Things to know about the Claret Jug, awarded to the British Open winner

The Champion Golfer of the Year earns a big paycheck and of course the Claret Jug.

The Champion Golfer of the Year, aka the winner of the British Open, earns a large sum of money, many accolades and the historic Claret Jug. OK, not the Claret Jug. We can explain.

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There have been 151 Opens contested over the years but the trophy wasn’t yet created for the first nearly dozen tournaments.

And did you know that the Claret Jug has a lesser-known formal name of The Golf Champion Trophy?

But what about the trophy? Here are some more interesting facts about the Claret Jug.

Brian Harman shows off Claret Jug to Georgia football coach Kirby Smart, then hits Braves game

Harman had a chance to sit in a football team meeting, but Smart didn’t make a big deal about it.

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British Open champion Brian Harman was back at his old stomping grounds in Athens Monday ahead of playing in the Tour Championship starting Thursday in Atlanta.

“I got to take a picture with the jug,” Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said on 960 The Ref. “I got to see that. Pretty cool. I didn’t drink anything out of it.”

That would be the Claret Jug that Harman won at the Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England, joining two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson as former Georgia golfers to win a major championship.

Harman had a chance to sit in a football team meeting, but Smart didn’t make a big deal about it.

“I wanted to introduce him to the team, but I was afraid nobody would know who he was,” Smart said.

After Harman won the trophy at Hoylake, the 36-year-old Savannah native said he was inspired by words Georgia football coach Kirby Smart said prior to last season.

“I was a wreck,” Harman said, according to the Golf Channel. “I mean, I’ve been a wreck the whole week. But … I kept thinking about something Kirby Smart said, ‘I’m not gonna be hunted; I’m gonna hunt.'”

Harman, 36, never let up after holding the lead after the second and third rounds. He entered Sunday with a five-stroke cushion at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England and lifted the Claret Jug after winning by six.

“Dawgs on top! Congrats @harmanbrian,” Smart tweeted after the victory “Let’s celebrate this fall!”

Harman told reporters after his win that he’s impressed with how Smart has handled success.

“I’ve always kind of — I just always pay attention when really successful people talk,” he said. “There’s always clues there as to how they feel. I’ve always admired the fact that even with all the success that he’s had, it’s all about the next play, the next game, the next week of practice. He knows that the results come because of what you do in the trenches.”

After showing off the trophy to Smart and others on the Georgia campus on Monday, Harman added another big moment on Tuesday night when he threw out the first pitch at the Atlanta Braves game against the New York Mets.

Harman tees off at 1:27 p.m. on Thursday with Patrick Cantlay at the East Lake Golf Club.

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Yasir Al-Rumayyan, R&A’s Martin Slumbers secretly met during 2023 British Open

R&A officials confirmed the meeting but would not provide comment on a private discussion.

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Brian Harman’s stellar performance to lift the Claret Jug and claim the 2023 Open Championship last week provided a break from the ongoing news surrounding the pending deal between the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

However, during Sunday’s final round, PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan and associate Amanda Staveley met with R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England. The news was first reported by the Telegraph and confirmed by Golfweek, though R&A officials would not provide comment on a private discussion.

Al-Rumayyan and Staveley were secretly brought to the property with the help of an R&A sponsor, but reports state the meeting was more “symbolic than substantive.”

Slumbers spoke about Saudi money and its place in golf last week ahead of the opening round of the final men’s major championship of the year, saying he was “very open” to talk to “various potential sponsors.”

“We have a number of large corporate partners that help us make this thing happen. I think the world has changed in the last year. It’s not just golf. You’re seeing it in (soccer). You’re seeing it in F1. You’re seeing it in cricket. I’m sure tennis won’t be that far behind,” said Slumbers. “The world of sport has changed dramatically in the last 12 months, and it is not feasible for the R&A or golf to just ignore what is a societal change on a global basis. We will be considering within all the parameters that we look at all the options that we have.’’

Newcastle United’s chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan (L) and minority owner Amanda Staveley (C) and Manchester United co-chairman Avram Glazer (R) before a match at Wembley Stadium on February 26, 2023. (Photo by Glyn Kirk/AFP)

Due to the PIF being its primary and longtime sole investor, LIV Golf was criticized as just another way for Saudi Arabia to “sportswash” its controversial human rights record, same with the PIF’s purchase of Premier League team Newcastle United, of which Al-Rumayyan is the chairman and Staveley is a co-investor.

British Open champ Brian Harman can’t wait to mow grass on his new tractor

Brian Harman loves the outdoors and not just for playing golf.

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Brian Harman loves the outdoors and not just for playing golf. Long known as an avid hunter, Harman has some land that requires tending, and he’s got just the machine for the job.

“I had a nice week a couple weeks ago and I bought a new tractor for my hunting place, so I’ll get home and I’ll be on the tractor mowing grass in the next few weeks, so I’m excited about that,” Harman said Sunday in the media center with Claret Jug by his side, basking in the glow of his victory at the 2023 Open Championship.

The assembled media at Royal Liverpool peppered Harman with questions all week about hunting, one of his main off-course pursuits, but Sunday’s media session also included talk of his big new piece of equipment.

“So that’s going to be the reward, you’re going ride your tractor?,” one scribe asked.

“Yeah. Just put my phone away and go get on the tractor,” he said.

“Could you tell us a little bit more about your tractor, please?”

“I haven’t seen it yet,” Harman said. “It’s on order. It’s a 105 horse Kubota tractor and it’s going to be a pretty one.”

“What color?

“Orange.”

“How many acres will you mow?”

“Let’s see, we’ve got about 25 acres of food plots that need, and, gosh, I don’t know how many miles of roads, but I’d call it probably 40 acres total that needs to get mowed.”

“I’ve never known an Open Champion to celebrate by mowing grass on a tractor,” said a reporter.

“I’ve got a lot of layers, man. I’m like an onion.”

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Brian Harman credits a training aid for epic putting week at 2023 British Open

After the third round, Brian Harman didn’t want to give away any trade secrets.

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HOYLAKE, England — After Saturday’s third round, NBC’s Cara Banks asked leader Brian Harman what he credited his remarkable putting performance to, but Harman was holding his cards close to the vest. He didn’t want to give away any trade secrets.

But after rolling to a six-stroke victory on Sunday to hoist the Claret Jug, Harman finally revealed the key to his improved putting. He has been using a training aid to help with his stroke.

“It’s a silly looking mirror where it’s got like a little better release pattern,” said Harman, who couldn’t recall what tournament he picked it up but pulled it out of the barn of his farmhouse recently. “I was just kind of cutting my putts too much. I spent a lot of time just feeling the ball, almost hitting like a baby draw with my putter, and it’s been really, really good the last month or so.”

Prior to using the device, which he didn’t name but it appears to be the Short Game Gains Putting Mirror, Harman said he had been considering benching his TaylorMade Spider putter, but said that it won’t be leaving the bag any time soon after his putting performance this week. He took just 23 putts  Thursday and 26 on Friday and his 106 total putts were the fewest by the winner of the British Open in the last 20 years.

Harman led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting (+11.57). He finally missed  a putt on Sunday from inside 10 feet but he still went an impressive 58 for 59 putting from 10 feet and in. That is rolling your rock.

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Rory McIlroy’s long and winding road at the majors hits another hurdle

In 266 days, he can start all over and resume his majors quest at the Masters.

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HOYLAKE, England — The Long and Winding Road is a favorite Beatles song from the beloved group out of nearby Liverpool but it could also describe Rory McIlroy’s pursuit of a major championship during the last nine years.

McIlroy, who won his third of four majors at Royal Liverpool in 2014, shot a final-round 3-under 68 to finish at 6-under 278 and tied for sixth place.

“Solid performance,” McIlroy said. “Improved on my score every day. Yeah, I missed a few putts yesterday. Felt like I putted a bit better today. It was just hard. I needed to go out and shoot something 63, 64-ish, but really hard to do that in those conditions.”

McIlroy raced out to three birdies in a row beginning at the third hole to mount a bit of a charge but a bogey at No. 10 and another at No. 16 were killers.

“I got off to a really good start but it’s just hard to keep that going,” McIlroy said.

McIlroy missed the cut at the Masters, finished T-7 at the PGA Championship and was second at the U.S. Open.

“Solid performance, not spectacular, but a lot of optimism going into the rest of the year,” he said. “I can’t sit here and be too frustrated. You think about my performances in the majors between like 2016 and 2019, it’s a lot better than that.”

While there were encouraging signs along the way, the winless draught persists.

“Never saw this coming,” said NBC’s Paul Azinger, winner of the 1993 PGA Championship. “When he won his fourth major, it looked like the sky was the limit, he might win nine or 10.”

Jack Nicklaus predicted that McIlroy, 25 at the time, was on track to win 18 majors. Yet, nine years later, for all his successes, he’s still stuck on four. Who would’ve thought he’d go 34 majors without a major during his prime – all the while winning 15 Tour titles, including the Players Championship, two FedEx Cup titles and multiple stints at world No. 1. He’s recorded 20 top-10 finishes at the majors, including seven of his last eight.

McIlroy said he won’t dwell on this being another lost year at the majors and is focused on what is still to come.

“I think about trying to go and win a fourth FedEx Cup here in a couple weeks’ time, go try and win a fifth Race to Dubai, go and win a fifth Ryder Cup,” he said. “I just keep looking forward.”

In 266 days, he can start all over and resume his majors quest at the Masters.

2023 British Open prize money payouts at Royal Liverpool

The final men’s major of the year paid out $3 million for first place.

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HOYLAKE, England — In addition to custody of the Claret Jug and the title of Champion Golfer of the Year, Brian Harman became a $30-million man on Sunday.

Harman, 36, banked $3 million, the largest winner’s check in the history of the British Open, and crossed $30 million in career earnings after winning his first major championship. Harman entered the week ranked No. 46 on the career PGA Tour money list with $28,967,672.

The R&A announced that the total prize fund for the 2023 Open was $16.5 million, an 18 percent increase from a year ago and nearly double the purse from 2016.

The top 31 finishers all made six figures for their four days of work. Even golfers who failed to make the cut didn’t go home empty-handed. The leading 10 professionals and ties made $12,000; the next 20 professional golfers and ties $10,000; and the remainder of professional golfers and ties $8,500.

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2023 British Open prize money

Pos Golfer Score Earnings
1 Brian Harman -13 $3,000,000
T2 Tom Kim -7 $1,084,625
T2 Sepp Straka -7 $1,084,625
T2 Jason Day -7 $1,084,625
T2 Jon Rahm -7 $1,084,625
T6 Rory McIlroy -6 $551,250
T6 Emiliano Grillo -6 $551,250
T8 Shubhankar Sharma -5 $403,350
T8 Cameron Young -5 $403,350
T10 Max Homa -4 $308,400
T10 Matthew Jordan -4 $308,400
T10 Tommy Fleetwood -4 $308,400
T13 Henrik Stenson -3 $232,875
T13 Hideki Matsuyama -3 $232,875
T13 Thomas Detry -3 $232,875
T13 Viktor Hovland -3 $232,875
T17 Laurie Canter -2 $187,900
T17 Xander Schauffele -2 $187,900
T17 Alex Fitzpatrick -2 $187,900
T20 Tyrrell Hatton -1 $163,067
T20 Sungae Im -1 $163,067
T20 Antoine Rozner -1 $163,067
T23 Adrian Meronk E $121,500
T23 Scottie Scheffler E $121,500
T23 Matthew Southgate E $121,500
T23 Louis Oosthuizen E $121,500
T23 Alex Noren E $121,500
T23 Stewart Cink E $121,500
T23 Byeong Hun An E $121,500
T23 Rickie Fowler E $121,500
T23 Jordan Spieth E $121,500
T23 Nicolai Hojgaard E $121,500
T33 Adam Scott +1 $84,112
T33 Oliver Wilson +1 $84,112
T33 Wyndham Clark +1 $84,112
T33 Richard Bland +1 $84,112
T33 Patrick Reed +1 $84,112
T33 Cameron Smith +1 $84,112
T33 Patrick Cantlay +1 $84,112
T33 Romain Langasque +1 $84,112
T41 Marcel Siem +2 $58,725
T41 Victor Perez +2 $58,725
T41 Hurly Long +2 $58,725
T41 Jordan Smith +2 $58,725
T41 J.T. Poston +2 $58,725
T41 Alexander Bjork +2 $58,725
T41 Min Woo Lee +2 $58,725
T41 Matt Fitzpatrick +2 $58,725
T49 Christiaan Bezuidenhout +3 $45,933
T49 Abraham Ancer +3 $45,933
T49 Brendon Todd +3 $45,933
T52 Ryan Fox +4 $43,433
T52 Michael Stewart +4 $43,433
T52 Corey Conners +4 $43,433
T55 Andrew Putnam +5 $41,375
T55 Adrian Otaegui +5 $41,375
T55 Gary Woodland +5 $41,375
T55 Zach Johnson +5 $41,375
59 Brandon Robinson Thompson +6 $40,500
T60 Scott Stallings +7 $39,900
T60 Bryson DeChambeau +7 $39,900
T60 Kurt Kitayama +7 $39,900
T60 Rikuya Hoshino +7 $39,900
T64 Padraig Harrington +8 $39,025
T64 Brooks Koepka +8 $39,025
T64 Richie Ramsay +8 $39,025
T64 Guido Migliozzi +8 $39,025
T68 Danny Willett $9 $38,033
T68 David Lingmerth +9 $38,033
T68 Sami Valimaki +9 $38,033
T71 Robert MacIntyre +10 $37,550
T71 Joost Luiten +10 $37,550
T71 Thomas Pieters +10 $37,550
T74 Christo Lamprecht (a) +11 $0
T74 Thriston Lawrence +11 $37,300
76 Zack Fischer +13 $37,175

 

Lynch: What rain? Gritty Open champs don’t get washed away by lousy weather

Harman summoned the holy trinity of attributes that have been required on foul days at golf’s oldest major.

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HOYLAKE, England — Sunday afternoon at Royal Liverpool brought weather as persistently disagreeable as a drunk at a Saturday night bar, but only for competitors. For spectators, it was a minor annoyance. And for hardcore fans, it was a welcome 11th-hour arrival of authentic Open conditions, weather in which you’d think twice about leaving even Brandel Chamblee outdoors.

As morning mist turned to steady rain, it summoned the holy trinity of attributes that have been required on foul days at golf’s oldest major since Old Tom Morris first wrung out his tweed suit: attitude, aptitude and fortitude.

Attitude: a positive mindset before a shot is struck, a determination to push forward and not retrench.

Aptitude: learning from and adapting to varying conditions; forgetting stock shots and yardages and letting the inner artist – heck, the inner survivor – take over.

Fortitude: gut punches are coming, whether through missed putts, crappy bounces or ill-timed gusts; absorb them, move on.

Each individual trait is necessary, but useless without the other two.

If these elements were fed into Chat GPT with a request for an identikit image of someone who embodies them, it might generate a weathered face with an unmistakeable flintiness, and with a gleam in the eye. In short, you’d be looking at Tom Watson.

Watson says he didn’t truly appreciate links golf until 1981. It speaks volumes about his attitude, aptitude and fortitude that he’d already won three Claret Jugs by that time – more than the two he added after he learned to love the ground game. His resolve didn’t just show up in the British Isles. It produced one of the greatest rounds in golf history, though one often overlooked. In the rain-soaked second round of the 1979 Memorial, with a wind chill hovering at 13 degrees, 42 of 105 players didn’t break 80. One didn’t crack 90. Watson shot 69, missing only two greens and making no bogeys.

On Sunday, I reached out to Watson to ask how he approached final rounds at the Open in detestable weather. “Frankly, bad weather reduced the number of people who could win,” he said. “Some just couldn’t deal with and adjust to the bad conditions.”

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That’s the essence of a hall of famer, and the greatest links golfer of the last half-century. While others looked despairingly at the sky, his eyes never left the prize.

As the final round trudged on through growing puddles at Royal Liverpool, there was a degree of correlation between a player’s disposition and his score.

“It’s kind of sadistic to play in this kind of weather.” Thomas Pieters, 80.

“It was pretty brutal. Didn’t really have the mindset of it’s going that wet for that long.” Min Woo Lee, 75.

“These are not my conditions. I’ve always struggled a little bit in the rain. I fight grip slips and water balls off the tee.” Ryan Fox, 74.

“The umbrella to the glove to the yardage book to the umbrella, it just gets tiring holding the dang thing and shuffling it around… But if that’s the worst part of the day, it’s not so bad.” Max Homa, 69.

“I like it because a lot of people are going to complain about it, so you just have to accept it and be ready for it more mentally than physically.” Adrian Meronk, 67.

Vowing to be positive, adaptable and resolute is easy until a peg goes in the turf. Delivering on the intention is quite another. I asked Shane Lowry how he readied himself for the final round at Royal Portush in 2019, which he entered with a four-stroke lead knowing that lousy weather was coming.

“I felt going out that I had to be aggressive, that if I made four birdies I wouldn’t be beaten,” he replied. “And if I got in trouble to make bogey at worst. That’s pretty much the way it is for Harman today.” Lowry went on to win by six and Harman basically mirrored his game plan at Hoylake. A smattering of bogeys, but nothing worse, and enough birdies to offset any damage.

Harman is 5-foot-7 and on this day, in these conditions, joined an illustrious list of golfers of shorter stature who proved to be all grit. Like Gary Player, Ian Woosnam and Corey Pavin. He proved anew what all of them did before, that nothing is out of reach if you have the right attitude, not even the greatest trophy in the game.

Brian Harman wins first major, claims 2023 British Open at Royal Liverpool

Harman passed his biggest test on Sunday.

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HOYLAKE, England – Brian Harman skipped football practice one day when he was 11 years old. His mother, Nancy, drove him from their home in Savannah, Georgia, to Sea Island, Georgia, where he took an hour-long lesson from Jack Lumpkin, a fixture on every list of top golf instructors. Growing up on a golf course, Harman had picked up the game on his own and showed raw potential, but he wanted to find out what one of the best teachers thought of his ability.

“He didn’t tell me to get lost,” Harman recalled. “He told me I was doing well and come back in a few months and he’d check me again. For me, that was like a rite of passage.”

Harman passed his biggest test on Sunday, enduring a typical English summer day of a steady rain and a rocky start to shoot 1-under 70 at Royal Liverpool and win the 151st British Open by six strokes over Tom Kim (67), Sepp Straka (69), Jason Day (69) and Jon Rahm (70).

At 5-feet-7, Harman is one of the shorter players on Tour, but it hasn’t stopped him from beating competitors that are bigger and stronger. All his life he’s been told he’s too small, but Harman’s never paid attention. Instead, it served as motivation to prove them wrong. Asked once how long he’s played with a chip on his shoulder, Harman, said, “I think since my dad dropped me off at football practice and told me to not be disappointed if I didn’t get to play at all. I played a lot.”

Open Championship 2023Leaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

Gifted with an all-around game and a silky-smooth putting stroke, he’ll never be confused for one of the game’s long knockers, but his hard work and bulldog mentality helped him win two previous PGA Tour titles heading into this week. He proudly noted that this will be the 12th straight year that he’s qualified for the FedEx Cup Playoffs, something only eight other players can stake claim to and only five of them are on track to do so this season. World Golf Hall of Famer Davis Love III has watched Harman blossom over the years and has been one of his biggest cheerleaders.

“He’s a lot like Jeff Sluman. He has that mentality of, I may not be the biggest guy out here, but I’m going to be the toughest,” Love said.

Harman, however, had been the leader of a dubious distinction: he’s been a top-10 machine but hasn’t won since the 2017 Wells Fargo Championship, recording 29 top-10s since the start of the 2017-18 PGA Tour season, the most of any player without a win in that span.

“It’s been hard to deal with,” he said. “That’s a lot of times where you get done, you’re like, ‘Dammit, man, I had that one.’…Like when is it going to be my turn again?”

Asked on Friday after he built a five-stroke lead with a bogey-free 65 to explain why he hasn’t won more often, Harman said he wished he knew.

“I think about it a lot, obviously,” he said. “I don’t know why it hasn’t happened, but I’m not going to quit.”

After a sluggish start on Saturday, Harman tacked on a third-round 69, his first 54-hole lead at a major since the 2017 U.S. Open, where he faltered on the final day. Harman learned from that experience, where he felt as if the day moved too quickly and he let his mind wander. Likewise, it took several years but Harman, who played his first British Open at Royal Liverpool in 2014 and then missed the cut four consecutive times, figured out how his game could translate to the linksland.

On Sunday, with the sky a milky gray that made it difficult to see the Dee Estuary from the 11th hole let alone the north of Wales in the distance, Harman made an early bogey at the second and another at the fifth after he drove into a gorse bush. After Masters champ Jon Rahm made birdie ahead of him, Harman’s lead was trimmed to three.

That’s when Harman proved his toughness. A round earlier when he stumbled with his second straight bogey at the third hole, he passed a spectator who said, “Harman, you don’t have the stones for this.”

“It helped snap me back into I’m good enough to do this, I’m going to do this,” Harman said.

That he did. He settled his nerves and responded with back-to-back birdies at Nos. 6, where he struck a 5-iron to 14 feet, and 7 where he sank a 23-footer.

Harman led the field in fairways hit and avoided the dreaded pot bunkers. But thanks to using a training aid to fix his tendency to cut putts, his putter was his sword and his savior in becoming the Champion Golfer of the Year. He led the field in putting for the week, his 106 putts the fewest by a winner in the last 20 years. On one of the few occasions when he missed at No. 13 and made bogey, he buried a 37-foot birdie putt one hole later and an 8-foot birdie at 15 for good measure as his lead stretched back to five shots. He signed for a 72-hole total of 13-under 271 and his third career PGA Tour title and first in his last 168 starts.

“He’s a gritty player,” NBC’s Paul Azinger said. “The kind of guy if you handed him a pocket-knife and a book of matches and sent him off into the jungle, you’d find him a month later doing just fine.”

Harman, who hunts for elk and nine-point bucks with a bow and arrow in his spare time, detailed how after missing the cut at the Masters in April he blew off steam over the weekend by hunting for turkeys and pigs. Harman’s prowess with a bow and arrow drew the following question from a reporter on Friday: “I take it the sheep and the cows are safe around here at the moment, are they?”

“Sheep don’t taste as good as the turkeys do, I would imagine,” he said.

Harman was tabbed the “Butcher of Hoylake,” by one British tabloid, a nickname, which he said he approved.

“That made me chuckle,” he said. “Someone texted me that yesterday. That’s funny.”

The hunter became the hunted, but nobody could get him in their crosshairs. He simply carved up the field and Royal Liverpool with his combination of accuracy off the tee and a red-hot putter.

“If everything else is good, then (his game) can be pretty lethal,” Zach Johnson said.

2023 Open Championship
Brian Harman celebrates after putting on the 14th green during the final round of the 151st Open at Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

Harman began working with instructor Justin Parsons in recent years but always kept Lumpkin, who died last year at 86, involved as a member of his team.

“Brian can’t replace Jack as a friend or mentor,” said Love III, who won a major under Lumpkin’s watchful eye. “But Justin has really made a difference for him, an overall golf coach not just a swing coach.”

That initial lesson all those years ago with Harman was equally as meaningful for Lumpkin, who knew talent when he’d seen it and from Harman’s very first swing knew he’d seen something special.

“He had a look in his eyes that he wanted to be a great player,” Lumpkin told Golfweek a few years ago. “After that first lesson, I couldn’t wait to see him again. His mom used to bring him down twice a year in the early days and I used to wait to see his name in my lesson book because I just knew how good he was going to be.”

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Brian Harman, ‘The Butcher of Hoylake,’ holds 5-stroke lead at 2023 British Open among third-round takeaways

“You’d be foolish not to envision, and I’ve thought about winning majors for my whole entire life.”

HOYLAKE, England — Brian Harman said Friday you don’t get to pick your nickname, but he approved of a British tabloid tabbing him “The Butcher of Hoylake.”

“I like that one better than the Harmanator,” said Harman, who enjoys hunting for animals in his spare time. “That made me chuckle. Someone texted me that yesterday. That’s funny.”

On Saturday, Harman, 36, continued to carve up Royal Liverpool, signing for 2-under 69 to maintain a five-stroke lead over Cameron Young heading into the final round of the 151st British Open.

Harman overcame a shaky start, making bogeys at the first and fourth hole. Just like that, his five-stroke overnight lead was trimmed to two strokes over Jon Rahm, who shot a bogey-free 63. But Harman bounced back with birdies at the fifth and ninth to return to double-figures under par and shoot even-par 35 on the opening nine.

“It would have been really easy to let the wheels start spinning and really kind of let it get out of control, but I just kind of doubled down on my routine and knew I was hitting it well, even though I hadn’t hit any good shots yet,” he said. “Really proud of the way that I hung in there.”

He continued hunting for birdies, sticking his approach at the par-4 12th to 5 feet and rolled in the birdie putt. Harman complained that his TaylorMade Daddy Longlegs putter was misbehaving not long ago and he considered benching it, but it has been more friend than foe — he’s 44-for-44 from inside 10 feet this week. He drained a 20-foot birdie putt at the par-3 13th and finished with five straight pars to card a 2-under 69 and a 54-hole total of 12-under 201.

Harman enjoyed a celebrated junior and amateur career, including playing on a winning U.S. Walker Cup team, and has won twice on the PGA Tour, but when asked to name his biggest achievement in the game, he noted that he has qualified for the FedEx Cup playoffs the last 12 straight years, an accomplishment achieved by only eight other players. (Harman is one of five on track to make it again.) It speaks to his consistency, but also to the fact that he has never really won any of the biggest events in the game. He slept on a 54-hole lead at a major once before at the 2017 U.S. Open at Erin Hills, but he didn’t have a five-stroke lead that time. This is unchartered territory.

Open Championship 2023Leaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

“You’d be foolish not to envision, and I’ve thought about winning majors for my whole entire life. It’s the whole reason I work as hard as I do and why I practice as much as I do and why I sacrifice as much as I do,” he said. “Tomorrow if that’s going to come to fruition for me, it has to be all about the golf. It has to be execution and just staying in the moment.”

Will the butcher’s blade run dull by the end of the championship?

“I feel like he’s not someone to back down,” Young, his closest pursuer, said. “With the lead he has right now, it’s not necessarily going to be up to me tomorrow. It’s just really time for me to focus on myself and see where that gets me.”

Harman is the 12th player in the last 40 years to hold a 54-hole lead of five strokes or more in a major championship; the leader has converted to victory nine times in the previous 11 attempts. NBC’s Curt Byrum noted Harman showed Saturday he has the mental toughness to stand up to whatever adversity he may face in the final round.

“Today may have been as big a hurdle as tomorrow might be. As hard as it is going to be for him with the expectations and the big lead to go on and win,” he said, “I think he’s going to be really tough to catch.”

Here are four more things to know about the third round of the British Open.