Min Woo Lee held off a back-nine charge from Scottie Scheffler and an impressive finish from Rory McIlroy to claim a breakthrough PGA Tour title at the Texas Children’s Houston Open.
Lee took a four-shot lead into the final day and briefly saw his lead increase to five strokes at Memorial Park Golf Course, with three birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn keeping him in control of the tournament.
The Australian remained three ahead until a bogey par-five 16th cut his lead to one, as Scheffler and Gary Woodland set the clubhouse target at 19 under, only for Lee to par his final two holes to card a three-under 67 and hold onto a one-shot victory.
Scheffler remains winless in 2025 but heads into his Masters title defence with a runner-up finish in Houston for the second successive year, while Woodland posted his best PGA Tour result in six years after equalling the course record with a final-round 62.
Finland’s Sami Valimaki ended three strokes back in fourth after matching Woodland’s 62, while McIlroy ended his final start before Augusta National with a final-round 64 and tied-fifth finish.
More to follow…
McIlroy heads to Augusta with top-five finish
McIlroy’s slim title hopes appeared effectively over when he made a three-putt bogey at the first and scrambled a par at the next, only for to take advantage of the par-five third and then hole 20-foot putts to post back-to-back gains from the fifth.
The world No 2 fired a huge approach into the par-five eighth and holed a putt from a similar distance for eagle, seeing him turn in 31, before following a 15-foot birdie at the 10th by adding another at the 12th to go six under for the day.
McIlroy holed from eight feet to save par at the 14th and posted a two-putt birdie at the par-five 16th, but ended the week on 15 under after missing from inside five feet to save par at the last.
“The last three days were really good,” McIlroy told Golf Channel. “I actually made a slight adjustment to my driver yesterday, I went to the range and took the loft off a little bit and definitely drove the ball better today. That was a positive, as was seeing some putts go in.
“As I went on during the week I went better and better, as the score suggests. It was a good week, I still feel like I have some stuff to work on but, overall, a solid week which is nice to fine-tune my game heading to Augusta.”
What’s next?
The PGA Tour stays in Texas for the Valero Texas Open, held at TPC San Antonio, where the winner – if not already exempt – will secure the final invite to The Masters. Early coverage begins on Thursday from 1.15pm on Sky Sports Golf ahead of full coverage from 9pm.
The Masters then takes at Augusta National from April 10-13, where Scheffler is defending champion and McIlroy searches for a fifth major title. Watch live on Thursday April 10 from 2pm on Sky Sports Golf. Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW.

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