The putting advice Rory McIlroy swears by under pressure

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Augusta National hosted a press conference with 2025 Masters champion Rory McIlroy on Wednesday. Back in the spotlight, McIlroy reflected on last year’s victory and shared a few hard-earned insights, including a simple piece of advice that can help anyone make more clutch putts.

Rory’s key for making pressure putts

“When I have to make an important putt I try to keep it so simple. I really focus on aiming correctly,” he said. “I think half the battle is just making sure you’re aiming in the right spot with the putter.”

It may not be the most exciting part of the game, but McIlroy and other tour pros know that aim and alignment are the foundation of great putting. That’s why they spend countless hours on the practice green refining their setup, aim and start line.

With tools like putting mirrors, string lines and chalk guides, elite players are able to sharpen their fundamentals and train their eyes to recognize when the putterface is aimed properly.

The goal of their practice is simple: start the ball on the intended line. Through repetition, players like McIlroy are able to build something even more important — trust. And when the pressure rises, trust in your setup allows you to commit fully to the stroke.

The single thought that frees up Rory’s stroke

Under pressure, many tour pros rely on a single swing thought to stay athletic and maintain their rhythm. While every swing thought is different, they are all designed to achieve the same outcome. For McIlroy, his thought focuses on what’s happening at impact.

“The one thought that I have that sort of frees me up is just trying to keep the putter low through impact,” he said. “If anything, I have a tendency for the putter to rise a little bit through impact. A nice thought for me is to just keep the putter nice and low going through.”

It’s a subtle cue, but an effective one. By keeping the putter low, McIlroy promotes a smooth, controlled strike — one that keeps the ball rolling consistently on line.

More importantly, it highlights a key lesson that every amateur can learn from: understand your tendencies and work with them, not against them. The best players in the world don’t chase perfection, they manage their patterns.

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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: golf.com