
As it was for Phil, as it is for Bryson, the desire for perfection meets the need for creativity at The Open
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – An eagle-eyed reporter questioned Bryson DeChambeau on Friday about a golf ball that he appeared to be using in practice but not competition this week at The Open.
Caught tinkering, again, DeChambeau gave a wry smile. Then he offered a defense of his unique strategy – and a glimpse into his future plans.
'I need help out here,' he conceded.
At Royal Portrush and everywhere else, DeChambeau is an iconoclast in search of efficiency, optimization and, ultimately, perfection. There's no one quite like him. Not how he thinks and strategizes. Not how he practices and rarely plays. Not with the one-of-one equipment he uses. And not, if everything stays on schedule, where he hopes to go.
Over the past few years, DeChambeau has been working feverishly with his team of nerds to design a new golf ball that performs better at his off-the-charts speeds. He wants to lower his sky-high flight, but he's been having trouble dialing in the right combination, especially when his steep angle of descent produces a tremendous amount of spin with his irons but, curiously, not with his wedges, which come off high with little zip.
It's a work in progress. No, DeChambeau told the reporter, he didn't experience a eureka moment on the range earlier this week. But he's getting closer. He's been told the first iteration of the ball – his ball – could be in his hands within the next few weeks. Then, and perhaps only then, he'd be able to have better, more predictable control of his shots.
As DeChambeau explained, 'I need a golf ball that on wedges can click on the face most consistently. I get a lot of slipping on the face, just because of how vertical I am and how much loft I have, and it just rolls up the face and launches with no spin most of the time on my shots, so getting something that comes off at a more consistent trajectory in adverse conditions is really the goal.'
As with most things with DeChambeau, he's searching for answers not by altering his style but by tweaking his equipment. It's his usual course of action. Going to same-length irons. Less driver loft. More clubhead curvature. And now, with his ball, a different core and composition.
He's equal parts innovative and stubborn.
But with a highly stylized game that is productive all but one week a year, DeChambeau also offers a fascinating parallel to a superstar of the previous generation, another iconoclast who enjoyed pushing the boundaries of his equipment and forever believed that his way was the right way.
Phil Mickelson couldn't figure out links golf, either. At least not initially. He preferred to rear back and rip it. Send towering iron shots into the sky. Grab his 60-degree wedge and attempt another magic trick around the greens.
That Americanized style made Mickelson wildly successful. A sure-fire Hall of Famer long before he headed to Muirfield in the summer of 2013. But he always felt there was a gaping hole in his competitive resume at the only major that wasn't played in the U.S.; in his first 11 appearances at The Open, he couldn't muster a single top-10 despite establishing himself as the second-best player of his generation.
So, ahead of the 2004 Open, Mickelson and Dave Pelz, the late short-game guru, set out on a quest to learn some new shots. Overseas, Mickelson incorporated a full-swing 'chip' that he used off the tee to put the ball in play more often and allow him to showcase his myriad other gifts. The extra reconnaissance paid off; Mickelson placed third that year, by far his best effort to date. He was the runner-up in 2011. And then, two years later, he completed the links double, winning the Scottish Open and Open Championship in consecutive weeks.
'I think winning in 2013 was the greatest accomplishment in my career because I had to learn a style of golf that I didn't grow up playing,' Mickelson said Thursday. 'It's the greatest source of pride for me as a player to overcome those obstacles. Now, I've come to really love it, enjoy it, and I seem to play well in some of the adverse conditions, too.'
That prompted a follow-up: Why was it important to him?
Why adapt for just one tournament a year when, for the other 51 weeks, he was a threat to win anywhere and at any time?
'I just think it's a sign of a complete player,' he said.
It'd be the ultimate achievement for DeChambeau, too. His top-end results in this championship are slightly better than Mickelson's – he finished sixth three years ago, at St. Andrews – but it's his only top-30 in seven tries so far. This year, at Portrush, he looked well on his way to another early exit following a birdie-less 78 in Round 1, but he capitalized on benign morning conditions to card a Friday 65, matching the low round of the day, just to make the cut.
Still, afterward, DeChambeau appeared unmoved. Perhaps because he knew he wasn't close to conquering this outstanding goal. It was just his eighth under-par score in 24 career Open rounds.
'In order to be a complete golfer, you've got to win over here,' DeChambeau agreed. 'That's something I've struggled to do. I've played well at times when it's dry and the greens are more consistent in their bounce and the greens are a little bit better. But when it gets as chaotic as this, with the wind going every which way, you have to be a complete golfer that pivots on demand.
'I think (Mickelson) is right – it's the most proud moment of his career. And for me, if it was ever to happen in my career, it probably would be the proudest as well.'
DeChambeau is the most blatant (and successful) example of the Trackman generation that now dots the professional landscape. Athletes built for speed who have exploited all of the new-age technology to optimize their swings and their games. Headstrong alphas unyielding in their approach. In many ways, they're smart to lean into the high-powered ball-bashing that can destroy run-of-the-mill tour courses susceptible to high-launch, low-spin driving and flag-hunting approach play. On the right week, with optimal conditions, they'll cash in.
But Open success relies on players flashing other skills and adapting in ways that are uncommon on the every-week tour. Varying trajectory. Bending shots both directions. Using multiple techniques around the green. There's also the mental computations, the strategy, and calculating other variables like wind and runout. Some of the best Open players of the past decade – Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Xander Schauffele, Jordan Spieth – all excel in those areas. It's reasonable to believe, with his dynamic skill set, that Scottie Scheffler – who grew up playing shot-shaping games at home in wind-swept Dallas – will soon thrive in this event, too. (He's near the top of the leaderboard in Round 2.)
'I've always been creative and had a good imagination when it comes to hitting shots,' said Rickie Fowler, who sports a tidy Open record despite boasting the second-highest apex height on Tour, at nearly 130 feet. 'Growing up on a flat driving range, I had to picture different things and hit different shots. Over here, there's obstacles out there, but you have to at times be able to see the shots and then execute it as well.'
Brian Harman, the 2023 Open champ, is a throwback in that sense, too; he might use TrackMan for validation or verification but never optimization. He trusts his hands and his instincts. It took a little seasoning – he went 0-4 in the 2006 Palmer Cup in his first taste – but he came to love links golf. The stingers. The iron shots held into a strong crosswind. The straight-faced chip shots that don't expose the bounce.
'Places like this force you to be a little bit more creative,' Harman said. 'There's probably 10 different types of clubs, irons, drivers and woods that you can hit off the tee. There's different ways to attack into the green. I just enjoy the creativity and trying to think your way around. You're not forced to hit certain shots. You can do it your own way.'
Earlier this week, Harman played a practice round at Portrush with Andrew Novak, who was making his Open debut. In just a few days Novak had understood (if not mastered) some of the intricacies of this unique brand of golf. The lack of grain around the greens and how it opens up a variety of shots. The discipline to play away from tucked flags, accepting 40 feet as a reasonable approach, or take on risk. Both the benefit and potential drawback of playing your preferred, stock shot. Tips and tricks that can't be found on a Trackman or with adjustments to his equipment.
The idea that only winning on a proper links can make Novak a 'complete player' is still a bit foreign to him. He's 30 and just now breaking out. This year, he won for the first time on Tour, in a team event. This is only his fourth career major start, period.
But the concept of completeness still held some meaning to him, particularly now that he's pushed his way into the game's elite.
'That's a very nice bonus that you can point to,' Novak said, 'like, Hey, look – I can do that, too. That's pretty impressive to say.'

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Forbes
4 minutes ago
- Forbes
Scheffler's Fourth Major Win Evokes Prime-Tiger Woods Comparisons
Scottie Scheffler kisses the Claret Jug following his victory at the Open Championship at Royal ... More Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland. (Photo by Alex Pantling/R&A/R&A via Getty Images) When Tiger Woods was in his prime and took a 54-hole lead into the final round of a tournament, the result felt like a foregone conclusion. It often seemed the rest of the field was playing for second place. Scottie Scheffler's dominating victory at The Open Championship – and fourth win in eight starts – had that same feeling of inevitability. The 27-year-old Texas carried a four-shot lead into the final round and promptly birdied three of the first five holes at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland to quell any questions about whether he might relinquish the lead. Scheffler won with relentless efficiency, finishing 17-under par overall, and the winning margin felt wider than it was. "What he's doing is so dominant and so clinical," NBC Sports analyst and former professional golfer Brandel Chamblee said of Scheffler, who has moved within a U.S. Open win of the career Grand Slam. "I can't help but think that we are on an inevitable march towards one of the greatest careers in the history of golf." Given his current streak of dominance, including 11 straight Top 10 finishes and four wins, among them two majors, since the start of May, the comparisons to Woods are perhaps inevitable. Scottie Scheffler won his fourth career major title (all since 2022) at Royal Portrush. (Photo by ... More) "I don't think we thought the golfing world would see someone as dominant as Tiger come through so soon, and here's Scottie sort of taking that throne of dominance," said Xander Schauffele, who won the PGA Championship and Open Championship in 2024, but finished seven shots behind Scheffler despite closing with rounds of 69, 66 and 68. "You can't even say he's on a run. He's just been killing it for over two years now. He's a tough man to beat, and when you see his name up on the leaderboard, it sucks for us." $90 Million in Career Earnings All 17 of Scheffler's wins have come over the past 3 1/2 years, a stretch that includes Masters Tournament titles in 2022 and 2024, and the PGA Championship in May of this year. By winning another $3.1 million, Scheffler pushed his career earnings past $90 million, the fourth-highest total in history. With his final-round coronation at Royal Portrush, Scheffler collected his fourth career major 1,197 days after his first – the exact timeframe Woods needed to go from one to four majors. Given the vagaries of the Open Championship – including wind, weather and the different skillsets and mindset that links golf demands – Scheffler is just the second No. 1 player since the advent of the Official Golf Ranking in 1986 to claim the Claret Jug. The other was Woods. "I look everywhere and I try to find some kind of weakness, somewhere where he can get derailed, and I just can't find it," NBC Sports analyst Paul McGinley, a former Irish professional who captained Europe to victory at the 2014 Ryder Cup, says of Scheffler. "He might even prove to have more longevity than Tiger Woods." A fan favorite at Royal Portrush, Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland finished seven strokes behind ... More winner Scottie Scheffler. (Photo by) Rory McIlroy finished in a tie for seventh place at 10-under par and the Irishman, the fan favorite all week at Royal Portrush, acknowledged that no one in the pack could 'hang with Scottie this week' given the mistake-free efficiency with which Scheffler was playing. "He is the bar that we're all trying to get to,' McIlroy said. 'In a historical context, you could argue that there's only maybe two or three players in the history of the game that have been on a run (like) the one that Scottie's been on here for the last 24 to 36 months. Incredibly impressive." Scheffler's Final Round Scheffler's final-round performance at the Open Championship was particularly Woods-esque. While names like McIlroy, Harris English, Chris Gotterup, Wyndham Clark, Haotong Li, and Matt Fitzpatrick all shot below par on Sunday and at times seemed poised to make charges, Scheffler charged right alongside them. He had four front-nine birdies and offset his lone double bogey of the week (a 6 on the par 4 8th hole) with two birdies over the next four holes. "That was, I felt like, one of my best performances mentally," Scheffler said. "To only have one double -- really only one over-par hole in the last 36 holes of a major championship -- that's how you're able to win these tournaments.' Scottie Scheffler walks up the 18th hole during Saturday's third round at the Open Championship at ... More Royal Portrush Golf Club. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/R&A/R&A via Getty Images) Harris English, who has twice been a major runner-up to Scheffler this year -- by a combined nine strokes at the PGA Championship and The Open Championship -- summed up the challenge facing the rest of the tour. "There's no stat that he's bad in,' English said afterward. 'It's like, how do you beat this guy?" Tiger Woods Comparisons Scheffler remained characteristically humble during his post-championship news conference when asked about the comparisons to Woods. "I still think they're a bit silly. Tiger won, what, 15 majors? This is my fourth. I just got one-fourth of the way there," Scheffler said. "I think Tiger stands alone in the game of golf. He was inspirational for me growing up. He was a very, very talented guy." Scottie Scheffler with son Bennett and the Claret Jug on the 18th green after winning the 153rd Open ... More Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland. (Photo by Alex Pantling/R&A/R&A via Getty Images) And yet, when you look at Scheffler's pace, his trophy cabinet is growing almost as quickly. Already, only 21 golfers in history have won more than his four major titles. Besides Woods, who hasn't played in 2025, the only other active players with more majors are Phil Mickelson (6), Brooks Koepka (5), and McIlroy (5). At just 27 years old, Scheffler still has time on his side. And if the comparisons to 'prime Tiger' feel premature now, that sentiment may not last much longer.
Yahoo
13 minutes ago
- Yahoo
British Open 2025 prize money: Full payout from the $17 million purse at Royal Portrush
Along with the claret jug, Scottie Scheffler earned another hefty paycheck at the 153rd Open Championship. The world No. 1 added to his mind-numbing money totals with $3.1 million of the $17 million purse at Royal Portrush. He is now just shy of $100 million in official career earnings and over $19 million for the season. Here's a breakdown of the total purse from the men's final major of the season: FINISH PLAYER EARNINGS 1 Scottie Scheffler $3,100,000 2 Harris English $1,759,000 3 Chris Gotterup $1,128,000 T4 Wyndham Clark $730,667 T4 Matt Fitzpatrick $730,667 T4 Haotong Li $730,667 T7 Robert MacIntyre $451,834 T7 Xander Schauffele $451,834 T7 Rory McIlroy $451,834 T10 Bryson DeChambeau $304,650 T10 Corey Conners $304,650 T10 Brian Harman $304,650 T10 Russell Henley $304,650 T14 Rickie Fowler $240,000 T14 Nicolai Hojgaard $240,000 T16 Jesper Svensson $185,258 T16 Hideki Matsuyama $185,258 T16 Tommy Fleetwood $185,258 T16 John Parry $185,258 T16 Justin Rose $185,258 T16 Rasmus Hojgaard $185,258 T16 Tyrrell Hatton $185,258 T23 Maverick McNealy $138,040 T23 J.J. Spaun $138,040 T23 Lucas Glover $138,040 T23 Dustin Johnson $138,040 T23 Ludvig Aberg $138,040 T28 Harry Hall $119,950 T28 Oliver Lindell $119,950 T30 Daniel Berger $104,850 T30 Akshay Bhatia $104,850 T30 Keegan Bradley $104,850 T30 Kristoffer Reitan $104,850 T34 Sergio Garcia $86,517 T34 Aaron Rai $86,517 T34 Jon Rahm $86,517 T34 Justin Thomas $86,517 T34 Christiaan Bezuidenhout $86,517 T34 Lee Westwood $86,517 T40 Shane Lowry $68,340 T40 Jordan Spieth $68,340 T40 Jason Kokrak $68,340 T40 Takumi Kanaya $68,340 T40 Nathan Kimsey $68,340 T45 Matt Wallace $51,186 T45 Matthew Jordan $51,186 T45 Thomas Detry $51,186 T45 Henrik Stenson $51,186 T45 Jordan Smith $51,186 T45 Sam Burns $51,186 T45 Thriston Lawrence $51,186 T52 Adrien Saddier $44,350 T52 Sepp Straka $44,350 T52 Marc Leishman $44,350 T52 Sungjae Im $44,350 T56 Phil Mickelson $42,334 T56 Jhonattan Vegas $42,334 T56 Tony Finau $42,334 T59 Antoine Rozner $41,550 T59 Justin Leonard $41,550 T61 Dean Burmester $41,100 T61 Romaine Langasque $41,100 T63 Riki Kawamoto $40,280 T63 Andrew Novak $40,280 T63 Viktor Hovland $40,280 T63 Ryggs Johnston $40,280 T63 Francesco Molinari $40,280 68 Jacob Skov Olesen $39,400 69 Matti Schmid $39,100 70 Sebastian Soderberg $38,900 Note: Non-qualifiers after two rounds: Leading 10 professional golfers and ties $12,350; next 20 professional golfers and ties $10,300; remainder of professional golfers and ties $8,750.


NBC Sports
34 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
153rd Open: The man beloved at home and the one who has conquered the world
Watch the best moments from the late portion to the final round of the 2025 Open Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland. PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – The tone was set Saturday night. Rory McIlroy had just turned golf's most staid championship into a rollicking summer festival, the eventgoers delirious at the prospect of their celebrated native son, one of the most famous athletes to ever come from this tiny island of less than two million people, heading into the final round of the 153rd Open with a shot to hoist the claret jug at home, in front of them, and for them too. The only person who seemed unstirred by the possibility was McIlroy himself. He'd shot 66 but only moved within six of the lead. He had three players in front of him and four others pulled up alongside him, with a calm Sunday forecast that would make it even more difficult to separate, but his outlook was dimmed by the man at the top of the board. 'Yeah, look, Scottie Scheffler is ...,' McIlroy said, collecting his thoughts. 'It's inevitable.' It was an admission that, amid this lovefest in Rory's town, it's ultimately still part of Scottie Scheffler's world. McIlroy – too far back to seriously contend this week, and too far behind in the world rankings this year – has come to accept this reality. And so, rather than this Open homecoming becoming a monument to his dominance in the sport, he instead viewed the week through a different prism: a celebration of his greatness. How far he has come in his nearly two decades as a pro. And all he has accomplished, even now, with a new ruler in the sport. 'A lot of gratitude, a lot of pride,' he said. 'A lot of pride that I am from these shores.' McIlroy's stats and status might be under siege in this new world order, but it's hard to envision a crowd or a tournament ever tilting in Scheffler's direction as it did for McIlroy over these four days at Portrush. Kids high-fived him along the rope line and began to weep. Fans bellowed and chanted his name from high atop the dunes. Patrons gave him standing ovations in the grandstands. 'I've heard enough 'Rorys' to last me a lifetime,' Matt Fitzpatrick said. It was McIlroy, after all, who helped lobby R&A officials to bring the game's oldest major back to Royal Portrush, an hour from his childhood home in Holywood, for the first time in 63 years. But that 2019 Open represented a missed opportunity while at a professional crossroads. He'd lost some of his joy between the ropes. His major record had soured. He'd been displaced for a time by other talented players. When he strode to the first tee, he was blown away by the outpouring of support. Unprepared and overwhelmed by the reception, he melted down during an opening 79 and, only after his inspired rally fell short, did he realize the magnitude and the depth of his people's love. Check his record since then; it has spurred on his play over the past half-decade. Recalling those painful memories, McIlroy vowed to make this week, and this year, different in what, at age 36, was likely his last Portrush Open in his prime. He wanted to reciprocate. Embrace the experience, not shield himself from it. Maybe there would have been more angst had he not prevailed at the Masters. If he was still major-less for more than a decade. But he returned home a legend, and now everyone, 45,000 a day, could revel in it. McIlroy turned pro in 2007, at the age of 18, and took his talents globally, sharing himself with the rest of the world outside the borders of Northern Ireland. The U.S. Australia. Japan. South Africa. That was his way of not just growing his wallet, but also his brand and his platform and, along the way, his popularity. That wider reach has never appealed to Scheffler. He was born in New Jersey and moved with his family at a young age to Dallas, where he still resides. The Schefflers are all a tight-knit group, a short drive away while at home and, now, a consistent, supportive and loving presence on the road. As a kid, all Scheffler wanted to do was become a professional golfer, wearing long pants in the blazing summer heat like local heroes Justin Leonard and Harrison Frazar, and he still can't quite believe that he's blessed and talented enough to be living out his wildest dreams. Now with a young family of his own, he has made no apologies that he's U.S.-centric with his schedule and that he doesn't aspire to be a globetrotting ambassador for the sport. As the top player, he said it was 'not my priority nor my responsibility' to travel the world and ply his trade, to grow the game. It was at the end of that early-week press conference when Scheffler went viral. His 5-minute monologue on his inner war between fulfillment and satisfaction offered a rare glimpse into what drives the most dominant golfer since Tiger Woods. Frustrated that some of the social clips had taken his comments out of context, with the implication that pro golf left him feeling empty, Scheffler spent much of his winner's press conference Sunday defending himself. That he cares about competing. Doing the work. Trying his best. Seeing how far his talent and work ethic and dedication can take him. Everything that accompanies his success – status and stardom – holds little interest to him. 'There's more to life than playing golf,' he said. 'But I'm pretty excited to go home and celebrate this one.' Stoic and steady, simplistic and stable, Scheffler doesn't inspire much emotion. He might never become a beloved figure that spawns his own legion of fandom; the 2027 PGA in Frisco, less than an hour from home, isn't likely to become the lively lovefest that McIlroy's homecoming was. But sports fans love greatness, and they're undoubtedly now witness to Scheffler's brilliance. 'I think all you can do is admire what he does and how he does it,' McIlroy said. 'He just goes about his business. Doesn't do anything overly flamboyant. But he's the best at executing in the game right now. All you can do is tip your cap and watch in admiration.' What little hope the field had Sunday disappeared as soon as Scheffler stuffed his approach to a foot on the opening hole. Midway through the front nine, he led by eight. Over the final 36 holes, with the crowd at a fever pitch, desperate to will his chief rival to victory, Scheffler's only blemish came with a double bogey on the eighth hole – two strokes that he got back with birdies on two of the next four holes. There was nothing McIlroy or anyone else could do to stop the onslaught, so over the final two hours, he tried to soak in an Open unlike any other. A few extra nods to the crowd. More high-fives. When he tapped in for a final-round 69, leaving him in joint seventh, seven shots behind, he removed his cap and, before entering the tunnel, spun around to wave to the cheering crowd one last time. In the group behind him, Scheffler was polishing off another rout. Methodical, clinical, dominant – the first player in the modern era to win each of his first four major championships by at least three strokes. 'Walking up 18, I didn't really know if I was going to get that much support from the crowd,' Scheffler said. 'The crowd, I think, wanted somebody else to win this week, and I got to play spoiler a little bit.' Not just this week, but this entire year too. The best spring of McIlroy's career – a signature title at Pebble, a rousing playoff at The Players, and a Masters moment that transcended the sport – has since been supplanted by Scheffler's two-major summer, making him a virtual lock for Player of the Year honors for the fourth season in a row. 'I also had the three wins when Scottie wasn't quite on his game,' McIlroy said, chuckling. 'He is the bar that we're all trying to get to.' But now he's back on his game, just as he's largely been since February 2022, when this winning spree began. Scheffler was 15th in the world before that breakthrough week in Phoenix, when he was an unproven closer, when his putting was inconsistent, when his approach play was stellar but not peerless. This will soon be week No. 115 in a row at the top. He's converted 10 consecutive 54-hole leads. He's transformed into a world-class putter. (Matt Fitzpatrick: 'He's just not missed a putt.') And he is, statistically, the best ball-striker since prime Woods. Must it be inspiring or dispiriting, a reporter asked McIlroy, to go up against Scheffler when he's in form like this? 'Neither,' McIlroy said. 'All I can do is focus on myself and try to play the best golf that I can. I know that, when I do that, I'll have my weeks where I'll contend and hopefully win.' Even if those weeks are becoming less frequent. Afterward, McIlroy signed a hat and a flag, posed for two selfies, and then bounded up the hill and into the early evening. The hyped home game was over; a few weeks of vacation awaited. About a hundred yards away, with the trophy presentation underway and Scheffler in the middle of the arena, thousands of fans began to stream out of the grandstands and toward the exit. Their local hero didn't walk away victorious. They settled for a glimpse at history instead. Rory McIlroy talks about the experience at Royal Portrush, calling it an "awesome week" that came close to all he wanted -- and hoping the R&A can bring The Open back soon. Then, Live From debates Player of the Year.