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Feb 22, 2026 | 9:49 PM EST

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Rory McIlroy came to Riviera Country Club needing one win to reach 30 PGA Tour victories, and he left knowing exactly where that win went, not on Sunday, but across 27 holes of stagnant middle-round golf that handed Jacob Bridgeman the breathing room to claim his maiden Tour title at the 2026 Genesis Invitational.

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Bridgeman finished at 18-under, with McIlroy and

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Kurt Kitayama one shot back at 17-under in a $20 million Signature Event hosted by Tiger Woods. But for McIlroy, the real turning point came well before the final stretch on Sunday.

“I’ll rue basically all 18 holes yesterday and then the front nine today, like 27 holes where I failed to capitalize on the chances I gave myself,” McIlroy said.

That is the key takeaway from the tournament. McIlroy finished Saturday with seven straight pars and a 69, while Bridgeman shot a 64, gaining 4.6 strokes on approach and building a six-shot lead by the end of the day. McIlroy’s inability to capitalize left Bridgeman with a margin that was about more than just ball-striking.

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McIlroy knows what it means to hold a big lead. He has been in that position before and understands the pressure that comes with it.

“It’s hard. I think sometimes it’s harder when Jacob has a big lead, and I’m not doing anything to put pressure on him, so he sees that,” he said. “Like, I’ve had this before when I had a big lead, and the guy playing with me isn’t putting pressure on, and then the guys in front are.”

When the nearest rival is not making a move, the leader feels safer than the numbers show. Bridgeman played it safe with pars on the front nine. McIlroy missed his chances to close the gap. The six-shot lead stayed intact and was never really threatened.

What finally applied pressure on Bridgeman came from ahead of the final pairing rather than behind it. Adam Scott posted a Sunday 63 to set the early clubhouse target at 16-under. Kitayama made eight birdies in a 64, including one on the par-4 17th that trimmed Bridgeman’s lead to one shot with the closing holes remaining.

“Kurt did what he did, and Adam posted, and I started to make a couple of birdies,” McIlroy said, and the sequencing of that sentence contains its own summary.

The Northern Irishman finally responded with four birdies on the back nine, including two in a row on 17 and 18. That left Bridgeman needing to make a three-foot par putt on the last hole to win. He made it and took the title by one shot.

Bridgeman’s comfort under that closing pressure, however, was not coincidental, and it was not purely a product of Saturday’s ball-striking clinic.

Jacob Bridgeman’s 2026 Genesis Invitational victory reflected psychological steadiness built before Sunday

As reported ahead of Sunday’s final round, Bridgeman had already shared a final-pairing situation with McIlroy during the FedExCup Playoffs last season, a high-pressure round at the BMW Championship in Baltimore where Bridgeman needed a strong performance to secure his place at East Lake, with McIlroy alongside him throughout. That experience removed the novelty of Sunday’s dynamic entirely.

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“I think if it was my first time, maybe it would be a little unsettling,” Bridgeman said. “But now I’m not worried about it.”

He had already shown in a key competitive setting that playing alongside McIlroy was something he could handle. He shot 72 on Sunday. A bogey on 16 cut his lead to one, but he still closed out the win.

“It was honestly easy until I got to the 16th, then it got really hard,” Bridgeman said.

The difficulty arrived late, which is precisely the point.

“I couldn’t feel my hands on the last few greens,” he added. “I hit that putt on 18 hoping it would get somewhere near the hole.”

The three-footer went in, and the tournament was his.

For McIlroy, the week showed his ball-striking is in good shape ahead of the Florida swing. He finished third in approach-to-green and fourth in strokes gained off the tee at the Genesis. Switching back to his usual blades after struggling with cavity-back irons in Dubai brought back the consistency he needed.

Pre-tournament coverage had noted that Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus, between them, made 28 appearances at Riviera across their careers without winning the event, their combined 155 PGA Tour victories counting for nothing on this particular course in Pacific Palisades. McIlroy’s 30th win was not added to that historical footnote on Sunday.

“I feel like my game’s pretty much all there,” he said. “Looking forward to Bay Hill and THE PLAYERS.”

The 27 holes at Riviera, though, will take longer to move past.

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