Louis Oosthuizen withdraws from Wyndham Championship

At No. 8, Louis Oosthuizen was the lone top-10 golfer in the FedEx Cup points standings in the field.

Louis Oosthuizen, citing a neck injury, has withdrawn for the Wyndham Championship on the eve of the tournament, according to the PGA Tour.

At No. 8, Oosthuizen was the lone top-10 golfer in the FedEx Cup points standings in the field for the 2020-21 PGA Tour regular-season finale.

He is being replaced by Wes Roach, who is No. 208 in the points.

Roach joins the group of Jason Kokrak and Josh Teater at 7:34 a.m. ET on the 10th tee on Thursday at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Teater is in the field after he replaced Patrick Reed, who withdrew from the tournament on Tuesday.

WYNDHAMTee times, TV | Odds, picks, predictions | Fantasy

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Wyndham Championship Fantasy Golf Power Rankings

We look at the fantasy golf power rankings for the 2021 Wyndham Championship, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

The 2020-21 PGA Tour regular season comes to an end with this week’s Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. A top-heavy field is in attendance ahead of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Below, we look at the fantasy golf power rankings for the 2021 Wyndham Championship, with PGA Tour picks and predictions.

The top 125 golfers in the season-long point standings after this week will advance to The Northern Trust at Liberty National Golf Club. The three-week playoff stretch will end with the Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club from Sept. 2-5. Field size will condense each week based on the updated FedEx Cup standings.

Louis Oosthuizen is the top-ranked golfer in this week’s field by both the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings (No. 2) and the FedEx Cup standings (No. 8). Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Rose and Francesco Molinari are among the biggest names in need of a strong showing this week to join him in the playoff picture.

Also see: Wyndham Championship odds, picks and predictions

2021 Wyndham Championship: Fantasy Golf Top 20

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Odds last updated Wednesday at 9:10 a.m. ET.

20. Brendon Todd (+6000)

On the playoff bubble at No. 110 in the season-long point standings, so he needs an adequate showing this week. Leads the PGA Tour in driving accuracy percentage for the season and averaged 0.55 Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee per round despite missing the cut last year.

19. Kevin Kisner (+4000)

Has averaged 1.26 strokes gained on the field per round over 24 career rounds at Sedgefield CC, including a T-3 finish in 2020. Had recent back-to-back top-10 finishes against comparable fields at the Rocket Mortgage Classic and Travelers Championship.

18. Mackenzie Hughes (+6000)

Made the cut in each of his last four events prior to a 50th-place finish at the Olympic Golf Competition. Tied for 22nd in this event in 2019 with a strong approach game and good play on the greens.

17. Justin Rose (+6000)

The former World No. 1 had a disappointing T-54 finish in the condensed field last week at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational and enters the regular-season finale 138th in the FEC standings and in need of a big jump. He stepped up for top-10 finishes at the Masters and PGA Championship.

16. Si Woo Kim (+4000)

Blew up with a final round of 78 last week to finish last dead last. Started the back 9 at even par for the round until shooting a 13 on the par-3 11th and then birdied four of his final seven holes.

15. Kevin Streelman (+4000)

Forty-sixth on Tour in driving accuracy and finished in the top 20 in five of his last seven events. Has struggled with the short game this season but is averaging 1.01 total strokes gained per round on the field.

14. Charl Schwartzel (+4000)

Ten career rounds played at Sedgefield with an average of 1.59 strokes gained on the field per round. Has climbed to 76th in the Official World Golf Ranking from No. 206 at the end of 2020 and has two top-three finishes in his last six events.

13. Tommy Fleetwood (+4000)

Enters the week 136th in the FEC standings and needs a strong finish not only to reach the playoffs but to maintain full-time PGA Tour status for next year. Can make up for his wayward driver with strong iron play.

12. Robert MacIntyre (+4000)

Ineligible for the FEC playoffs while playing this event on a temporary Tour membership, but he can grab a 2021-22 Tour card with a quality finish. Has four top-10 finishes through 17 international events this year, including a T-8 at the British Open.

11. Rickie Fowler (+5000)

Made the cut in five of his last six events with a top finish of T-8 at the PGA Championship to get to No. 130 in the FEC standings. Tied for 22nd in his only appearance to date at Sedgefield in 2016.

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10. Matthew Wolff (+4000)

Has just one missed cut through five events since returning to more regular play at the US Open. He tied for 17th against the strong field last week in Memphis, Tennessee. Tied for 19th in his 2019 tournament debut with 1.40 SG: Approach per round.

9. Russell Henley (+3000)

Thirty-seventh in driving accuracy and leads this field with 0.93 SG: Approach per round. Had three straight top-20 finishes before a missed cut at the British Open.

8. Jason Kokrak (+2000)

The two-time winner this season enters the tournament 12th in the FEC standings. He has 25 rounds of experience at this venue with an average of 0.26 total strokes gained on the field per round.

7. Kevin Na (+3000)

Has averaged 1.40 strokes gained on the field over 14 career rounds at this venue. Most recently tied for fourth in 2017 with 1.71 SG: Tee-to-Green and 1.38 SG: Putting per round.

6. Hideki Matsuyama (+1300)

Up to 17th in the OWGR after last week’s playoff loss at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. Missed the cut in his last appearance here in 2019 but has averaged 1.15 strokes gained per round over 18 career rounds at Sedgefield.

5. Brian Harman (+2000)

Forty-first in the OWGR but 12th in the Golfweek rankings with five top-10 finishes against two missed cuts this year. He’s 39th in driving accuracy for the season and tied for sixth in this event in 2019.

4. Sungjae Im (+3000)

Averaging a field-best 2.38 strokes gained per round over eight career rounds at Sedgefield CC. Finished in the top 10 each of the last two years.

3. Will Zalatoris (+2000)

Would rank 26th in the FEC standings if not for playing this season on a Special Temporary Membership. He’s 18th in the Golfweek rankings with five top-10 finishes against stronger fields than this and makes the playoffs with a win.

2. Louis Oosthuizen (+1500)

Has put together the most impressive 2020-21 season of anyone without a win with six top-10 finishes in 2021, including three in majors. Makes his debut at this event and course but enters without a flaw in his game.

1. Webb Simpson (+1000)

Leads this field with 46 career rounds played at Sedgefield and ranks second with 1.97 total strokes gained on the field per round. Tied for third last year and in 2017, and finished second in 2018 and 2019.

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Cameron Champ wins 3M Open for third PGA Tour title

The win is the third of the 26-year-old Champ’s career.

Louis Oosthuizen lipped out with a shot from just inside 100 yards on his final hole that would have tied Cameron Champ and given the South African a share of the 3M Open lead in the clubhouse at 14 under.

Instead Oosthuizen had to settle for the clubhouse lead one back at 13 under, putting the pressure on Champ to finish strong. The 26-year-old made birdie on No. 15 to take a two-shot advantage but hit a wayward drive left that found the thick rough on the final hole. After two lay ups to get back in the fairway, Champ spun his approach shot to a couple feet and signed for a 5-under 66 on Sunday at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota, to earn his third win on the PGA Tour. Champ previously won the 2019 Safeway Open and 2018 Sanderson Farms Championship.

The Houston resident had struggled in recent events. Before a T-11 at the John Deere Classic two weeks ago, Champ had missed the cut or withdrawn in his previous five starts. The former Texas A&M Aggie is now the fourth player 27 yeard old or younger to win a Tour event in each of the last three years, joining Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa and Bryson DeChambeau.

3M Open: Leaderboard

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At 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities, Louis Oosthuizen doing best to get past latest major disappointment

After yet another major disappointment, Louis Oosthuizen is doing his best to move on at the 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities.

BLAINE, Minn. – It was unlike Louis Oosthuizen and his pleasant ways to take a pass on talking with the media after the final round of the British Open.

But who could blame him?

For the third consecutive major championship, Oosthuizen staggered off the 72nd hole dragging a large dose of disappointment, another chance at grabbing major championship hardware coming up just short once again as Collin Morikawa hoisted the Claret Jug at Royal St. George’s.

“You don’t want to always talk about close again, finishing second, finishing third, so I wasn’t really up for that conversation right there,” Oosthuizen said. “Collin played the way you should play to win a major, especially on a Sunday. He didn’t make many mistakes and when he did make a mistake, he made unbelievable up‑and‑downs for pars.

“It was just frustrating because I knew my game was definitely there to have a good solid day. Weather was as good as you can get at the Open, so it was just a bit of frustration and disappointment really. I was fine on Monday, though.”

He was in good spirits on Wednesday, too, as he finished his prep for the 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities. Still, despite being six times zones and more than 6,500 miles from Royal St. George’s, his latest close-but-no-cigar curtain closer was still fresh on his mind.

Oosthuizen set the Open Championship 36-hole scoring record of 129 and led after each of the first three rounds, his 54-hole advantage one shot over Morikawa. But Oosthuizen was out of sorts in the final round, bogeyed the par-5 seventh – the easiest hole on the course – and couldn’t catch the eventual winner on the back nine. He finished in a tie for third, four shots back.

This came on the heels of finishing one shot short one month earlier to Jon Rahm in the U.S. Open, where he led by two with three to play at Torrey Pines but hit his tee shot on the 17th into a penalty area while Rahm became the first Spaniard to win the tournament with two long birdie putts on the 71st and 72nd holes.

That came one month after the 38-year-old from South Africa couldn’t get the putter working in the final 18 of the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island and fell two shots shy of Phil Mickelson, who became the oldest major winner in history.

In 10 months, Oosthuizen has played in five majors and finished third or better in four. Only six players beat Oosthuizen in those four – champion Bryson DeChambeau and runner-up Matthew Wolff at the 2020 U.S. Open; Mickelson at the 2021 PGA Championship; Rahm at the 2021 U.S. Open; and Morikawa and runner-up Jordan Spieth at the 2021 British Open.

And since Oosthuizen’s stellar triumph in the 2010 British Open at St. Andrews, he has finished runner-up six times in majors.

“I would look back at all the finishes that I had in majors and the way I played them to be really proud of what I achieved and being able to perform at major levels is what it’s all about,” the world No. 9 said. “Being that close, you want the second one. You also look back and look at it as you came that close and you couldn’t get it. But I’ll still have hopefully quite a few majors in me and hopefully I can get another one under the belt.

“I’ll take more motivation out of it than being disappointed.”

Oosthuizen, who has 14 professional wins but is still searching for his first on American soil, is a tad tired – physically and mentally – after the Open and jet lag. He’s conserving his energy and will be mindful to be mentally sharp starting with the first round.

“I’m not doing much this week on the range,” he said. “I was doing a little bit of work on putting yesterday. I’ll do a bit of work with my physio, and other than that, just resting up and waiting for to start and just try and get the mind as fresh as I can. I know the game is there, I’m swinging well and I’m putting nicely, so I just need to not make that many thinking errors.

“That happens when you come off a major week.”

But he’s glad he’s at TPC Twin Cities instead of at his new farm he bought in Ocala, Florida.

“I’m glad that I entered in this event to sort of get back in there and play and not really sit around at home and thinking about the disappointing Sunday last week,” he said. “I think I can still do better. You can always improve.

“I’m just doing what I’ve been doing the last three, four years really. I think it’s just the work is starting to pay off and I’m just having a good time on the golf course and trying to enjoy my golf as much as I can.”

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Louis Oosthuizen suffers more major heartbreak. Will he ‘rise up’ again?

In Louis Oosthuizen’s six runner-up finishes – including at least one in all four majors – he had rarely beaten himself.

There’s more major-championship heartbreak for Louis Oosthuizen.

Eleven years to the day that Oosthuizen won the British Open in 2010, he suffered a different outcome this time.

Oosthuizen, the 54-hole leader for a second straight major championship, closed in 1-over 71 at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England, to finish tied for third with Jon Rahm. It marked the ninth time he’s finished either runner-up or third at a major and dropped him to 1-for-7 in converting 54-hole leads or co-leads on the PGA Tour and 1-for-4 in major championships. Oosthuizen didn’t speak to the media after his round, but posted congratulations to the Champion Golfer of the Year on social media.

“Well I do know one thing, the fans at the Open are second (or third) to none,” he tweeted. “Thank you for the incredible support this week, and congrats to Collin Morikawa who played with class and grit today. Well done mate.”

Oosthuizen, who set a 36-hole Open scoring record with rounds of 64-65 and signed for a gutty 1-under 69 on Saturday, lacked his ballstriking excellence of the first three days. He hit several shots weak and to the right, including at the fourth hole, which lead to a bogey and gave Morikawa a share of the lead.

“His tempo, his rhythm, whatever it was, was off,” noted NBC’s Paul Azinger.

Oosthuizen picked a bad time for his swing to be out of synch. He flared another iron right at the par-5 seventh and the ball rested on the upslope of the revetted bunker. When Oosthuizen bladed the shot into a buried lie in another bunker over the green, Azinger said, “That is just pressure – plain and simple.”

British Open: Leaderboard | Prize money | Winner’s bag

Oosthuizen made bogey while Morikawa made birdie for a pivotal two-stroke swing.

“The seventh hole was definitely the turning point,” Morikawa said during his winner’s news conference. “Saw what happened to Louis. I’m not sure what happened with his first bunker shot, if he had a tough lie or anything, but just to have that little switch of a two-shot swing kind of got that round started and into another gear in a sense.”

Morikawa added birdies at Nos. 8 and 9 to extend his lead to four. Oosthuizen cut into the deficit in memorable fashion, caroming his tee shot off the flag at the 253-yard par-3 11th.

But he made a critical error at No. 13, tugging his tee shot and depositing it into a bunker and leaving him no choice but to pitch out. He made bogey there and despite a bounce-back birdie at 14, he never got closer than within three strokes of Morikawa.

Oosthuizen, 38, has been a central figure in the last three majors: T-2 at the PGA Championship in May, second at the U.S. Open and T-3 at the British. Jordan Spieth, who shot a final-round 66, edged him for runner-up honors and kept him from moving up the career list for seconds. Oosthuizen has been a bridesmaid six times, tied for ninth all-time, and improbably just has one PGA Tour victory despite his textbook swing, cool, calm demeanor and evolution into a top putter.

“When I watch him play and hit his drives, I’m like, ‘Wow, I want to hit it like that,’ ” Morikawa said. “Louis is consistent, he really is. He’s going to keep knocking at these doors, and I’m sure he’s going to knock a few more down. He’s just too good. He just had an unlucky break on 7.”

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But as Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee pointed out, Oosthuizen has the most runner-ups in majors of anyone who has won only one of them.

“It seems inevitable that he’s going to get another major, but at his age, there are only four majors a year, and it’s more likely that he won’t than he will,” he said.

Oosthuizen was asked on Thursday about how he managed to bounce back from the disappointment of close calls at the previous two majors this season, and he gave a telling response.

“It depends if you lost it or someone else beat you,” he said. “I think in both of those I was beaten by better golf at the end there. It takes a little while, but it’s sort of – you have to get over it quickly, otherwise it’s going to hold you back to perform again.”

In Oosthuizen’s six runner-up finishes – including at least one in all four majors – he had rarely beaten himself, shooting over par in the last round only once and on four occasions shot 70 or better. This time, it was a bit of a case of both – Oosthuizen succumbed to the pressure while also being beaten by a flawless performance by Morikawa.

As the Golf Channel’s Jaime Diaz noted, Oosthuizen has experienced heartbreak, but his heart wasn’t broken. Time will tell if he can “rise up” and earn that elusive second major.

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Louis Oosthuizen just missed a hole-in-one on a 253-yard par 3 and nobody could believe it

How did this ball not go in?!

Sunday morning’s final round of the 2021 British Open has been a wild one with Collin Morikawa building a lead and others, including Jordan Spieth, trying to make runs to put some pressure on Morikawa.

Louis Oosthuizen, who entered Sunday with a one-stroke lead, is one of those players now trying to catch Morikawa. Oosthuizen is used to being in contention at majors and is trying to win one for the first time since he won The Open Championship in 2010.

He almost picked up two strokes in stunning fashion on the 253-yard, par-3 11th hole when his tee shot hit the pin and somehow didn’t go in.

Look at how close he was to an incredible ace:

He birdied the hole but man, that should have gone in.

Twitter had reactions:

54-hole leader Louis Oosthuizen has simple plan for final round of British Open: ‘Go one better’

Louis Oosthuizen is 18 holes away from ending his anguish of being golf’s nearly man at the majors, especially this year.

Louis Oosthuizen is 18 holes away from ending his anguish of being golf’s nearly man at the majors, especially this year.

It wasn’t as pretty as his record-setting scoring over the first 36 holes, but the 38-year-old South African broke out of a three-way tie with a birdie at 16 to shoot 1-under 69 on Saturday at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England and take a one-stroke lead over Collin Morikawa heading into the final round of the 149th British Open. Oosthuizen has a simple plan as he tries to go for a wire-to-wire victory tomorrow.

“Go one better,” said the runner-up of the last two majors. “You know, finishing second isn’t great, so I will play my heart out tomorrow and see if I can lift the Claret Jug again.”

For the 10th consecutive major round – a run dating to the second round of the PGA Championship in May – Oosthuizen, winner of the Claret Jug in 2010 but since then second in six majors, is among the top three on the leaderboard and setting the pace at 12-under 198.

It was another uncharacteristically, lovely summer day on the southeastern English coast – blue skies, a warming sun, and the absence of the Open Championship’s trademark blustering wind –  so much so that fans lathered in suntan lotion to enjoy the balmy, dry conditions. The action on the course heated up almost as much as the temperature, but it was less of a birdie-fest as trickier hole locations and a layout firming up and stretched within 10 yards of the maximum length of 7,189 yards proved to be a true linksland test.

“The R&A definitely said there won’t be low scoring today,” Oosthuizen said. “There were some real questionable pins out there.”

Jon Rahm echoed that sentiment, saying, “Those were some of the hardest pin positions I’ve ever seen. You can’t really appreciate it on TV. You have to be so precise.”

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Morikawa, who won the PGA Championship in his first attempt in 2020 is attempting to become the first player to win two different majors in his first attempt. He stumbled early with bogeys on two of the first five holes and trailed by four strokes at the turn, so the 24-year-old Morikawa is pleased to be one stroke back and playing in the final group for the second straight day.

“I think the biggest thing I can draw from the PGA is just knowing I can get it done,” he said. “It’s going to be a grueling 18, but I look forward to it. It’s the position you want to be in. As an athlete, golfer, you want to be in this position. I love it.”

Oosthuizen was caught first by Jordan Spieth and then by Morikawa but he never lost a share of the lead. Oosthuizen skated along with six pars to open his round and then birdied seven and nine to regain a two-stroke lead. But he made bogeys at Nos. 11 and 13 – just his second and third bogeys of the week – to drop into a tie for the lead with Spieth at 11 under.

Oosthuizen made a sloppy par at the reachable par-5 14th, where Morikawa made birdie to make it a three-way tie at the top. One hole later, Oosthuizen was in danger of dropping out of top position, but he salvaged par with a clutch putt. Then, he drilled his tee shot at the par-3 16th to 15 feet and canned the putt to improve to 12 under.

“I had a few loose swings before that on my iron shots and sort of needed that little boost and made a really good swing on 16 and a few good ones coming in,” he said.

Spieth frittered away two strokes as his trusty putter failed him with bogeys at the final two holes – a three-putt bogey at 17 and a missed 3-footer at the last. The 2017 British Open champion is alone in third place at 9-under 201.

One stroke further back are Canadian Corey Conners (66) and American Scottie Scheffler (69), who are tied for fourth at 7-under 203. Rahm, the reigning U.S. Open champion, kept his hopes alive for winning back-to-back majors with a 69 and is part of a trio at 6-under 204.

“I’ll have to play a flawless round tomorrow, but never say never,” Rahm said.

Sunday’s final round marks 11 years to the day that Oosthuizen won his lone major and PGA Tour title. If he were to win again, it would be the second-longest gap between major wins, held by Julius Boros at 11 years, 9 days (between the 1952 U.S. Open and 1963 U.S. Open). But should he finish second again, Oosthuizen would suffer the same sad fate as Jack Nicklaus in 1964 and Ernie Els in 2000 in finishing runner-up in three majors in the same season.

“You try not to think of it until you’ve done it,” Oosthuizen said on Friday. On Saturday, he was asked again whether he would think about the silver trophy of which he has a replica back home on his farm in Ocala and said, “You need to believe that you can lift the trophy, as well, and if you think about it beforehand that you might win this championship, I think that’s great, and you have to believe you can do it.”

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Frustrated Jordan Spieth remains in contention to end major drought in British Open at Royal St. George’s

Jordan Spieth continued to display his captivating artistry Saturday and remained in prime position to claim his second Claret Jug.

Jordan Spieth continued to display his captivating artistry Saturday on the rutted links canvas of Royal St. George’s and remained in prime position to claim his second Claret Jug.

The three-time major winner and Champion Golfer of the Year from 2017 at Royal Birkdale, when he delivered an extraordinary back nine on Sunday to win, patched together a 1-under-par 69 to move to 9 under and rest three shots behind pace-setter and 2010 Open champion Louis Oosthuizen and two shots behind 2020 PGA champion Collin Morikawa.

The only other time Spieth began a major with three rounds in the 60s – he has shot 65-67-69 – was in 2017 at Royal Birkdale.

Spieth was at his brilliant best early in the round as he made five birdies in his first 11 holes to offset two bogeys. He grabbed a share of the lead early on the back nine before he was forced to scratch and claw to keep his round together.

But he couldn’t keep from needing three putts from short of the green on the par-5 14th to walk away with just a par and then three-putted both the 17th and 18th greens for bogeys, which sent him directly to the practice green after he put his signature to the scorecard.

The frustrated Spieth thus bypassed the assembled media.

But the world No. 23 is still in the hunt through 54 holes and will get the bad taste out of his mouth as quickly as possible and call upon his links golf powers in the final round in an attempt to end his major drought dating to Royal Birkdale.

Spieth has been much-watch TV this week, his assortment of escapes, supreme ball-striking and converted long birdie putts never dull. This week, his brushes are his old reliable Scotty Cameron putter – though it let him down late on Saturday – and a set of Titleist’s latest version of its new T100 irons he put in the bag this week. But his mind has been equally instrumental at Royal St. George’s and his love at first sight for links golf fuels him.

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When Spieth travels over the pond, his paint-by-numbers approach is not in his luggage as he turns his golf senses away from swing thoughts when eyeing the lay of the land in the Old World and is always mindful of the elements.

Without worrying about his mechanics, Spieth channels his imagination, creativity and feel and plays golf instead of playing with swing thoughts dashing through his head. He relishes shaping and flighting shots and turning to a variety of clubs when confronted with chip and pitch shots.

“There’s a lot of external factors over here, and I think that external is where I need to be living,” said Spieth, who has won the oldest championship in golf in 2017, fell one shot short of a playoff in 2015 at St. Andrews and tied for ninth in 2019 at Carnoustie.

He can tap into that history on Sunday. And he is no longer lost in the wilderness, ending his winless drought of nearly four years with a victory earlier this year in the Valero Texas Open. Spieth grinded through his struggles, even coming to enjoy the grind, and thinks he’s better for it.

Piece it all together and Spieth could wrap his hands around the Claret Jug once again.

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Here are 5 things to know about British Open leader Louis Oosthuizen

The South African started Saturday at the top of the leaderboard of the British Open at Royal St. George’s Golf Course in Sandwich, England.

Louis Oosthuizen has already had either a great year or a year of “almosts,” depending on how you feel about finishing second in two of the biggest golf tournaments around.

The South African is at the top of the leaderboard after Friday’s second round of the British Open at Royal St. George’s Golf Course in Sandwich, England. He leads Collin Morikawa by two shots at 11 under par, setting a 36-hole tournament record in the process. 

This performance is following an excellent run in 2021’s golf majors — he finished second in both the PGA Championship and U.S. Open already this year.

Oosthuizen has recently purchased a farm in Marion County, moving to the Ocala, Florida, area after previously living in the South Florida community of Palm Beach Gardens.

Here’s a look at Louis Oosthuizen.

Playing links golf for just the second time, Scottie Scheffler again in position to win first title at British Open

Scheffler canned a 15-footer for par on his final hole Friday, putting him in a tie for fourth through 36 holes.

There’s always a first time.

For Scottie Scheffler, his initial encounter with links golf came last week in the Scottish Open. The Texas lad quickly adapted to the different style of the game at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick, Scotland, finishing in a tie for 12th.

And now, a few days later in the British Open at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England, he’s in position to win his first major and break his PGA Tour maiden.

Scheffler canned a 15-footer for par on his final hole Friday and has put together rounds of 67-66 that has left him in a tie for fourth through 36 holes, four shots behind pace-setter Louis Oosthuizen.

“Last week was actually my first time to the United Kingdom, so I’m pretty fresh over here,” he said. “I’ve enjoyed it so far. The weather has been good. I really like links golf and it’s been fun coming out here, playing, seeing, creating shots, really just having fun.

“I really didn’t change much. I just had to figure out how I play shots on this grass. I never played on this type of grass before. That was the biggest adjustment. I’ve always done well on courses that are firm and fast, and so I wasn’t too worried about coming over to play links golf the first time. Just needed to figure out the bunkers and the grass around the greens.”

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The last player to win the British Open in their debut was Ben Curtis in 1993 – at Royal St. George’s. Despite his lack of experience, Scheffler sounds like an old veteran when asked about his approach to playing Royal St. George’s.

“First things first, you got to get the ball in the fairway, especially on a new golf course where I’m not as in tune to where and where not to put my golf ball,” Scheffler, 25, said. “So, getting the ball in play is really important. I feel like I’ve gotten a really good feel for the positions on this golf course and where I need to attack and kind of play a little bit safe.

“I feel like my game is trending in the right direction this week.”

It’s been trending in the right direction for some time. Scheffler has been knocking on the door named victory for nearly two years. And it seems the bigger the stage, the bigger the tall Texan’s game gets.

This year he finished in a tie for fifth in the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship, lost to Billy Horschel in the final of the WGC-Match Play, and finished third in the Memorial.

His major record isn’t shabby, either. He tied for fourth in the 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park, tied for 18th in this year’s Masters, tied for eighth in the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island and tied for seventh in the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.

The collegiate and amateur standout who is ranked No. 19 in the world has come accustomed to answering questions about his thoughts of winning his first PGA Tour title.

“I kind of think (about) that going into every tournament,” he said. “I’m always looking to try and win golf tournaments, and it’s nice to be able to put myself in a position to win this one. We’re only halfway there. I think I’m four shots back going into the weekend, so I got a lot of work to do.”

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