
Hole-by-hole guide: The Open at Royal Portrush
Here is a closer look at the venue.
1st (Hughie's), 420 yards, par 4: Most players will take a three wood or long iron and although there is out of bounds to the right, the key is avoiding the fairway bunker on the left to set up an approach to an elevated green which sits across you.
2nd (Giant's Grave), 575 yards, par 5: The hole is almost 50 yards longer than it was in 2012 and a good drive will need to hug the left-hand side of the fairway to have a chance of reaching in two, although the green is guarded by pot bunkers around 30 yards short.
3rd (Islay), 176 yards, par 3: A relatively-straightforward hole with just one bunker but the green slopes from right to left so the ideal shot in would be a fade for right-handers.
4th (Fred Daly's), 502 yards, par 4: Now 20 yards longer than 2019. Quite a narrow tee shot with the wall on the right and a bunker on the left which must be avoided. Approaches from the left can be partially blocked out by the mound short of the green. The Claret Jug on the fifth hole at Royal Portrush
5th (White Rocks), 372 yards, par 4: If it plays downwind, you can be aggressive and cut the corner of the dog leg and get close to the green, but it is tough to pick the right line. Laying back off the tee leaves a tougher second to an angled green with the Atlantic beyond.
6th (Harry Colt's), 193 yards, par 3: A classic links par three away from the water so club selection is what is going to be difficult into a sloping green which sits across you.
7th (Curran Point), 607 yards, par 5: The second hole on the front nine which has extended by 15 yards, but will be a birdie chance downwind if you avoid the massive bunker on the right - a recreation of the "Big Nellie" bunker on the now-defunct 17th - and a smaller one to the left of the fairway.
8th (Dunluce), 434 yards, par 4: New in 2019, the hole gives players the option to lay up short of the fairway bunkers or take them on to get closer to a large, undulating green which is protected by a solitary bunker on the right.
9th (PG Stevenson's), 432 yards, par 4: A radio mast in the distance is the target off the tee and it is a must to find the narrow fairway. Rough and mounds to the left make it difficult to get close to the green and there is a little more room right than you think.
10th (Himalayas), 450 yards, par 4: The hole doglegs from left to right and it is important to hit the undulating fairway otherwise you will be hitting across the long, narrow green which will make club selection on the second shot key.
11th (Tavern), 475 yards, par 4: At the 2012 Irish Open, this hole was a par five and it was the joint-hardest hole when Lowry won the Claret Jug in 2019. There is a big dip in front of a very narrow green with a lot of trouble around it. The biggest grandstand is on the final hole
12th (Dhu Varren), 532 yards, par 5: The easiest hole of the 2019 championship. A good chance for a birdie if you can stay out of the bunkers on the right, although if it plays into the wind you are going to be worried about the bunker around 70 yards short of the green.
13th (Feather Bed), 199 yards, par 3: Five yards have been added but a downhill tee shot means it plays shorter than the yardage suggests, although it is quite a small green and surrounded by five bunkers.
14th (Causeway), 466 yards, par 4: Seven yards shorter than six years ago, when it was the joint-hardest of the tournament, and one of the widest tee shots on the course so it is almost a free hit and - while that offers a good chance of birdie if you can avoid the two bunkers on the right of the fairway - less than a third of players found the green with their approach last time round.
15th (Skerries), 429 yards, par 4: Probably an iron down the right as long as you can carry the bunkers on the right and run it down the hill. The green nestles down into the dell and is well protected.
16th (Calamity), 236 yards, par 3: A great par three with a long carry to quite a big green and you need to guard against missing it right. A lot of second shots will be played from left of the green.
17th (Purgatory), 409 yards, par 4: Tee shots will land on a downslope and if the wind is in the right direction, the bigger hitters will have the chance to drive a green protected by bunkers on the front left and right.
18th (Babington's), 474 yards, par 4: A left-to-right dogleg with quite a generous fairway and the biggest danger is the two bunkers to the right. Find those off the tee and cross bunkers short of the green also come into play.

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The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
Scheffler's masterpiece gives the Portrush crowds what they expected rather than what they wanted
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Prior to Scheffler's procession, Rory McIlroy gave one last salute to the raucous crowds, later saying he got everything he wanted from his week back home, aside from the Claret Jug. Those huddled together on the other side of the ropes shared the same sentiment. McIlroy told the media last night he was unwinding between rounds by watching Oppenheimer, and was overheard today bending Harry Diamond's ear about some element of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. Given it was McIlroy who last year suggested Scheffler should address his putting issues by switching to a mallet putter, perhaps he feels like Oppenheimer himself. I have become death, destroyer of fields. . . We always speculated about the extent to which Scheffler might dominate if he became a good putter, but this weekend he putted better than anyone else in the world. When Scheffler wobbled toward the end of his front nine today, he was saved solely by his putter. He won by four shots in the end, clear of Harris English, and gained almost two-and-a-half strokes with his putting alone. Scheffler admitted in his victory speech he was not the crowd favourite this week, but you were surprised he thought to mention it, given how impervious he appeared to it all week. Five hours earlier, McIlroy bounded down the first fairway to his customary fervour, with Scheffler following 10 minutes later. Rory found the fairway, and then Scottie found the first cut of rough. Though Rory could only make par, the crowds around him were looking at Scheffler's spot and conjuring up all manner of unconvincing hope. Advertisement Scheffler then banished it all by leaving his second shot a foot from the hole. He then birdied four and five, but didn't even have the decency to slam the door. Instead he grabbed the handle and occasionally creaked it ajar, less in invitation than in taunt. After he birdied the par-four fifth looking out at the coastal cliffs, Scheffler turned his back on the water and suddenly looked unsteady. He missed the green on the par-three sixth and then took a scenic route to the green on the par-five seventh, and yet he saved par twice with nerveless, 15-foot putts. He finally made a concession to the field on the eighth hole, taking two swipes to make it out of the bunker and finally missing a putt to make double-bogey, his first dropped shots since he played the 11th hole on Friday. A shout of Yessss was heard from the crowd as Scheffler's putt drifted by, and certainly some of the the galleries' ardour for McIlroy spun off to a coolness-come-hostility to the leader. McIlroy, though, quickly vacated himself from contention by taking his own double-bogey on 10. Instead the challenge was led by Chris Gotterup, fresh from winning last week's Scottish Open, who went out in three-under and got to within four of Scheffler. Wyndham Clark meanwhile made a charge, blasting his way to alongside Gotterup at 11-under. But they all needed Scheffler to capsize which was simply never going to happen. There has never been a better golfer at bouncing back from a dropped shot, and sure enough, Scheffler responded to his double with a birdie on the very next hole. Another birdie on the par-five 12th wiped the double clear. McIlroy continued his toil, picking up a shot on 12 but seeing a short putt for birdie on 14 slide by the hole. He picked up one final shot on 15, but Rory would provide no hometown lore. He played well for most of the four days, but Scheffler was simply far too good to handle. Rory McIlroy waves to the crowds for one last time. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo And while we recognise and celebrate sporting excellence, we are not always enthralled by it. In fact, the excellent aim to drain their art of all that might excite. But while the galleries around Royal Portrush were not given what they came for, they were given what they expected, and on these claustrophobic Masters Sundays, that's a stunning achievement by Scottie Scheffler. Shane Lowry memorably described Scheffler's game as 'impressively unimpressive', and having played alongside him on Thursday and Friday, he expounded further today. 'If Scottie's feet stayed stable and his swing looked like Adam Scott's, we'd be talking about him in the same words as Tiger Woods', said Lowry. 'I just think because it doesn't look so perfect, we don't talk about him like that.' Scottie doesn't thrill or magnetise like Tiger but he is ascending to his plane of greatness, and he will soon pass out all of his currently active peers as he does so. He may not be deeply fulfilled by this climb but that does not mean he will waver in it. File Royal Portrush away as another Scottie Scheffler masterpiece.

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
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Irish Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Rory McIlroy strikes it rich despite Portrush Open heartbreak
Rory McIlroy will have to settle with a single major and a Career Grand Slam for 2025 after falling short at the Open Championship in Portrush. McIlroy seemed reinvigorated coming into this one after some patchy form post-Masters. And although he hit it far from his best, the five-time major winner did enough to get himself into the penultimate group on the final day of the Open. Trying to chase down eventual winner and world number one Scottie Scheffler, McIlroy finished in a tie for seventh and seven shots off Scheffler. But he still struck it rich, earning a cool €388,600 to add to his net worth, while Shane Lowry earned a not-so-shabby €58,800 for his week's work. Here is how much each player earned. Full Open Pay Out 1 Scottie Scheffler -17 $3,100,000 (€2,666,000)2 Harris English -13 $1,759,000 (€1,513,000)3 Chris Gotterup -12 $1,128,000 (€970,100)T4 Wyndham Clark -11 $730,667 (€628,800)T4 Matt Fitzpatrick -11 $730,667 (€628,800)T4 Haotong Li -11 $730,667 (€628,800)T7 Robert MacIntyre -10 $451,834 (€388,600)T7 Xander Schauffele -10 $451,834 (€388,600) T7 Rory McIlroy -10 $451,834 (€388,600) T10 Bryson DeChambeau -9 $304,650 (€261,000)T10 Corey Conners -9 $304,650 (€261,000)T10 Brian Harman -9 $304,650 (€261,000)T10 Russell Henley -9 $304,650 (€261,000)T14 Rickie Fowler -8 $240,000 (€206,400)T14 Nicolai Hojgaard -8 $240,000 (€206,400)T16 Jesper Svensson -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 Hideki Matsuyama -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 Tommy Fleetwood -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 John Parry -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 Justin Rose -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 Rasmus Hojgaard -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T16 Tyrrell Hatton -7 $185,258 (€159,300)T23 Maverick McNealy -6 $138,040 (€118,700)T23 J.J. Spaun -6 $138,040 (€118,700)T23 Lucas Glover -6 $138,040 (€118,700)T23 Dustin Johnson -6 $138,040 (€118,700)T23 Ludvig Aberg -6 $138,040 (€118,700)T28 Harry Hall -5 $119,950 (€103,200)T28 Oliver Lindell -5 $119,950 (€103,200)T30 Daniel Berger -4 $104,850 (€90,200)T30 Akshay Bhatia -4 $104,850 (€90,200)T30 Keegan Bradley -4 $104,850 (€90,200)T30 Kristoffer Reitan -4 $104,850 (€90,200)T34 Sergio Garcia -3 $86,517 (€74,400)T34 Aaron Rai -3 $86,517 (€74,400)T34 Jon Rahm -3 $86,517 (€74,400)T34 Justin Thomas -3 $86,517 (€74,400)T34 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -3 $86,517 (€74,400)T34 Lee Westwood -3 $86,517 (€74,400) T40 Shane Lowry -2 $68,340 (€58,800) T40 Jordan Spieth -2 $68,340 (€58,800)T40 Jason Kokrak -2 $68,340 (€58,800)T40 Takumi Kanaya -2 $68,340 (€58,800)T40 Nathan Kimsey -2 $68,340 (€58,800)T45 Matt Wallace -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Matthew Jordan -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Thomas Detry -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Henrik Stenson -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Jordan Smith -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Sam Burns -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T45 Thriston Lawrence -1 $51,186 (€44,000)T52 Adrien Saddier E $44,350 (€38,100)T52 Sepp Straka E $44,350 (€38,100)T52 Marc Leishman E $44,350 (€38,100)T52 Sungjae Im E $44,350 (€38,100)T56 Phil Mickelson 1 $42,334 (€36,400)T56 Jhonattan Vegas 1 $42,334 (€36,400)T56 Tony Finau 1 $42,334 (€36,400)T59 Antoine Rozner 2 $41,550 (€35,700)T59 Justin Leonard 2 $41,550 (€35,700)T61 Dean Burmester 3 $41,100 (€35,300)T61 Romain Langasque 3 $41,100 (€35,300)T63 Riki Kawamoto 4 $40,280 (€34,600)T63 Andrew Novak 4 $40,280 (€34,600)T63 Viktor Hovland 4 $40,280 (€34,600)T63 Ryggs Johnston 4 $40,280 (€34,600)T63 Francesco Molinari 4 $40,280 (€34,600)68 Jacob Skov Olesen 6 $39,400 (€33,900)69 Matti Schmid 8 $39,100 (€33,600) 70 Sebastian Soderberg 11 $38,900 (€33,500)