The Magic of The Open Championship: Why Golf's Oldest Major Captivates Like No Other
I love all four majors. They each hit me differently, though. I've been going to Augusta almost every year since 2010, and the Masters is straight-up theater. Those azaleas, the crazy-quiet crowds, that green jacket moment. It's American golf in its absolute purest form and has all the feels to get you pumped up for the year to come.
Advertisement
But The Open Championship? That's something entirely different.
4:30 AM alarm on a Thursday in July. My wife thinks I've lost it. I'm up making coffee in the dark, settling into my chair, and waiting for those first shots from Scotland. Something about watching golf at that hour just feels right.
When those links courses show up on the screen, you're transported. St. Andrews with that old stone bridge. Royal Troon getting pounded by wind off the water. These aren't country club courses where they vacuum the fairways like we have here at home. This is golf in its rawest and most natural form. You versus whatever Scotland decides to throw at you.
Advertisement
European crowds get it in a way we don't as Americans.
We're loud, we cheer and we lose our minds. I'm guilty of it, too. But watch the Open crowds. There's this quiet respect that's almost religious. A guy walks across the Swilken Bridge, perhaps for the last time, and you could hear a pin drop. Someone hoists that Claret Jug for the first time? Grown men start crying.
The green jacket has prestige, no doubt about that. The Wanamaker Trophy looks absolutely amazing. But the Claret Jug? Oh, that Claret Jug is something else. Champion golfers of the year don't hold it – they cradle it in their arms with love and affection. Nicklaus said it was like holding "a newborn baby." That's coming from a guy who won everything, multiple times.
The history smacks you in the face. When you're watching someone play St. Andrews, it's awe-inspiring to know that golfers have been getting beat up by that exact hole since the 1550s. Five hundred years of torture in many cases, but a walk that most would choose for their last round before they die.
Advertisement
That's the magic of the Open Championship. It gets back to the basics of this game that we all love so very much. You. Club. Ball. Whatever Mother Nature's mood is that day. Everything else feels manufactured these days. The Open? Still real.
So yeah, I'll keep setting that insane alarm every July. Coffee ready, TV on, watching golf the way it was meant to be.
Related: Why Links Golf and Britain's Ancient Courses Hit Differently Than Anything We Have in America
Related: Why Chris Gotterup's emotional win makes me believe golf's future is bright
Related: Gary Player Reflects on Royal Portrush's Return to The Open Championship
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 14, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
a minute ago
- USA Today
Bryson DeChambeau whiffs on shot from the long rough at the 2025 British Open Championship
(Editor's note: For live updates of the first round of the Open Championship, please click here.) The Open Championship is often associated with damp conditions, cloudy skies, rolling hills, coastal views, and — of course — long grass. The Dunluce Links at Royal Portrush is covered in deep, grown-out fescue, or as it's more informally known, the "thick stuff." It is one of the signature challenges that competitors must face and overcome if they want to hoist the Claret Jug. Just keep it in the fairway, right? It's not that simple, and one of the world's best ball strikers learned that the hard way during Thursday's opening round. Bryson DeChambeau's tee shot on the par-4 fourth hole found the rough to the left of the fairway, but his second shot doomed him even more, as he discovered his ball buried in the long grass about 40 yards in front of the green. A catastrophic side-hill lie didn't help matters, either, and DeChambeau proceeded to completely whiff on his fourth shot. He eventually got it up-and-down for a double bogey after needing two attempts to get out of the fescue. DeChambeau, a member of LIV Golf and a two-time U.S. Open champion, was 2 over through six holes just before noon ET on Thursday, six shots behind a four-way tie for the lead. Stay up-to-date on all the first-round action at the 2025 British Open with our live updates page.


Newsweek
31 minutes ago
- Newsweek
DraftKings Promo Code: Claim $150 Bonus For The Open, NBA Summer League
Take advantage of the latest DraftKings promo code offer by clicking here and starting with a $150 instant bonus. Set up a new account and start with a $5 bet on The Open, MLB, NBA Summer League or any other available market. This will unlock a $150 bonus, no matter the outcome of the original wager. This is a busy weekend for sports fans, with The Open Championship already underway and the MLB returning on Friday. Additionally, there are NBA Summer League games, where the young stars look to make an impression. DraftKings Sportsbook will have a ton of different ways to bet on the games. Now, let's take a deeper dive into the details of this offer. DraftKings Promo Code: Bet $5, Win $150 Bonus Instant gratification is far from the norm in sports betting, but this DraftKings promo is breaking the mold. Each new player can use a $5 bet on any game to secure the $150 bonus. New users will receive the bonus in the form of six $25 bonus bets that will be valid for up to one week after the original wager settles. New users can apply their bonus bets to The Open, MLB, NBA Summer League, WNBA All-Star Game, UFC, tennis and more. There should be something for every sports fan with this promo. Don't miss out on all the ways to get in on the action with this DraftKings Sportsbook offer. How To Redeem This DraftKings Promo Code Offer It's important to note that players can skip the promo code. All you have to do to set up a new account is fill out the required information sections. Next, make a cash deposit of $5 or more using any of the secure payment methods (online banking, PayPal, credit card, debit card, Apple Pay, etc.) Finally, place a $5 bet on The Open, MLB, NBA Summer League or any other available market. That is all it takes to secure the $150 instant bonus. Think of this promo as a head-start on a weekend that features everything from The Open and MLB to the NBA Summer League and WNBA All-Star Game. Other Ways to Bet On The Open at DraftKings The Open is the oldest major championship in golf and players can grab bonuses for the weekend. It starts with DraftKings' $150 instant welcome bonus, but there are other options available in the app. There are $1 million in bonus bets on the line in the King of the Course promo. Place a bet on any golfer who is participating in the Open and win a share of the bonuses if your golfer has the most birdies after cut day. There is also a 30 percent top finish boost on The Open parlays. DraftKings Sportsbook is always rolling out new boosts and bonuses for players in the app, so continue to check it to see the latest offers. 21+ and present in participating states. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-Gambler. Newsweek may earn an affiliate commission if you sign up through the links in this article. See the sportsbook operator's terms and conditions for important details. Sports betting operators have no influence over newsroom coverage.


CNN
32 minutes ago
- CNN
Lee Westwood and his caddie wife are the duo defying the odds at the Open Championship
For better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, for birdie or for bogey: Lee Westwood and his wife Helen are living every golf couple's dream at The Open Championship. The former world No. 1 rolled back the years to make an impressive start in the 153rd edition of the sport's oldest tournament at Royal Portrush, Northern Ireland on Thursday, with his spouse caddying every step of his two-under 69 opening round on a rain-soaked Dunluce Links course. It may be considered an unconventional – but not unheard of – arrangement for most players, but Westwood never had a second thought about his choice on the bag for his 90th major appearance. 'I prefer to have her caddying for me whenever she can,' the 52-year-old told reporters when he returned to the clubhouse, two shots off the lead. 'It was an easy decision for me. Probably harder for her – she'd rather be at home riding her horse.' The on-course partnership began in 2018, the duo explained on 'The Therapy Crouch' podcast earlier this month. 'I knew I could handle the weight of the bag and what have you, but I didn't have a bloody clue what I was doing,' said Helen, adding that she had never played the sport before that point. Yet it was a move that reaped instant reward, with Westwood claiming his 24th European Tour victory on their third tournament together. When the pair married in Las Vegas in 2021, their 'honeymoon' the following week was spent contesting the US Open in San Diego. While technical decisions on the course, like the choice of club or shot, start and end with the seven-time Ryder Cup champion, mental matters often fall upon the caddie's shoulders. 'Sometimes, when I'm kicking off and having a bit of a moan and a whinge, she looks at me and goes, 'Are you finished?'' Westwood said. 'He's in a beautiful spot doing something that he loves. I'm like, 'Grow up, get on with it,'' Helen added. With world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and home hero Rory McIlroy favorites among a star-studded field as The Open returns to Royal Portrush for just the third time, Westwood arrived as a 500/1 longshot with some bookmakers – but can take heart from the last time the venue played host on the Causeway Coast. The Nottinghamshire-born golfer finished tied-fourth in 2019, Helen on the bag once again, as McIlroy and a host of other big names were left reeling by testing conditions. It can serve as hope in his latest bid to shed the unwanted tag as one of the most talented players to never win a major. The best of his nine top-10 finishes came at the Open in 2010, albeit by seven shots, a year after he had agonizingly missed out on making the tournament playoff by a single stroke. 'I love The Open Championship and I love Portrush,' Westwood said Thursday. 'It's one of the golf courses where if it wasn't The Open and somebody said, 'Do you want to go and play Portrush this weekend?' I'd probably go. And there's not many courses like that.' Westwood's 28th Open start marks his first since 2022, the same year he left the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf. He had been competing in a Dallas event on the breakaway circuit just two days before he stamped his ticket for Royal Portrush with a victory in a final qualifying event earlier this month. He had held a share of the early lead with Denmark's Jacob Skov Olesen and China's Li Haotong at four-under par following a fourth birdie of the opening round at the 12th hole, only for bogeys at the 14th and 16th to drop him back. 'Links golf more than any golf gives you a chance when you're our age,' Westwood said. 'There's a bit more run on the ball … you've got to use the conditions.' 'Can't beat a senior name up there on a Thursday … we'll talk again if it's up there on Sunday,' he added.