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Justin Rose

English professional golfer (born 1980)

Justin Rose

English professional golfer (born 1980)

FieldValue
nameJustin Rose
imageJustin Rose Ryder Cup 2025-168 (cropped).jpg
captionRose at the 2025 Ryder Cup
fullnameJustin Peter Rose
nicknameRosie
birth_date
birth_placeJohannesburg, South Africa
death_date
height
weight195 lb
nationality
residence{{plainlist
spouse
children2
yearpro1998
retired
tourPGA Tour
European Tour
extourSunshine Tour
prowins26
pgawins12
eurowins11
japwins1
asiawins1
sunwins2
auswins1
nwidewins
chalwins
champwins
seneurowins
otherwins3
majorwins1
masters2nd/T2: 2015, 2017, 2025
usopenWon: 2013
openT2: 2018, 2024
pgaT3: 2012
wghofid
wghofyear
award1European Tour
Order of Merit winner
year12007
award2PGA Tour
FedEx Cup winner
year22018
award3Payne Stewart Award
year32021
  • Albany, New Providence, The Bahamas
  • Putney, London, England}} European Tour Order of Merit winner](harry-vardon-trophy-winners) FedEx Cup winner](fedex-cup) Justin Peter Rose (born 30 July 1980) is an English professional golfer. At age 17, Rose came to prominence when he finished in fourth place as an amateur at the 1998 Open Championship. He turned professional the next day but struggled during his first few years, making few cuts. In the early 2000s, however, Rose improved, winning his first European Tour title in 2002 and leading the tour's Order of Merit in 2007. In the ensuing years, Rose won a number of notable tournaments on the PGA Tour, culminating with a win at the 2013 U.S. Open. Since then Rose has continued with success, earning a gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics, reaching #1 in the world rankings in 2018, and finishing runner-up at a number of major championships, including a playoff loss to Rory McIlroy at the 2025 Masters.

Early life

Rose was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, to English parents, Annie and Ken. The family moved to England when Rose was five, and he started to play golf at Tylney Park Golf Club. He then moved on to Southwood Golf Club, Hartley Wintney Golf Club, Royal Winchester Golf Club and finally North Hants Golf Club. All of these clubs were near his then home in Hook, Hampshire.

Rose broke 70 for the first time at the age of 11 and was a plus three handicap by 14.

Amateur career

Rose played in the Walker Cup in 1997 as a 17-year-old. Later in the year, Rose burst to worldwide prominence at the 1998 Open Championship held at Royal Birkdale Golf Club. He holed out for birdie from the rough from about 50 yards on the 18th hole to finish in a tie for fourth. He won the silver medal for the low amateur.

Professional career

Rose at the 2013 BMW PGA Championship

European Tour

The day after his success at the 1998 Open Championship, Rose turned professional. Rose struggled badly in his early career. He missed the cut in his first 21 consecutive events, including the European Tour qualifying school in 1998. He earned his first European Tour card when he finished 4th at the qualifying school in 1999. The following season he failed to retain his card and had to revisit the qualifying school, where he finished 9th.

Despite his early career struggles, Rose's career soon began to take off and he became established on the European Tour. In 2001, he opened the season with consecutive second-place finishes in South Africa. He went on to finish the year in top-40 on the Order of Merit. He won his first professional event, the Dunhill Championship in South Africa, in 2002, and followed this up with three further victories in that year. They included another win in South Africa at the Nashua Masters, a win on the Japan Golf Tour at The Crowns Tournament, and then he won his second European Tour title at the Victor Chandler British Masters, edging out Ian Poulter in the final round.

In 2003, Rose reached number 33 in the Official World Golf Ranking. He earned enough money to claim his PGA Tour card as a non-member for 2004 after finishing with more money than the 125th ranked player on the money list. In 2004, he played mostly in America on the PGA Tour while also maintaining his membership on the European Tour. He did not have a great year and slipped out of the top 50 in the world rankings; however, he kept his tour card after earning in excess of a million dollars.

His ranking continued to fall in early 2005, and in March he announced that he was quitting the European Tour and concentrating on playing on the PGA Tour. This had no apparent effect on his poor form, and by the middle of the year, he had fallen out of the World's top 100. In August of that year, he made an about-face by announcing his intention to return to the European Tour. Later the same week he had his best result of the year, leading the Buick Championship in Connecticut after three rounds before slipping to a third-place finish. A couple of further good results followed late in the 2005 season, and he maintained his status on the PGA Tour after all.

In September 2006 at the Canadian Open, Rose led a PGA Tour tournament going into the final round for the first time. But he slipped up with a final round 74 which moved him down the field. He went on to finish 2nd at the Valero Texas Open and finished 47th on the money list with US$1.629 million in prize money. In November 2006 he won the Australian Masters, to claim his first title for four years. His renewed consistency, including a top 5 finish at the 2007 Masters, saw him surpass his previous best world ranking, by reaching number 26 on 8 April 2007.

Rose at the 2008 [[KLM Open

Rose lost in a playoff at the 2007 BMW PGA Championship but moved into the top twenty of the World Rankings for the first time. By October he had reached a new career high of 12 and became the top-ranked British golfer. Rose won the European Tour Order of Merit title for 2007 in a thrilling climax to the season at the Volvo Masters, which he won in a playoff on 4 November. His new world ranking of number 7 made him the top-ranked European golfer for the first time, and he subsequently moved up to sixth in the rankings. Since the end of 2009, Canadian golf instructor Sean Foley coaches Rose.

PGA Tour

In 2010, Rose had a third place at the Honda Classic in Florida, and then he broke through with a victory at the Memorial Tournament in Ohio with a final round 66 to win by three strokes over Rickie Fowler. This was his first win on American soil. The next day, Rose had to try to qualify for the U.S. Open, along with runner-up Rickie Fowler. Neither qualified, which raised questions about the qualification process of the U.S. Open. In his first tournament start since the Memorial, at the Travelers Championship (Connecticut) two weeks later, Rose led by three shots entering the final round but fell away to a tie for ninth. His good form continued the following week at the AT&T National where he shot a final-round even par 70 to win the tournament.

In 2011, Rose continued with success. He entered the final round of the Transitions Championship (Florida) with a one-stroke lead. However, he shot a three-over-par 74, including four consecutive bogeys, in the middle of the round to finish five shots behind champion Gary Woodland. In September 2011, Rose played the BMW Championship at Cog Hill Golf & Country Club (Illinois), the third of the four FedEx Cup playoff events. A flawless round of 63 on the opening day helped Rose to build a four stroke advantage going into the final round. Even though there was a late wobble with a bogey at the par-5 15th hole, Rose recovered and won by two strokes from John Senden.

In 2012, Rose played World Golf Championship event at the WGC-Cadillac Championship at Doral Golf Resort & Spa. He entered the final round three strokes behind Bubba Watson. However, Rose played well in the final round and took a two-stroke lead entering the par-4 18th hole. He found the right rough with his tee shot and could not get up and down from the back of the green, making bogey. This left Watson requiring a birdie to tie Rose. Watson hit an iron shot from the right hand rough to within ten feet but could not make the birdie putt giving Rose the biggest win of his career. At the 2012 PGA Championship, Rose recorded his best ever performance in a major championship with a T-3. At the 2012 Ryder Cup, Rose played a major part in Team Europe's comeback against the United States. Rose holed putts of 10, 35, and 12 feet on the final three holes to defeat Phil Mickelson 1 up. On 12 October 2012, Rose won the 8-man Turkish Airlines World Golf Final defeating Lee Westwood by a single stroke in the final. He also beat Tiger Woods by a stroke in the semi-final after progressing from his group with a 100% record. On 25 March 2013, Rose finished second to Tiger Woods at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and rose to a career-high of third in the world rankings.

In June 2013, Rose played the U.S. Open. Rose entered the final round two strokes behind leader Phil Mickelson at one-over-par. In the final round, Rose birdied the 6th and the 7th holes to tie the lead. Rose three-putted the 11th for bogey to fall back to one-over-par for the tournament. Around the same time, Mickelson holed his second shot from the fairway at the par-4 10th for eagle to regain the lead. However, Rose responded with birdies at the 12th and 13th holes to move back into the solo lead. Rose could not get up and down from a bunker on the 14th hole, however, and a bogey on the 16th hole dropped him to level for the day. However, Mickelson recorded bogeys at the 13th and 15th holes to remain one shot behind Rose. At the par-4 18th hole, Rose hit a 4-iron approach to the back of green to ensure par. The shot was reminiscent of Hogan's own shot from about the same area, landing his approach on the green and two putting for the victory, as Hogan had in 1950.

He had the clubhouse lead. Mickelson, needing a birdie at the last to tie Rose, blocked his drive and could not reach the green in two. He hit his pitch shot near the pin but could not hole it. Rose won the tournament by two over Mickelson and Jason Day. He became the first Englishman to win the U.S. Open since Tony Jacklin in 1970.

In June 2014, Rose won the Quicken Loans National defeating Shawn Stefani on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff. Two weeks later, Rose won the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open. At the 2014 Ryder Cup, Rose emerged as the leading points-getter, amassing four points in a 3-0-2 performance, as Europe won. At the 2015 Masters Tournament, Rose finished in a tie for second with Phil Mickelson behind winner Jordan Spieth. Two weeks later he won his seventh PGA Tour tournament at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans. In October, he won the UBS Hong Kong Open on the European Tour defeating Lucas Bjerregaard by one stroke.[[File:Justin Rose at 2015 PGA Championship.jpg|thumb|Rose at the [[2015 PGA Championship]] ]]Rose earned rights to represent the United Kingdom at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. On the opening day, he became the first ever player to make a hole-in-one in Olympic play after recording it on the 189-yard par-3 4th hole of Gil Hanse's new Olympic Course in Barra da Tijuca using a 7-iron. Described as having an inspiring effect on the rest of the Great Britain team, Rose later gave the golf ball from that hole-in-one to gymnast Nile Wilson, who would go on to win a bronze medal in the horizontal bar. Rose went to the 18th hole on Sunday tied at −15 with playing partner Henrik Stenson of Sweden. Rose then produced a backspin pitch that left him with a short birdie putt which he converted while Stenson underhit his approach and eventually three-putted for bogey. Rose won the gold medal. Shortly thereafter, Rose brought his Olympic gold medal to The Barclays at Bethpage Black and wore it around his neck, on the suggestion of playing partner Phil Mickelson's caddy Jim "Bones" McKay and to cheers from the gallery, during his final putt.

In April 2017, Rose shot opening rounds of 71-72 at the Masters to enter the weekend as one of only a handful of players under par. In the third round, he fired a five-under round of 67 to co-lead through 54 holes with Sergio García. His round consisted of seven birdies, which resulted in a 31 on the back nine to move into contention for his second major championship. Rose ultimately lost to García in a sudden-death playoff. In October, Rose played the WGC-HSBC Champions. He was tied for fourth place, eight strokes behind leader Dustin Johnson after the third round. However, in the final round Rose shot a 67 to Johnson's 77 to win by two strokes. Late in the year, Rose won the Turkish Airlines Open, a Rolex Series event, on the European Tour and the Indonesian Masters, an Asian Tour event. In December 2017, it was announced that Rose would be the host of the 2018 British Masters. He opted to take the event to Walton Heath Golf Club.thumb|250px|Rose with [[Brooks Koepka]] at the [[2018 U.S. Open (golf)|2018 U.S. Open]]. In May 2018, Rose won the Fort Worth Invitational on the PGA Tour. Two months later, in July, Rose tied for second with a score of six-under-par at the 2018 Open Championship. His cumulative score of twelve-under-par across all four 2018 major championships was the best amongst everyone who made the cut in all four tournaments. In September 2018, he placed high in two FedEx Cup Playoffs events, finishing second at the Dell Technologies Championship and losing a playoff to Keegan Bradley at the BMW Championship. Those finishes moved Rose to World Number One in the Official World Golf Ranking. The next week, Rose finished T4 at the Tour Championship to win the season-long FedEx Cup and $10,000,000. Rose was part of the winning European team at the 2018 Ryder Cup at Le Golf National outside of Paris, France. On 4 November 2018, Rose successfully defended his title at the Turkish Airlines Open with a playoff victory over Li Haotong. This victory returned Rose to World Number One and earned him $1,166,660.

In January 2019, Rose won the Farmers Insurance Open on the PGA Tour. Around this time, he announced new sponsors. He transitioned from TaylorMade Golf to Honma in a 10-club deal. He also switched from Adidas to Bonobos for his clothing. In May 2020, the deal with Honma was cancelled by Rose, however, after he fell from #1 to #14 in the world rankings. In June, Rose finished tied for 3rd at the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, California.

In February 2023, Rose ended a four-year winless streak when he won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. He shot a final-round 66 to win by three shots over Brendon Todd and Brandon Wu.

In September 2023, Rose played on the European team in the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Guidonia, Rome, Italy. The European team won 16.5–11.5 and Rose went 1–1–1 including a loss in his Sunday singles match against Patrick Cantlay.

In July 2024, Rose had to come through the hard route of playing at the Open by coming through Final Qualifying at Burnham & Berrow. Despite this, Rose went on to tie for runner-up in the 2024 event for the second time at Royal Troon.

Rose was runner-up at the 2025 Masters Tournament after going to a playoff against Rory McIlroy after both tied at −11, Rose having made up seven shots on the final round after scoring 66. Rose parred the playoff hole and McIlroy won with a birdie. This was the second time that Rose had tied for first in the Masters in the regulation 72 holes and lost in a sudden-death playoff. The only other player to lose two Masters playoffs is Ben Hogan, in 1942 and 1954 when the playoffs were over 18 holes.

In August 2025, Rose won the FedEx St. Jude Championship with a birdie on the third playoff hole to defeat J. J. Spaun.

Personal life

Rose married long-time girlfriend Kate Phillips, a former international gymnast, in December 2006. They have a house in Albany, New Providence in The Bahamas, and a riverside flat in the London suburb of Putney. Kate gave birth to their first child, a son, in February 2009. In January 2012, they had a daughter.

Rose is an advocate of sustainable golf facilities and works as an ambassador to the STRI's Golf Environment Awards, hosting receptions for winners.

Awards and honours

  • Rose was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to golf.
  • In 2021, he was named as the recipient of the PGA Tour's Payne Stewart Award for his character, sportsmanship, and a commitment to charity.
  • In 2023 Rose won the Nicklaus-Jacklin Award at the 2023 Ryder Cup.

Amateur wins

  • 1995 McGregor Trophy, Carris Trophy
  • 1997 St Andrews Links Trophy
  • 1998 Peter McEvoy Trophy

Professional wins (26)

PGA Tour wins (12)

Legend
Major championships (1)
World Golf Championships (2)
FedEx Cup playoff events (2)
Other PGA Tour (7)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
16 Jun 2010Memorial Tournament65-69-70-66=270−183 strokesUSA Rickie Fowler
24 Jul 2010AT&T National69-64-67-70=270−101 strokeUSA Ryan Moore
318 Sep 2011BMW Championship63-68-69-71=271−132 strokesAUS John Senden
411 Mar 2012WGC-Cadillac Championship69-64-69-70=272−161 strokeUSA Bubba Watson
516 Jun 2013U.S. Open71-69-71-70=281+12 strokesAUS Jason Day, USA Phil Mickelson
629 Jun 2014Quicken Loans National (2)74-65-71-70=280−4PlayoffUSA Shawn Stefani
726 Apr 2015Zurich Classic of New Orleans69-66-65-66=266−221 strokeUSA Cameron Tringale
829 Oct 2017WGC-HSBC Champions67-68-72-67=274−142 strokesUSA Dustin Johnson, USA Brooks Koepka,
SWE Henrik Stenson
927 May 2018Fort Worth Invitational66-64-66-64=260−203 strokesUSA Brooks Koepka
1027 Jan 2019Farmers Insurance Open63-66-69-69=267−212 strokesAUS Adam Scott
116 Feb 2023AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am69-69-65-66=269−183 strokesUSA Brendon Todd, USA Brandon Wu
1210 Aug 2025FedEx St. Jude Championship64-66-67-67=264−16PlayoffUSA J. J. Spaun

PGA Tour playoff record (2–4)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
12014Quicken Loans NationalUSA Shawn StefaniWon with par on first extra hole
22015Memorial TournamentSWE David LingmerthLost to par on third extra hole
32017Masters TournamentESP Sergio GarcíaLost to birdie on first extra hole
42018BMW ChampionshipUSA Keegan BradleyLost to par on first extra hole
52025Masters TournamentNIR Rory McIlroyLost to birdie on first extra hole
62025FedEx St. Jude ChampionshipUSA J. J. SpaunWon with birdie on third extra hole

European Tour wins (11)

Legend
Major championships (1)
World Golf Championships (2)
Tour Championships (1)
Rolex Series (2)
Other European Tour (5)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
120 Jan 2002Dunhill Championship171-66-66-65=268−202 strokesENG Mark Foster, ZAF Retief Goosen,
ZAF Martin Maritz
22 Jun 2002Victor Chandler British Masters70-69-65-65=269−191 strokeENG Ian Poulter
326 Nov 2006
(2007 season)MasterCard Masters269-66-68-73=276−122 strokesAUS Greg Chalmers, AUS Richard Green
44 Nov 2007Volvo Masters70-68-71-74=283−1PlayoffENG Simon Dyson, DNK Søren Kjeldsen
511 Mar 2012WGC-Cadillac Championship69-64-69-70=272−161 strokeUSA Bubba Watson
616 Jun 2013U.S. Open71-69-71-70=281+12 strokesAUS Jason Day, USA Phil Mickelson
713 Jul 2014Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open69-68-66-65=268−162 strokesSWE Kristoffer Broberg
825 Oct 2015UBS Hong Kong Open365-66-64-68=263−171 strokeDNK Lucas Bjerregaard
929 Oct 2017WGC-HSBC Champions67-68-72-67=274−142 strokesUSA Dustin Johnson, USA Brooks Koepka,
SWE Henrik Stenson
105 Nov 2017Turkish Airlines Open69-68-64-65=266−181 strokeBEL Nicolas Colsaerts, ZAF Dylan Frittelli
114 Nov 2018Turkish Airlines Open (2)65-65-69-68=267−17PlayoffCHN Li Haotong

1Co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour

2Co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour of Australasia

3Co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour

European Tour playoff record (2–3)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
12007BMW PGA ChampionshipDNK Anders HansenLost to birdie on first extra hole
22007Volvo MastersENG Simon Dyson, DNK Søren KjeldsenWon with birdie on second extra hole
32017Masters TournamentESP Sergio GarcíaLost to birdie on first extra hole
42018Turkish Airlines OpenCHN Li HaotongWon with par on first extra hole
52025Masters TournamentNIR Rory McIlroyLost to birdie on first extra hole

Japan Golf Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-up
15 May 2002The Crowns64-70-63-69=266−145 strokesTHA Prayad Marksaeng

Asian Tour wins (2)

Legend
Flagship events (1)
Other Asian Tour (1)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-up
125 Oct 2015UBS Hong Kong Open165-66-64-68=263−171 strokeDNK Lucas Bjerregaard
217 Dec 2017Indonesian Masters62-69-66-62=259−298 strokesTHA Phachara Khongwatmai

1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

Sunshine Tour wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
120 Jan 2002Dunhill Championship171-66-66-65=268−202 strokesENG Mark Foster, ZAF Retief Goosen,
ZAF Martin Maritz
29 Feb 2002Nashua Masters64-68-65-68=265−151 strokeZAF Titch Moore

1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

Other wins (3)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-up
114 Nov 2004Bilt Skins Game$42,500$7,000SWE Daniel Chopra
212 Oct 2012Turkish Airlines World Golf Final66−51 strokeENG Lee Westwood
314 Aug 2016Olympic Games67-69-65-67=268−162 strokesSWE Henrik Stenson

Major championships

Wins (1)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunners-up
2013U.S. Open2 shot deficit+1 (71-69-71-70=281)2 strokesAUS Jason Day, USA Phil Mickelson

Results timeline

Results not in chronological order in 2020.

Tournament19981999
Masters Tournament
U.S. Open
The Open ChampionshipT4LACUT
PGA Championship
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Masters TournamentT39T22T5T36T20
U.S. OpenT5CUTT10CUTCUT
The Open ChampionshipT30T22CUTT12T70T13
PGA ChampionshipT23CUTCUTT41T12T9CUT
Tournament201020112012201320142015201620172018
Masters TournamentT11T8T25T14T2T102T12
U.S. OpenCUTT211T12T27CUTCUTT10
The Open ChampionshipCUTT44CUTCUTT23T6T22T54T2
PGA ChampionshipCUTCUTT3T33T244T22CUTT19
Tournament2019202020212022202320242025
Masters TournamentCUTT237CUTT16CUT2
PGA ChampionshipT299T8T13T9T6CUT
U.S. OpenT3CUTCUTT37CUTCUTCUT
The Open ChampionshipT20NTT46CUTT2T16

LA = low amateur

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place.

NT = no tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals1521223468558
Masters Tournament03047152017
PGA Championship00127132316
U.S. Open101357209
The Open Championship02034112216
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 10 (2013 PGA – 2016 Masters)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 3 (2015 Open – 2016 Masters)

Results in The Players Championship

Tournament2003200420052006200720082009
The Players ChampionshipT39T58CUTCUTCUTT22
Tournament2010201120122013201420152016201720182019
The Players ChampionshipCUTT45T51CUTT4CUTT19T65T23T8
Tournament202020212022202320242025
The Players ChampionshipCCUTT6CUTCUT

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

C = Cancelled after the first round due to the COVID-19 pandemic

World Golf Championships

Wins (2)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner(s)-up
2012WGC-Cadillac Championship3 shot deficit−16 (69-64-69-70=272)1 strokeUSA Bubba Watson
2017WGC-HSBC Champions8 shot deficit−14 (67-68-72-67=274)2 strokesUSA Dustin Johnson, USA Brooks Koepka,
SWE Henrik Stenson

Results timeline

Results not in chronological order before 2015.

Tournament200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019
ChampionshipT46T28T15T20T421T8T3455T17T38T37
Match PlayR32R64QFR64R64R32R64R32R32T17T28R16
Invitational5T33T2T27T29T19T33T5T17T4T3T46T6311
ChampionsT7T245T4813T28
Tournament202020212022
ChampionshipT54
Match PlayNT1T26
InvitationalT54
ChampionsNT1NT1NT1

1Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

NT = No tournament

"T" = tied

Note that the HSBC Champions did not become a WGC event until 2009.

Note that the Championship and Invitational were discontinued from 2022.

Team appearances

Amateur

  • European Boys' Team Championship (representing England): 1996, 1997
  • European Amateur Team Championship (representing England): 1997
  • Walker Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1997
  • Jacques Léglise Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 1996, 1997
  • Bonallack Trophy (representing Europe): 1998 (winners)

Professional

  • World Cup (representing England): 2002, 2003, 2007, 2011
  • Seve Trophy (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2003 (winners), 2007 (winners)
  • Ryder Cup (representing Europe): 2008, 2012 (winners), 2014 (winners), 2016, 2018 (winners), 2023 (winners), 2025 (winners)
  • Team Cup (representing Great Britain and Ireland): 2025 (playing captain, winners)
2008201220142016201820232025Total
334221.5217.5

References

References

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  2. siddharth. (2015-09-25). "Justin Rose Majors, English Golfer – Basic, Professional, Personal details".
  3. Mair, Lewine. (17 June 2013). "Archive: Justin Rose's father, Ken, dies of cancer aged 57". The Telegraph.
  4. Heath, Elliott. (2019-09-03). "What Is Justin Rose's Home Club?".
  5. siddharth. (2015-09-25). "Justin Rose Majors, English Golfer – Basic, Professional, Personal details".
  6. (30 November 1998). "Rose fails school test".
  7. (9 April 2007). "Rankings boost for Augusta king". BBC Sport.
  8. (4 November 2007). "Rose claims Order of Merit title". BBC Sport.
  9. (10 December 2007). "Rose continues to climb rankings". BBC Sport.
  10. (7 March 2010). "What they said: Justin Rose". PGA Tour.
  11. (19 November 2009). "Justin Rose: New approach has got my swing back in time for Dubai challenge". The Sunday Times.
  12. (7 June 2010). "Justin Rose set for next phase after landmark US win". BBC Sport.
  13. (8 June 2010). "U.S. Open without Rose raises questions". [[Sporting News]].
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  15. (11 March 2012). "Justin Rose rallies to win WGC". ESPN.
  16. (25 March 2013). "Week 12 - Tiger Woods Wins An Eighth Arnold Palmer Invitational And Returns To World Number One". Official World Golf Ranking.
  17. (17 June 2013). "US Open champion Justin Rose hailed by Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell". Guardian UK.
  18. Hodgetts, Rob. (17 June 2013). "Justin Rose wins US Open at Merion to end wait for first major". BBC Sport.
  19. (17 June 2013). "Justin Rose clinches first major title". Sky Sports.
  20. (29 June 2014). "Rose survives mistake, playoff to win Quicken Loans". PGA Tour.
  21. (27 April 2015). "Birdie-birdie finish gives Justin Rose 7th PGA Tour title". ESPN.
  22. (25 October 2015). "Hong Kong Open: Justin Rose claims narrow victory". BBC Sport.
  23. Corrigan, James. (11 August 2016). "Justin Rose hits the first hole-in-one in Olympic history on day one of Rio 2016 golf". The Daily Telegraph.
  24. Herbert, Ian. (21 August 2016). "Rio 2016: How did we beat China at the Olympics? Here are eight reasons why". The Independent.
  25. (14 August 2016). "Rio Olympics 2016: Justin Rose holds off Henrik Stenson to realise his dream with gold in the men's golf". The Daily Telegraph.
  26. Porter, Kyle. (28 August 2016). "Watch: Justin Rose ends Barclays with gold medal around neck for final putt". [[CBS Sports]].
  27. Harig, Bob. (9 April 2017). "Justin Rose knows this is one major 'that slipped by'". ESPN.
  28. (29 October 2017). "Justin Rose wins WGC-HSBC with comeback over Dustin Johnson". ESPN.
  29. Inglis, Martin. (6 December 2017). "2018 British Masters host venue announced".
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  31. Murray, Scott. (22 July 2018). "The Open 2018: Francesco Molinari wins title on day of drama – as it happened". The Guardian.
  32. (16 August 2018). "Justin Rose had the lowest aggregate score in the four 2018 major championships". Golf News Net.
  33. Greaves, Russell. (26 September 2018). "Ryder Cup 2018: Did Justin Rose just throw shade at Team USA's stars?". Sporting News.
  34. (4 November 2018). "Rose rises to the top again in Turkey". European Tour.
  35. Beall, Joel. (May 23, 2020). "Justin Rose officially splits from Honma".
  36. (16 June 2019). "2019 US Open purse, winner's share, prize money payout".
  37. Woodard, Adam. (6 February 2023). "Justin Rose ends four-year drought with win at 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am".
  38. (21 July 2024). "Leaderboard". The Open.
  39. (10 August 2025). "Justin Rose rallies late and beats Spaun in Memphis playoff". Associated Press News.
  40. (25 September 2015). "Justin Rose Majors, English Golfer – Basic, Professional, Personal details".
  41. "Exclusive interview: Justin Rose says 'fear of not living up to potential' keeps him driving for grand slam". The Telegraph.
  42. (26 February 2009). "Justin Rose Welcomes Son Leo".
  43. Ballengee, Ryan. (2 January 2012). "New Year's baby: Rose, wife welcome daughter". Golf Channel.
  44. (June 2012). "Golf Power List 2012". Golf Club Management.
  45. (31 December 2016). "Andy Murray & Mo Farah knighted in New Year Honours list". BBC Sport.
  46. (2021-08-11). "Rose named Payne Stewart Award winner". Reuters.
  47. (1 October 2023). "Justin Rose named winner of the Nicklaus Jacklin award". Ryder Cup.
  48. (19 October 2015). "European Boys' Team Championship – European Golf Association".
  49. (19 October 2015). "European Amateur Team Championship". European Golf Association.
  50. (9 January 2025). "Julien Guerrier replaces Nicolai Hojgaard in the Team Cup". Ten Golf.
  51. (12 January 2025). "Great Britain & Ireland win Team Cup 17-8". European Tour.
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