Rory McIlroy all about the glory ahead of FedEx Cup battle

World number just looking to chalk another title off the list ahead of battle for $10m cheque

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland walks off the second green during a practice round prior to the start of the TOUR Championship  at East Lake Golf Club on  in Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph:  Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland walks off the second green during a practice round prior to the start of the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club on in Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

There are six million reasons to want to win the FedEx Cup title, but Rory McIlroy insists he needs just one.

The 25-year-old is one of five players who know victory at East Lake would also see them secure the overall FedEx Cup title won by Sweden's Henrik Stenson last year, and with it a $10 million (€7.73m) bonus.

McIlroy, who is fourth in the standings behind Chris Kirk, Billy Horschel and Bubba Watson. Hunter Mahan is fifth.

"The money is great but at the same time it's the title that would mean more to me," McIlroy said ahead of this week's Tour Championship in Atlanta. "It's good being in the top five, you know what you need to do.

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“You need to win and that takes care of everything. Being in the top five was important coming in, I would have liked to be a bit higher on the list but haven’t played well enough over the past few weeks.”

McIlroy won his fourth major title, and third tournament in succession in the US PGA Championship at Valhalla, and has finished 22nd, fifth and eighth in the first three play-offs, despite four-putting the 12th hole in each of the last two rounds last week.

The packed schedule has led to complaints from some players and a promise from PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem that a break between events would be reinstated next year, but McIlroy found a more simple solution to fatigue.

“It’s amazing what a night in your own bed can do, just one night,” the world number one told a pre-tournament press conference. “I was standing in the shower on Monday morning in Denver thinking to myself why I am going to Atlanta today? So I didn’t, I went to Florida for a day and a half and it was really good.

“It was refreshing to spend a bit of time at home, dump a lot of luggage that I’ve been carrying with me for the last four or five weeks. I had a great practice session at the Bear’s Club and was able to work out in the gym at home.

“I feel really good coming in here. I feel like that day and a half at home will definitely help and anything other than a win here would definitely be a disappointment. After I finished the PGA all my focus was on the FedEx Cup and trying to win this . . . obviously if I finish second or third and end up winning the whole thing, that’s cool as well!

“But I want to win and I only have to beat 28 other guys, it’s not like a regular event where you have to beat 155.

“I don’t think it (the money) will make me any more nervous on the golf course on Sunday. Ten million is a lot of money to anyone and if I’m thinking of getting myself something or whatever it’s a nice bit of extra money to have. I’m not saying I am motivated by the money in any way. It’s obviously nice and I have made a lot of money over the past seven or eight years, but it (winning the FedEx) is one of the only things that I have not achieved in the game of golf and that’s the real reason I want to win this week.”

In theory all 29 players at East Lake — Dustin Johnson qualified but is taking a leave of absence — have the chance to win the overall title. But only those in the top five control their own destiny and can emulate Stenson, who led from start to finish 12 months ago and later became the first player to also win the Race to Dubai in the same season.

McIlroy currently leads Sergio Garcia by more than €2.5 million in those standings.