
Jacob Skov Olesen overcomes major inexperience to set early lead at The Open
The 26-year-old Danish left-hander, who won the Amateur Championship at Ballyliffin in Ireland last summer, only turned professional in November after earning his DP World Tour card.
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That meant he had to sacrifice his amateur exemptions for this year's Masters and US Open so this was only his second appearance at one of golf's premier events after debuting at Troon 12 months ago.
After making the turn in one under, he birdied the 10th, holed a 40-foot eagle putt at the 12th and chipped in for birdie at the 15th to move clear on five under but bogeyed the last.
That dropped him into a share of the lead with China's Haotong Li, with
Matthew Jordan, the Royal Liverpool golfer who has finished 10th in the last two Opens, a shot behind.
He enjoyed a run of three birdies immediately after making the turn on one under, only to drop a shot at the par-three 13th.
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Veteran Lee Westwood rolled back the years to be bogey-free through 13 holes to also reach four under before dropping his first shot.
The 52-year-old, back at the Open for the first time since 2022 after coming through qualifying, finished joint-fourth on this course six years ago and used all his experience to manoeuvre himself to the top of the leaderboard.
He birdied the par-five second and then drove the green at the 372-yard par-four fifth to pick up another shot and a take a share of the lead for the first time.
Westwood made the most of Portrush's other two par-fives, the seventh and 12th, with birdies at both just as the rain began to get heavier but then three-putted the 14th.
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The morning was also good for Westwood's fellow LIV golfer Phil Mickelson, who carded his best Open round since the third day at Carnoustie in 2018 with a one-under 70 – the highlight of which was a holed bunker shot for par at the third having left his first in the sand.
The 2013 Open champion has missed the cut in five of his last seven majors and since the 2023 Masters has not finished higher than 43rd.
World number one Scottie Scheffler, 2019 champion Shane Lowry and two-time major winner and one of the favourites this week Jon Rahm were all two under well into their front nine.
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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Air of inevitability blows in as Scottie Scheffler seizes control of the Open
Scottie Scheffler still had 20 holes of this Open Championship to play. History tells us leads can evaporate in just one. Dense rough, links bunkers, the scale of pressure attached to the oldest major. Open calamity is written in folklore. The ghost of Jean van de Velde still lingers. And yet, the bookmakers had Scheffler at only 1-8 to lift the Claret Jug. The fat lady had cleared her throat. Twenty holes. What sporting planet is this? It is possible to run out of adjectives for Scheffler. Unflappable, remarkable, relentless. Nobody will ever match the impact of Tiger Woods on golf but it really is no exaggeration to suggest Scheffler can be similarly dominant. Come Sunday evening on the Causeway Coast, Scheffler will surely be a four-time major winner and three-quarters of the way towards a career grand slam. This is only his 24th major start as a professional. In one of them, his pursuit of glory was undermined by being thrown into a police cell. Immediately before the pandemic, nobody beyond golf geeks knew who Scottie Scheffler was. Confidence – or certainty – attached to what happens next is backed up by Scheffler winning on the last nine previous occasions when he has held a 54-hole lead. He is in pursuit of a 12th victory since spring of 2024. This advantage is to the tune of four shots. Li Haotong's 69 means he is the closest to Scheffler's 14 under par. Li will play in the final group of a major for the first time in an up-and-down career. Scheffler; 68, 64, 67. He has barely broken sweat. Saturday's hope of a tussle was a brief one, as Matt Fitzpatrick chipped in for an eagle at the 3rd to tie the lead. Scheffler jabbed back by collecting two shots of his own at the 7th but Fitzpatrick's birdie at the same hole kept matters interesting. Scheffler reached 13 under par by picking up a shot at the 8th. On the back nine there were two ridiculous par saves from Scheffler, at the 11th and 14th after finding deep foliage. The 16th is called Calamity for a reason; Scheffler made a mockery of its reputation courtesy of a birdie two. Fitzpatrick had erred at the short 13th, with his birdie two holes later offset by another mistake on the penultimate hole. The Yorkshireman closed on nine under after his level-par 71. Scheffler has promised not to overthink his position. This seems his finest attribute, a mindset that does not move dependent on leaderboards. 'I like being out here competing,' Scheffler said. 'This is why we work so hard, to have opportunities like this and I'm excited for the challenge of tomorrow. Winning major championships is not an easy task and I've put myself in a good position. 'Going into tomorrow I'm going to step up there on the 1st tee and I'm going to be trying to get the ball in the fairway. When I get to the second shot I'm going to be trying to get that ball on the green. There's not really too much else going on.' Simple, so blissfully simple. Try telling that to poor Matti Schmid, who shot 79. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Fitzpatrick bemoaned problems on the greens. What was the issue with putts, Matt? 'They just wouldn't go in,' he replied with admirable candour. Fitzpatrick added: 'Let's be realistic, he's five ahead. It's not easy. But if you get off to a good start, then obviously put a bit of pressure on early doors and hope for the best ... You get three under through six, like some of the guys today, the 7th the par five and all of a sudden you're kind of right back in it, you would hope. It's clear what I have to do tomorrow.' The tournament minus Scheffler is a decent one. Rory McIlroy reached eight under par with a dramatic 66, his lowest score of the week, before wonderful crowds. McIlroy's homecoming has been already been everything he could have imagined. The Belfast boy has Chris Gotterup, Harris English and Tyrrell Hatton for scoring company. On a day when chances were aplenty, the defending champion, Xander Schauffele, posted five under par to move to minus seven. Lee Westwood is out of winning contention at minus five but a back nine of 29 in glorious sunshine proved hugely enjoyable for the veteran. Westwood credited his wife and caddie, Helen, with triggering the run by providing the former world No 1 with a tuna sandwich on the 10th tee. Bob MacIntyre, who is now eight shots adrift, summed up the hopelessness of it all for mere mortals. At the start of 2025, MacIntyre asked his caddie to assess how far behind the world's top-ranked player he was in various statistics. Said bag man gave up the process after swiftly realising MacIntyre, then 16th in the rankings, was closer in all departments to No 2 than No 2 was to No 1. It is not the sea air dominating in Portrush. Instead, an air of inevitability.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How Captain America Keegan Bradley can take centre stage as Ryder Cup drama hots up ahead of Bethpage
Keegan Bradley, the USA Ryder Cup captain, birdied the 6th at Royal Portrush on Saturday afternoon and pumped his fist in delight. 'Boston, baby,' an American voice in the crowd shouted out. 'USA, USA,' another shouted. Bradley, who is ranked a career-high seventh in the world and is ninth in the US Ryder Cup standings, is still vying to become the first playing captain at a Ryder Cupsince Arnold Palmer helmed the US team in 1963, and his strong showing on the Dunluce Links course has kept him in the hunt. His form, though, has given the US team a problem as it wrestles with the complications of having a playing captain in an era when the size of the Ryder Cup and the responsibilities of the team captains dwarf the way things used to be when Palmer doubled up more than 60 years ago. The possibility of the dual role throws up all sorts of interesting questions. If he does not qualify automatically for the US team, could he make himself one of his own captain's picks? When he is playing here at The Open, is he prioritising his own game or studying the form of his players and his European opponents. He got a close look at Nicolai Hojgaard, who has an outside chance of making the European team, because Hojgaard was his playing partner. Hojgaard also outscored him, shooting a 69 compared to Bradley's 70 — which was not the most propitious omen. Against that, Bradley's showing here should be put in the context that he has missed the cut at his previous five appearances at The Open. He shot a three under par 68 on Friday and said it was the best round he had played at the tournament 'in a very long time'. Bradley's solid start kept him in the mix at the Open but will he pick himself for the Ryder Cup? After he sunk that birdie on the 6th, Bradley walked down the steep, grassy path to the 7th tee and looked up at the groups of spectators ranged high on the dunes that funnel the fairway towards the green. The binoculars that they held up to their eyes were not trained on him. They were trained on the group ahead and, specifically, they were trained on Rory McIlroy, who had a chance for eagle. By then, the golf course was in thrall to its local hero as he raced up the leaderboard and Bradley had a front row seat. It was his fate on Saturday to be in the group behind McIlroy and English player Jordan Smith and to feel the passion and the popularity that Europe's Ryder Cup leader can generate with the brilliance of his game and the power of his personality. McIlroy, of course, will not have the same fanatical support he has enjoyed here in his homeland over the last few days when Europe take on Bradley's USA team at Bethpage Black, near New York, in the last weekend of September in front of a hostile, partisan, US crowd. But Bradley spent the afternoon listening to the roars that rolled over the course as McIlroy shot a brilliant 66, the highlight of a which was a mammoth 56ft putt for eagle on the par-5 12th, which helped to push him towards the top of the leaderboard. Bradley's consolation in all this was that Scottie Scheffler, the jewel in the crown of the US team, was still sitting serenely at the head of the pack, apparently impervious to any pressure that McIlroy or Matt Fitzpatrick tried to exert on him. Bradley, 39, finished the day on -4 and if he maintains his form on Sunday, he will gain ground on both Ben Griffin and Collin Morikawa, who are immediately ahead of him in the US Ryder Cup rankings. It would continue an impressive run of form for the Vermont native, who had runner-up finishes last season at the Sony Open in Hawaii and the Charles Schwab Challenge before he won the BMW Championship. He made a strong start to this year with five top-20 finishes in his first seven starts, tied for eighth at the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow and then came from three back with four holes to play to claim a one-shot victory at the Travelers Championship last month at TPC River Highlands. After The Open, the build-up to the Ryder Cup will begin in earnest and now that it is only two months away, the obsession with whether Bradley will play and, if he does, whether he will retain the captaincy, is growingand growing. 'Being inside the ropes is almost like a sanctuary,' he said recently. 'One of the things of being a captain is when I get inside the ropes, I can really focus on just playing. Normally when I leave the tournament, I'm still hyper-focused on what I did that day, what's coming up or what swing thought I'm working on. 'Now I leave just focused on the Ryder Cup. Worrying about my own game has been taken over and I think that helps. I do know that nothing about picking the team is going to be easy. 'If I get to that position where I finish outside the top six but I feel like I'm going to help the team, then I'll consider playing. But I get asked that question 10 times a day and I still don't really have an answer.' Some things are becoming clearer, mostly that Scheffler and McIlroy will be titanic leaders for the US and Europe at Bethpage Black. But Bradley's role is still mired in doubt. The US team may be searching for some clarity about whether Bradley will play as well as captain, or just captain, or just play, but there is only confusion. A top 10 finish on Sunday remains very much within his reach. The rest, his performances keep saying, can wait.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Scheffler in Tiger-mode as he closes in on Open
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland, July 19 (Reuters) - The last nine times American Scottie Scheffler has led after 54 holes on the PGA Tour, he has closed out the victory and there is no reason to suggest he will not make that a perfect 10 at the British Open on Sunday. The 29-year-old world number one extended his lead from one to four strokes with a calm and collected bogey-free round of 67 on a picture-perfect Royal Portrush course on Saturday. Barring a nonchalant eagle at the par-five seventh, he left the chasing pack to provide the fireworks as he displayed the sort of Zen-like focus once associated with 15-time major winner Tiger Woods in his pomp to seize control. Scheffler also led after 54 holes in all of his three major wins and while he will be taking nothing for granted on Sunday, someone will surely have to do something special to stop him. "Your guess is as good as mine," Scheffler, the first world number one to lead the Open at the halfway stage since Woods in 2006, said when asked why he has become such a good finisher. "I like being out here competing. This is why we work so hard is to have opportunities like this, and I'm excited for the challenge of tomorrow. Winning major championships is not an easy task, and I've put myself in a good position. "Going into tomorrow I'm going to step up there on the first tee and I'm going to be trying to get the ball in the fairway, and when I get to the second shot I'm going to be trying to get that ball on the green. There's not much else going on." That simple mantra has worked wonders on Portrush's Dunluce Links. He has made only three bogeys in three rounds -- a figure matched only by China's Li Haotong who is his nearest challenger ahead of Sunday's finale on the Antrim coast. After Friday's majestic round of seven-under 64, the lowest of the week, Saturday was about making sure he consolidated having built a strong foundation. With eagles and birdies being sunk all across the course, Scheffler took a while to get going but just when the field began to sense an opportunity, he eagled the seventh thanks to a sublime approach shot and then birdied the eighth. He then dug in, making a vital par-save from 10 feet on the 11th hole after a rare missed green. "I think the card could look stress-free, but I had two really nice par saves on the back nine that were key," he said. "I made a nice eight-ish footer on 11, another one on 14, so two really important putts I felt like. "I think anytime you can keep a clean card around a major championship, you're going to be having a pretty good day." Scheffler, whose tied seventh last year at Troon was his previous best Open result, knows there is still plenty of work to do, but he is looking immovable. Home favourite Rory McIlroy, who will start six shots back in a tie for fourth, said he was not surprised by Scheffler's display so far. "He's playing like Scottie. Everyone's seen the way he's played over the past two or three years. He's just so solid. He doesn't make mistakes," McIlroy said. "He's turned himself into a really consistent putter as well, so there doesn't seem to be any weakness there. Whenever you're chasing down a guy like that, it's hard to do. "He's incredibly impressive."