logo
Who will hit the 2025 British Open's first tee shot? The only two-time winner in the field

Who will hit the 2025 British Open's first tee shot? The only two-time winner in the field

USA Today16-07-2025
There are 16 past champions playing in the 2025 British Open Championship at Royal Portrush. Only one of them is a two-time winner of the Claret Jug.
Padriag Harrington won the Claret Jug in back-to-back years (2007, 2008) and he's the most recent golfer to pull off that feat. He was also the first European golfer to do it more than 100 years.
Who will hit the first tee shot at the 2025 British Open Championship?
So it's only fitting that Harrington, who's grouped with Nicoloai Hojgaard and Tom McKibbin at 1:35 a.m. ET (6:35 a.m. local time in Scotland), will be the first to hit in Thursday's first round.
And while Harrington wasn't among the 10 golfers to hold an official pre-tournament news conference, he did hold an impromptu media session during his practice round on Thursday. He quipped there's no such thing as a bad links golf course and compared it to whiskey, essentially saying there's no bad whiskey, there's just some better than others.
At about 10 p.m. local time Wednesday in Scotland, Harrington posted a screenshot of the 4 a.m. alarm he set on his iPhone. You can bet there's no way he's missing his tee time at Royal Portrush on Thursday morning.
Harrington is one of just 11 men to win the Open in consecutive years. The others:
Tiger Woods (2005, 2006), Tom Watson (1982, 1983), Lee Trevino (1971, 1972), Arnold Palmer (1961, 1962), Peter Thomson, (1954, 1955, 1956), Bobby Locke (1950, 1951), Walter Hagen (1928, 1929), Bobby Jones (1926, 1927), James Braid (1905, 1906), Harry Vardon (1898, 1899), JH Taylor (1894, 1895), Bob Ferguson (1880, 1881, 1882), Jamie Anderson (1877, 1878, 1879), Young Tom Morris Jr. (1868, 1869, 1870, 1872), Old Tom Morris (1862, 1862). Note: Young Tom Morris didn't get a chance to defend in 1871 as that year's open was canceled.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ian Baker-Finch to sign off from CBS today at Wyndham Championship after 30 years in TV
Ian Baker-Finch to sign off from CBS today at Wyndham Championship after 30 years in TV

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Ian Baker-Finch to sign off from CBS today at Wyndham Championship after 30 years in TV

GREENSBORO, N.C. – After 30 years of broadcasting the PGA Tour, Ian Baker-Finch signing off from CBS Sports on Sunday with the network's final broadcast of the season at the Wyndham Championship. 'Since I made the decision, it's the best I've felt in a long time,' he said. Baker-Finch said he began wrestling with the decision last year at the Masters and RBC Heritage when he realized it represented his 40th year either playing or announcing at those events. 'That's what sort of got me thinking, what's next?' he explained. During his playing career, his powerful swing and competitive spirit was his appeal. Later, his charming personality and soothing voice added to his legacy. The Australian won the 1991 British Open at Royal Birkdale as a player and after he lost his game just a few years later, he made a successful transition to announcing, spending the last 19 years with CBS. Coincidentally, his remarkable story is detailed in a fascinating authorized biography, Ian Baker-Finch: To Hell and Back, which is to be released officially on Monday. Baker-Finch was introduced to golf by his father, who along with his fellow farmers helped build Beerwah Golf Club, a nine-hole course built on 100 acres of pine forest in the Sunshine hinterland of Queensland a mere six miles from the family farm. Baker-Finch received his first clubs – a 2-wood, 3-, 5- and 7-iron and a putter – on his 12th birthday, and was the only student in his school to play the game. He worked at local farms to earn enough money to build a full set at $15 a club. He got his first matched set at age 14 and a year later, in 1975, he received Jack Nicklaus's instructional book Golf My Way, which became his golf bible, as a birthday present from his parents. From those humble beginnings, he left school at age 15 to pursue a career in the game. 'I had this dream of being a club pro, giving lessons and being part of the fabric of a club,' Baker-Finch recalled. 'I never thought I'd be an Open champion.' For many golf fans, the 1984 Open at St. Andrews represented Baker-Finch's first real splash on the world stage. He held a share of the 54-hole lead and played with Tom Watson in the final pairing before skying to 79. Jim Nantz, who would become his longtime friend and broadcast partner at CBS, remembers being dazzled by Baker-Finch's play. 'He was just 23 and you could tell he was going to be a star,' Nantz said. Baker-Finch would surpass his wildest dreams by winning the 1991 Open at Royal Birkdale. In the final round, Baker-Finch sank a 15-foot birdie at the par-3 seventh to go 5 under for the day. He looked up at the leaderboard as he walked to the eighth tee and realized he held a five-shot lead. 'I thought, 'Bloody hell, do not stuff it up from here. I will not be allowed back home,' ' he wrote in his biography. Pete Bender compared caddying for Baker-Finch that week to riding Secretariat, the champion thoroughbred racehorse, and all he had to do was hold on. During his victory speech, Baker-Finch said, 'The pain of the other couple of times when I had a chance to do it gave me the strength to do it today. I will cherish this trophy forever.' Within three years of his Open conquest, his game was in tatters. The 1993 Australian PGA Championship was the last of his 17 wins as a professional golfer. In 1995, he played in 15 tournaments on the PGA Tour and missed every single cut. He hit rock bottom at the 1997 Open at Troon, shooting 92 in the opening round and withdrew. At age 36, six years after being hailed as the Champion Golfer of the Year, his playing career was over. To this day, he regrets playing that round at Troon because the scar tissue became too deep. 'Had I not played that day,' he mused, 'I may have come back to playing but then that was the sliding door moment to the TV career.' Baker-Finch had dabbled in TV the year before while nursing injuries back home in Australia and served as the lead analyst for all four networks in his native land during the summer portion of the schedule as well contributing to the Open Championship for ABC. Its producer at the time, Jack Graham, called him and said, 'I know you would love to get back to playing but if you don't, you've got a job with us.' As a broadcaster, he was a gifted storyteller and determined to follow the principles of 'less is more.' He made a point to glean fresh information from players. 'There was always a warmth quotient,' said CBS's play-by-play commentator Jim Nantz. 'Everyone loves Ian. His genuine kindness always shone through.' 'Everything Finchy said had meaning and purpose,' said CBS executive producer of golf Sellers Shy. 'As our mate steps away, he leaves 19 memorable years at CBS Sports defined by integrity, excellence and kindness. Retirement is a fitting reward for someone who gave so much to the game – and to all of us.' Calling the fifth Green Jacket for Tiger Woods in 2019 and Rory McIlroy completing the career Grand Slam are among the highlights of his broadcasting career. When Adam Scott became the first Australian golfer to don the Green Jacket, Nantz threw the called to Baker-Finch, Scott's fellow Queenslander, who famously said, 'From Down Under to on top of the world, Jim.' Baker-Finch turns 65 in October, and his latest contract was set to expire. His desire to do the preparation required to broadcast at the highest level 23 weeks a year had waned. 'I don't ever want to get to the point where the producer and the team have to sort of legacy protect, if you will. I'm not there yet, but at nearly 65 you start feeling that way,' he said. Baker-Finch looks forward to traveling and enjoying various wine regions and playing more golf, 'and working on my game a little bit because that's what I love to do,' he said. He'll spend more time with wife Jenny and his daughters and grandchildren. The month of March he'll go to New Zealand as he and Jenny enjoyed this year plus three months in Australia, playing a bunch of golf in the Melbourne Sandbelt region while doing it all at his own pace. He'll keep his hands busy doing some golf course design work and still travel to several of golf's biggest events for meetings in his role as chairman of the board of the PGA of Australia. He expects his final broadcast to be an emotional one as the CBS broadcast team has become a second family and for three decades he's been one of the integral voices that make up the soundtrack of the game. 'I hope people saw me as someone who loved the game and respected the players and brought a calm and honest perspective to the coverage,' he said. 'It's never been about me. I'm sort of uncomfortable when something's about me. The love and support I've received since I went public with my retirement has been overwhelming. I do think there may be some on social media that'll say good riddance, we didn't like the accent, or we didn't like him or he was never tough enough on the players but that doesn't worry me. I think the majority will say, 'Hey, he did a good job. He loved the game. We'll miss him.' "

Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Newcastle: Son says emotional farewell in South Korea, Maddison suffers injury
Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Newcastle: Son says emotional farewell in South Korea, Maddison suffers injury

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 Newcastle: Son says emotional farewell in South Korea, Maddison suffers injury

Heung-min Son was given a guard of honor by both Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United players as he played what is expected to be his final minutes as a Spurs player. An emotional Son, 33, announced on Saturday that he is set to leave Spurs this summer after a decade with the north London club. It has been widely reported that he will join LAFC in Major League Soccer. The friendly in Seoul, South Korea finished 1-1 on Sunday with Brennan Johnson's early goal putting Spurs ahead — he of course hit Son's signature celebration — but Newcastle equalized before the break through Harvey Barnes. However, Son's farewell game ended on a sour note as his close friend James Maddison was stretchered off the pitch late on as the Spurs playmaker looked to have suffered a serious injury. Son gets standing ovation, guard of honor in Seoul, South Korea In his native South Korea on Sunday, Son started Spurs' friendly against Newcastle and was substituted in the second half. When that happened the players from both Spurs and Newcastle gave him a guard of honor off the pitch while the entire stadium rose to its feet to applaud Son. He was then mobbed by players and coaching staff on the sidelines too as one of the most popular players in Premier League history, no matter who you support, received a fitting farewell as a Spurs player. Son's legendary status at Spurs is confirmed after he captained them to the UEFA Europa League trophy last season, their first trophy in 17 years and first European trophy in 41 years. He will leave Spurs having scored 173 goals and adding 101 assists in 452 games as he became a club legend and the model of consistency. We're not crying, you are 🥹 Heung-Min Son waves goodbye to Tottenham Hotspur after an incredible 10 years with the club 🤍 Beautiful moment for Son as he is given a guard of honour while he walks off the pitch for what is likely to be the final time as a Spurs player ❤️🇰🇷 Seoul salutes a Spurs and Korean icon. Nice one, Sonny 🤍 Incredible moment as Son comes off for the last time for Spurs. The game stops, his team-mates all come to embrace their tearful captain before forming a guard of honour. He then comes off the pitch and all the subs and staff hug him. Frank deliberately made the sub separate.

Charley Hull Grinds To Contention In 'Really Good' Third Round At AIG Women's Open
Charley Hull Grinds To Contention In 'Really Good' Third Round At AIG Women's Open

Newsweek

time20 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Charley Hull Grinds To Contention In 'Really Good' Third Round At AIG Women's Open

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Charley Hull made the most of the so-called moving day at the AIG Women's Open and closed the gap to first place by six strokes. The Englishwoman fired a third-round 66, climbing more than 20 spots on the leaderboard and entering the title race. Hull's performance included seven birdies and a bogey. The two-time LPGA Tour winner particularly shone on the front nine, where she carded five birdies and no bogeys. In fact, this is Hull's best round at the AIG Women's Open in more than a decade. Her previous 66 came in the third round of the 2014 edition at Royal Birkdale. "Really good [round]," Hull told the reporters after her performance. "Just made birdies when I gave myself an opportunity to make a birdie, apart from the last hole." (She carded par on the 18th.) Charley Hull of England plays her second shot on the 16th hole during the third round of the AIG Women's Open 2025 at Royal Porthcawl Golf Club on August 02, 2025 in Bridgend, Wales. Charley Hull of England plays her second shot on the 16th hole during the third round of the AIG Women's Open 2025 at Royal Porthcawl Golf Club on August 02, 2025 in Bridgend, European star was pleased with the result, saying she likes the situation she's in. "I just kind of enjoy chasing," she said. "It's quite fun. I like it. It's more fun that way. I like hunting someone down. It was good fun, and see what she (Miyu Yamashita, the current leader) does this afternoon and just focus again tomorrow." Hull is trying to win her first major championship, or at least clinch her second career top-10 finish at the AIG Women's Open. She co-led the event at Walton Heath two years ago, but couldn't find her best golf in the final round and finished second, six strokes behind winner Lilia Vu. However, the 29-year-old wasn't the only one to make a significant jump on the leaderboard. A Lim Kim (5-under for the round), Andrea Lee (5-under), Minami Katsu (7-under), and Megan Khang (4-under) all climbed to within four shots of the leader. The situation was very different for World No. 1 Nelly Korda, who dropped more than 20 spots on the leaderboard after carding 2-over for the round. Korda is now tied for 36th with a 54-hole score of even par. Yamashita remains in the lead amid her rookie season on the LPGA Tour, having won the Q-School last December. She won eight tournaments on the Japanese professional tour before heading to America. More Golf: PGA Tour Fan Favorite Shoots Season-Low Round to Take Lead At Wyndham

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