Joost Luiten rips officials for ruining his Olympics: ‘I’m the one who is f***ed,’ plans island pool party instead

Luiten said he’s disappointed but he’s come to terms with getting a raw deal.

TROON, Scotland – Joost Luiten remains on the outside looking in to represent the Netherlands in the men’s golf competition at the Olympics in Paris in a few weeks but he’s planning a pretty good consolation prize. Luiten booked a holiday in Mallorca, one of Spain’s Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean, which he noted isn’t too far away should a competitor withdraw and he get a spot from the reallocation list.

Luiten, a native of the Netherlands, qualified for the Summer Games in Paris but his governing body for golf decided not to send him and compatriot Darius van Driel. Luiten wrote on social media that the Dutch Olympic Committee required the likelihood of a top-eight finish in the 60-man, 72-hole competition and denied him because it did not feel he would be able to do so.

Luiten, a 38-year-old DP World Tour veteran, said he spent $20,000 on legal fees to take his case to a Netherlands court, which ruled in his favor. But the International Golf Federation already had given his spot in the 60-man Olympic field to Finland’s Tapio Pulkkanen. The IGF, which administers golf in the Olympics, announced last week that IOC turned down a proposal to expand the men’s field to 61 to give Luiten a spot. Instead, he was named the first reserve.

“I’m the one who is out. I’m the one who is fu**ed,” said Luiten after shooting 76 at Royal Troon on Friday in the second round of the 152nd British Open. “I’m over it now. I spent a lot of money on a court case to win it and then you win it and then they say, f*** it, you’re still not in because someone else f***ed up. That’s the annoying thing.

2024 British Open
Joost Luiten of Netherlands tees off on the first hole during day two of The 152nd Open championship at Royal Troon. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

“It’s mistake after mistake after mistake and no one wants to own up to it and nobody wants to make it right and now I’m in a position where I don’t know what to do.”

Luiten previously competed in the Olympics in 2016 in Rio de Janiero. What was Luiten’s initial response when he was informed that even though he won his court case against the Dutch Olympic Committee, he still wouldn’t be in the field?

“This can’t be right,” he said. “I was entered before the deadline. The IGF gave my spot away even though I notified them not to give it away because I’m going to court. They say they followed the protocol.

“They all point to each other. They’re just a bunch of amateurs. They think they run a professional golf event but you can see it’s the Olympics, it’s run by amateurs.”

Asked what should be done to ensure this doesn’t happen again, Luiten said, “I think they should make it an amateur event. If you let amateurs decide for professional golfers then you get some weird rulings and whatever. That’s what happened in Holland with me. You’ve got a bunch of amateurs making the rules for professional golf events. That’s the way the Olympics started and that’s the way it should be.”

Luiten said he’s disappointed but he’s come to terms with getting a raw deal.

“I could take them to court again but then you spend another $100,000 and you don’t know if you’re going to win for an event that you don’t even get paid for. I spent $20,000 and I’m done with it,” he said. “It’s the Olympics but with all the stuff going on it has lost some of its – what’s the word? – glamour.

“I don’t know what I’d do if I get the call but right now I’m happy not to play. I’m quite done with it. I’ll be quite happy when I’m in Mallorca and I’m in the pool.”

Luiten shot 75-76 at Royal Troon this week to miss the cut.

Tiger Woods shoots second-round 6-over 77, misses cut at 2024 British Open

This is his third missed cut in four major starts this year.

After posting an 8-over 79 on Thursday, things didn’t get much better for Tiger Woods at the 2024 British Open on Day 2.

The 15-time major champion began his day with a par on No. 1, but made a sloppy double-bogey six on the par-4 second and was quickly over par. Woods added another blemish to the card on No. 5 but quickly got the shot back with a nice 20-foot birdie putt on the par-5 sixth.

Before making the turn, Woods made bogey at the par-4 ninth and made the turn with a 3-over 39.

He opened his back nine with a couple pars at Nos. 10 and 11 before a bogey on the par-4 12th.

BRITISH OPENLeaderboard | Photos | How to watch

A three-foot miss on the 14th resulted in another bogey for Tiger, and he walked to the 15th tee box 5 over on the day.

After two pars on 15 and 16, a bogey on 17 and another par on 18, Tiger settled for a second-round 6-over 77.

This is his third straight missed cut in majors this year.

John Daly WDs from 2024 British Open; Ernie Els also leaves Royal Troon early

Both Daly and Els shot 82 during their opening rounds on Thursday.

As he did in his previous major appearance, John Daly withdrew on Friday morning ahead of the second round of the Open Championship at Royal Troon. He did the same during the 106th playing of the PGA Championship in Louisville earlier this year.

Daly, 58, the winner of the 1995 Open Championship, plays primarily on PGA Tour Champions and has made 11 starts this season, including one withdrawal.

Daly has five career PGA Tour wins.

Also, two-time Open winner Ernie Els left prior to Friday’s round, citing a problem with his back. Els won the Claret Jug in both 2002 and 2012.

Els won his first senior major last weekend, winning the 2024 Kaulig Companies Championship at Firestone after firing a final-round 68, which put him at 10 under for the tournament, beating Y.E. Yang by one shot to win it.

Both Daly and Els shot 82 during their opening rounds on Thursday.

Angry Shane Lowry sees British Open solo lead disappear (briefly) over rules controversy

Lowry knew immediately that he was in a world of trouble.

TROON, Scotland – Shane Lowry’s lead during the 152nd British Open took a hit due to a bad shot and a ruling that didn’t go his way on the 11th hole at Royal Troon Golf Club during the second round on Friday. It resulted in a double bogey but Lowry managed birdies on two of his final three holes to card 2-under 69 in breezy conditions and improve to 7-under 135.

Lowry, the 2019 Open champ who opened with 66 and added three birdies and a bogey in his first 10 holes to lead by two, yanked his second shot dead left from 176 yards at the 11th hole into a gorse bush.

“I did the hard part. I hit my drive where you could find it, which is obviously a hard thing to do on that hole. I drew a nice lie in the (right) rough. I got a little bit distracted on the right just as I was over the shot, and I kind of lost a bit of train of thought. You’re so afraid of going right there that I just snagged the club and went left,” he said.

According to the radio broadcast, Lowry blamed a photographer for distracting him. A hot mic caught him erupting at the photographer.

Lowry knew immediately that he was in a world of trouble and hit a great provisional to about 10 feet. It looked like he might escape without too much pain.

“The referee asked me going down, did I want to find my first one, and I said no. So I assumed that was OK. Then we get down there, and somebody had found it. So apparently we have to find it then, or you have to go and identify it, which I thought, if you declared it lost before it was found, that you didn’t, you didn’t have to go and identify it,” Lowry said.

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However, a spectator found Lowry’s ball in the gorse bush, which meant that Lowry had no choice but to play his original ball. Lowry argued with the rules official. According to the radio reporter, he said, “Even though I told you I didn’t want to search for it.” The rules official said, “I am very sorry, but yes.”

According to the Rules of Golf, as soon as the original ball is found it is back in play and the second ball on the green is no longer an option to play.

“It’s one of those rules where common sense is thrown out,” said radio commentator Brendon de Jonge.

Lowry asked for a second opinion but the ruling stood.

“I felt like through that whole process of that 20 minutes, it was whatever it was, of taking the drop, seeing where I could drop, and I felt like I was very calm and composed and really knew that I was doing the right thing, and I felt like (caddie) Darren (Reynolds) did a great job too just kind of — he kept telling me, we have loads of time. We don’t need to rush this. We just need to do the right thing here.”

Lowry elected to take an unplayable lie. He could’ve dropped within two club lengths but it wouldn’t have given him much of a shot so instead took the option of taking the ball back on line of sight leaving himself about 70 yards. After the penalty shot, he knocked his fourth to the fringe and took two putts for a double-bogey 6. Lowry led the championship by two when he teed off at No. 11, Railway, but after his Railway nightmare, he left tied for the lead with Englishman Daniel Brown.

“Is this really going to mess with the mind of Shane Lowry?” the radio host asked.

It did not. Lowry didn’t drop another shot and finished with birdies on two of his final three holes to retake the solo lead when he headed to the clubhouse.

“To be honest, I was happy enough leaving there with a 6,” Lowry said. “It wasn’t a disaster. I was still leading the tournament.”

2024 British Open Friday tee times, pairings and how to watch at Royal Troon

More coffee golf!

The first round of the 2024 British Open is in the books, and there’s a past Champion Golfer of the Year lurking.

Shane Lowry fired a bogey-free 5-under 66 on Thursday and is one back of the lead at Royal Troon in Scotland. Daniel Brown is the solo leader, playing in one of the last groups of the day, firing a 6-under 65 after a birdie on 18. Justin Thomas had the best round of the morning wave, shooting 3-under 68, and is solo third.

Meanwhile, there were plenty of big names who struggled on Thursday, including Ludvig Aberg, Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, Tiger Woods and more.

Marquee groups

  • Jon Rahm, Tommy Fleetwood, Robert MacIntyre
  • Ludvig Aberg, Bryson DeChambeau, Tom Kim
  • Rory McIlroy, Max Homa, Tyrrell Hatton
  • Wyndham Clark, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka
  • Tiger Woods, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay
  • Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Young

Here’s a look at the second round tee times for the 2024 British Open, as well as Friday’s TV and streaming information.

Friday tee times

Time Players
1:35 a.m.
Ewen Ferguson, Marcel Siem
1:46 a.m.
C.T. Pan, Yuto Katsuragawa
1:57 a.m.
Rikuya Hoshino, Angel Hidalgo, Richard Mansell
2:08 a.m.
Corey Conners, Ryan Fox, Jorge Campillo
2:19 a.m.
Ernie Els, Gary Woodland, Altin Van der Merwe
2:30 a.m.
Henrik Stenson, Rasmus Hojgaard, Jacob Skov Oleson
2:41 a.m.
Louis Oothuizen, Billy Horschel, Victor Perez
2:52 a.m.
Sepp Straka, Brendon Todd, Jordan Smith
3:03 a.m.
Denny McCarthy, Taylor Moore, Adrian Meronk
3:14 a.m.
Jason Day, Ben An, Rickie Fowler
3:25 a.m.
Alex Cejka, Eric Cole, Kurt Kitayama
3:36 a.m.
Darren Clarke, J.T. Poston, Dean Burmester
3:47 a.m.
Phil Mickelson, Joost Luiten, Dustin Johnson
4:03 a.m.
Padraig Harrington, Davis Thompson, Matthew Jordan
4:14 a.m.
Wyndham Clark, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka
4:25 a.m.
Tiger Woods, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay
4:36 a.m.
Collin Morikawa, Sam Burns, Si Woo Kim
4:47 a.m.
Shane Lowry, Cameron Smith, Matt Fitzpatrick
4:58 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Young
5:09 a.m.
Akshay Bhatia, Tom Hoge, Sami Valimaki
5:20 a.m.
Emiliano Grillo, Ben Griffin, Mackenzie Hughes
5:31 a.m.
Yannik Paul, Joe Dean, Andy Ogletree
5:42 a.m.
Ryan van Velzen, Charlie Lindh, Luis Masaveu
5:53 a.m.
Kazuma Kobori, Jaime Montojo, Liam Nolan
6:04 a.m.
Daniel Brown, Denwit Boriboonsub, Matthew Dodd-Berry
6:15 a.m.
Jeung-Hun Wang, Aguri Iwasaki, Sam Horsfield
6:26 a.m.
Justin Leonard, Todd Hamilton, Jack McDonald
6:47 a.m.
Alex Noren, Tom McKibbin, Calum Scott
6:58 a.m.
Jesper Svensson, Vincent Norrman, Michael Hendry
7:09 a.m.
Younghan Song, Daniel Hillier, Ryosuke Kinoshita
7:20 a.m.
Min Woo Lee, Ryo Hisatsune, Abraham Ancer
7:31 a.m.
Nicolai Hojgaard, Adam Scott, Keita Nakajima
7:42 a.m.
Francesco Molinari, Justin Rose, Jasper Stubbs
7:53 a.m.
Justin Thomas, Sungjae Im, Matthew Southgate
8:04 a.m.
Nick Taylor, Matt Wallace, Laurie Canter
8:15 a.m.
Matteo Manassero, Shubhankar Sharma
8:26 a.m.
Zach Johnson, Austin Eckroat, Thornjorn Oleson
8:37 a.m.
John Daly, Santiago de la Fuente, Aaron Rai
8:48 a.m.
Stewart Cink, Chris Kirk, Dominic Clemons
9:04 a.m.
Stephan Jaeger, Adam Schenk, Joaquin Niemann
9:15 a.m.
Adam Hadwin, Lucas Glover, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
9:26 a.m.
Tony Finau, Russell Henley, Matthieu Pavon
9:37 a.m.
Jon Rahm, Tommy Fleetwood, Robert MacIntyre
9:48 a.m.
Ludvig Aberg, Bryson DeChambeau, Tom Kim
9:59 a.m.
Brian Harman, Viktor Hovland, Sahith Theegala
10:10 a.m.
Rory McIlroy, Max Homa, Tyrrell Hatton
10:21 a.m.
Keegan Bradley, Will Zalatoris, Gordon Sargent
10:32 a.m.
Harris English, Maverick McNealy, Alexander Bjork
10:43 a.m.
Guido Migliozzi, Sean Crocker, Tommy Morrison
10:54 a.m.
David Puig, John Catlin, Gun-Tack Koh
11:05 a.m.
Thriston Lawrence, Dan Bradbury, Elvis Smylie
11:16 a.m.
Nacho Elvira, Minkyu Kim, Darren Fichardt
11:27 a.m.
Mason Anderson, Masahiro Kawamura, Sam Hutsby

How to watch

Thursday, July 19 (all times EST)

First round, 1:30 a.m.- 4 a.m., Peacock

First round, 4 a.m.-3 p.m., USA Network

First round, 3 p.m.-4:15 p.m., Peacock

Live from the Open, 3 p.m., Golf Channel

Despite lost sleep, Scottish stars in mix after Open Championship’s first round at Royal Troon

A ruffled golfing mind can make a restless pillow.

TROON, Scotland — In theory, sleeping should be a fairly straightforward process. All you have to do, after all, is lie on your back and shut your eyes. It’s so easy, even a corpse can do it.

But trying to nod off the night before you make your Open Championship debut? Well, that’s a different matter altogether.

“I tried to get to bed around 7.30, 8 p.m. last night because I knew it was going to be an early start,” said Scottish amateur Calum Scott.

“I tried to get comfortable in bed and see if I could close my eyes, but it took me a while. I was probably up until midnight, so I didn’t get much sleep.”

A ruffled golfing mind can make a restless pillow. He would’ve slept better last night, mind you. A spirited level-par 71 on a tough, testing day left this particular Scott as the leading Scot. He was even better than Robert MacIntyre.

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It was an admirable effort from the Walker Cup player, who harnessed the conditions and some early nerves to fine effect.

“The first few holes were a little shaky,” conceded Scott, who earned his place in the field through The Open Amateur Series. “It was tough with the crowds out there. It was something I haven’t experienced before.

“I was a little uncomfortable at the start, but once I got the past the nerves, the noise and the other distractions, I settled in and played some really good golf.”

A particular highlight was a birdie on the Postage Stamp, par-3 eighth – what Rory McIlroy would’ve given for that – while a birdie putt from 12 feet under the towering gaze of the grandstands on the 18th provided a finishing flourish.

The hearty round of applause for a job well done was fully merited. A post round 40 winks was probably justified too.

“Birdies at the Postage Stamp and the 18th?” he smiled. “I couldn’t have asked for anything better.”

While Scott trotted off for a kip, MacIntyre returned to his own digs in a chipper mood after a dogged 1-over 72.

On a day when one or two big names suffered a few devastating dunts to their ambitions, the newly crowned Genesis Scottish Open champion’s exercise in damage limitation brought an upbeat self-assessment.

“I thought it was almost perfect,” said MacIntyre, who has recorded two top-10 finishes in his previous four Open appearances.

“The putter didn’t turn up today, but I thought tee to green was absolutely superb. You can’t win it on the first day, but you can play yourself out of it. I thought 1-over was a good round of golf.”

After a relatively barren day on the greens, MacIntyre plonked in a six-footer for birdie on the 18th to give himself a late lift.

“I had loads of chances from inside the 12-feet range,” he said of the ones that got away. “I thought I rolled them well and they went the opposite way. But that’s Troon. It’s very subtle.

“It’s an old school links golf course where the greens are very flat but they just kink left to right. With the crosswinds, as well, when you’re hitting a putt, the ball will move in the wind. But that putt on the last was big.”

Bearsden’s Ewen Ferguson, the winner of the BMW International Open a couple of weeks ago, opened with a 3-over 74 while local lad Jack McDonald marked his Open debut with a 76.

Out in the very first group of the 152nd championship, with past Troon winners Justin Leonard and Todd Hamilton for company, McDonald relished the experience in his own backyard.

“I played really well tee to green to be honest but I had a few three-putts in there,” said McDonald, who nabbed a Troon tee-time in a play-off at the final qualifying shoot-out at Dundonald a couple of weeks ago.

“Todd just kept saying to me, ‘come on, knock this in and get the crowd going’. It almost felt like I just needed that one putt to go in, but I just couldn’t do it.

“I kept going at it, though, and kept committing to everything. It was all about controlling the emotions of playing in my first major. I could’ve been a few shots better. But that’s golf.”

Mistakes and inconsistency highlight Tiger Woods’ opening round at 2024 British Open

Thursday was a similar script to what has become the 2024 version of Tiger Woods.

One of the biggest talking points coming into the 2024 British Open surrounding Tiger Woods was whether it was time for him to retire.

The talks and conversations stemmed from a Colin Montgomerie interview last week, saying it was past time for Woods to call it a career from playing professionally. Woods responded Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference, but while he talked the talk in the media center, he didn’t walk the walk on the golf course, only adding fuel to the fire about how this version the 15-time major champion can compete in the biggest competitions in golf.

Woods shot 8-over 79 on Thursday at Royal Troon in Scotland, and it was a similar script to what has become the 2024 version of Tiger. He had a decent start, was 1 under thru 3 holes, but he couldn’t capitalize on his good play off the tee, as poor iron shots piled up and then it got shakier once he got on and around the greens.

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Another ailment on Thursday was a nearly 15-minute wait on the par-4 11th tee box. Woods’ group, which included PGA champion Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay, had to stand around while Wyndham Clark received a ruling in the fairway and then had to wait for a TV tower to be lowered so he could hit a shot.

Tiger Woods hits out of the rough on the 12th hole during the first round of the Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Troon. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports

The cold temperatures plus standing around is about the worst thing for Woods, who has said numerous times he prefers warmer temperatures and movement to keep his body loose. When he finally hit, Woods’ tee shot nearly went out of bounds but into a bush, and he had to take an unplayable. After the wait, for the next couple holes he was constantly stretching his back and never really seemed in a groove all the way to the clubhouse.

He birdied the third and added another at the 14th, but Woods also had six bogeys and two doubles. The inconsistency of playing only five tournaments this year and 10 complete rounds showed its face again. He is a combined 39 over so far this year.

Tiger’s scores in 2024

Tournament Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4
Genesis Invitational 72 (WD)
Masters Tournament 73 72 82 77
PGA Championship 72 77
U.S. Open 74 73
Open Championship 79

There were flashes of prime Tiger, from stellar tee shots to the thundering movements of the stellar galleries parading around Royal Troon to get a glimpse of a legend. But far more often were the mistakes and blunders that he has only started to make thanks to Father Time and his body only allowing him to do so much.

If there were any positives from the opening round, it’s how Woods finished. He was 1 over in his last six holes when that number could’ve been a bit higher and should’ve been a bit lower. But he was somewhat stable coming in on an otherwise inconsistent day, and that’s perhaps what he needs to bounce back Friday and grind to make the cut.

However, a three-putt bogey on the last will leave a sour taste in his mouth before his tee time Friday morning.

Lynch: Royal Troon 1, Bryson DeChambeau 0

His opening round in the 152nd Open was, as the Scots say, dreich.

TROON, Scotland — Conventional wisdom, grounded in a data sample compiled over the past 164 years, says the key to success in the Open Championship is more about art than analytics, that links golf itself is best understood through poetry rather than pedagoguery. So it came as no surprise to learn Thursday that Bryson DeChambeau is taking the opposite tack in trying to solve a puzzle that continues to confound him.

His opening round in the 152nd Open was, as the Scots say, dreich — a word usually reserved for the dismal weather that has settled over the Ayrshire coast. Like a whiskey hangover, it began painfully and offered little respite. He was 6-over-par through eight holes. The skill for which he is most celebrated — the tee ball — was firing, but not much else. In approach play and putting, DeChambeau wasn’t close to breaking the top 120 in the 157-man field as the day wore on. He made 104 feet 5 inches of putts, but 54 feet 11 inches of that came on one stroke, an eagle putt on the 16th hole. He signed for a 5-over par round of 76.

Most Tour players would quickly dismiss a day like today, chalking up poor scores to the whipping wind, scattered rain and penal hazards on this venerable old links. Others certainly did.

“It’s tough. It’s really tough … It’s brutal.” — Brian Harman (73)

“Disappointed. Got off to a bad start. Missed every sort of important putt. Drove it pretty poor. It wasn’t the best day.” — Tommy Fleetwood (76)

“One of the worst rounds I think I’ve had this year … It wasn’t a fun experience.” — Tyrrell Hatton (73)

“I just didn’t adapt well enough to the conditions. Your misses get punished a lot more this week.” — Rory McIlroy (78)

“They cannae f——-g play!” a cantankerous old Scot of my acquaintance muttered derisively.

DeChambeau is a cause-and-effect guy, willing to ascribe only so much of his performance to the vagaries of the conditions. “It’s a completely different test. I didn’t get any practice in it, and I didn’t really play much in the rain. It’s a difficult test out here,” the U.S. Open champion said. “Something I’m not familiar with. I never grew up playing it, and not to say that that’s the reason; I finished eighth at St. Andrews. I can do it when it’s warm and not windy.”

Bryson DeChambeau hits out of the rough on the 15th hole during the first round of the Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Troon. Mandatory Credit: Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports

Unfortunately for him, warm and windless weather isn’t on tap this week, nor many dry spells. They seldom are at the Open.

“I’m going to go figure it out,” he announced after signing his card. His game plan for mastering the ancient linksland won’t rely on inspirational talk about art or poetry, but on Flightscopes and Trackmans.

“It’s something equipment-related. The golf ball is — look, I’m not at 190 ball speed, so particularly when I’m hitting driver or 3-wood, those clubs are built for around that speed, that 190 ball speed, and my 3-wood around 180, so colder, firmer conditions the golf ball is not compressing as much,” he said. “So it’s probably something along those lines.”

Somewhere Old Tom Morris, or even Young Tom Watson, chuckles.

“When there’s so many measurements going on in your mind — ,” a reporter began.

“There’s not that many. There’s a couple but not that many,” DeChambeau quickly replied, like a kid denying having eaten the cake he has just smeared all over his face.

The man who seldom provides stock answers seemed to be struggling to understand why his stock shots didn’t deliver stock results, while being reluctant to accept that stock shots can lose value in the crosswinds and firm conditions that prevailed Thursday at Royal Troon.

“I was trying to draw the ball and the ball was knuckling a little bit. It was a really difficult challenge, and I should have just cut the ball.”

“I was swinging it somewhat okay, just the ball wasn’t coming off in that window that I normally see, so it was a weird day.”

DeChambeau also referenced that windows theory in a press conference two days ago. “Most people try to see it through windows. I do too, but not that specific,” he said. “It’s more of, if I take it back a certain distance and go through, it will come out with a certain launch just based on the loft. So I’m really focused on accomplishing that task, just swinging the way I want to swing, and the results will speak for themselves hopefully.”

The results didn’t produce a comforting message but continued an unimpressive trend. In six previous appearances in the Open, the outlier remains a T-8 finish two years ago at the Old Course, the only venue he can bludgeon his way around. Otherwise, there are two missed cuts, no finishes inside the top 30, and two outside the top 50.

“I’m just proud of the way I persevered today. Shoot, man, I could have thrown in the towel after nine and could have been like, I’m going home. But no, I’ve got a chance tomorrow. I’m excited for the challenge,” he said. “If I have some putts go in and hit some shots the way I know how to and figure out this equipment stuff, I’ll be good.”

Who knows, DeChambeau might be proven right. He’s an inveterate problem solver. So too was Ivan Lendl, but then Lendl never quite managed to figure out his sport’s oldest and most prestigious major championship contested in the British Isles. And like the tennis great, even DeChambeau’s failure to solve the riddle is oddly compelling.

Friday at 2:48 p.m. Troon time, he gets to try again, beginning from well outside the projected cut. By the dinner hour, we’ll know whether golf fans will wait 262 days — or only 260 — before seeing him again in a tournament that matters.

Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy blown away by the wind at 2024 British Open

“It was a weird day,” DeChambeau said.

TROON, Scotland — After dueling for the U.S. Open title last month in the North Carolina Sandhills, Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy dueled for the most disappointing start at the 152nd British Open on Thursday.

DeChambeau shot 42 on the front nine at Royal Troon and posted 5-over 76 while McIlroy was even worse, slicing his tee shot on the train tracks at No. 11 and shooting 7-over 78.

“It was a weird day,” DeChambeau said.

“It was definitely tricky,” said McIlroy of the test that was Troon, the seaside links along the west coast of Ayrshire.

Despite a light rain for much of the day, the course played firm with just enough wind to wreak havoc.

“It was brutal out there,” defending champion Brian Harman said.

McIlroy, the world No. 2, said, “if anything, it was more like the conditions got the better of me, those cross-winds.”

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Oh, those fickle winds. McIlroy dropped a shot at the first but got it back with his lone birdie of the day at No. 3 after wedging to inside 4 feet. It all started to go wrong at No. 8, the Postage Stamp par 3, where his tee shot found the right bunker and he needed two tries to extricate himself. Double bogey.

“I missed the green and left it in the bunker and made a 5. Then once we turned on that back nine, it was left-to-right winds. I was sort of struggling to hole the ball in that wind a little bit, and that got me.”

So did his tee shot at No. 11, which sailed right and out of bounds and resulted in another double bogey. McIlroy, who has been stuck on four major titles for nearly a decade, didn’t respond well to conditions that perplexed the field of 157.

“You play your practice rounds, and you try to come up with a strategy that you think is going to get you around the golf course. Then when the wind is like that, you know, other options present themselves, and you start to second guess yourself a little bit,” McIlroy said. “The conditions were tough on that back nine, and I just didn’t do a good enough job.”

Neither did DeChambeau, though his travails were largely on the front nine.

2024 British Open
Bryson DeChambeau hits out of the rough on the 15th hole during the first round of the 2024 British Open at Royal Troon. (Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports)

He made bogeys at three of the first four holes, missing par putts of inside 5 feet at the first and just over 3 feet at the fourth. Then he made a double bogey at the sixth, spraying his tee shot right into thick rough and tried to hack a 7-iron out of trouble.

“I didn’t get it high enough,” he said. “I thinned it a little bit and caught the stuff and came out dead, and then I tried to open face a 5-wood and squirted off the left side of my face and just shot left. I’m just glad nobody got hurt. Luckily I found it.”

But it was the wind that proved to be a riddle that DeChambeau failed to solve.

“It was in and off the right and I was trying to draw the ball and the ball was knuckling a little bit,” he said. “It was a really difficult challenge, and I should have just cut the ball.”

DeChambeau finished T-6 at the Masters, second at the PGA Championship and then won the U.S. Open for the second time. But the Open Championship has typically given him fits: a T-8 in 2022 is his only finish better than T-33 in six previous starts, and the change in wind direction created a variable he said he felt unprepared for.

“It’s a completely different test. I didn’t get any practice in it, and I didn’t really play much in the rain,” he explained, calling the conditions “something I’m not familiar with.”

He added: “I never grew up playing it, and not to say that that’s the reason… I can do it when it’s warm and not windy.”

After playing his first eight holes in 6 over, DeChambeau righted the ship. He did have one highlight to remember, holing a 55-foot eagle putt at 16.

However, the driver was as erratic as it was in the final round of the U.S. Open when he managed to find just five fairways but kept drawing good lies amid the Pinehurst wiregrass and scrub brush. His luck ran out as the Scottish fescue proved more penal. DeChambeau blamed his Krank driver, which he said was designed for around 190 ball speed, for not being built for cooler conditions when the golf ball doesn’t compress as much.

“It’s probably something along those lines,” he said.

Both DeChambeau and McIlroy have dug big holes and will have their work cut out just to make the cut.

“He absolutely gutted,” Golf Channel’s Paul McGinley said of McIlroy. “His race is probably run now at this stage. As they say, you can’t win the Open or a major on the first day, but you can certainly lose it and he may well have lost it there today.”

DeChambeau, for one, wasn’t ready to throw in the towel.

“I’m going to go figure it out,” DeChambeau said.

Justin Thomas shoots 68 at 2024 British Open, or 14 strokes better than his start a year ago

“I have yet to play a links course that I dislike or I think is bad,” Thomas said.

TROON, Scotland – A year ago, Justin Thomas made a career-worst score of nine on his final hole of his opening round of the British Open at Royal Liverpool en route to another disappointing missed cut in a major. He looked lost in his game. One year later, Thomas posted 3-under 68 at Royal Troon on Thursday to sit alone in third, three strokes behind leader Daniel Brown at the 152nd Open. Asked to describe the difference in his game from a year ago, he said, “I would guess about 15 strokes better, 13 strokes? What did I shoot?”

He shot 82 a year ago so Thomas should’ve split the difference because the answer is 14 strokes.

“I couldn’t even tell you what I was thinking or how it was then,” Thomas said. “I’m just worried about how I am now, and I’m very pleased with my game and know things are continuing to work in the right direction. I’ve just got to keep trying to play well.”

Thomas, a 15-time winner on the PGA Tour and two-time major winner, has slipped to No. 29 in the world. He ranks 17th in the FedEx Cup with five top-10 finishes this season, so in comparison to last year, his game has shown signs of regaining the form that made him a world No. 1.

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But he remains winless since the 2022 PGA Championship, and the majors mostly have been a disaster this season. He finished T-8 at the PGA Championship in his native Kentucky but missed the cut at both the Masters and U.S. Open, continuing a distressing trend. He’s missed more than half of his last nine starts in majors.

On a rainy, battleship-gray day in the first round, Thomas carded seven birdies, including the final two holes, despite tricky wind conditions that flipped in the opposite direction than the pros had faced in practice rounds or even back in 2016, the last time this championship was contested here.

“That was wild,” said Thomas, who still managed to birdie two of the first four holes. “ I remember trying to drive 1 and 3 in 2016, and I hit 7-iron into 1 today, and I hit a 3-wood up there on 3 to have a wedge in. But it just was very, very different. But it just was all very typical of an Open, just trying to make the best out of the conditions.”

Thomas, who made his Open Championship debut at Troon in 2016 and began with a 67 that year to sit T-4 through 18 holes before falling to T-53, has struggled at this major more than any other, with nary a top-10 and a T-11 in 2019 as his best showing in seven previous appearances. Yet, Thomas declared himself a fan of links golf.

“I have yet to play a links course that I dislike or I think is bad,” Thomas said. “If I had to choose one style of golf or probably even one golf course the rest of my life to play, it would be a links course.”

At the Genesis Scottish Open a week ago, Thomas raced out of the gate with a flurry of birdies to shoot 62 and assume the first-round lead. Despite taking six more shots this week, Thomas ranked his play as better at Troon.

“I felt like I had great control off the tee,” he said, “just in the sense of, I would say, the quality of play.”

Last week, Thomas tumbled down the leaderboard and finished T-62, saying he didn’t get anything out of his rounds.

“It wasn’t bad enough to shoot over par both days,” he said.

Will this week be any different? Can Thomas piece together more than one good round in a row – preferably four of them – and be a serious contender at the 152nd Open? To hear Thomas tell it, his game is trending in the right direction and as the pros like to say, he said he feels close.

“I’m just doing, I would say, everything better,” he said.

On Thursday, he was 14 strokes better than a year ago and that alone is reason for optimism.