‘It sucked’: Collin Morikawa hands over Claret Jug, begins British Open prep at Old Course to reclaim it

“The replica is beautiful, but it’s not the same. It really isn’t. It will never be.”

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Collin Morikawa’s possession of the Claret Jug came to an end Monday morning.

It was not an easy separation.

“It sucked. It really did,” Morikawa said in his pre-tournament meeting with the media Monday at the Old Course, home to the 150th Open Championship. “I woke up this morning and looked at it. The replica is beautiful, but it’s not the same. It really isn’t. It will never be.

“But I don’t want to dwell on the past. I think I’ve talked about that early on in my career. I always look forward to what’s next. Maybe hopefully just giving it back kind of frees me up and allows me just to focus on winning this week.”

In his first start in the Open Championship, Morikawa held off Jordan Spieth and Louis Oosthuizen to win the Claret Jug last year at Royal St. George’s (Morikawa also won the PGA Championship in 2020 at TPC Harding Park in his first start).

Morikawa is making his first start at the Old Course, the rumpled, flat grounds nestled in the city. The Home of Golf was love at first sight for Morikawa.

“I can see why guys love it,” he said. “I can see how special this week can be. I can see how the course can play a million different ways, depending on the weather.

“Looks like we’re going to get some pretty consistent weather and some wind patterns this week. I think overall you’ve just got to be ready to play some good golf because you’re going to get some good bounces and probably some bad ones.”

Morikawa, ranked No. 8 in the Official World Golf Ranking, has not won in 2022. Trying to reclaim the Claret Jug might be the final push to victory.

“Now that I know what it’s like to have the Claret Jug for a year, there’s nothing like it. It’s a really special year,” he said. “Even though you won that tournament a year ago, it’s going to be in your history for the rest of your life. And it’s pretty cool. I think trying to defend this week at the 150th at St Andrews would be even more special.”

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‘This is my purpose’: Trey Mullinax earns first PGA Tour win at 2022 Barbasol Championship, punches ticket to Open Championship

Mullinax now has a trip to the home of golf on his summer schedule.

Low scores set up for a close shave in the final round of the 2022 Barbasol Championship with the tournament being decided with a clutch, late putt.

Trey Mullinax made a 14-footerfor birdie on the final hole to take a one-shot lead at 25 under and earn not only his first PGA Tour win, but the final spot in the field for next week’s 150th playing of the Open Championship at St. Andrews. The 30-year-old shot a 6-under 66 on Sunday to follow rounds of 65-65-67 and hold off a charging Kevin Streelman, who missed his birdie putt on the 18th that would’ve forced a playoff.

“I had a reminder this week that this is my purpose. This is what God has for me,” said Mullinax on the Golf Channel broadcast after his round. “I just told myself that all day, ‘This is your purpose. This is what you’re supposed to be doing, so commit to it and do it.'”

Mark Hubbard finished third at 22 under, followed by Hurly Long at 21 under. Vince Whaley rounded out the top five at 20 under.

On top of his date with the Old Course, Mullinax is also exempt through the end of the 2023-24 PGA Tour season. After next week’s major, just six events remain on the Tour schedule for the season.

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Three players secure last-minute spots in 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews

St. Andrews awaits for three lucky players.

Kurt Kitayama, Jamie Donaldson and Brandon Wu have plans next week at the home of golf.

The trio secured their spots in the field at the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews after qualifying via their finishing positions at the 2022 Genesis Scottish Open, the final of 15 events in the Open Qualifying Series.

“It’s really exciting to be going to St Andrews. The 150th Open there, it’s going to be a really cool experience,” said Kitayama. “After my two previous experiences, the goal is now to try and make the cut. It’s just a different type of golf and you have to adapt. The atmosphere is really cool at The Open with all the grandstands and the fans who just love their golf.”

Kitayama finished runner up at the Scottish Open, one shot behind champion Xander Schauffele. Donaldson and Wu each shot rounds of 3-under 67 on Sunday to finish T-6 to lock up the final two positions. One last exemption is available from the PGA Tour’s 2022 Barbasol Championship.

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Lynch: Greg Norman’s exclusion from the Open Championship at St. Andrews should be cheered—he’s earned it

Norman’s current endeavors have considerably more bearing than his past achievements.

It’s a sign of how far Greg Norman has traveled on the low road to perdition that the major championships he once elevated with his presence have come to believe that even exhibitions and dinners can only benefit from his absence.

That sentiment was apparent in April when Augusta National didn’t send Norman an invitation to attend the Masters, which it customarily extends to all living (non-imprisoned) major winners. Now the R&A has declined to invite the Great White Pilot Fish to the Celebration of Champions exhibition in St. Andrews on Monday or to Tuesday’s champions dinner (not a consideration back in Georgia). Augusta National and the R&A are not organizations prone to discourtesies. They don’t do oversights, or at least not accidentally.

“We contacted Greg Norman to advise him that we decided not to invite him to attend on this occasion,” said the R&A. “The 150th Open is an extremely important milestone for golf and we want to ensure that the focus remains on celebrating the Championship and its heritage. Unfortunately, we do not believe that would be the case if Greg were to attend.”

“I’m disappointed. I would have thought the R&A would have stayed above it all given their position in world golf,” Norman said. “[It’s] petty, as all I have done is promote and grow the game of golf globally, on and off the golf course, for more than four decades.”

The it all to which Norman obliquely refers is relevant. While he’d like to peddle a narrative that the R&A is being picayune and ignoring his past accomplishments, what the governing body is actually doing is acknowledging his present activities. And those activities don’t involve the promotion or growth of golf but rather its wholesale whoring for the purposes of Saudi sportswashing, a difference that might not be as obvious to Norman as it is to folks who don’t conflate the good of the game with their personal enrichment and score-settling.

‘It’s the right thing to do’: Rory McIlroy explains his role in leading resistance against LIV Golf

The reality is that Norman’s current endeavors have considerably more bearing than his past achievements in determining whether he ought to be invited to events at which many attendees regard him with barely disguised contempt.

Despite Norman’s insinuation, this isn’t a case of the R&A reflexively choosing sides with the PGA and DP World tours in a commercial dispute with his Saudi-funded LIV Golf. The decision was selfish, sure, but it was made purely in the interests of the R&A, the Open and its ancillary events, not in the interests of Jay Monahan or Keith Pelley.

Norman has already shown an eagerness to use the 150th Open Championship for cheap stunts intended to raise both his profile and that of his new venture. As when he demanded a spot in the St. Andrews field at age 67, despite his earned exemption having expired at age 60, and gone unused since he was 54. Had he genuinely wished to compete, Norman could have followed the example of Sandy Lyle, the 64-year-old champion from 1985, who entered qualifying this year. Lyle didn’t make it but he tried the only route available. He didn’t demand an exemption to which he wasn’t entitled, but then Lyle isn’t known to have a larger-than-life bust of himself in his garden either.

The Celebration of Champions is a charming event particular to St. Andrews, where past winners play a short loop on the Old Course to kickstart the week on golf’s greatest stage. There will be a robust turnout of greats Monday afternoon. Anyone who believes that would be the case if Norman were also present knows nothing of how he is viewed by many of his fellow players. Similarly, fewer place settings would be needed for a champions dinner that included him.

The R&A’s decision signals something that, while increasingly evident, has not been stated explicitly. Which is that golf’s most powerful organizations will—when possible, without compromising their championships—impede the stooges who would auction the sport to MBS. Those bodies clearly grasp how ruinous LIV’s success would be to golf’s image and its broader economy as corporate marketing dollars search for safer harbors.

More: LIV Golf’s unspoken secret — players are ripping off the Saudis

Fred Ridley signaled his support for the existing order at the Masters. The PGA of America’s Seth Waugh, who runs both a major and the Ryder Cup, has repeatedly done so. Mike Whan, CEO of the USGA, couldn’t alter the U.S. Open’s criteria but suggested he was amenable to doing so in the future. And even prior to this week, the R&A’s Martin Slumbers fired a warning shot by removing the exemption into the Open previously granted to the winner of the Asian Tour’s order of merit, a move made after that circuit spreadeagled itself for Saudi cash.

Decisions have consequences, a lesson learned often by Norman at major championships.

LIV Golf is a tumor that grows by diminishing everything around it—major championships, established tournaments, tours, formerly estimable venues and, not least, reputations. The thing about ruined reputations is that, at a certain point, the owner of the sullied name becomes impervious to the stain, which instead smears those with whom he associates. It is to the R&A’s credit that it is willing to stiff-arm a man who aims to cheapen the entire sport just to enrich himself at the teat of a tyrant.

Photos: Tiger Woods at the 2022 Open Championship at St. Andrews

Check out the best photos of Tiger Woods at the 2022 Open Championship in St. Andrews, Scotland.

Tiger Woods arrived to the Old Course at St. Andrews in Scotland on Saturday afternoon to begin preparations ahead of the 150th Open Championship.

It’s a return to the place where Woods has won two Open titles, in 2000 and 2005. His 2000 triumph helped him become the fifth golfer in history — and youngest ever — to complete the career grand slam.

On Sunday, he played an 18-hole practice round, following his 18-hole walk around St. Andrews on Saturday evening, showing how serious he is ahead of the last men’s major championship of the year.

Woods has made the cut in both events he has played this year, the Masters and PGA Championship, though he withdrew following the third round at Southern Hills in the latter when he looked uncomfortable for most of the round.

He returned to the public eye last week for the JP McManus Pro-Am in Ireland.

Take a scroll through some of the images from Woods’ practice rounds leading up to the 150th Open Championship at the home of golf.

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36 holes in less than 19 hours? Yes, Tiger Woods is serious about the upcoming 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews

Here’s how Tiger Woods has practiced in preparation for the 2022 Open Championship.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – After an 18-hole Saturday evening stroll on the Old Course alongside Justin Thomas that came to an end in darkness at 10:40 p.m. local time, Tiger Woods made a quick turnaround for his Sunday morning session.

Ten hours later, he went around the entire Old Course once again with Thomas, as the three-time Claret Jug winner began his prep in earnest for the 150th Open starting Thursday. Unlike the night before when he chipped, putted and hit a few wedges over 18 holes, Woods went through his entire bag on a sun-splashed, hot day of rest on his favorite golf course in the world.

After two-time Open champion and World Golf Hall of Fame member Lee Trevino popped out of the R&A building at 8:40 a.m. and asked whether Woods and Thomas needed a fourth, the two went onward and over 5 hours got a feel for the course (it’s already firming up), spent considerable time on and around the greens and dialed in sight lines off the tees.

The only thing Woods didn’t do was talk to the media. He explained he would talk following Monday’s Celebration of Champions, where he is grouped with Trevino, Rory McIlroy and Georgia Hall. He’s also scheduled to meet the media on Tuesday.

“Be patient,” Woods said. If anyone knows about patience, it’s Woods.

While Woods remained silent, Thomas spoke up.

“It feels like it was a long time ago,” he said of Woods’ withdrawal from the PGA Championship after the third round. Woods, still recovering from a horrific, one-car accident north of Los Angeles that nearly led to amputation of his severely injured right leg, made the cut in the Masters before finishing 47th in his only other start in 2022.

Thomas, who lives near Woods in Florida, did not play a practice round with his good friend after the PGA Championship until Saturday. He did, however, practice with Woods on a few occasions.

“This has been the one circled for him,” Thomas added. “He’s excited to be here. Overall, it is a much easier walk that Augusta National and Southern Hills. The Old Course is a lot flatter, but it’s got way more awkward steps, if you will.

“I feel about Tiger being here like I always do: He’s going to find a way to be just fine.”

Woods, who ramped up his practice shortly before the U.S. Open, which he decided not to play, has now played 90 holes since landing in Europe: two rounds in the JP McManus Pro-Am earlier this week, another 18 with McIlroy at Ballybunion, and 36 at St. Andrews.

On Sunday, Woods visibly limped most of his way around the Old Course, at times making considerable effort to limit weight on his right foot. His driver was erratic in the early going. His iron play was spot on.

Woods started tweaking his driver on the eighth tee to get more spin for his left-to-right drives. He used Thomas’ launch monitor to dial in the specifications. He did some more tweaking on the ninth tee. Seemed to work. He ended his round by driving the par-4 18th, his ball coming to rest 20 feet from the pin.

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Just hitched: Tom Watson marries former CBS executive LeslieAnne Wade

Golf legend Tom Watson got married Saturday to LeslieAnne Wade.

Tom Watson has a busy week ahead of him. But first, a wedding to attend. His wedding.

The eight-time major champion got hitched Saturday in New Jersey, marrying LeslieAnne Wade. The couple announced their engagement in May. They plan to travel to the Old Course at St. Andrews to attend the 150th Open Championship, which begins Thursday in Scotland.

Watson, 72, won the Open five times during his iconic career. He is a Hall of Famer and won 39 times on the PGA Tour. Watson retired from competitive golf in 2019 after an almost 50-year career during which he won 70 titles and twice captained the United States in the Ryder Cup.

Ms. Wade served as a Senior Vice President of Communications at CBS Sports and currently works with the Endeavor agency and for White Tee Partners, a women-owned marketing agency she co-founded.

Congrats to the newlyweds.

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A huge payday awaits at the 150th playing of the Open Championship next week

The Champion Golfer of the Year is going to get richer.

The Champion Golfer of the Year is going to get richer.

Much, much richer.

The R&A announced Friday the winner of next week’s 150th playing of the Open Championship, to be conducted on the Old Course in St. Andrews, will take home the largest first-place check in tournament history along with the Claret Jug.

The payday? $2.5 million.

The total purse will be $14 million, a 22 percent increase on 2021 and a 60 percent increase on 2016.

“There have been significant changes in prize money over the last year. We have made this substantial investment while balancing our wider commitments to developing golf at all levels around the world and to continuing to elevate the AIG Women’s Open,” said Martin Slumbers, chief executive of the R&A.

The bump in the purse – whether influenced by LIV Golf, the Saudi Arabia-backed league doling out huge purses – continues a trend in some of the game’s biggest tournaments.

Matthew Fitzpatrick won a record $3.15 million for winning the U.S. Open at The Country Club. The purse was $17.5 million, up $5 million from the year before.

Justin Thomas earned a record $2.7 million with his playoff victory against Will Zalatoris in the PGA Championship at Southern Hills. The total purse was $15 million, up $3 million from 2021.

The Masters bumped its purse by $3.5 million to $15 million. And Cameron Smith won a record $3.6 million of the record $20 million purse in The Players Championship at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass.

 

Prize money

Place USD Place USD
1 $2,500,000 36 $73,500
2 $1,455,000 37 $70,000
3 $933,000 38 $66,500
4 $725,000 39 $64,000
5 $583,000 40 $62,000
6 $505,000 41 $59,500
7 $434,000 42 $56,500
8 $366,000 43 $54,000
9 $321,000 44 $51,000
10 $290,000 45 $48,000
11 $264,000 46 $45,500
12 $234,000 47 $43,700
13 $220,000 48 $42,000
14 $206,000 49 $40,000
15 $191,500 50 $39,100
16 $176,000 51 $38,200
17 $167,500 52 $37,600
18 $159,750 53 $37,000
19 $153,000 54 $36,500
20 $145,750 55 $35,900
21 $139,000 56 $35,400
22 $132,000 57 $35,000
23 $125,000 58 $34,750
24 $118,000 59 $34,500
25 $114,000 60 $34,250
26 $109,000 61 $34,000
27 $105,000 62 $33,900
28 $101,500 63 $33,750
29 $97,000 64 $33,600
30 $92,000 65 $33,400
31 $89,000 66 $33,100
32 $84,500 67 $32,900
33 $81,500 68 $32,600
34 $79,250 69 $32,400
35 $76,500 70 $32,200

 

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Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy tackle Ballybunion in preparation for British Open at St. Andrews

Ballybunion’s Old Course sits at No. 7 on Golfweek’s list of classic courses in Great Britain & Ireland.

Tiger Woods teed it up this week at the 2022 JP McManus Pro-Am in Ireland, and he continued his major championship preparation at an Irish classic.

Ahead of next week’s 150th British Open at St. Andrews, the three-time Open champion – twice at the Old Course, which Woods claims to be his favorite in golf – played a round alongside good friend Rory McIlroy on Thursday at Ballybunion.

The Old Course at Ballybunion sits at No. 7 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses in Great Britain and Ireland and is the highest-rated Irish course on the list (not counting No. 1 Royal County Down and No. 5 Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland).

“This is a pretty historical Open we are going to be playing. I’m lucky enough to be part of the past champions who have won there and want to play there again,” said Woods of the Open at St. Andrews. “I don’t know when they are ever going to go back while I’m still able to play at a high level. And I want to be able to give it at least one more run at a high level.”

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Rejected! Greg Norman’s written request for special exemption into 150th British Open denied

Past champions are only exempt into the championship until age 60.

Being a former two-time Champion Golfer of the Year doesn’t go as far as it used to, at least not for Greg Norman.

The winner of the 1986 and 1993 British Opens, Norman had his written request for a special exemption into the 150th Open at St. Andrews denied by the R&A, according to Australian Golf Digest, who spoke with him on Wednesday.

“I’m disappointed with their decision, particularly given it is the 150th Open,” Norman said. “I have been a staunch proponent of the R&A since 1977 and a proud Champion Golfer of the Year – twice.”

Past champions are only exempt into the championship, which dates to 1860, until age 60, or have won the championship in the previous 10 years to be exempt from qualifying. Norman, who last played in the Open in 2009 at Turnberry, reportedly had filled out his application to play in the tournament last month and requested a special exemption.

“I think I can still get in,” Norman said at the time. “It’s the 150th. I’m a past Open champion. I love St. Andrews. If there’s a moment in time that I would consider going back and teeing off one last time, maybe this is it. I’m filling out my entry form now, I think I’m going. I think I can still get in.”

Australia’s Greg Norman hugs the Claret Jug after winning the British Open Golf Championship, Sunday, July 18, 1993 at Royal St. Georges golf club, Sandwich, England. Norman came back, beating old nemesis Nick Faldo with a record score and acquiring his second British Open golf championship.

The R&A quickly rebuffed the idea, and apparently weren’t swayed by Norman’s written request – no truth to the rumor it began, “Surely, you jest.”

“We have replied to him,’’ a spokesman for the R&A said. “There is no change to our position.’’

Norman, 67, could still sign up for qualifying, but he implied that a past champion should receive special treatment. There is, indeed, some precedent for special exemptions. The R&A granted one in 2015 to five-time winner Tom Watson to make a fond farewell at St. Andrews. Mark Calcavecchia, the 1989 Open champ who is 61, received an exemption this year after what should have been his final British Open was canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and he was sidelined with an injury last year.

The 150th Open is set to begin on July 14.

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