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msudogs
Moderator
Registered: Nov 2005
Posts: 65535
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We have seen elite players win the Claret Jug at Royal Troon including Arnold Palmer (1962), Tom Watson (1982), and Henrik Stenson (2016), and we have also seen winners here like Mark Calcavecchia (1989), Justin Leonard (1995), and Todd Hamilton (2004). The Open is typically the most wide-open and unpredictable major championship because of the weather and links golf in general.
Despite the wide-open nature of this championship, Scottie Scheffler, four weeks removed from winning his sixth event of 2024 at the Travelers Championship, is a strong 5/1 favorite. Scheffler is the first player with six PGA TOUR wins before July since “The King” Arnold Palmer in 1962, who coincidentally enough won The Open at Royal Troon that same year.
McIlroy (8/1) won his lone Open ten years ago at Royal Liverpool, and it is now approaching a decade since his last major championship victory at the 2014 PGA. He looked like he would break that major drought last month at the U.S. Open before a late collapse allowed Bryson DeChambeau (14/1) to walk through the door and claim his second U.S. Open title.
Xander Schauffele (12/1) finally broke his major championship maiden, winning the PGA at Valhalla this past May.
Åberg (14/1) seemed to have the Scottish Open under control going into last Sunday’s final round but ended up posting the worst Strokes Gained numbers (-4.55 SG: Total, -3.90 SG: Tee-To-Green) in any round of his young career.
Morikawa (16/1) won The Open in 2021 and was in contention on Sunday, but like in the PGA, never could get anything going nor maintain any momentum.
A trio of Europeans – Jon Rahm. Tyrrell Hatton, and Tommy Fleetwood – reside at 25/1.
Brian Harman (66/1) was a long shot last year at Royal Liverpool but ran away to a six-stroke victory. Another 2023 long shot major champion was Wyndham Clark (2023 U.S. Open) who also is priced at 66/1.
Past winners of the Claret Jug in this field include McIlroy, Morikawa, Harman, Cameron Smith (40/1), Shane Lowry (40/1), Francesco Molinari (500/1), Jordan Spieth (80/1), Henrik Stenson (400/1), Zach Johnson (1000/1), Phil Mickelson (350/1), Ernie Els (1500/1), Darren Clarke (5000/1), Louis Oosthuizen (65/1), Stewart Cink (750/1), Padraig Harrington (350/1), Todd Hamilton (5000/1), Justin Leonard (5000/1), John Daly (5000/1), and Tiger Woods (200/1).
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07-17-24 08:22 AM |
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msudogs
Moderator
Registered: Nov 2005
Posts: 65535
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Royal Troon Golf Club is located in Troon, South Ayrshire, Scotland along the western coast and around 30 miles southwest of Glasgow, Scotland’s largest city. It was founded in 1878, and the Old Course was designed in 1888 by George Strath, a caddie of four-time Open champion Old Tom Morris and 1883 Open champion Willie Fernie. Five-time Champion Golfer of the Year (the title given to the winner of The Open) James Braid re-designed Royal Troon in 1923. The team of Martin Ebert and Tom Mackenzie have been the go-to duo for Open rotation courses in recent years to do renovations and restorations as they have worked on Royal Lytham & St. Annes, Royal Portrush, Turnberry, Royal St. George’s, Carnoustie, and Royal Liverpool. They also have worked here on Royal Troon both in 2016 and last year in preparation for this Open.
Royal Troon will play as Par 71 of 7,385 yards, which is almost 200 yards longer than the 2016 Open held here.
Some players will try to play bomb and gouge off the tee, but that can be dangerous with some fescue rough that can be deep and will be even thicker due to the warmer temperatures and rainfall over the last couple of months preceding this year’s Open. However, you cannot just rely on low stingers that could roll through the fairways.
As with most pure links courses, Royal Troon is no different in terms of being heavily potbunkered, especially in the fairways.
Compared to other courses in the Open rotation, the fairways are not overly wide and generous. If you recall, back in 2016, Henrik Stenson and Phil Mickelson essentially lapped the field here largely because they clubbed down and rarely hit drivers off the tee.
The Bentgrass/Poa mixed greens are on the small side (4,500 sq ft average) and tend to have smaller landing areas in the front and larger towards the back. These greens will run painfully slow and as low as 9.5 on the stimpmeter (especially when the wind is blowing) and 10.5 will be as fast as they run.
Courtesy of The Open’s official website, here is this year’s scorecard at Royal Troon as compared to the 2016 Open Championship:
Iona Stephen, a Scotland native who is a presenter and host on Sky Sports golf coverage, narrates a hole-by-hole flyover of Royal Troon Golf Club for Golf Digest here: Every Hole at Royal Troon Golf Club | Golf Digest (youtube.com)
As you can see on the scorecard and the video, the most unique and signature hole here at Royal Troon is the Par 3 8th, which measures at only 123 yards. It is known as the “Postage Stamp.” The green only measures 2,635 sq ft. It played at just 99 yards in the third round of the 2016 Open.
Royal Troon not only has the shortest hole in the Open rotation, but also the longest with the Par 5 6th named “Turnberry” at now 623 yards.
The 498-yard, Par 4 11th, known as “The Railway”, was once called by Arnold Palmer “the most dangerous hole I have ever seen” back in 1962. The hole features the Glasgow Central-to-Ayr railway line that runs hard up the right side. In 1962, Jack Nicklaus, who was then a TOUR rookie, made a quintuple bogey 10 on this hole for what was then a Par 5.
For the most part, the first six holes are the easiest group, the middle six (7-12) are unique and a bit more challenging, yet not overwhelming, and the final six holes are the most difficult, especially with windy conditions that go right into the players’ faces.
Not all links courses in the Open rotation are created the same. Royal Troon is probably most comparable to Royal Liverpool, Royal St. George’s, Royal Portrush, Carnoustie, and Muirfield.
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07-17-24 08:23 AM |
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msudogs
Moderator
Registered: Nov 2005
Posts: 65535
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Longshot Brian Harman, who had only two PGA TOUR victories to his credit and had not won anywhere since 2017, took control of The Open last year in the second round and never looked back. He built a five-shot lead heading into the weekend. In the third round, he bogeyed two of his first four holes and then made four birdies for the rest of his round to lead by five heading into Sunday, where he eventually won by six strokes.
2023: Brian Harman (-13/271), Royal Liverpool; 150/1
2022: Cameron Smith (-20/268), St. Andrews; 20/1
2021: Collin Morikawa (-15/265), Royal St. George’s; 40/1
2020: Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2019: Shane Lowry (-15/269), Royal Portrush; 70/1
2018: Francesco Molinari (-8/276), Carnoustie; 33/1
2017: Jordan Spieth (-12/268), Royal Birkdale; 16/1
2016: Henrik Stenson (-20/264), Royal Troon; 33/1
2015: Zach Johnson (-15/273), St. Andrews; 110/1*
2014: Rory McIlroy (-17/271), Royal Liverpool; 18/1
2013: Phil Mickelson (-3/281), Muirfield; 20/1
2012: Ernie Els (-7/273), Royal Lytham & St. Annes; 45/1
2011: Darren Clarke (-5/275), Royal St. George’s; 200/1
2010: Louis Oosthuizen (-16/272), St. Andrews; 250/1
Playoff win over Marc Leishman and Louis Oosthuizen – *
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07-17-24 08:23 AM |
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