
2025 Open Championship predictions, odds: First-round leader picks at Royal Portrush
The first-round leader (FRL) market is one of the best bangs for your buck in all of sports betting, and there's no better tournament for FRL bettors than the Open Championship.
The wind, rain, and unique courses make the British Open a carnival of chaos, and when you shrink it down to just 18 holes the playing field gets leveled even more, which leads to some surprising names at the top of the leaderboard after Round 1.
Just look at the players who paced the field after 18 holes at the last five iterations of the Open:
2019: JB Holmes
2021: Louis Oosthuizen
2022: Cameron Young
2023: Emiliano Grillo, Tommy Fleetwood, Christo Lamprecht (who finished plus-11 for the tournament)
2024: Daniel Brown
As those names suggest, this is not the place – or the market – where you want to be spending your bankroll on players at the top of the board.
Instead, it behooves you to take some shots and sprinkle some sleepers being offered at big prices.
2025 Open Championship First-Round Leader picks
Marco Penge 80/1 (FanDuel)
Although not a household name on this side of the Pond, Marco Penge is starting to rack up impressive results on the DP World Tour.
The Englishman won the Hainan Classic at the end of April, finished T11 at the BMW International Open two weeks ago and then was a runner-up (with Rory McIlroy) at the Scottish Open last week.
Penge is someone to consider across all markets, but we'll back him to get off the blocks hot Thursday.
Marco Penge during a practice round Tuesday.
Getty Images
Lucas Glover 140/1 (bet365)
There's no right or wrong way to handicap the first-round leader market. It's nearly impossible to predict.
But it doesn't hurt that Lucas Glover is coming off back-to-back top-10 finishes at the Travelers Championship and John Deere Classic.
Get the lowdown on the Best USA Sports Betting Sites and Apps
Padraig Harrington 500/1 (Caesars Sportsbook)
Glover has plenty of experience in this event, so he shouldn't be overwhelmed by whatever Royal Portrush throws at him this weekend.
A two-time Open Champion, Padraig Harrington is well past his prime. That said, the Irishman still has it in his locker to go low for 18 holes in conditions that will be to his liking.
The 53-year-old should come into the week buoyed with confidence after winning the U.S. Senior Open at the end of June, and he made the cut at last week's Scottish Open.
Lee Westwood finished T4 at the 2019 Open Championship at Royal Portrush.
Getty Images
Lee Westwood 500/1 (DraftKings)
Like Harrington, Lee Westwood is into his 50s and well beyond his prime. However, the 52-year-old Englishman is playing some decent stuff on LIV and he finished T4 at Royal Portrush back in 2019.
That's enough to get me in at this price.
Why Trust New York Post Betting
Michael Leboff is a long-suffering Islanders fan, but a long-profiting sports bettor with 10 years of experience in the gambling industry. He loves using game theory to help punters win bracket pools, find long shots, and learn how to beat the market in mainstream and niche sports.
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Gianni Infantino, Donald Trump and how Fifa went full Maga at the Club World Cup
Just before Reece James went to lift the Club World Cup trophy, the Chelsea captain politely told Donald Trump that they were likely about to leap around in celebration so he might want to move. A remarkable sentence in itself. The US president, according to sources in the middle of this, very much gave the impression he was loving it and wanted to stay. You can see the images for yourself. There's certainly something incongruous about the player of the tournament, Cole Palmer, looking confused beside one of the world's most powerful leaders in this moment of triumph. That kind of scene is no longer new, of course, but it does look like it's becoming normalised in this authoritarian-leaning political era. This was one step up from Qatar 2022. If that saw the Emir give Lionel Messi the otherwise innocent garment of the bisht in the centre of an immortal image in order to signal his state's presence, this was a leader himself in the middle of it. If Chelsea want a giant poster of their trophy-lift outside Stamford Bridge, Trump will be front and centre. We're beyond symbolism here. It's too obvious. As stunning as it all was, the only real surprise was that Gianni Infantino initially appeared to be beckoning the US president away. If so, it was perhaps the only moment over the last few years where the Fifa president didn't prostrate himself to Trump. Even here, Infantino eventually let him at it. It's hard not to wonder what would have been said if this happened, say, at the 1978 World Cup, a tournament hijacked by the Argentinian dictatorship at the time. Reece James, holding the trophy, hesitates as Donald Trump lingers for Chelsea's big moment (Getty Images) The events in New Jersey at least got everyone finally talking about the Club World Cup. Not that you'd even consider that idea if you were listening to Infantino. 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Crucially, Infantino has also seen that - with the financial support of Saudi Arabia and political support of Trump - Fifa can essentially do what it wants in football. There is minimal resistance. Many stakeholders don't want to offer any at all. A lot of powerful people, companies and states are now invested in all of this. The big clubs are onside, which is something that Uefa and national associations like the FA should be very worried about. It's a potential super league run by the sport's highest authority. And, while some on the Fifa Executive Committee were aghast at the Trump spectacle, Infantino loyalists there were loving it. America put on a show for the inaugural Club World Cup (AP) If this doesn't necessarily end up as 'a golden era', it may well be the moment that starts profound transformation in football. An eminently logical question now is, what exactly will Infantino do next? Sunday's story about Fifa convening a meeting of player unions without inviting the game's biggest player union, FifPro, was indicative because it just shows how Infantino's Fifa now go about governance. It is much like Trump. Just act, with the considerations of major stakeholders barely considered. The Club World Cup was implemented in the exact same way, which has led to a legal action from FifPro. 'Classic post-truth politics,' as one source said. Infantino's disgraced predecessor, Sepp Blatter, even commented on the Saudi influence here over the weekend. 'We have lost football to Saudi Arabia,' the 89-year-old told German's ntv. 'We offered it, and they took it. Surprisingly, there is no opposition to this within Fifa.' Quite. What does it say about the modern Fifa when Blatter sounds like the voice of morality and reason, and some in football now pine for his interpretation of the Fifa presidency? Blatter's brief visibility does raise another key point, that should be remembered. His era's 2015 downfall was the game's moment for true reform, with Infantino himself voted in because he was perceived as a reform candidate. He has instead accelerated down a new direction, that features classic problems. Sepp Blatter has emerged as football's unlikely voice of reason in recent days (Getty Images) One of the crucial factors allowing Infantino to go his own way was because the structure of Fifa didn't change. It was still based on the same clientelistic model, with most voters – the national associations – dependent on money distribution. That plays into why there is so little opposition to his reign now. Uefa have been strategically outflanked, a development that warrants more discussion. The big football associations could come together, since that's where most of the game's 'organically generated' money comes from, except their major clubs are now invested in the Club World Cup. The associations themselves are meanwhile part of the system. Many won't speak out because they're too dependent on Fifa money or want to host tournaments for the future. That sounds a lot like Manchester United not playing in the FA Cup in 1999-2000, because the FA wanted to host the 2006 World Cup. It's remarkable how the same politics persist, even in the new football world. The Fifa system allows no 'opposition party' so no one wants to be in a minority opposition. And as to why all of this matters, there is a direct link between the upward drag of the $114m Chelsea are projected to make from this tournament, and the struggles of Morecambe and Sheffield Wednesday way below them. This ecosystem is what Fifa is supposed to be the ultimate regulator of. Instead, it currently looks like its great disruptors. It arguably made Trump's presence all the more fitting.
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Cole Palmer is England's cheat code for World Cup success after Chelsea heroics
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