Rory McIlroy believes stepping away from involvement in the sport's politics has improved his golf and personal happiness.
At the height of the fall out from the fracture caused by LIV Golf, the Northern Irishman found himself the unofficial spokesman for the PGA Tour, fielding questions on it at every event and, as a member of the Tour's policy board, being involved in behind-the-scenes discussions.
But McIlroy has taken a back seat since standing down in November 2023, winning seven times including a Grand Slam-completing Masters victory earlier this year.
"From a golfing perspective, stepping away from the politics and being intimately involved, it's definitely made me happier from a golfing perspective," said McIlroy.
"When I was on the board, I was clued in, I talked to people, I got different opinions but at the same time I felt like it was taking away from some of the other things I want to do in my life.
"You can't keep all the plates spinning at the same time and something had to give. If you look at my golf since then, it's been a pretty good run.
"I have a clear head and I'm out of all the political stuff in golf, basically, and I can just focus on playing and making myself competitively happy by playing in the tournaments that I want to play.
"And having more time to make myself personally happy doing things I want to do away from golf, travelling with my family and showing my daughter different parts of the world, is a very nice place to be in life."
McIlroy is chasing a fourth-successive Race to Dubai title this week and a seventh Order of Merit in total, which would surpass Seve Ballesteros and put him just one behind Colin Montgomerie.
Marco Penge and Ryder Cup team-mate Tyrrell Hatton are the only two players who can stop him at the DP World Tour Championship.
Despite being based in the United States, McIlroy has maintained strong links with the DP World Tour he still considers 'home' and he called on other players to "step up" their support.
"With the fractured nature of the men's professional game at the minute, this tour needs all of its stars to step up and play in the big events," added McIlroy, who has had a new award - for which he is ineligible - named after him to commemorate his Grand Slam success which will reward the best performance by a European player over the course of the year's four majors.
"I feel quite a responsibility to do that and to try to make this tour as strong as it can possibly be."
The Rory McIlroy Award will be introduced for the 2026 season, with the winner being the member who cumulatively earns the most Race to Dubai points from the Masters Tournament, US PGA Championship, US Open and The Open.
McIlroy himself will be ineligible for the award, though will present it to the winner in the coming years.
"To have something named after you, that will be presented to future generations of players, is a huge honour and it is very humbling," McIlroy said.
It will be the fifth award presented annually by the DP World Tour that is named after a player.
The Harry Vardon Trophy is awarded to the Race to Dubai winner, the Seve Ballesteros Award is given to the Player's Player of the Year, the Harry Cotton Award is claimed by the rookie of the year, while the John Jacobs Award is awarded to the Legends Tour Order of Merit (Senior Tour) winner.