the gravitational pull of golf’s largest event. On each of the last two Masters Sundays, he endured a final round that featured incredible highs and impressive disaster in equal parts. And, on each of the last two Masters Sundays, McIlroy emerged on the 18th green at the top of the pack, enjoyed an emotional walk to the scorer’s tent, cruised to Butler Cabin, and slipped his shoulders into a green jacket.

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And yet, for all of their spine-tingling similarities, the differences between the two McIlroy wins were even more striking. The crowd on this Masters Sunday seemed excited but not totally euphoric. The winner on this Masters Sunday seemed emotional but not completely overcome. And the larger impact of the victory on this Masters Sunday seemed respectful but not quite earth-shattering.

In nearly all ways, this was perfectly understandable. Rory McIlroy can only end a decade-long epoch in pursuit of major glory once. He can only complete the career Grand Slam with a victory at one of the sport’s holiest sites, Augusta National, once. And he can only deliver a reaction of instant-iconography once.

But then, early last week, the TV ratings came out suggesting something entirely different. According to Nielsen, McIlroy’s 2026 Masters win outrated McIlroy’s 2025 Masters win by a significant margin, delivering 13.995 million average viewers, up eight percent from McIlroy’s win last year.

If you’re like me, you saw those numbers and paused. Nothing about McIlroy’s win this time around suggested the numbers would have outperformed his win from last April, and nothing about the reaction to the victory in the days that followed suggested that TV audiences were salivating for more than they’d gotten last April (when late-night TV spots, morning show hits, a crazed degree of social media fame were fairly standard fare).

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So, does that mean CBS has the wrong numbers? Or Nielsen screwed up the ratings? Not exactly.

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