
On a different level – Rory McIlroy hails Open champion Scottie Scheffler
The Northern Irishman began the day six off the lead and he probably knew it was a bridge too far to reel in the in-form American, who had already won the US PGA this year to add to his two Masters titles.
It would have required a fast start and shooting something close to the 61 McIlroy shot on this course as a 16-year-old – virtually impossible in a major setting.
3 down, 1 to go.
Scottie Scheffler will attempt to complete the career Grand Slam on his 30th birthday at the 2026 U.S. Open. pic.twitter.com/96IfQdnDdm
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) July 20, 2025
'I wish I had have been closer to Scottie going into today and been able to make a real push but he's been on a different level all week and he's been on a different level for the last two years to the rest of us,' he said after his rival won the third leg of the career Grand Slam which McIlroy completed at Augusta in April.
'None of us could live with what he had this week. He is the bar that we're all trying to get to at this point, so hats off to him.
'I think all you can do is admire what he does and how he does it. I think what he does is one thing, but how he does it is another.
'He just goes about his business, doesn't do anything overly flamboyant, but he's the best at executing in the game right now.
'In a historical context, you could argue that there's only maybe two or three players in the history of the game that have been on a run, the one that Scottie's been on here for the last 24 to 36 months. Incredibly impressive.
'He's been absolutely amazing over these past two to three years. He's an unbelievable player, an incredible champion and a great person too.'
After missing the cut six years ago when The Open returned to Portrush, McIlroy was determined to make it up to the thousands of fans willing him on this week.
But he had too much to do on the last day and a two-under-par 34, including three birdies and a bogey, on the easier front nine, was just not enough.
He was still six shots back at the turn but a double-bogey at the 10th, where he mis-hit a chip, represented the end of his challenge despite two more birdies coming home to finish seventh on 10 under, seven behind Scheffler.
'I felt like I did well. Eight, nine and and 10 were the ones that killed me – not that I was ever going to get to 17-under I don't think,' he added.
'I could have maybe finished second, which would have been better than where I did finish, but only making par off those tee shots on eight and nine and then the double off of 10 after the flier did me in.
'Then I just tried to play a good back nine and finish as well as I could.'

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BBC News
15 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Right up there' - Portrush shines for Open week
Only the Open Championship could make a small, seaside town in Northern Ireland feel like the centre of the sporting an overwhelming majority of the huge crowds were willing home favourite Rory McIlroy to victory, that it was the world number one who denied the story its fairytale ending still felt wholly fitting. Other events of this size are played out in cities of similar stature, but the sight of superstar Scottie Scheffler hoisting the Claret Jug on the 18th green of a brilliant, yet remote, course tucked away on the north coast of the island of Ireland summed up what is unique about this have been plenty of similarly seemingly incongruous scenes over the past seven it be multi-millionaires getting their morning coffee in establishments where an Ulster fry would set you back less than £7, a former Open winner becoming a repeat customer at a small pie shop on the main street or the defending champion sinking a stout round the corner, the Open did not just come to town, it became a part of it for the duration of its Cameron Smith, who won his Claret Jug at St Andrews in 2022, could hardly have paid Portrush a bigger compliment than comparing it to the home of golf."It seems like there's a lot of Opens where the course is great but the town doesn't really get involved, whereas this one kind of seems like everyone in town is happy to have you here and gets around the whole tournament," he said."It's right up there. It's a very similar feeling to St Andrews for sure." In a week that began with the eventual winner questioning the meaning of it all, there was great purpose in the way the first arriving fans flooded through the gates and on to the course after word spread that McIlroy had snuck out for a practice round at the earliest available opportunity. Those first holes on Monday, and his stints watching chunks of Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer between rounds, must have felt like the briefest slices of quiet for the most recent member of golf's Grand Slam all other points around Royal Portrush, galleries thronged around the Holywood star, the roars that greeted each of his made putts reverberating across the links. While his walk off the 18th green was without the Claret Jug, the love for the returning hero, playing at home for the first time since his Masters victory, was a far more fitting conclusion to his week than the tearful missed cut back in it was not just McIlroy who sparked adoration. Americans Bryson DeChambeau and Jordan Spieth, as well as England's Tommy Fleetwood, were among other huge draws obliging as many requests for selfies and autographs as time allowed, while the thump of children's feet along grandstands as players neared with golf balls sounded like the promised thunder. So keen were others to take home a souvenir of their week by more conventional means, queues for the merchandise tent snaked round multiple sets of barriers with one visitor reportedly spending £13,000 in one were content with more transitory pleasures. On Padraig Harrington's insistence that Royal Portrush had the best ice creams on The Open rota, there seemed general agreement after what was surely a record number of 99s consumed up and down the links. A more uniquely Northern Irish staple - the fifteen traybake - proved more divisive in the media coconut-based treat was not all that failed to gain universal popularity. Jason Day was left confounded by local weather forecasts as the week proved true the old cliche about Northern Ireland featuring all four seasons in one day, while marathon rounds on Thursday left a few players grumbling about bottlenecks on the course. Those that took the time to look around as they waited, though, were rewarded with the spectacular views that make Portrush such a memorable course for the hacker and world's best player alike."It's one of the coolest views that I've seen in the game of golf, to be honest with you," said Scheffler of the course's signature hole Calamity Corner."We were kind of looking out. It was a day in which you had a bunch of rain and there was rainbows on the other side, and you're looking out over the golf course on the right, and you've got the huge bluffs by the ocean and it's just mounds and hills, and the town is in the distance." Even Shane Lowry, who had the best day of his golfing life here six years ago when winning the 148th Open Championship, cut a wholly frustrated figure at points during a weekend when he was handed a two-shot penalty on Friday and struggled with illness in his third after a brilliant closing 66 on Sunday, Royal Portrush had clearly redeemed itself in the Offaly man's eyes when all was said and by BBC Sport NI when would he like to see The Open be back here for its fourth staging, he replied: "How about next year?"While it will surely be longer than a six-year wait for another go this time around, after another hugely successful week, a return sooner rather than later seems a certainty.


BBC News
15 minutes ago
- BBC News
An Open to remember - 18 photos from Royal Portrush
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Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Scottie Scheffler calls Tiger Woods debate 'a bit silly' after matching 1,197 day feat
Scottie Scheffler has laughed off comparisons with him and Tiger Woods despite winning the Open in dominant fashion at Royal Portrush, leading to an incredible statistic he shares with the golfing legend Scottie Scheffler claimed comparisons with him and Tiger Woods were "a bit silly" after he claimed his fourth Major by winning the Open in dominant fashion at Royal Portrush. A stellar round on Friday had put the American in pole position to win the Claret Jug and he made no mistake over the weekend, eventually winning by four shots. He finished on -17 with his eight under round 64 on the second day seeing him pull away from the field, who couldn't catch him. Scheffler's first Open title also compliments the two Masters he's won as well as the PGA Championship he landed earlier this year, further cementing his status as the world's best player. The American's triumph at Royal Portrush also prompted numerous comparisons with Woods. Incredibly the gap between their first and fourth majors is the exact same time period, to the day. Woods first major win at the Masters in 1997 and his fourth major at the Open in 2000 were 1,197 days apart. That is the same time separating Scheffler's Masters win in 2022 and his Open success just over three years later. Despite that though the Claret Jug winner was dismissing the notion that he could emulate the 15-time Major winner. He said: 'I still think they're (the comparisons) a bit silly. Tiger won, what, 15 majors? This is my fourth. I just got one-fourth of the way there. I think Tiger stands alone in the game of golf. He was inspirational for me growing up. He was a very, very talented guy, and he was a special person to be able to be as good as he was at the game of golf.' Woods still competes in Majors but hasn't claimed one since he won the Masters in 2019 and few expect him to add to his haul. Not since he was at his peak has the golfing world seen such dominance before Scheffler's recent rise. Last year's Open winner Xander Schauffele, who finished seven shots off Scheffler, admits they thought the days of Woods-type domination were over but his fellow American is now replicating it. He said: 'I don't think we thought the golfing world would see someone as dominant as Tiger [Woods] come through so soon, and here's Scottie sort of taking that throne of dominance. You can't even say he's on a run. He's just been killing it for over two years now. He's a tough man to beat, and when you see his name up on the leaderboard it sucks for us.' Scheffler had made headlines before the tournament began on Thursday where he opened up on a personal struggle when it came to motivation, claiming that golf was "not a fulfilling life." Despite being one tournament away from the Career Slam he asked: "Why do I want to win this golf tournament so badly? Why do I want to win the Open Championship so badly? I don't know because, if I win, it's going to be awesome for two minutes."