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Rory McIlroy loses playoff to Matt Fitzpatrick, wins Euro title

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Rory McIlroy's banner year ended with more drama Sunday when he eagled the last hole in regulation to force a playoff but lost out to Matt Fitzpatrick, who won the season-closing World Tour Championship for a third time.

The consolation for McIlroy? A fourth straight Race to Dubai title -- crowning him as the top European player of the year -- to add to his wins at the Masters to complete the career Grand Slam, The Players Championship and his home Irish Open. McIlroy also helped Team Europe win an away Ryder Cup.

All of his big individual victories came in playoffs, but a final one proved just beyond the Northern Irishman after he hit his drive into a creek on the first playoff hole, No. 18, and made bogey. Fitzpatrick chipped to 3 feet and rolled in a par putt to win the title again at Jumeirah Golf Estates, along with victories in 2016 and 2020.

"Obviously you never like to see the way it ends, but obviously delighted," Fitzpatrick said after sealing his first win in two years.

McIlroy generated the biggest roar of the day when he poured in a 15-footer for eagle on No. 18 to complete a round of 5-under 67 and join Fitzpatrick (66) at 18-under par for the week. He also eagled the last at the Irish Open in September to force a playoff before going on to beat Sweden's Joakim Lagergren at The K Club.

"In typical Rory fashion, he did it again," said Fitzpatrick, who watched it unfold while sitting in the scorer's hut. He met McIlroy outside, shaking his hand and giving his Ryder Cup teammate a hug.

They did so again after the playoff, which finished with both of them as winners.

For McIlroy, it's a seventh Race to Dubai title, putting him one clear of the late Seve Ballesteros and one behind Colin Montgomerie's record haul.

"I didn't get this far in my dreams, so it's very cool," said McIlroy, who revealed that he spoke to Ballesteros' wife, Carmen, before his round Sunday.

"It seems within touching distance now," he added about catching Montgomerie. "I'd love to be the winningest European in terms of Order of Merits and seasonlong races. You know, I've probably got a few more good years left in me, and hopefully I can catch him and surpass him."

Nine players either led or held a share of the lead across a wild few hours at the Earth course that culminated in Fitzpatrick making three birdies in his final five holes to overtake McIlroy and overhaul a slew of Europe's other stars, including Tommy Fleetwood and Ludvig Åberg.

A birdie putt from 6 feet at No. 18 took Fitzpatrick a stroke clear of Fleetwood (67), Åberg (66) and Laurie Canter (67) and two ahead of McIlroy, who was waiting in the 18th fairway knowing he now needed to make eagle.

He hit a fairway wood from around 230 yards to the right of the pin, got a good read from playing partner Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, who was a few feet further away, and drained the putt.

Neergaard-Petersen (68) made birdie to join the group at 17 under in a tie for third.

Fitzpatrick, the U.S. Open champion in 2022, started the season slowly but finished strong, getting onto the Ryder Cup team on the back of top-10 finishes at the British Masters in August and the European Masters and BMW PGA Championship in September. He then won 2½ points from his four matches at Bethpage Black.

"To turn it around in the summer like I did and have a Ryder Cup like I did, feel like it's hard to top given everything," Fitzpatrick said. "But the way that I played today, I feel like I really didn't hit one bad shot all day. I'm so proud of myself, the effort that everyone puts in behind the scenes. Yeah, what a feeling."