Justin Rose registered a three-shot victory over Brandon Todd and Bradon Wo at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Monday (February 6).Rose finished the final round with a scoring deficit of six to claim the 11th trophy of his career. American golfers Brandon Todd and Brandon Wu tied up in second position with a score deficit of 15. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostJustin Rose made five birdies, a bogey on the first hole, and an eagle to finish at 66 on Monday.With the win, the English golfer ended his four-year title drought and received an invitation to the Masters, which is scheduled to take place in April. Not only that, but it also helped him jump from the 71st to the 35th position in the world rankings. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostJustin Rose confessed that he worked a bit harder for the tournament, learning from his mistakes. During the press conference, Rose said:"Sometimes, when you're trending [the wrong way] you kind of try a little too hard. I think the format this week, playing with amateurs, kind of just mellowed me out to the point where I let it happen. I let my good golf come forward. It's obviously a learning lesson in that."Rose became the oldest golfer after Phil Mickelson to win at Pebble Beach. He is now looking forward to Augusta's match in April"Augusta's definitely been a big part of being on my mind. I thought the simple way to approach it was try to play my way into the top 50 in the world ... claw my way up the world rankings and make it that way."He added:"Obviously, this is a better way to make it by winning a tournament. So yeah, big relief from that point of view."Rain, wind, and weather highly impacted the match that was scheduled to be completed on Sunday. However, heavy storms and rainfall delayed the tournament's third round, which concluded on Sunday. However, the PGA Tour player endured everything to win the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am leaderboard1. Justin RoseT2. Brendon ToddT2. Brandon WuT4. Denny McCarthy, Keith Mitchell, and Peter MalnatiT7. Taylor Pendrith, Kevin Yu, Ryan Moore, and Joseph BramlettT11. Michael Kim, and Beau HosslerT13. Ben Martin, Victor Hovland, Taylor Moore, Scott Stallings, Eric Cole, Seamus Power, and Hank LebiodaT20. Mark Hubbard, Garrick Higgo, Nick Taylor, Martin Trainer, Richy Werenski, Andrew Novak, Jonas Blixt, Robby Shelton, and Brent GrantT29. Dylan Wu, Sung Kang, Kyle Westmoreland, Satoshi Kodaira, and Kurt KitayamaT34. Harry Hall, Sam Stevens, and Kevin KisnerT37. Aaron Baddeley, Thomas Detry, Adam Schenk, and Byeong Hun AnT41. Dean Burnmester, Joel Dahmen, Russel Knox, SH Kim, Doc Rahman, Nick Hardy, and Danny WillettT48. MJ Daffue, Tyson Alexander, Charley Hoffman, Augusto Nunez, Harry Higgs, Adam Long, and Tom HogeT55. Matthew NeSmith, Greyson Sigg, and Tano GoyaT58. Paul Haley II, Lanto Griffin, Ryan Armour, David Lingmerth, and Trevor WerbyloT63. Jorden Spieth, and Kevin StreelmanT65. Callum Tarren, Fabian Gomez, SY Noh, Alex Smalley, and Sean O'HairT70. Greg Chalmers, Cody Gribble, Chad Ramey, and Brian Stuard74. Geoff Ogilvy75. Paul O'Hara