Tiger Tracker: Follow Tiger Woods with shot-by-shot live updates from the second round of the 2022 Open Championship

Keep up with every shot from Tiger’s second round at the Old Course.

Tiger Woods struggled on Thursday afternoon and it all started with a water ball on the very first hole (thanks to his perfect tee shot finding a divot). His putter was cold and his iron play was subpar.

Friday, however, is another opportunity.

His second round at the Old Course for the 150th Open Championship will have to be a special one if he plans on hanging around for the weekend.

He tees off alongside Matt Fitzpatrick and Max Homa at 4:58 a.m. ET.

So, if you were asleep for his round, or you want to follow along, here’s Woods’ second round shot for shot.

2022 British Open: Pace of play of first round is ‘ridiculous,’ ‘insane,’ ‘just sad’

“It’s just a joke, isn’t it?” said reigning U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick of his round, which clocked in at 6 hours, 10 minutes.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – With apologies to the USGA’s sectional qualifying for the U.S. Open, the longest day of golf this year was the opening round of the 150th British Open at The Old Course.

“It’s just a joke, isn’t it?” said reigning U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick of his round alongside Tiger Woods and Max Homa, which clocked in at 6 hours, 10 minutes. “This just shouldn’t be happening ever in golf.”

Fitzpatrick nailed it, but he also conceded there was little to be done about it, given that with modern equipment seven of the par-4 holes are drivable, and the conditions had most everyone waiting on the tee to swing for the fences, often not even needing a club under a head cover.

“It’s the way the golf course is set up. It’s how firm it is. The way the golf course is designed. You’re crossing over a lot, and to get better angles and better lines, you’ve got to hit across all the fairways,” Fitzpatrick explained. “There’s nothing you can do unfortunately about it. It’s just sad more than anything. It’s just ridiculous.”

The morning wave turned in a brisk 5 hours and 30 minutes, by comparison. In the afternoon, there were some odd moments such as waving up Tiger’s group to tee off at the par-5 14th.

“Wait on the tee for a while and then they said we were going to hit up on them, and they let us drive, so, we hit our drive,” Homa said. “Then when we got up there, we waited 20 minutes for them to hit, which meant we had to wait another 20 after that for us to hit. It was very bizarre.”

Not just bizarre but the snail’s pace prevented players from finding any rhythm.

“I felt like everything was like choppy,” Homa said. “It was just an insane amount of waiting.”

The traffic jam got so bad that Homa’s group actually returned the favor and waved up the group of Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth and Harold Varner III at the 18th. At that point, were they really saving time? But this happened on several other holes, too, including the fifth, seventh, ninth and 12th.

Rory McIlroy was the most diplomatic when asked about the stop-start nature of the round.

“I think St Andrews is that way,” he said. “There’s a lot of crisscrossing and waiting on other greens and waiting on greens to clear because the drivable par-4s.

So I think, especially the first two days when it’s the full field, it’s to be expected. It is what it is. Thankfully it speeds up over the weekend and two balls, and it gets moving a little bit more. But I think playing this tournament, you expect it to be that way the first couple of days.”

McIlroy, who waited 20 minutes on the fifth tee, sounded like a man in a state of bliss after shooting a 66. The old Tiger-ism ‘It is what it is’ rings hollow in this case; it is what it shouldn’t be. It doesn’t get dark until after 10 o’clock here and there’s no reason for daylight to be an issue. Yet, still players finished in the gloaming in front of abandoned grand stands.

Six hour-plus rounds? That’s both insane and sad, and it needs to be fixed.

As Fitzpatrick put it, it should never happen in golf.

2022 British Open at St. Andrews Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

Everything you need to know for the second round of the 150th British Open.

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Cameron Young, a PGA Tour rookie who missed the cut at the Scottish Open last week but has amassed five top 5s this season including a T-3 at the PGA Championship, got off to a hot start at The Old Course in the 150th Open Championship.

Young made back-to-back birdies on two occasions during his front nine and added another circle at the ninth to go out with a 31. He’d come home with a 33 after a birdie at the 18th and signed for a bogey-free 8-under 64.

Rory McIlroy, who has now started quickly in three straight majors, fired a first-round 6-under 66. Tiger Woods opened with a 78 in a round that took 6 hours, 10 minutes. Speaking of slow play, and with apologies to the USGA’s sectional qualifying for the U.S. Open, the longest day of golf this year was the opening round of the 150th British Open at The Old Course.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s what you need to know for the second round of the 2022 British Open. All times listed are ET.

Second round tee times

1st hole

Tee time Players
1:35 a.m.
Mark Calcavecchia, Ryan Fox, Jediah Morgan
1:46 a.m.
Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Bernd Weisberger, Sam Bairstow
1:57 a.m.
Adrian Meronk, Haotong Li, Marcus Armitage
2:08 a.m.
Thriston Lawrence, Fabrizio Zanotti, Alex Wrigley
2:19 a.m.
Aaron Wise, Si Woo Kim, Sam Horsfield
2:30 a.m.
Talor Gooch, Shaun Norris, Wyndham Clark
2:41 a.m.
Henrik Stenson, Russell Henley, Aldrich Potgieter
2:52 a.m.
Stewart Cink, Sergio Gargia, Aaron Jarvis
3:03 a.m.
Sungjae Im, Paul Casey, Gary Woodland
3:14 a.m.
Dustin Johnson, Adam Scott, Mark Leishman
3:25 a.m.
Scottie Scheffler, Joaquin Niemann, Tyrrell Hatton
3:36 a.m.
Darren Clarke, Richard Bland, Filippo Celli
3:47 a.m.
Kevin Na, Kazuki Higa, Aaron Rai
4:03 a.m.
David Duval, Justin Harding, Jordan Smith
4:14 a.m.
Shugo Imahira, Jason Scrivener, David Law
4:25 a.m.
Abraham Ancer, Yuto Katsuragawa, Emiliano Grillo
4:36 a.m.
Louis Oosthuizen, Harris English, Keita Nakajima
4:47 a.m.
Padraig Harrington, Thomas Pieters, Keith Mitchell
4:58 a.m.
Tiger Woods, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Max Homa
5:09 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Jon Rahm, Harold Varner III
5:20 a.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Sam Burns, Mito Pereira
5:31 a.m.
Keegan Bradley, Sebastian Munoz, Sahith Theegala
5:42 a.m.
Laurie Canter, Dimitrios Papadatos, Matthew Griffin
5:53 a.m.
John Catlin, Jamie Rutherford, David Carey
6:04 a.m.
Mingyu Cho, Jorge Fernandez-Valdes, Robert Dinwiddie
6:15 a.m.
Lars Van Meijel, Jack Floyd, Ronan Mullarney
6:36 a.m.
Paul Lawrie, Webb Simpson, Min Woo Lee
6:47 a.m.
Sadom Kaewkanjana, Ben Campbell, Barclay Brown
6:58 a.m.
Dean Burmester, Chan Kim, Brandon Wu
7:09 a.m.
Ian Poulter, Jamie Donaldson, Guido Migliozzi
7:20 a.m.
Garrick Higgo, MinKyu Kim, Ashley Chesters
7:31 a.m.
Phil Mickelson, Lucas Herbert, Kurt Kitayama
7:42 a.m.
Patrick Reed, Tom Hoge, J.H. Kim
7:53 a.m.
John Daly, Bryson DeChambeau, Cameron Tringale
8:04 a.m.
Cameron Smith, Brooks Koepka, Seamus Power
8:15 a.m.
Francesco Molinari, Tommy Fleetwood, Rikuya Hoshino
8:26 a.m.
Cameron Young, K.H. Lee, Robert MacIntyre
8:37 a.m.
Zach Johnson, Billy Horschel, Corey Conners
8:48 a.m.
Brian Harman Pablo Larrazabal, Danny Willett
9:04 a.m.
Stephen Dodd, J.T. Poston, Lee Westwood
9:15 a.m.
Sepp Straka, Luke List, Justin De Los Santos
9:26 a.m.
Ernie Els, Ardi Arnaus, Brad Kennedy
9:37 a.m.
Mackenzie Hughes, Scott Vincent, Victor Perez
9:48 a.m.
Jason Kokrak, Nicolai Hojgaard, Sihwan Kim
9:59 a.m.
Collin Morikawa, Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele
10:10 a.m.
Shane Lowry, Justin Thomas, Viktor Hovland
10:21 a.m.
Will Zalatoris, Hideki Matsuyama, Tony Finau
10:32 a.m.
Kevin Kisner, Chris Kirk, Takumi Kanaya
10:43 a.m.
Dylan Frittelli, Trey Mullinax, Matthew Jordan
10:54 a.m.
Anthony Quayle, Zander Lombard, John Parry
11:05 a.m.
Thomas Detry, Richard Mansell, Marco Penge
11:16 a.m.
Alexander Bjork, Oliver Farr, Matthew Ford

How to watch

Friday, July 15th

TV

USA: 4 a.m.-3 p.m.

STREAM

Peacock: 1:30-4 a.m.
Peacock: 3-4 p.m.

Streaming will include featured groups, featured holes and is also available on NBCSports.com, the NBC Sports app and theopen.com.

Saturday, July 16th

TV

USA: 5-7 a.m.
NBC: 7 a.m.-3 p.m.

STREAM

Peacock: 7 a.m.-3 p.m.

Streaming will include featured groups, featured holes and is also available on NBCSports.com, the NBC Sports app and theopen.com.

Sunday, July 17th

TV

USA: 4-7 a.m.
NBC: 7 a.m.-2 p.m.

STREAM

Peacock: 7 a.m.-2 p.m.

Streaming will include featured groups, featured holes and is also available on NBCSports.com, the NBC Sports app and theopen.com.

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Tiger Woods struggles early and often in first round at 2022 British Open

Woods had a few classy moments but failed to garner any sort of momentum on Thursday.

Tiger Woods loves St. Andrews. The Old Course is his favorite in all of golf.

But during the first round of the 150th playing of the Open Championship, the course didn’t quite love him back. Woods, who has won two of his three Opens at the Home of Golf, struggled his way to a 6-over 78 during a marathon round that lasted 6 hours and 10 minutes and left groups sitting and waiting.

The 15-time major champion made a double bogey on the first hole and added two bogeys on Nos. 3 and 4, plus another double on No. 7, before making his first birdie of the round on No. 9. Woods, who made the turn at 5-over 41, added a second consecutive birdie on No. 10 but lost his momentum with a bad bogey on the par-3 11th.

More: Tiger Woods awarded St. Andrews membership

He finished the round with two more bogeys on Nos. 13 and 16 and a birdie on No. 14 before making par on two of the most iconic holes in golf, the Road Hole 17th and finishing 18th.

Woods, Max Homa and Matt Fitzpatrick begin their second round at 4:58 a.m. ET Friday morning.

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2022 British Open: Rory McIlroy calls the 150th Open at The Old Course the ‘fiddliest Open’

McIlroy has now opened with 67 or better in three straight majors.

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ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Rory McIlroy called the 150th Open Championship at The Old Course the “fiddliest” Open he’s ever played and noted that “fiddly hasn’t really been my forte over the years.”

Well, he fiddled and diddled his way to seven birdies and just one bogey for an opening-round 6-under 66, just two strokes off the clubhouse lead set by American Cameron Young.

Fiddly, for those of you who might otherwise have to rush to the Oxford Dictionary or fire up the Google machine means “complicated or detailed and awkward to do or use.” That’s a pretty fair representation of what it is like playing a fast and firm Old Course, where the fairways are running as fast as the greens. It continued a positive trend of fast starts at the majors for McIlroy, who previously had opened 65-67 at the PGA Championship in May and the U.S. Open in June.

“Three in a row for me now,” McIlroy said. “Just sort of what you hope will happen when you’re starting off your week. Yeah, I mean I did everything that you’re supposed to do around St Andrews. I birdied the holes that are birdie-able. And I made pars at the holes where you’re sort of looking to make a par and move to the next tee. And didn’t really put myself out of position too much.”

150th Open Championship: Tee times | Leaderboard

McIlroy made it look easy on Thursday, holing a 55-foot downhill birdie putt at the first and stringing together three birdies in a row beginning at the seventh. He tacked on another birdie at 12 and was cruising along at 5 under for the day when he made his lone bogey at the 13th – “a little bit too cute with the second shot,” he said – but bounced back with a birdie at 14 and finished in style with one final circle on the card at the last.

“Everything feels very settled. No real issues with my game,” he said. “Everything feels like it’s in good shape. Everything feels just sort of nice and quiet, which is a nice way to be.”

He played with an ease that may have been missing in recent years as McIlroy has tried to make swing changes in an effort to end his major-less drought that dates to the 2014 PGA Championship. But if he looked cool and composed on the outside, McIlroy wasn’t shy to point out that there were several pivotal moments where he had to deliver to keep his round going and he was proud of how he had come through nearly unscathed.

150th Open Championship at St. Andrews
Rory McIlroy tees off on the fifth hole during the first round of the 150th Open Championship golf tournament at St. Andrews Old Course. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

“It might have looked easy, but there’s certain parts of the round that are challenging,” he said.

Take, for instance, the 17th hole, the brute known as The Road Hole, that in the first round played downwind.

“I hit it way down there. And my ball’s on the fairway, but it’s in a lie where I don’t feel like I can get the leading edge of a lob wedge underneath the ball to get a good enough strike on it. So I chipped a little gap wedge down there, and I pulled it,” McIlroy explained. “But I played the right shot so that if I did miss it, it wasn’t in too bad of a spot but I could then get it up-and-down from. And that’s what I’m talking about, the trickiness. I only had 85 yards to the front of the green on 17, and I knew four was going to be a good score. So, I think it’s accepting that sometimes and not being overly aggressive, even when you put yourself in some of these positions. I think that’s important.”

In other words, McIlroy survived one of those fiddly lies that haven’t always been his cup of tea.

“I’m hopefully going to make it my forte this week,” he said.

Photos: 2022 Open Championship at the Old Course at St. Andrews

Doesn’t get any better than a firm and fast Old Course.

The last men’s major of 2022 is here and it’s going to be fantastic.

For the 150th edition of the oldest championship in golf, the best players in the world have arrived at The Old Course in St. Andrews for the Open Championship.

Tiger Woods, who we last saw at the PGA Championship at Southern Hills, has returned to the spotlight and will tee it up at his favorite golf course in the world Thursday at 9:59 a.m. ET with Max Homa and 2022 U.S. Open winner Matt Fitzpatrick.

Rory McIlroy entered the week as the betting favorite at +900, followed by several players at +1500, a group that included Jordan Spieth.

St. Andrews will play as a par 72 measuring 7,313 yards.

Here are some of the best photos from the week.

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British Open: Cameron Young’s golf equipment at St. Andrews

See the clubs Cameron Young used to shoot 64 in the first round of the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews.

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The golf equipment Cameron Young is using at the 150th Open Championship on the Old Course at St. Andrews:

DRIVER: Titleist TSR3 (10 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei 1K Pro White 70 TX shaft

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TSR3 (16.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Tensei 1K Pro White 80 TX shaft

IRONS: Titleist T200 (2), with Mitsubishi Tensei CK 100 TX shaft; (4), with Nippon NS Pro Modus3 Tour 130 X shaft; 620 CB (5), 620 MB (6-9), with Nippon NS Pro Modus3 Tour 130 X shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Cameron Young’s irons – $1,399″ link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/oe3mDg”]

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (48, 52, 58, 60 degrees), with Nippon NS Pro Modus3 Tour 130 X shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Cameron Young’s wedges – $179 each” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/GjY7qm”]

PUTTER: Cameron Phantom X 11 Knuckle Neck tour prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1 Left Dot

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Tiger Tracker: Follow Tiger Woods on Thursday at the 2022 British Open at St. Andrews with shot-by-shot updates

Can Tiger Woods claim his fourth Open and third at the Old Course?

Tiger Woods is back at his favorite golf course in the world.

After making the cut at both the Masters and PGA Championship, the 15-time major champion is teeing it up for just the third time this week at the 2022 British Open following his single-car accident that nearly cost him his leg last year. A three-time Champion Golfer of the Year, Woods has won the Claret Jug twice at the Old Course at St. Andrews, which plays host for this year’s historic 150th playing of the Open. The Home of Golf has now hosted the championship 30 times.

Woods tees off at 9:59 a.m. ET alongside Matthew Fitzpatrick and Max Homa. Follow his round with shot-by-shot analysis and updates below.

More: Tiger Woods awarded St. Andrews membership

2022 British Open: Justin Rose withdraws from 150th Open at St. Andrews

Justin Rose withdrew from the 2022 British Open citing a back injury. 

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Justin Rose withdrew from the 2022 British Open citing a back injury.

The 41-year-old Englishman, who burst on the scene as a 17-year-old amateur at the 1998 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale, will be replaced in the tournament by Japan’s Rikuya Hoshino. The first alternate on the reserve list is now Aaron Rai, a 27-year-old Englishman.

Rose, a former World No. 1 and winner of the 2013 U.S. Open at Merion, has long made it known that the British Open is the major he most desires. But since turning pro shortly after his miraculous run at the championship in 1998, in which he was named low amateur for his T-4 finish, he has a spotty record overall: he has played in 19 Opens since and recorded just two top-10 finishes, with a T-2 in 2018 at Carnoustie in Scotland. That will remain his best career result.

Rose has made 12 cuts in 16 starts this season on the PGA Tour. Last month, he shot 60 in the final round of the RBC Canadian Open to finish T-4.

Q&A: Mike Tirico on reuniting with Nick Faldo and Paul Azinger, his favorite British Open (of the last 25) and his signature calls

Tirico is set to broadcast his 24th British Open this week at St. Andrews.

Mike Tirico is set to broadcast his 24th British Open this week at his favorite venue, the Old Course at St. Andrews.

Tirico did his first Open in 1997 for ESPN/ABC and after broadcasting last year from NBC/Golf Channel’s Connecticut studio, he’s happy to be back in Scotland in the Old Grey Toon.

Thursday and Friday he’ll be in the booth for three hours each day, doing what he did for 18 years at the Open. In a nod to the halcyon days of the Tirico/Paul Azinger/ Nick Faldo announce team, they will partner up once again on Friday from 1-2 p.m. ET in a final tip of the hat to Faldo, who announced he is retiring later this year.

“We did one couple-hour stint at the Players a few years back, maybe three years ago I think it was,” Tirico said. “That was the only other time we’ve done it since we did it many moons ago (at ABC/ESPN) since we stopped. This will be the second time in the last 15 years.”

Since coming over to NBC, Tirico made a smooth transition into the host role.

“I guess my job is get us on the air, set the scene a little bit, especially since we’re on for so long, resets, highlights, things like that,” he said. “I think here it’s a little bit more perspective I can add because I’ve been here for 23 of them, this being the 24th, so I can add just some historical stuff, things I remember from being here and all the stuff we’ve seen over the years with Jack and Tom playing their last, Spieth going for the career Slam, all that stuff.”

Tirico has been involved in the U.S. and British Opens, the Players Championship and the Tour Championship, and the occasional odd event here or there.

“This is 25 years for me of doing golf as a whole,” he said. “It’s made this 25 years great, absolutely great.”

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