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.

Watch: Haotong Li gets rejected by the Swilcan Burn at 2022 British Open

Haotong Li’s approach hit the wall of the Swilcan Burn and ricocheted back into play.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — On Thursday, Tiger Woods rinsed his approach at the par-4 first hole from a divot into the Swilcan Burn fronting the green. It was an inauspicious start that resulted in a double bogey en route to shooting 78.

Unlucky? Rub of the green, Old Tom Morris would likely have said.

On Friday, China’s Haotong Li was on the right side of a good break when his approach at the first from 75 yards hit the rock wall of the Swilcan Burn, the famous winding waterway that empties into St Andrews Bay alongside the two-mile West Sands Beach, and ricocheted out of the water and back towards him. He avoided a penalty shot and faced a 44-yard pitch over the Burn.

“That’s just not playing fair is it,” an announcer on Sky Sports said.

“We shouldn’t laugh,” his broadcast partner added.

Li’s disgust was written all over his face and that’s before it would go from bad to worse. Li, 26, who won the BMW International Open on the DP World Tour two weeks ago, failed to take advantage of his good fortune. He deposited the next shot into the water anyway and had to sink a 14-foot putt to salvage a triple-bogey 7.

Watch: Si Woo Kim cans second attempt from Road Hole bunker for incredible par

Si Woo Kim would go on to sign for a 3-under 69.

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The 17th hole at The Old Course in St. Andrews is one of the most unique holes in golf. Not only is the tee shot played over the Old Course Hotel, but just steps from the putting surface is a road that is in play.

Just ask Xander Schauffele, who, after flying a wedge over the green, had to play from the gravel surface.

Protecting the front left of the 17th green is a pot bunker, dubbed the “Road Hole bunker.” Many balls find their way into the trap, as angulations force all stray shots into the bottom.

During Thursday’s first round of the 150th Open Championship, Si Woo Kim’s second shot found the Road Hole bunker, finishing right up against the lip. When he tried to pitch out sideways, the ball failed to get out and it came to rest once again in the sand.

150th Open Championship: Leaderboard

Then he did the impossible.

Kim made par at the last and signed for an opening 3-under 69.

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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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Lynch: The British Open and Tiger Woods are showing LIV golfers their new reality, and they won’t like it

Finally, someone in golf’s government delivered the unambiguous clarity required to combat the Saudi effort to hijack the game.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Long before Paul Lawrie clipped the first ball off the ancient linksland of the Old Course to begin the 150th Open Championship, it was obvious that the Royal & Ancient was stiff-arming the royal and affluent of LIV Golf this week in St. Andrews.

The maladroit CEO of the Saudi-funded splinter circuit, Greg Norman, won two Opens yet was deemed undeserving of a place at either the past champions’ dinner or the Celebration of Champions exhibition, which are held only when the Open is contested at golf’s ancestral home. That his exclusion was publicly endorsed by multiple players illustrates the disdain with which Norman is widely viewed, but the R&A also suspected he would use the Open to pimp LIV Golf.

The R&A’s chief executive, Martin Slumbers, didn’t stop at wrapping the Great White Pilot Fish in a newspaper and marking him ‘Return to Sender’ to Riyadh. He was strident in making clear his determination to defend the Open but also his willingness to enlist the championship in defense of the broader sport.

“We have been asked quite frequently about banning players. Let me be very clear. That’s not on our agenda,” he said, briefly providing Norman another hopeful moment at a major that was soon dashed. “What is on our agenda is that we will review our exemptions and qualifications criteria for The Open. Players have to earn their place in The Open, and that is fundamental to its ethos and its unique global appeal.”

Slumbers left no doubt that LIV Golf — its ranks oversubscribed with banged-up veterans and no-name journeymen — isn’t a valid pathway into golf’s greatest championship. “Professional golfers are entitled to choose where they want to play and to accept the prize money that’s offered to them. I have absolutely no issue with that at all. But there is no such thing as a free lunch,” he said. “I believe the model we’ve seen at Centurion and Pumpkin Ridge is not in the best long-term interests of the sport as a whole and is entirely driven by money. We believe it undermines the merit-based culture and the spirit of open competition that makes golf so special.”

To players who hoped to continue taking spots in majors based on the vapors of past accomplishments, Slumbers made clear he’s not having it. The Open will remain open to the best players in the world, he insisted, while emphasizing that LIV members are no longer actually proving themselves against the best. The Open will not be used by emeritus golfers who took the lazy, lucrative option.

150th Open Championship: Tee times | Leaderboard

Slumbers then tied a bow around his ‘get lost’ letter to LIV: “In my opinion, the continued commentary that this is about growing the game is just not credible and if anything, is harming the perception of our sport which we are working so hard to improve.”

Finally, someone in golf’s government delivered the unambiguous clarity required to combat the Saudi effort to hijack the professional game.

LIV Golf players competing in St. Andrews can’t have missed the chill, in person and on paper. Ian Poulter, who used lawyers to force his way into the field at last week’s Scottish Open, was booed on the first tee. His starting time — fourth group out, in the company of two little-known Europeans — befitted a 46-year-old ranked outside the top 100 and seven years removed from his last top 10 finish at a major. Some of his fellow travelers might have expected more grace on the pairings sheet, but Phil Mickelson, Patrick Reed, Bryson DeChambeau, Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood, Abraham Ancer and Louis Oosthuizen — a runaway winner here in 2010 — all found themselves far short of marquee group status. Only Brooks Koepka and Dustin Johnson could boast playing partners of real stature.

The LIV defectors shouldn’t expect their reception in the locker room to remain collegial either, if the words of Tiger Woods are an indicator. “I think that what they’ve done is they’ve turned their back on what has allowed them to get to this position,” he said.

Sniping about loyalty aside, Woods cut to the jugular of LIV — competition, or the lack thereof, and left the impression that he regards its players as akin to Harlem Globetrotters who think they’re entitled to a spot on the roster of Steph Curry’s Warriors, mere entertainers with a guarantee and not athletes with a hunger.

“What is the incentive to practice? What is the incentive to go out there and earn it in the dirt? You’re just getting paid a lot of money upfront and playing a few events and playing 54 holes,” he said with barely-disguised contempt. “I can understand 54 holes is almost like a mandate when you get to the Senior tour. The guys are a little bit older and a little more banged up. But when you’re at this young age and some of these kids — they really are kids who have gone from amateur golf into that organization — 72-hole tests are part of it.”

“I just don’t see how that move is positive in the long term for a lot of these players, especially if the LIV organization doesn’t get world-ranking points and the major championships change their criteria for entering the events. It would be sad to see some of these young kids never get a chance to experience what we’ve got a chance to experience and walk these hallowed grounds and play in these championships.”

Thus LIV’s desperation to obtain world ranking points for its events. The process for a new tour to be granted such status is complex and lengthy, and LIV doesn’t meet several key criteria, but Norman is demanding affirmation a week after filing the application. He knows LIV can only survive as a parasite on the legacy model it vows to upend, can only gain traction and respectability by using the apparatus of the establishment he loathes — chiefly, world ranking points and major championships.

Slumbers made clear that he will defend the integrity of the sport against the stain of Saudi ownership, a war distinct from the lesser battle being waged by the PGA and DP World tours against LIV. It’s not outlandish to assume that his peers will make equally clear that their major championships won’t become collateral damage in this conflict.

A week intended to celebrate a century-and-a-half of history has instead become a polite cage fight for the future. Those surprised by Slumbers’ intervention will have been astonished by that of Woods. For the entirety of his public life, which neatly overlaps with his entire adult life, Woods defiantly avoided being conscripted into causes he didn’t believe were his, social or political. He always did and said what was best for Tiger, and what was usually best for Tiger was doing and saying nothing. But this week, Woods chose sides and made clear his willingness to fight those who would auction golf to the Saudis for their own enrichment. In the fullness of time, those two long-ago Claret Jugs might not be the most significant contribution he makes to this game in St. Andrews.

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2022 British Open: Ian Poulter’s opening tee shot was ugly — and was he or wasn’t he heckled?

Afterward, he was asked if the boos he received from spectators near the first tee had anything to do with his dreadful tee shot.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Ian Poulter nearly did the unthinkable with his opening tee shot at The Old Course at St. Andrews.

He nearly toe-pulled an iron off the tee at the huge double fairway out of bounds, a feat only performed by Ian-Baker Finch at the 1995 British Open, which effectively sent him into retirement as he battled the driver yips.

“When I walked off that 1st tee, (I thought) is it Ian James Finch or what could this be? It was 5 feet from out of bounds,” Poulter said. “The barrier was in the way, took a drop, and got off to a decent start after that really.”

Poulter made par at the first and by the end of the round signed for 3-under 69, a solid performance after an inauspicious start.

Afterward, he was asked if the boos he received from spectators near the first tee had anything to do with his dreadful tee shot.

“Didn’t hear one,” Poulter said. “I actually thought I had a great reception on the first tee, to be honest. All I heard was clapping.”

When it was suggested that the boos were the result of Poulter joining LIV Golf, Poulter continued to downplay that he was heckled. (The heckling isn’t audible in the video of the shot posted on YouTube, but several tweets by those around the tee noted that Poulter didn’t get a warm welcome.)

“Oh, my gosh, I have heard not one heckle. In three weeks, I’ve heard nothing,” he said.

Poulter has been the most vocal player to oppose having his membership suspended by the PGA Tour, and was among the players who challenged the DP World Tour’s ban of LIV Defectors at last week’s Genesis Scottish Open, a co-sanctioned event between the two tours. Eventually, he received a stay of his suspension and was allowed to compete. Poulter noted that he has ignored reading any of the stories being written about the upstart league’s challenge to the current golf world order, and claimed not to have heard R&A Secretary Martin Slumbers’ comments that took a hard stance against LIV Golf.

“Purposely haven’t looked at all. So I don’t want to know. You can tell me, I’m not going to listen. I’m here to play golf,” he said. “This could probably be my last Open Championship at St Andrews. So I’m trying to enjoy it despite the questioning.

“I’m staying out of the way. I’m not reading social media. I just want to play golf, right? I can only do my job. If I listen to a lot of nonsense, then I’m going to get distracted. That’s never going to be good for me. I’ll leave it to the clever people to figure stuff out, and I’ll just play golf.”

Poulter’s round did include one moment that was the polar opposite of his opening tee shot. At the ninth hole, he sank a putt from 150 feet for an eagle two.

“I kind of hit it two cups out to the right,” he cracked. “Longest putt I’ve ever made by a mile. You don’t ever hole those putts. Two-putt from there is a pretty good feat.”

And while Poulter was adamant that he didn’t have hecklers on his opening tee shot – charging that his thousands of admirers must have drowned out the one heckler, if there even was one – he did acknowledge that he heard from a boo bird at 17.

“We always have one out of several thousand people that say something silly most days,” Poulter said.

What did he say to the person shouting at him? “I said there’s always one American in the crowd.”

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British Open 2022: How to score a tee time at the Old Course at St. Andrews

There are four ways for visiting golfers to play the Old Course at St. Andrews, so plan early or plan to get in line.

The Old Course at St. Andrews is considered the Home of Golf and, throughout its history at the base of an incredible Scottish town, has been a public-access layout. But don’t expect to just ring up the pro shop for a tee time at 10 a.m. next Saturday for yourself and seven buddies.

The Old Course – site of this week’s British Open – hosts nearly 50,000 rounds a year, and that’s with the course being closed on Sundays when the hallowed golfing grounds become a public park – take your dog for a stroll to the beach, but don’t plan on sneaking out for a quick nine after a haggis brunch.

With all those rounds played six days a week, there is quite a bottleneck for access for visiting golfers. But tee times aren’t impossible, they just require planning – and maybe a very early morning wake-up call or long night sitting outside.

There are several ways for locals to score tee times – might we suggest signing up for classes at the ancient University of St. Andrews? Short of that, the St. Andrews Links, which manages tee times on the Old, offers access to non-residents via limited advance registrations, authorized providers, the Old Course ballot and singles golfers. Check out the details for each below.

Worth noting, the green fee for 2023 is 270 pounds (roughly 320 U.S. dollars) in the high season of April 18-Oct. 16, then it drops to 190 pounds for the shoulder season of October 17-31, then it falls to 135 pounds for the low season of November 1-March 31. Players tackling the Old in the winter might be required to play all full shots off mats, little strips of artificial turf that must be carried around the course throughout the round. Caddies, of course, cost extra and must be arranged.

And last of all, don’t forget your handicap card. Players must provide proof of having a handicap of 36 or less.

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Do you like Tiger Woods’ chances this week? Here are several ways to bet on him at the 150th Open

It’s time to believe in Mr. Woods.

Tiger Woods has played in just two tournaments this year: The Masters and the PGA Championship. He made the cut in both but had disappointing weekends.

This week, he returns.

He’s back at the Home of Golf and where he won two of his three Open Championships.

For most of 2022, we’ve heard Woods had one goal: Play the 150th Open at St. Andrews.

This week, he accomplishes that goal a year and a half after his life-changing car accident.

Many are writing him off after seeing him perform earlier this year at Augusta National and Southern Hills, but the Old Course is different.

It’s strategy. It’s chess. It’s experience. And, maybe most importantly, it’s an easier walk compared to the other courses he has played this season.

If you’re in the other camp, the camp that believes the 15-time major champion can make a run this week for his 16th, here are several ways you can bet on Woods.

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Photos: John Daly’s wild outfits at the 2022 British Open at St. Andrews

Daly took his signature style to the Old Course.

When we last visited with John Daly, he was (very briefly) leading the 2022 PGA Championship and showing off his usual wild sartorial choices.

And this week, at the 2022 British Open at St. Andrews, the 1995 British Open champion is back, getting ready to tee it up at the Old Course.

So far, on Monday and Tuesday, we’ve only seen a couple of his iconic fits, but they’ve been eye-popping with a pink-patterned pair of pants to go with a blue shirt, and a pair of black and white skull-and-flower shorts.

We’ll see what he’s got cooked up for later this week soon enough. Just enjoy what he wore so far: