Twitter reacts: Brian Harman wins The Open

Former Dawgs finish at the top of golf’s final major of the year.

Former Georgia Bulldogs golfer Brian Harman won the 2023 British Open with a score of 13-under. Harman won the 2023 Open Championship at Royal Liverpool with a six-stroke edge, which is the second biggest margin of victory in Open Championship history. Harman entered Sunday with a five-stroke lead.

Harman’s win at the 151st Open Championship earned $3 million in prize money. Not a bad day at the office. Harman was not the only former Bulldog to perform well at the final men’s major of 2023. Sepp Straka finished tied for second at the Open Championship.

The Open is Brian Harman’s first career major victory and his third career victory on the PGA Tour.

Here’s how Georgia and golf Twitter reacted to Brian Harman’s victory in The Open Championship:

Brian Harman had the coolest response to finally achieving his dream of winning a major

What a wholesome moment.

Brian Harman waited a long time for a day like Sunday — a rain-filled affair at the Royal Liverpool, where he won The 2023 Open Championship and shocked the betting world.

Harman had turned professional in the late 2000s but never became a household name. More importantly, he wasn’t winning majors like he and, assuredly, many of his peers had dreamed about when they were younger. All that’s in the rearview mirror now, as Harman can keep and relish the Claret Jug in his home for the next year.

When a reporter with Sky Sports asked Harman about his feelings on finally breaking through, his response was absolutely perfect and eminently relatable:

Aww, man. How can you not be happy for a guy like that finally getting his well-deserved shine? Winning a major golf tournament is one of the hardest things to do in professional sports, and he achieved it.

While not by his choice, Harman took the long way to earn one, and it seems the arduous path was worth it.

Brian Harman’s dominant 6-stroke Open Championship win was a shock to the betting world

No one saw this underdog story coming.

Brian Harman just had an Open Championship win to remember at a rainy Royal Liverpool. Not only did the veteran golfer win his first-ever major, he also did so by winning a dominant six strokes over Sepp Straka in second place. Per ESPN, he’s the first American golfer to win The Open by at least six strokes since Tiger Woods … over 20 years ago!

For someone with an unconventional waggle and place to store his gloves, Harman had a delightful weekend.

It’s a weekend that seemingly almost none of the betting market saw coming in advance. How, you might ask?

A mere ONE PERCENT of the pre-tournament tickets were on Harman to win The Open. Because it bears repeating: ONE PERCENT.

Congratulations if you’re one of the lucky few who saw Harman prevailing. If you’re licking your wounds and getting your bearings, rest assured — you’re not alone.

Brian Harman’s comical number of gloves stored under his umbrella had fans making so many jokes

Why store SO MANY gloves there???

Entering Sunday, Brian Harman had a chance to earn quite the career milestone. The American golfer had a sizable lead in The 2023 Open Championship and simply had to maintain it to win his first-ever major. Never mind his pre-swing waggle and the counter established to joke about it, Harman was clearly the golfer to watch.

He added to this when he unveiled his umbrella that, for some reason, had several pairs of gloves attached to the interior.

I understand the idea of having options and switching around, but this was such a strange (and funny) place to store his other, er, many choices.

Naturally, given how unusual Harman’s “pro shop” of gloves was, golf fans had lots of jokes.

Lynch: The Masters? Meh. The Open is golf’s greatest major. Here’s why

Long may The Open continue.

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HOYLAKE, England — Golf is a sport in which a chap might be celebrated as non-conformist simply for wearing outré shades of khaki pants, and where tournaments on the weekly hamster wheel can blur together like the revolving door “family” partnerships of grifting influencers. There isn’t much left that retains a distinct identity, one unbartered to presenting sponsors nor hostage to discommodious interviews in which CEOs position products from financial instruments to shave foam as bettering humankind. Amid all of this commercialization and homogenization (not to mention politicization), major championships are golf’s safe haven.

Each of the big four owns a particular character, formed over decades and impervious to whatever branding concepts are dreamed up by a marketer with more ambition than awareness.

The Masters is about perfection: in the presentation of the course, in the choreography of the tournament, in the control of the broadcast, in the nomenclature that gives the week its own language. The U.S. Open is the veneration of challenge, or more accurately, difficulty — the desire to exert a vice grip on the world’s best golfers until all but one cry out in surrender. The PGA Championship represents the most compelling case against the Players Championship being a major because the players already have one. This is it, a tournament that prides itself on a set-up that doesn’t upset competitors, even at the cost of sometimes struggling to distinguish itself from other stops on the schedule.

Open Championship 2023Leaderboard, tee times, hole-by-hole

And the Open? It’s defined by a multitude of elements that combine to make it the greatest championship in the game. Why?

Because of the history, for starters. The first shot was struck in the Open three weeks before Abraham Lincoln was elected president and every single great in the annals of the sport has contributed their share since.

Because its the original DNA of a game that morphed into a global sport, essentially unchanged as the unspeakable in pursuit of the inedible over wild contouring land set hard by the sea.

Because the Open doesn’t try to protect players from the capriciousness at the heart of links golf, at least it didn’t until the R&A softened bunkers at Royal Liverpool. Good shots aren’t guaranteed good results and poor shots are often saved by a fortuitous carom off a contour. Vagaries are a virtue, not something to be mitigated.

Because it not only tests execution — which every man in the field has mastered — but also imagination, an asset lacking in many. Forget the video game golf familiar to the professional tours, where balls drop and stop with the precision of drone strikes. Here, routes to the target are foraged along the ground, negating wind and navigating hazards. Even if range finders were permitted, they’d be useless. Raw numbers are as meaningless at the Open as they are in a Russian election; it’s all about how you process them to an acceptable outcome.

Because it presents in abundance the one requirement to make golf interesting: options. Particularly in encouraging a tremendous variety of shotmaking around the greens. Nothing is uniform, which allows competitors to play to their strengths or around their weaknesses, whether lobbing wedges or bunting fairway metals. It’s a beguiling upgrade over the standardized test so prevalent on professional tours these days.

Because the conversation on Sunday night focuses on what might be consumed from the Claret Jug, not on how much honey is in the prize pot.

Because it’s a necessary reminder that golf is an outdoor sport, where the turf is hard and the rain moreso. The other three majors are held in locations and seasons where rain is frequently accompanied by electricity, sending everyone to shelter. It’s a rare Open that doesn’t see wind barrel in from the sea, bringing nasty squalls and taking the dreams of many. Golfers, like livestock, are expected to work in all weather at this major, and there is no better means of separating contenders from pretenders than golf on a filthy day along the British coast.

Because it stands as an annual reminder to golfers, superintendents and greens committees the world over that courses need not be lush lawns and floral extravaganzas, that brown doesn’t equal decay. The motto of the 151st Open — Forged in Nature— ought to be a guiding principle everywhere.

Because of the delightful incongruity between the reputation of the venue and the reality of the surrounding area, usually charmless seaside villages whose luster, such as it was, faded shortly after the Wright Brothers created an alternative for vacations. St. Andrews is the exception that proves the rule, but every Open mixes the stuffy air of an elite club with the faint whiff of fish and chips on the breeze.

Because of the spectators. British golf fans have been progressively deprived of upper-tier golf since the European circuit set out for warmer pastures and despots’ dollars, but the Open has the permanence of Dover’s white cliffs, at least when pandemic insurance payouts aren’t a preferred option. Crowds never disappoint, the number of spectators in shorts inversely correlated to the horridness of the weather. And they possess a deep appreciation for links golf, applauding shots that finish far from the pin because they understand how good that result actually is.

Because of the characters particular to Opens, past and present. Like the longtime first tee starter Ivor Robson, whose advancing years belied bladder control that was marveled at for four days every July. Like retired R&A chief Peter Dawson, who — jaw squared like a navvy shovel — summoned forth the Champion Golfer of the Year with the authority of a field marshal in Arnie’s Army. Like Maurice Flitcroft, the infamous gadfly who gatecrashed Open qualifying five times despite being banned after his first foray, during which he shot 121 (“Does that mean he’s won it?” his mother asked a reporter). Like the gaggle to be seen peering from the clubhouse, white-haired members with teeth like toppled tombstones and dandruff on their lapels, bursting with pride yet faintly irked at the inconvenience of the world’s finest golfers interrupting their weekly four-ball followed by G&Ts.

These are the inseparable components of the Open, each contributing to a potpourri that encapsulates everything that makes up the greatest championship in golf. It’s a list that has remained largely unchanged for most of the century-and-a-half they’ve been playing this thing. Long may it continue.

Travis Smyth makes hole-in-one at ‘devilish’ par-3 17th at Royal Liverpool

Drinks on Smyth!

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There was a popular storyline coming into the 2023 Open Championship, the brand new par-3 17th at Royal Liverpool.

It’s short — it played 126 yards on Thursday and 132 yards on Friday — but devilish. If players are off by just a few yards, big scores can come into play. Just ask Lucas Herbert, who made a triple-bogey six during the first round.

Well, the tough shortie wasn’t too difficult for Travis Smyth on Friday as he canned a hole-in-one.

Smyth was coming off a bogey at the par-4 16th and was 3 over for his round.

He walked off the 17th green 1 over and with a memory he’ll have for a lifetime.

An incredulous Jon Rahm quickly became a meme at The Open Championship

We’ve all seen this look before

Jon Rahm is going to have to put in some major work on Friday at The Open Championship if he’s going to avoid missing the cut at a tournament for the second time this season after not missing any since 2021.

After taking a few weeks off to rest up, Rahm was far from his best on Thursday at Royal Liverpool GC while posting a three-over-par score to finish the day tied for 89th.

The Masters champion shot one-over on the front nine, got back to even with a birdie at the par-three No. 10 and then dropped three more strokes on his last seven holes. And he was clearly frustrated by it all as was evident by this look on his face:

Unfortunately for Rahm, the Internet quickly latched onto his expression and turned him into the latest meme.

The Open Championship: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

Golf fans were livid USA ended coverage of The Open to air The Fast and The Furious

Fans trying to watch The Open got furious very fast

Technically speaking, Dom Toretto and your average pro golfer have plenty in common.

Win or lose, both end the day with family. Dom lives his life a quarter-mile at a time. That’s 440 yards, about the same distance as a tough Par 4. Still, it would’ve been nice if viewers of The Open in the United States could see a little more of the action at Royal Liverpool and a little less of Vin Diesel drag racing.

The U.S. broadcast of The Open did fans a favor by extending their window to show the dramatic end to Rory McIlroy’s first round, but it quickly switched over to a regularly scheduled re-airing of 2001’s The Fast And The Furious.

Understandably, many golf fans were not pleased by this development and it’s hard to blame them. A fully uninterrupted broadcast of a major tournament — let alone the final major of the year — isn’t a lot to ask for.

The Open Championship: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

2023 British Open: A fan hitting golf balls on the Royal Liverpool beach became the unlikely star of Thursday’s broadcast

This is the easiest way to get your swing critiqued by every golf analyst

As anyone obsessed with the sport will tell you, once you get bit by the golf bug, it’s an impossible itch to fully scratch. You begin to think of your day in terms of when you can get out to the course or the range.

For one fan who posted up on the beach adjacent to Royal Liverpool GC in Hoylake, this meant getting in some work while The Open Championship was heating up across the way.

The broadcast cameras at The Open caught this hero taking some hacks and couldn’t get enough of him. And you’ve really got to give him some credit, too. He couldn’t have picked a better opportunity for his game to get noticed by the sport’s power brokers (amateur tournaments and lower circuit tours notwithstanding).

Golf fans certainly understood where he was coming from, even if they didn’t love all the attention he was taking away from the actual major tournament taking place.

The Open Championship: Live leaderboard, Schedule, Tee times

Englishman Tommy Fleetwood is feeling the local love, leads British Open with 66

“I’ll always be a northwest boy, and to have so many people out there from the area supporting is really, really great.”

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HOYLAKE, England — Englishman Tommy Fleetwood figures he’s imagined winning the British Open in his native land a million times.

“Winning a major is a dream, or winning the Open is a huge, huge dream,” he said. “For sure I’ve pictured it a lot and visualized it a lot; just haven’t done it yet in person, so that’s hopefully the next thing.”

Fleetwood is off to a stellar start at the 151st British Open as he tries to make his dream come true. On Thursday, the 32-year-old Fleetwood fired a 5-under 66 at Royal Liverpool Golf Club to share the opening-round lead with South African amateur Christo Lamprecht and Argentina’s Emiliano Grillo.

Fleetwood has been plagued by slow starts, recording only five rounds in the 60s to start his week this season on the PGA Tour. It adds up to a first-round scoring average of 70.38, which ranks a dismal 72nd overall. Asked if this was one of his most enjoyable starts at a major, Fleetwood didn’t hesitate to nod in the affirmative.

“One of, for sure,” he said. “Just a combination of everything really. One of the things that we’ve said this week is what an amazing time it is for us to be out on the golf course with that support, playing in an Open. It’s very, very special.”

Open Championship 2023: Leaderboard, scores, news, tee times, more

Bathed in glorious sunshine that made his rock-star hair glisten, Fleetwood sandwiched birdies at Nos. 5 and 7 around his lone bogey of the day at the sixth. Out in 34, he tacked on a birdie at the 11th and then reeled off three straight birdies starting at the 14th.

Fleetwood has been a picture of consistency this season – notching six top-10 finishes, including losing in a playoff at the RBC Canadian Open, a T-5 at the U.S. Open in June and T-6 last week at the Genesis Scottish Open.

“It’s much better having good results than getting kicked in the teeth all the time when you feel like you’re working so hard and you’re doing the right things,” Fleetwood said. “I think good results always spur you on and they give you the confidence to keep pushing on and doing those things.”

What has eluded Fleetwood is victory — he’s still winless on the PGA Tour and since the start of the 2017-18 season has the second-most top 10s of any player without a win in that span with 26. (Brian Harman with 29 leads this dubious distinction.) To hear Fleetwood tell it, he just needs to continue to be patient and trust in what he’s doing.

“There’s times where it could go either way, and it hasn’t gone my way yet,” Fleetwood said. “It’ll be my turn soon.”

He’s had his share of chances at majors, including at the British Open, where he finished second to Shane Lowry in 2019. All told, he’s recorded six top-fives in majors, including a runner-up finish at the 2018 U.S. Open. Fleetwood, born and bred in Southport, England, is bidding to become the first Englishman to win the British Open since Nick Faldo in 1992. Fleetwood considers Royal Liverpool to be “hallowed turf,” a links where one of his closest friends as kid was a member and he had the chance to play it on occasion. He’ll have plenty of support to win on home soil from a partisan crowd, who have been cheering heartily for their “Tommy Lad.”

“I’ll always be a northwest boy, and to have so many people out there from the area supporting is really, really great,” Fleetwood said. “You can easily put too much pressure on yourself. You can easily try too hard. But just having that support and people egging you on, whether you’ve hit a good shot or a bad shot, good hole, bad hole. Yeah, just pushes you on…having the opportunity to do it so close to where you grew up is something that’s very unique and very special.”