
Can Portrush return light Rory McIlroy's fire? – Open Championship talking points
Here the PA news agency looks at this year's event in Northern Ireland.
Finally ending his long quest for a career grand slam with a win at Augusta has had its drawbacks, with the sharpness disappearing from Rory McIlroy's game and his driving and approach shots suffering the most. The Northern Irishman will be well aware when the Open came back to Portrush – where he shot a course-record 61 as a 16-year-old – he tried too hard at his 'home' major. He missed the cut by a stroke after a first-round blow-up despite shooting 65 on the Friday. Feeding off the emotion and not succumbing to it will be key.
Not since Nick Faldo lifted his third Claret Jug at Muirfield in 1992 has an Englishman won the Open. However, the chances look as slim as ever this year. Tommy Fleetwood is the country's top-ranked player at 13 and finished second on this course in 2019. There are only three other Englishmen in the top 50: Tyrrell Hatton, Justin Rose and Aaron Rai. Considering the average ranking of the last 10 champions is 13, it would look like an English triumph would have to buck the trend.
Statistics help narrow down the contenders, not withstanding a Ben Curtis-type shock. The average world ranking of champions since 2000 is 37 – skewed by world number 396 Curtis – but every winner since 2012 has been inside the top 30. This century, Tiger Woods is the only world number one to lift the Claret Jug, in 2000, 2005 and 2006 – which would appear to rule out Scottie Scheffler. Last year's champion Xander Schauffele, Jordan Spieth and Ernie Els are the only other players to win while ranked in the world's top three, which offers hope to McIlroy and Schauffele. The average age of champions since 2000 is 32.5, while 18 of the last 24 winners had recorded a previous top-10 finish at The Open. Winners since 2000 average 8.58 previous Open appearances. Schauffele – aged 30, world number three, with seven previous Opens – would appear to meet most of the metrics but the bad news for the defending champion is only eight have ever won back-to-back since the first World War, with only Woods and Padraig Harrington achieving it in the last 42 years.
The weekend starts here … Irish links golf at its finest!#portmarnockgolfclub pic.twitter.com/QdF19FFcA2
— Portmarnock Golf Club (@PGC1894) August 23, 2024
Portrush's second Open in six years has re-established the venue on the championship's 10-course rota but its arrival in Northern Ireland will intensify calls for the south of the country to be bestowed the honour for the first time. The highly-rated Portmarnock Golf Club to the north of Dublin across the border in the Republic has been spoken about many times. An Open there would be the first time the event has been staged outside of Great Britain and Northern Ireland but the R&A are not opposed to adding a course regularly listed in the world's top 100, having hosted the 2024 Women's Amateur and 2019 Amateur – both run by the R&A – and 19 Irish Opens. 'We're having a proper look at it. It's clearly a great course,' said new chief executive Mark Darbon, who visited Portmarnock earlier this year.
The conditions are nearly always a talking point when golf's oldest major rocks up at a seaside course but it is wind rather than rain which is usually more of an issue. In the final round in 2019 at Portrush, Shane Lowry made light of miserable, wet conditions to win by six, and three of the last four Opens have had to deal with less-than-ideal weather. The early forecast is for things not to be as bad as they were six years ago, but even in July and even with the summer we have been having, the Causeway Coast can throw up its fair share of obstacles, with some rain expected.
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North Wales Chronicle
23 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Tourism chiefs in NI confident of another swift return of the Open
Almost 280,000 spectators attended Royal Portrush Golf Club across a week that culminated with world No 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler lifting the prized Claret Jug in front of thousands of cheering fans around the sun-drenched 18th green on Sunday evening. The 153rd Open at Portrush was the second-best attended event in the championship's long history. When the Open came to Northern Ireland in 2019 after an almost 70-year absence, tournament organisers, the R&A, committed to staging it at Royal Portrush at least two more times. There was surprise at how soon the sporting showpiece then returned, especially as the event skipped a year because of the pandemic in 2020. Tourism NI is now hopeful that there will be a similar timeline for the next staging of the major championship on the region's scenic north coast. The tourism promotion body's director of events Aine Kearney said the R&A's feedback on last week's event had been overwhelmingly positive. 'We've had really positive engagement with senior people in the R&A and they just told us how well it's gone,' she said. 'And we hope that puts us in a really good place in terms of them coming back as quickly as they did after 2019.' She added: 'It's been an outstanding success. And I think that's something that's been echoed by the R&A, we've heard the same from the golfers, we've heard the same from all the visitors that have come to experience not only the golf but also the destination. 'The feedback has been absolutely fabulous in terms of how successful it's been, and how much we've been able to shine a light on Northern Ireland as a fabulous destination.' After the 2019 Open in Portrush, revenue generated by golf tourism in Northern Ireland has jumped by 66% to £86 million per annum. Ms Kearney said there was hope the trade would see a similar 'bounce' on the back of this year's event. 'What we do know is that there were a lot of people playing golf while they were here (for the Open),' she said. 'The reports we have from all of our golf clubs is that their tee time sales this week were absolutely unbelievable and that puts them in a really good position, not only from the income they got from that to be able to continue to invest in their product, but also the advocacy that will come from the people that played.' She added: 'Hopefully, from that advocacy and the 100 million viewers across 190 countries that saw not only the world's best golfers playing, but also the magic of the landscape and the destination … we hopefully will look to see a similar increase to what we saw on the back of 2019, that was a 66% increase to £86 million. 'If we get that similar bounce again, we'll be very, very happy.' Ms Kearney said her overriding emotion following the tournament was 'pride'. 'It's absolute pride in terms of how we turned up as a destination, how we showed the world just what an amazing place this is to live, to visit and invest,' she said.


Daily Mirror
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Tommy Fleetwood didn't receive £120,000 Open prize money after it was sent to wrong person
Tommy Fleetwood saw the funny side after an embarrassing clerical error by the European Tour saw someone else receive his prize money from The Open Championship Tommy Fleetwood didn't receive £120,000 worth of prize money following his T12 finish at The Open Championship back in 2018. The Englishman, 34, is still in search of his first major after securing a T16 at Royal Portrush last week. He was never really in contention, and he went on to card a seven-under par, with Scottie Scheffler instead dominating from the opening round and going on to win his first Claret Jug by a four-shot margin. Fleetwood has come close at the Open in the past, finishing as the runner-up in 2019. That means the tournament has contributed a hefty sum of money to his impressive career total earnings of £23.1million. Yet, the popular Southport-born golfer was once left scratching his head following the Open at Carnoustie after his winnings were accidentally transferred to an American man with the name Thomas Fleetwood. Thomas Fleetwood, a club professional based at Streamstrong Resort in Florida, was born in 1959 and contested the European Senior Tour's qualifying school four times from 2013. Fleetwood, who is also a caddie, told Reuters he had been trying to get in touch with the Englishman. He said: "It was an honest mistake. I tried to get on their senior tour, so they have my [bank] information." The PGA Tour star himself was left more confused than annoyed by the error, as he said: "It looks pretty genuine. They [the European Tour] are looking into it and I'm sure they'll feel pretty bad about it. "It's a funny story. It's just something I don't really look at but I'll get on top of that." Greg Thorner, who posted the screenshot of his friend Thomas' bank account, said: "He played a few European events so the European Tour obviously had some information on him and it must have got mixed up. "I didn't believe him at first but then I watched him log into his account and I was like 'Holy crap'. He was not positive it was the same amount that Tommy won at the Open but we checked and it was. "He immediately contacted the bank and told them you've put money into my account that's not mine and unfortunately the money has already been taken out." The European Tour, now the DP World Tour, said at the time: "This was a clerical error which we are resolving and we apologise for the inconvenience caused to both parties." Fleetwood is set to receive £137,535 for his latest efforts at the Open. He will hope to receive his money without any surprises along the way this time around.

Western Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Western Telegraph
Tourism chiefs in NI confident of another swift return of the Open
Almost 280,000 spectators attended Royal Portrush Golf Club across a week that culminated with world No 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler lifting the prized Claret Jug in front of thousands of cheering fans around the sun-drenched 18th green on Sunday evening. The 153rd Open at Portrush was the second-best attended event in the championship's long history. Aine Kearney at Royal Portrush Golf Club during the Open (Tourism NI/PA) When the Open came to Northern Ireland in 2019 after an almost 70-year absence, tournament organisers, the R&A, committed to staging it at Royal Portrush at least two more times. There was surprise at how soon the sporting showpiece then returned, especially as the event skipped a year because of the pandemic in 2020. Tourism NI is now hopeful that there will be a similar timeline for the next staging of the major championship on the region's scenic north coast. The tourism promotion body's director of events Aine Kearney said the R&A's feedback on last week's event had been overwhelmingly positive. 'We've had really positive engagement with senior people in the R&A and they just told us how well it's gone,' she said. 'And we hope that puts us in a really good place in terms of them coming back as quickly as they did after 2019.' She added: 'It's been an outstanding success. And I think that's something that's been echoed by the R&A, we've heard the same from the golfers, we've heard the same from all the visitors that have come to experience not only the golf but also the destination. 'The feedback has been absolutely fabulous in terms of how successful it's been, and how much we've been able to shine a light on Northern Ireland as a fabulous destination.' After the 2019 Open in Portrush, revenue generated by golf tourism in Northern Ireland has jumped by 66% to £86 million per annum. Ms Kearney said there was hope the trade would see a similar 'bounce' on the back of this year's event. 'What we do know is that there were a lot of people playing golf while they were here (for the Open),' she said. 'The reports we have from all of our golf clubs is that their tee time sales this week were absolutely unbelievable and that puts them in a really good position, not only from the income they got from that to be able to continue to invest in their product, but also the advocacy that will come from the people that played.' She added: 'Hopefully, from that advocacy and the 100 million viewers across 190 countries that saw not only the world's best golfers playing, but also the magic of the landscape and the destination … we hopefully will look to see a similar increase to what we saw on the back of 2019, that was a 66% increase to £86 million. 'If we get that similar bounce again, we'll be very, very happy.' Ms Kearney said her overriding emotion following the tournament was 'pride'. 'It's absolute pride in terms of how we turned up as a destination, how we showed the world just what an amazing place this is to live, to visit and invest,' she said.