logo
Open Championship: Calamity Corner shows its teeth at windswept Royal Portrush

Open Championship: Calamity Corner shows its teeth at windswept Royal Portrush

Irish Times4 days ago
From the tee, all the players could see was a wall of umbrellas in the small stand behind the green. There spectators hunkered and scrambled to prevent their only cover from the rain taking off across the Portrush dunes towards Scotland.
The humid sunshine and comfortable temperatures of Wednesday, which made Dunluce Castle and the basalt White Rocks look picture postcard, gave way to the squalling showers and gusting winds of Thursday morning, where the 16th hole, a gem of the Dunluce course, lived up to its name.
'Calamity' – an event causing great and often sudden damage or distress; a disaster. The iconic par-3 yielded just 24 birdies across four rounds in the 148th Open, the fewest of any hole.
While it seemed mildly perverse waiting for misadventure and catastrophe to befall the players coming through Calamity Corner in brutal conditions, the hole's reputation preceded it.
READ MORE
Tom McKibbin
, in the first group out with
Pádraig Harrington
and Nicolai Højgaard, would have known of the course's beauties and dangers and the chasm on the right of the 16th hole, where the ball can fall as far as 40 feet. And so it went, with the LIV player's ball kicking into the drop as the gallery groaned.
But McKibbin recovered well, and walked off with his par.
The ideal shot or bale-out area was left, but with the wind gusting up to 30km/h and pushing the balls towards the lush ravine, and with rain in their faces, it would have taken more club than in the practice days.
Niklas Nørgaard, in the sixth group that came through, also found his tee shot falling away into the thick of the rift, forcing a deft scramble down the incline after it came to rest 28 yards from the pin.
His recovery drew a gasp from the crowd as the ball flew across the green, stopping just short of a television camera. His third was to four feet, four inches and his putt pitifully horseshoed out of the cup, leaving him shaking his head.
England's Lee Westwood on the 16th green on day one of the Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA Wire
The double bogey helped the Danish golfer to an ugly six-over round for the day.
Playing in the same group, Byeong-Hun An also saw his ball disappear down the slope and fall into what is quaintly described as the 'native area 14 yards from the flag'. He hacked out to 10 feet from the pin but missed the putt and walked away with a bogey.
'The weather here is the craziest weather pattern I've ever experienced in my life,' said Jason Day, who hit to the fringe on 16, walked away with a par and then weather-shamed the local forecasters.
'There's no consistency to it whatsoever. You look at the weather – I mean, I'd love to be a weatherman here. You just get it wrong all the time.'
By 5pm the hole had given up 10 birdies to the field, 53 pars and 21 bogeys.
Darren Clarke was another one of the victims. Like McKibbin, Clarke knows how the course can show its teeth and his tee shot also came to rest short and right, 18 yards from the pin. His recovery was good to eight feet, but again the ball refused to drop.
[
Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of Royal Portrush 16th's 'card wrecker' chasm
Opens in new window
]
Even from the back of the stand, as the wind whistled through, the wet, heavy air could not conceal that famously furious Clarke face, as he left with bogey on his way to a four-over finish for the day.
'Sixteen was playing tough. That's not the hole where you want the worst of the weather,' said England's Jordan Smith, who finished on level par for the round and with a birdie on 16.
'Yeah, that was a tricky 4-iron from about 200 yards. Absolutely pummeled by the wind and the rain on 16. That made a short, easy hole usually a really, really tough hole. Obviously made it look really easy making birdie.'
It wasn't always doom and gloom at Calamity Corner and when Matt Fitzpatrick came through in group 16 with Hideki Matsuyama and Ryan Fox, all three ended up disappearing down the slope with their anxious caddies hoping for a lucky break.
Matsuyama and Fox scrambled well to get up and down with Fitzpatrick, not visible from ground level, pitching straight into the hole.
'A bit of luck, obviously,' said the English player, who finished the day on four under par. 'Sometimes you need that. You need that. I thought I could play a bit aggressive after watching Foxy and Hideki leave them a bit short. Obviously, it just came out a little bit harder than I anticipated and on the perfect line.'
Everybody loves a blind shot on to a slick green in the rain from a lush, wet position 30 feet below the surface. And at the Open they are now beginning to enjoy it.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scheffler wins the Open in Portrush as golf enters a new era
Scheffler wins the Open in Portrush as golf enters a new era

Irish Post

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Post

Scheffler wins the Open in Portrush as golf enters a new era

SCOTTIE Scheffler picked up the Claret Jug in Co. Antrim with authority, finishing four shots clear at 17 under par. After a composed final round of 68, he won the 153rd Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Despite the best efforts of the rest of the world's top golfers — including Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry, it was a procession for Sheffler, with the result not in any really doubt from around the fifth hole on the final day. Truly the caravan has moved on and we are in a new era: the New Jersey man who was brought up in Texas from the age of six now looks set to dominate game for the foreseeable future. At the seaside links in Portrush the world No 1 added The Open to his 2022 and 2024 Masters trophies and the 2025 PGA Championship—making him the first player in the modern era to win his first four majors by at least three strokes each. Only the legendary Young Tom Morris and pre‑WWI greats managed similar dominance. Scheffler's weekend was a masterclass in links golf. He opened with a birdie at the first, reached seven shots clear before being pegged back by a double bogey on the 8th, then responded with solid putting down the stretch to maintain control. Every time he had a minor setback, it was almost immediately rectified. It seems he now has the perfect temperament for dealing with the major championships. His composure under pressure mirrored the performance of Tiger Woods at his peak—prompting Shane Lowry to draw that very comparison. With this Open Championship win, Scheffler is edging towards joining an elite group. His Grand Slam only requires the US Open for him to join Nicklaus, Woods, Hogan, Gary Player , Gene Sarazen and Rory McIlroy as players who have won all four golfing majors. Rory McIlroy's valiant charge on home soil produced a stirring but bittersweet performance for the home crowd. Finishing on 10 under par, McIlroy secured a shared seventh place with a final‑round 69. The top‑ten finish in his home Open marks a strong end to an eventful season. Having won the Masters in April—completing his own career Grand Slam—McIlroy remains one of the greats of the game, but the Open on home soil has long been his ambition. At 36, he remains in contention and is expected to mount a fierce challenge again at next year's Open. Shane Lowry—champion at Portrush in 2019—attempted to channel that magic once more but found himself beset by adversity midweek. In round two, he incurred a rare two‑shot penalty for accidentally moving his ball during a practice swing—a decision made after television replay review. That saw his score shift from 2 under to even par, a blow compounded by illness on Saturday. He never really recovered from these two setbacks. See More: Golf, Open Championship, Royal Portrush

Masterful Scottie Scheffler wins The Open at Portrush
Masterful Scottie Scheffler wins The Open at Portrush

The Journal

time9 hours ago

  • The Journal

Masterful Scottie Scheffler wins The Open at Portrush

SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER'S SERENE progress to his first Open Championship became a procession at Royal Portrush as the anticipated charge from Rory McIlroy failed to materialise and no-one else could get close to the relentless American. The reigning US PGA champion claimed the third leg of the career Grand Slam, and his fourth major in total, in some style and has only 11 months to wait to try to complete the set in the same four-year time-frame as 18-time major winner Jack Nicklaus did. Only Tiger Woods has achieved it quicker but Scheffler is starting to be mentioned in the same breath – and he is still getting better. He won his first Masters by three, his second by four and May's US PGA by five. However, this was on another scale with his 17-under total giving him a four-shot victory over compatriot Harris English, also runner-up to him at the PGA, in McIlroy's own backyard, which was even more comfortable than the numbers suggest. No-one in the modern era has ever won their first four majors by three shots or more – Young Tom Morris, John Henry Taylor and James Braid all achieved it before the First World War. McIlroy completed his own career Grand Slam at Augusta in April and on Saturday night described victory here for Scheffler, who has now won 25 per cent of all majors since 2022, as 'inevitable'. It was not the boldest prediction ever made in sport but the manner in which his rival clinically clinched the title was nevertheless impressive after becoming only the fourth after Woods, Nicklaus and Gary Player to win the Masters, US PGA and Open before the age of 30. In his Tuesday press conference, in a rare glimpse of his inner thoughts, Scheffler spoke of how being successful at golf does not fulfil him, how he only gets a two-minute buzz from winning and being a good husband and father means more to him. So when he holed his last putt he finally allowed himself to show some emotion, tossing his cap into the air before hugging wife Meredith and son Bennett and being congratulated by parents Scott and Diane. But the 14-month-old Bennett's enjoyment of the victory lasted an even shorter time than his dad's, crying when he was taken from his arms so Scheffler could complete the formalities of signing his card. 'I don't really know exactly what to say. I know I wasn't the fan favourite today,' Scheffler said. Advertisement 'When I'm inside the ropes I'm trying to compete – I don't think of much else. It will take a little while for this to sink in but right now it's pretty cool.' Scottie Scheffler celebrates. Ben Brady / INPHO Ben Brady / INPHO / INPHO The chasing pack had teed off more in hope than expectation as the world number one had converted his previous nine 54-hole leads into victories and sure enough, a brilliant approach from the rough to inside a foot saw him birdie the first to pull further away from home favourite McIlroy, struggling for the fast start he needed from six shots behind. He never looked back as birdies at four and five were followed by a clutch 16-footer for par and his biggest show of emotion to date with a fist pump. Mcllroy had birdied the second, bogeyed the fourth and picked up another shot at the 607-yard seventh while, behind him Scheffler found a bunker off the tee but still unerringly holed a 15ft par putt. His over-confidence got the better of him out of sand at the next, hitting the face and leaving his ball in the trap resulting in a double-bogey – his first dropped shots in 33 holes. But if his challengers thought that had left the door ajar it was slammed shut at the very next hole when he landed his approach four feet from the pin to turn at 16 under. McIlroy's mis-hit chip at the 10th for double bogey ended his chances eight back. Birdies at 12 and 15 got him back to 10 under but he would get no closer. English emerged from the pack with a five-under 66 to take second, while compatriot Chris Gotterup proved last week's Scottish Open victory was no fluke with a 67 to finish third on 12 under. Gotterup briefly reduced the gap to four at 13 but Scheffler subsequently carded his fifth and final birdie of the day at 12 to keep him at arm's length. Former US Open champion Wyndham Clark raced through the field with a 65 but he had started from too far back and could only get to 11 under alongside England's Matt Fitzpatrick and China's Haotong Li. Scot Robert MacIntyre, after his US Open near miss, shot 67 for 10 under alongside McIlroy and defending champion Xander Schauffele. Written by Press Association and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .

Open diary: Scottie Scheffler proves the tallest giant among the towering dunes of Royal Portrush
Open diary: Scottie Scheffler proves the tallest giant among the towering dunes of Royal Portrush

Irish Times

time13 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Open diary: Scottie Scheffler proves the tallest giant among the towering dunes of Royal Portrush

Monday Exiting Bellaghy, a banner stretches across the road. 'We Serve Neither King Nor Kaiser, But Ireland'. On towards Portglenone, Rasharkin, wildly off course for the Open we swing into decorated Ballymoney with its bunting and flags hanging from buildings, draped from windows. There is a different message here, a more conciliatory tone towards monarchs. Up Union Street to the Ballymena Road, and the smiling face of Jim Allister beaming out from his Traditional Unionist Voice constituency office, reminds us of how prudent it would have been to follow the Google Maps. The 18th green at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland. Photograph:Realigned and pointing towards Portrush, these are the racing roads of the Dunlop brothers, Joey and Robert, Michael and William, where superbikes tip 321km/h (200mph), squealing towards the famous links, where today the sun has given way to slate grey and charcoal skies. Portrush, though, is warm, almost humid, and more importantly, Rory McIlroy is in a good mood. 'I feel I'm in a good spot,' he said. That means we are all, for now, in good spots. Inside the course, its beauty, luminescent in the low light, catches the eye. On the hoarding, they have captured the Dunluce personality of danger and rugged charm with the championship slogan, Forged By Nature. Tuesday Waiting behind the rope at the first hole – Hughies – until the golfers hit their tee shots and amble past, a face that nobody has ever seen before, glides down the fairway. Unrecognised, Richard Teder is the first golfer from Estonia to play in the Open, qualifying by holing out from 90 yards in a sudden-death playoff. He is ranked 4,689th in the world. He said earlier in the week golf was easy. That triggered a lot of people. READ MORE In bay 10 Pádraig Harrington is hitting balls at the practice ground. Xander Schauffele is in five and Dustin Johnson in three. Brooks Koepka , buffed and gym shaped, is in 26. A crowd of children looking for autographs are shrieking in their wee Antrim accents Sheen ... Sheen ... Sheen at Shane Lowry on the putting green. There's a time and place. He turns and walks away. Five minutes later, the 2019 Open champion breezes past in the passenger seat of a buggy, head down, looking intensely at the screen of his phone. Business face. He's catching nobody's eye today. Scottie Scheffler: 'I'd much rather be a great father than I would be a great golfer.' Photograph:Scottie Scheffler is there too in a grey hoody and white cap. Afterwards, he talks about life and golf and shatters preconceived notions that an expressionless demeanour on the course makes for a dull boy. 'This is not the be-all, end-all. This is not the most important thing in my life,' he says. 'I'd much rather be a great father than I would be a great golfer.' It's what professional golfers must do these days, relate. Emotional alert. You sense a few in the room are beginning to fill up at Scottie's inner man. Wednesday Two miles from Bushmills is where the accommodation sits in the townland of Billy. The local Orange Lodge stands alone, surrounded by fields in splendid isolation like an Edward Hopper painting. Beyond are the seaside towns of Portrush and Portstewart. Damned if you can tell which is which and where one ends and the other begins as they ribbon around the coast. Portrush is in Antrim and Portstewart in Derry. One person who would know that is McIlroy. Last night, he was selected as Player of the Year by the Association of Golf Writers, who were suited and booted in the R&A pavilion by the first hole. Early in the evening, the surprise guest swept in through the doors wearing his Green Jacket. Rory McIlroy plays into the 17th green from the crowd during Day Three of The 153rd Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Photograph:Only first-time winners are allowed to remove their jackets from the Augusta club grounds, and then only for the first 12 months after their win. His entrance sparks a lightning standing ovation, belying the room's age profile. After winning this year's Masters, they had three different-sized jackets for him to try in The Butler Cabin, he tells us. To the background of the first fairway behind the giant glass window, where he stands, McIlroy, in his verdant green attire, and the links become one. Thursday Yesterday evening, Scotland could be seen from the West Strand. Today at 12.30pm, it is like somebody has pulled a blind down a few hundred yards off the coast at the Dunluce Course and turned on the cold shower. Two hours later, when McIlroy hits his first ball of the 153rd Open, a welcome climate transformation has taken place, and it is shirtsleeve weather. For that, thousands of fans are pleased because today is McIlroy's moment of redemption after an opening hole calamity in 2019 that is burned into their consciousness. Drive out of bounds. Quadruple bogey eight. Missed cut. Rory McIlroy strikes the ball on Day One of the Open at Royal Portrush. Photograph:Today, from the tee at the first hole, he, Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Thomas can see the people gather in and line both sides of a fairway that stretches out towards bunkers and rises steeply to the green. There, the gallery appears to be even more swollen as people squeeze in on the thin yellow rope. Closer to the play, they want to see the lines on McIlroy's face. They want to see the wince he makes when his first par putt of The Open rolls by. They greet that with silence and are torn between better than last time or a plus number after one hole. Friday Around these parts, many things are biblical, so why not the rain. It came late afternoon in stair rods sweeping across the top of the island. McIlroy got 20 minutes of it, Lowry was just beginning his round when it arrived. When the first heavy drops fell, a young woman at the back of the final hole ran for cover, clutching her phone and a child. If this were the 2025 Masters and not the Open, she would have found herself in the security cabin. Probably not where she would have wanted to be, but at least out of the squall. Rain clouds sweep over Royal Portrush on Friday. Photograph:Augusta National strictly prohibited cell phones this year, setting a challenge to a selfie-obsessed generation. They have also banned running around the course and regular patrons have become adept at speed walking. At Sawgrass in March, McIlroy borrowed a phone from a spectator, Luke Potter, a University of Texas golfer who was heckling him. Teeing off for his second round, hundreds of phones are pointed at him with people at the back of the 18th stand peering down, taking footage and selfies. Of the many things McIlroy is, a prized backdrop for a selfie is not one of his favourites. Saturday Lee Westwood leans across and kisses his caddie at the first tee. It's okay. Helen Storey is his wife. Westwood joined the Saudi Arabian-backed LIV Tour in 2022 and was runner-up in the Open at St Andrews in 2010. LIV have a house opposite the clubhouse but outside the club boundary. But there are no hard feelings here. Westwood is greeted almost as loudly as McIlroy. Like Monty before him, the English golfer had a great career but no Major in his locker. England's Lee Westwood embraces his caddie and wife Helen after putting on the 18th green during Day Three of the Open at Royal Portrush, Co Antrim, Northern Ireland. Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA 'It was an easy decision for me to make. She'd probably rather be at home riding a horse,' said Lee. 'I knew I could handle the weight of the bag, but I didn't have a bloody clue what I was doing,' said Helen. It's the chemistry. Above the 12th fairway Nikon have a viewing tower stocked with binoculars, where you can go in and scan across the Dunluce links. Today you might spy Lowry scooting off course at every turn. A stomach virus has swept through his team and the House of Offaly is far from all right. Further away on an otherwise perfect evening Scotland reappears on the horizon. Sunday As we walk 20 minutes from the West Strand car park, where last night the Sons of Ulster were warming up for their march with drum riffs, there are sweet but earnest people handing out leaflets at the bridge that takes fans over Dunluce Road and into the club grounds, to the beer and Loch Lomond whiskey tents. A fetching picture of McIlroy and Lowry is on the cover with numbers 61 and 63. As a 16-year-old, McIlroy shot a course record 61, and at the 148th Open, Lowry shot a third-round 63 with eight birdies, a record for the new layout. To win the Claret Jug, notes the leaflet, 'a challenging course must be completed again'. To prove it, they quote Paul from the Bible: 'I have finished my course, I have kept the faith.' They also provide a number for those in need of help with spiritual matters. McIlroy is six behind Scheffler, and Lowry's third-round 74 shoved him further back, although he's smiling more today. Another cracking sun-kissed day in Portrush and the week closes with McIlroy trying to go back in time. A spiritual matter indeed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store