Given Stollâs steadfast appearance by McIlroyâs side at the Masters, it seems the couple has indeed worked things out, at least enough to continue to appear together as a family. We have no idea what actually happened in their marriage, but the one thing we do know is it was McIlroy who instigated the split, at least legally.
Itâs even more absurd, then, that the gossip about the reasons for their brief breakup are largely being placed on Stollâs shoulders. This is at least, according to âbody language expertsâ consulted by such tabloids as the Daily Mail and Page Six, who have picked apart every pixel and frame of Stollâs actions at the Masters and declared her wanting. One expert told Page Six that Stoll seemed âpoliteâ as she congratulated her husband on his victory, calling the reaction âsubdued.â
âErica uses back pats, which are firstly a gesture of gentle affection but which also usually signal a desire to break from an embrace, while Rory appears much more clingy,â she claimed.
According to the tabloids, itâs obvious why Stoll would feel âsubduedââthe âhumiliatingâ divorce petition. But wait, thereâs more! McIlroy, they claim, is rumored to have dated a CBS Sports reporter at some point during the split, which neither have ever confirmed. Adding to Stollâs humiliation, then, is the fact that McIlroy did an interview with the reporter after his victory, andâgaspâdidnât mention his wife, just his parents and daughter. He was also spotted hugging a âmystery blonde,â mused another paper, who conveniently mentioned a few paragraphs later that the woman is actually the wife of his competitor, Justin Rose.
Iâll be the one to ask the perhaps obvious question: Why is the public not picking apart McIlroyâs reaction toward Stoll, especially since he was the one who filed for divorce in the first place? Imagine, just for a moment, that a woman athlete reconciled with her husband, and the press then tore him to shreds once they reappeared in public again, dissecting every frame of his actions to somehow determine he was to blame. It sounds absurd because it is. A man would never face this level of scrutiny.
This all raises another question. How exactly was Stoll supposed to behave when her husband won the Masters? We have to assume that if sheâd dissolved into histrionics, screaming and crying and clutching his chest, the commentary would have been equally condemning. Women arenât allowed to emote too much, either, and the headlines would have been filled with how Stoll stole McIlroyâs moment, how she clearly embarrassed him, and on and on and on. Should she have left her Patek Philippe at home? Worn a different hat? Or is it that she should have never let her relationship get to a point where its public cracks were exposed, because showing even a bit of vulnerability is seen as an open invitation for relentless scrutiny?
Hereâs the truth: Stoll couldnât win. Because if you actually watch her performance in her role as Rory McIlroyâs wife without any bias, you can easily see the truth. She did nothing wrong. Just because a woman may act differently than some may expect does not mean her actions are open for debate. But in 2025 that reality is becoming blurred in a way thatâs troubling for all of us, no matter who we are married to.