2019 Open Championship

The 2019 Open Championship was the 148th Open Championship, played from 18–21 July at Royal Portrush Golf Club in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It was the second Open Championship at Portrush, which last hosted in 1951, won by Max Faulkner. Royal Portrush saw major alterations in preparation for the tournament, including replacing two of the holes.

2019 Open Championship
Tournament information
Dates18–21 July 2019
LocationPortrush, County Antrim, Northern Ireland
55.200°N 6.635°W / 55.200; -6.635
Course(s)Royal Portrush Golf Club
Dunluce Links
Organized byThe R&A
Tour(s)
Statistics
Par71
Length7,344 yards (6,715 m)
Field156 players, 73 after cut
Cut143 (+1)
Prize fund$10,750,000[1]
Winner's share$1,935,000
Champion
Shane Lowry
269 (−15)
Location Map
Royal Portrush
Location in the United Kingdom
Royal Portrush
Location in Ireland
Royal Portrush
Location in Northern Ireland

Shane Lowry won his first major title by six strokes over Tommy Fleetwood. Ranked 33rd coming into the tournament, Lowry's previous biggest wins were the 2015 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and the 2019 Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. Lowry became the second player from the Republic of Ireland to win a major after Padraig Harrington.[2]

Lowry shot 67 in both the first and second rounds to share the lead with J. B. Holmes after 36 holes. He shot a course record (since the 2016 renovation) 63 in the third round to have a four-stroke lead over Tommy Fleetwood going into the final day. After shooting a 72 in challenging conditions on the last day, Lowry was able to convert a four-shot 54-hole lead into major victory, after failing to do the same at the 2016 U.S. Open. Fleetwood finished solo second for the second time in a major, having previously achieved the feat at the 2018 U.S. Open.[2]

Major champions Darren Clarke, Graeme McDowell, and Rory McIlroy competed in a major in their native Northern Ireland for the first time. Clarke was given the honour of the opening tee shot and described the event as a watershed moment for Northern Ireland, as hosting was seen as unrealistic during the years when violence ravaged the province.[3] McIlroy was the pre-tournament favourite but shot an 8-over-par 79 in the first round, which included a quadruple bogey eight on the first hole, a double bogey five on the 16th, and a triple bogey seven on the 18th. Despite shooting a 6-under-par 65 in the second round for a two-over-par total, he missed the cut by a single stroke.[4] Clarke also missed the cut, and McDowell finished tied-57th.[2]

Defending champion Francesco Molinari made the cut on the number and finished tied for 11th with a 3-under-par 281. Brooks Koepka finished tied 4th to become the fifth player, after Jordan Spieth, Rickie Fowler, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods, to finish top-five in all four majors in a single season.[2]

73 players made the cut, including no amateurs, meaning no Silver Medal was awarded for the tournament.[2]

Media

The 2019 Open Championship was televised by the Comcast Group in the United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland (both on Sky Sports), and the United States (Golf Channel on its cable service on Thursday and Friday, while on NBC its broadcast service on weekends). It was the fourth year of both channels airing the tournament, but the first since Comcast acquired Sky in late 2018, vertically integrating the two. At the 2019 Players Championship, Comcast integrated the two channels' coverage for the first time since the acquisition, and is expected to feature coverage from both networks' commentators.

The new 7th hole at Royal Portrush
The new 8th hole at Royal Portrush

Venue

Changes to the course for the Open

Specialists Mackenzie & Ebert oversaw changes to the course in preparation for the 2019 Open. The work began in 2015 and it was the first major changes to the Harry Colt designed links since the 1930s. Changes included:[5]

  • Removing the 17th and 18th holes. Holes 7 to 16 became holes 9 to 18.
  • Two new holes (the current 7th and 8th), which were created with land taken from the Valley course.
  • Reshaping some of the greens.
  • Nine holes have new tees, there are several new bunkers, and the course was lengthened by 201 yards.

Card of the course

Dunluce Links – Championship tees

HoleNameYardsParHoleNameYardsPar
1Hughie's421410Himalayas4474
2Giant's Grave574511P.G. Stevenson's4744
3Islay177312Dhu Varren5325
4Fred Daly's482413Feather Bed1943
5White Rocks374414Causeway4734
6Harry Colt's194315Skerries4264
7Curran Point592516Calamity Corner2363
8Dunluce434417Purgatory4084
9Tavern432418Babington's4744
Out3,68036In3,66435
Source:[6]Total7,34471

If required a three-hole aggregate playoff, followed by sudden death, would have used the 1st, 13th, and 18th holes.[7]

Length of the course for the previous Open:[8][9]

  • 1951: 6,802 yards (6,220 m), par 72

Field

Each player is classified according to the first category in which he qualified, but other categories are shown in parentheses.[10][11]

1. The Open Champions aged 60 or under on 21 July 2019

Stewart Cink (2), Darren Clarke (2), David Duval, Ernie Els (2), Pádraig Harrington, Zach Johnson (2), Paul Lawrie, Tom Lehman, Rory McIlroy (2,3,4,5,10,11,12,15), Phil Mickelson (2,4,12,15), Francesco Molinari (2,3,4,5,6,12,15), Louis Oosthuizen (2,4), Jordan Spieth (2,3,4,8,9,15), Henrik Stenson (2,4,15), Tiger Woods (3,4,9,12,15)

2. The Open Champions for 2009–2018
3. Top 10 finishers and ties in the 2018 Open Championship

Tony Finau (4,12,15), Kevin Kisner (4), Matt Kuchar (4), Eddie Pepperell (4,5), Justin Rose (4,5,12,15), Xander Schauffele (4,5,12)

4. Top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) for Week 21, 2019

Kiradech Aphibarnrat (5), Lucas Bjerregaard (5), Keegan Bradley (12), Rafa Cabrera-Bello (5), Patrick Cantlay (12), Paul Casey (12,15), Jason Day (10,12), Bryson DeChambeau (12,15), Matthew Fitzpatrick (5), Tommy Fleetwood (5,12,15), Rickie Fowler (12,15), Jim Furyk, Sergio García (5,9,15), Justin Harding, Tyrrell Hatton (5,15), Billy Horschel (12), Dustin Johnson (8,12,15), Brooks Koepka (8,10,12,15), Marc Leishman (12), Li Haotong (5), Shane Lowry, Hideki Matsuyama (12), Alex Norén (5,6,15), Pan Cheng-tsung, Ian Poulter (15), Andrew Putnam, Jon Rahm (5,12,15), Patrick Reed (5,9,12,15), Adam Scott, Webb Simpson (11,12,15), Cameron Smith (12), Brandt Snedeker, Justin Thomas (10,12,15), Matt Wallace (5), Bubba Watson (12,15), Gary Woodland (8,12)

5. Top 30 on the 2018 Race to Dubai

Alexander Björk, Jorge Campillo, Ryan Fox, Russell Knox, Alexander Lévy, Thorbjørn Olesen (15), Adrián Otaegui, Thomas Pieters, Shubhankar Sharma (16), Brandon Stone, Andy Sullivan, Lee Westwood, Danny Willett (9)

6. Last three BMW PGA Championship winners

Chris Wood

7. Top 5 players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2019 Race to Dubai through the BMW International Open

Kurt Kitayama, David Lipsky, Robert MacIntyre, Richard Sterne, Erik van Rooyen

8. Last five U.S. Open winners
9. Last five Masters Tournament winners
10. Last six PGA Championship winners

Jimmy Walker

11. Last three Players Championship winners

Kim Si-woo

12. The 30 qualifiers for the 2018 Tour Championship

Patton Kizzire, Kyle Stanley, Aaron Wise

13. Top 5 players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2019 FedEx Cup points list through the Travelers Championship

Ryan Palmer, Chez Reavie

14. Winner of the 2018 Open de Argentina

Isidro Benítez

15. Playing members of the 2018 Ryder Cup teams
16. Winner of the 2018 Asian Tour Order of Merit
17. Winner of the 2018 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit

Jake McLeod (OQS Australia)

18. Winner of the 2018–19 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit

Zander Lombard

19. Winner of the 2018 Japan Open

Yuki Inamori

20. Winner of the 2019 Asia-Pacific Diamond Cup Golf

Yosuke Asaji

21. Top 2 on the 2018 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List

Shugo Imahira, Shaun Norris

22. Top player, not already exempt, on the 2019 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List through the Japan Golf Tour Championship

Mikumu Horikawa

23. Winner of the 2018 Senior Open Championship

Miguel Ángel Jiménez

24. Winner of the 2019 Amateur Championship

James Sugrue (a)

25. Winner of the 2018 U.S. Amateur
26. Winners of the 2019 European Amateur

Matthias Schmid (a)

27. Recipient of the 2018 Mark H. McCormack Medal
  • Braden Thornberry forfeited his exemption by turning professional in December 2018.[17]
28. Winner of the 2018 Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship

Takumi Kanaya (a)

Open Qualifying Series

The Open Qualifying Series (OQS) consisted of twelve events from the six major tours and the Korean Tour.[18] Places were available to the leading players (not otherwise exempt) who finished in the top n and ties. In the event of ties, positions went to players ranked highest according to that week's OWGR.

LocationTournamentDateSpotsTopQualifiers
AustraliaEmirates Australian Open18 Nov310Abraham Ancer, Jake McLeod (17), Dimitrios Papadatos
AfricaSouth African Open9 Dec310Romain Langasque, Oliver Wilson
SingaporeSMBC Singapore Open20 Jan412Yoshinori Fujimoto, Jazz Janewattananond, Prom Meesawat, Mun Do-yeob
United StatesArnold Palmer Invitational10 Mar310Im Sung-jae, Kang Sung-hoon, Keith Mitchell
JapanMizuno Open2 Jun412Gunn Charoenkul, Yuta Ikeda, Chan Kim, Park Sang-hyun
CanadaRBC Canadian Open9 Jun310Adam Hadwin, Graeme McDowell
  • Only two eligible players finished in the top 10.
KoreaKolon Korea Open23 Jun28Hwang Inn-choon, Jang Dong-kyu
SpainEstrella Damm N.A. Andalucía Masters30 Jun310Adri Arnaus, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Mike Lorenzo-Vera
United StatesRocket Mortgage Classic30 Jun28Nate Lashley, Doc Redman
IrelandDubai Duty Free Irish Open7 Jul310Robert Rock, Paul Waring, Bernd Wiesberger
ScotlandAberdeen Standard Investments Scottish Open14 Jul310Nino Bertasio, Benjamin Hébert, Andrew Johnston
United StatesJohn Deere Classic14 Jul15Dylan Frittelli
Final Qualifying

The Final Qualifying events were played on 2 July at four courses covering Scotland and the North-West, Central and South-coast regions of England. Three qualifying places were available at each location, with 72 golfers competing at each. (R) indicates a golfer who came through Regional Qualifying (RQ).[19] Sam Locke and Ashton Turner were successful at Final Qualifying for the second consecutive year.[20] Brandon Wu was exempt[10] from RQ because he was ranked in the top ten in the World Amateur Golf Ranking,[21] while Tom Thurloway was exempted by winning the 2018 English Amateur closed championship.[22] Other qualifiers were exempted from RQ by virtue of a top 1000 Official World Golf Ranking at the date of entry.[10]

Fairmont St AndrewsSam Locke, Connor Syme, Brandon Wu (a)
Notts (Hollinwell)Tom Thurloway (a), Ashton Turner, Andrew Wilson (R)
Prince'sAustin Connelly, Curtis Knipes (a) (R), Callum Shinkwin
St Annes Old LinksMatthew Baldwin, Garrick Porteous, Jack Senior
Alternates

To make up the full field of 156, additional places were allocated in ranking order from the Official World Golf Ranking at the time that these places were made available by the Championship Committee. The first 14 alternates were added using the week 25 rankings on 26 June;[23] two of those declined spots and were replaced by the next two alternates.

  1. An Byeong-hun (ranked 53, week 25)
  2. J. B. Holmes (54)
  3. Emiliano Grillo (57)
  4. Scott Piercy (59; did not play)
  5. Branden Grace (60)
  6. Luke List (67)
  7. Jason Kokrak (70)
  8. Ryan Moore (75; did not play)
  9. Tom Lewis (76)
  10. Charley Hoffman (78)
  11. Joost Luiten (79)
  12. Lucas Glover (80)
  13. Joel Dahmen (81)
  14. Corey Conners (82)
  15. Andrea Pavan (83; replaced Scott Piercy)
  16. Mikko Korhonen (85; replaced Ryan Moore)
  17. Joaquín Niemann (79, week 27; replaced Todd Hamilton)[13]
  18. Kevin Streelman (85; replaced John Daly)[12][13]
  19. Rory Sabbatini (86; replaced Kevin Na)[14]
  20. Brian Harman (88; replaced Charles Howell III)[15]

Nationalities in the field

North America (52)South America (2)Europe (61)Oceania (7)Asia (23)Africa (11)
 Canada (3) Argentina (1) England (25) Australia (6) China (1) South Africa (11)
 Mexico (2) Chile (1) Northern Ireland (3) New Zealand (1) India (1)
 United States (47) Scotland (5) Japan (8)
 Ireland (3) South Korea (8)
 Austria (1) Taiwan (1)
 Belgium (1) Thailand (4)
 Denmark (2)
 Finland (1)
 France (4)
 Germany (1)
 Italy (3)
 Netherlands (1)
 Slovakia (1)
 Spain (7)
 Sweden (3)

Weather

  • Thursday: Mostly cloudy with intermittent showers. High of 64°F/18°C. Winds WSW 10–15 mph with gusts of 20–25 mph.
  • Friday: Mostly cloudy with occasional rain showers. High of 66°F/19°C. Winds NNE 5–10 mph.
  • Saturday: Cloudy with periods of sunshine. High of 66°F/19°C. Winds WNW 7–10 mph with gusts of 18–22 mph.
  • Sunday: Due to expected inclement weather, final round tee times ran from 7:32 a.m. to 1:47 p.m. Rainy with periods of heavy rain. High of 66°F/19°C. Winds SSW 17–20 mph with gusts of 30–35 mph.[2]

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, 18 July 2019

Brooks Koepka, winner of four of the last 10 majors, shot a 3-under 68 to be two strokes off the lead. Tiger Woods hit his highest first round score in the Open, a 7-over 78. J. B. Holmes opened with 66 for a one-shot lead over early leader Shane Lowry who shot a 67.[24] It was the second time he'd led in a major championship, the other time being the second round of the 2008 PGA Championship at Oakland Hills. Rory McIlroy shot an 8-over-par 79 which included a quadruple bogey eight on the first hole, a double bogey five on the 16th and a triple bogey seven on the 18th.[25] Two weeks after his win at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open, Jon Rahm finished two shots off the first-round lead.[2]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1J. B. Holmes United States66−5
2Shane Lowry Ireland67−4
T3Kiradech Aphibarnrat Thailand68−3
Tony Finau United States
Tommy Fleetwood England
Ryan Fox New Zealand
Dylan Frittelli South Africa
Sergio García Spain
Tyrrell Hatton England
Brooks Koepka United States
Robert MacIntyre Scotland
Alex Norén Sweden
Jon Rahm Spain
Webb Simpson United States
Lee Westwood England
Source:[26]

Second round

Friday, 19 July 2019

After round two, Shane Lowry and J. B. Holmes shared the lead on eight under. Brooks Koepka sat at tied-8th, the 12th consecutive major he'd been in the top 20. Four players, Justin Harding (T5), Xander Schauffele (T18), Kevin Streelman (T48) and Rory McIlroy (MC), posted a second round 6-under-par 65, the current course record (since renovation). 73 professionals and no amateurs made the cut line of 143 (+1). McIlroy missed the cut by one stroke, for the first time since 2013.[27] Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson both missed the cut, the first time this had happened in 83 majors. Local resident Graeme McDowell, and defending champion, Francesco Molinari, made the cut on number.[2]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
T1J. B. Holmes United States66-68=134−8
Shane Lowry Ireland67-67=134
T3Tommy Fleetwood England68-67=135−7
Lee Westwood England68-67=135
T5Justin Harding South Africa71-65=136−6
Justin Rose England69-67=136
Cameron Smith Australia70-66=136
T8Dylan Frittelli South Africa68-69=137−5
Brooks Koepka United States68-69=137
Andrew Putnam United States70-67=137
Jordan Spieth United States70-67=137

Amateurs: Kanaya (+2), Sugrue (+2), Schmid (+5), Wu (+7), Knipes (+9), Thurloway (+14)

Source:[26]

Third round

Saturday, 20 July 2019

Shane Lowry shot an 8-under-par 63 to break the course record since it was remodeled in 2016. His 197 set a new 54-hole scoring record at the Open, beating the 198 set by Tom Lehman in 1996 at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.[28] He became the 12th player since 2000 to be leading in a major by four or more strokes, with only three of them failing to go on and win, including Lowry himself at the 2016 U.S. Open. Lee Westwood sat tied-6th in his 82nd major start, which is the second highest number of major starts without a victory, with only Jay Haas (87) having more. The light afternoon winds favoured the later starters, and led to lower scores than in the first two days.[2]

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo par
1Shane Lowry Ireland67-67-63=197−16
2Tommy Fleetwood England68-67-66=201−12
3J. B. Holmes United States66-68-69=203−10
T4Brooks Koepka United States68-69-67=204−9
Justin Rose England69-67-68=204
T6Rickie Fowler United States70-69-66=205−8
Lee Westwood England68-67-70=205
T8Tony Finau United States68-70-68=206−7
Jon Rahm Spain68-70-68=206
Jordan Spieth United States70-67-69=206
Danny Willett England74-67-65=206
Source:[26]

Final round

Sunday, 21 July 2019

Summary

Sunday’s tee times were moved forward due to the adverse weather forecast. The first tee time for the final round at Royal Portrush was at 7:32am BST, with the two leaders beginning their final round at 1:47pm.[29][30] Shane Lowry shot a 1-over-par 72, with only Tony Finau scoring lower (71) out of the players in the top 10 after round 3. It meant Lowry won with a six shot margin ahead Tommy Fleetwood, the highest winning margin in a major since Martin Kaymer in the 2014 U.S. Open. Lowry had a clear lead throughout the round, and was generally praised for his composure in testing weather conditions, with some remarking about the similarity to his 2009 Irish Open win when he still had amateur status.[2]

Final leaderboard

Champion
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion

Note: Top 10 and ties qualify for the 2020 Open Championship; top 4 and ties qualify for the 2020 Masters Tournament

PlacePlayerCountryScoreTo parMoney ($)
1Shane Lowry Ireland67-67-63-72=269−151,935,000
2Tommy Fleetwood England68-67-66-74=275−91,120,000
3Tony Finau United States68-70-68-71=277−7718,000
T4Brooks Koepka United States68-69-67-74=278−6503,500
Lee Westwood England68-67-70-73=278
T6Rickie Fowler United States70-69-66-74=279−5313,000
Tyrrell Hatton England68-71-71-69=279
Robert MacIntyre Scotland68-72-71-68=279
Danny Willett England74-67-65-73=279
10Patrick Reed United States71-67-71-71=280−4223,000
Source:[26]

Scorecard

Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par453443544445344344
Lowry−15−15−15−16−17−17−18−17−16−16−15−15−15−14−15−15−15−15
Fleetwood−12−12−11−11−12−12−12−11−11−10−10−11−11−9−9−9−9−9
Finau−7−7−7−7−7−7−8−8−8−8−7−8−7−7−7−7−7−7
Westwood−7−8−9−9−10−10−10−10−9−10−9−8−7−7−7−6−6−6
Koepka−8−7−6−5−7−7−7−7−7−7−6−6−6−6−7−7−6−6
MacIntyre−2−3−3−3−3−3−4−4−4−5−5−5−5−4−4−4−4−5
Hatton−3−4−4−5−5−5−4−4−4−4−4−5−5−4−4−4−5−5
Willett−7−8−8−8−8−8−9−9−8−8−7−8−7−6−5−5−5−5
Fowler−6−7−8−9−9−9−9−9−9−7−7−7−6−5−6−6−5−5
Reed−4−4−5−5−4−4−5−5−4−4−4−5−5−5−5−5−4−4
Holmes−8−8−8−7−7−6−7−6−5−5−2EE+1+1+2+4+6

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Eagle Birdie Bogey Double bogey Triple bogey+

Aftermath

Reaction from Lowry

Lowry was interviewed by host broadcaster, Sky Sports, where he discussed his victory:[31]

"It's like an out-of-body experience! I was so calm coming down the last, I cannot believe it. The weather was awful but I had a look around, and everyone was struggling. It became a two-horse race with Tommy, and I just tried to focus on staying ahead."
"I suppose I talked to my caddie Bo a lot today, I said 'I cannot stop thinking about winning, holding the claret jug'. He just said, 'stay focused', and what a job he did today. I cannot wait to wake up tomorrow and feel what it feels like it is phenomenal."

Media and sporting reaction

Lowry's victory was widely covered in Ireland, and was featured on the front page of newspapers in both the Republic and Northern Ireland.

As Lowry advanced towards victory, the crowds gathered at Croke Park for the 2019 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship quarter-final double header received updates on the big screens in the stadium.[32]

Statistics

Course

Hardest three holes
Easiest three holes
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Par453443544364453443443571
Yards4215741774823741945924344323,6644474745321944734262364084743,680Total
Average score to par
1st round+0.21−0.37+0.02+0.24−0.10+0.24+0.12+0.06+0.22+0.64−0.03+0.40−0.22−0.04+0.16+0.26+0.24+0.20+0.37+1.35+1.99
2nd round+0.15−0.12+0.04+0.24−0.09−0.12−0.35+0.12+0.12−0.09+0.04+0.19−0.48−0.03+0.53−0.05+0.19−0.03+0.19+0.47+0.39
3rd round+0.08−0.67−0.10+0.15−0.04+0.25−0.07−0.03+0.00−0.42+0.00+0.32−0.48+0.07+0.33+0.11+0.25−0.19+0.10+0.49+0.07
4th round+0.34−0.32−0.01+0.10−0.30+0.03−0.26+0.32+0.36+0.25+0.03+0.62−0.12+0.16+0.38+0.12+0.37+0.29+0.14+1.99+2.23
Tournament+0.19−0.32−0.03+0.20−0.12+0.09−0.13+0.11+0.17+0.10−0.02+0.35−0.34+0.01+0.35+0.11+0.25+0.07+0.23+1.08+1.18

Source:[33]

Player

The leading player in each category were:

Fairways hit
1st roundPark Sang-hyun92.86%
2nd roundAdam Hadwin
Matt Kuchar
Xander Schauffele
Kevin Streelman
92.86%
3rd roundPaul Waring92.86%
4th roundLee Westwood92.86%
TournamentBrian Harman
Takumi Kanaya
82.14%
Greens in regulation
1st roundShane Lowry88.89%
2nd roundYuki Inamori
Xander Schauffele
94.44%
3rd roundShane Lowry94.44%
4th roundFrancesco Molinari88.89%
TournamentShane Lowry79.17%
Average number of putts
1st roundRyan Palmer1.33
2nd roundJack Senior1.28
3rd roundDanny Willett1.39
4th roundMatthew Fitzpatrick
Jim Furyk
Patrick Reed
1.39
TournamentZach Johnson
Jack Senior
1.44
Longest drives (yards)
1st roundCallum Shinkwin381
2nd roundLuke List
Bubba Watson
351
3rd roundAlex Norén335
4th roundLouis Oosthuizen343
TournamentCallum Shinkwin381

Source:[34]

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  29. "Adverse weather forecast brings Sunday start forward". The Open. 20 July 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  30. Murray, Scott (21 July 2019). "The Open 2019: Shane Lowry wins by six shots – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  31. "The Open 2019 final round". BBC. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  32. Gavin, Brian (22 July 2019). "A different man in black deserves the plaudits". Irish Examiner. It’s not often golf takes precedence over Gaelic games for me but this was an exception — and oh what an exception... It's the great sporting story we've had in the town, in the county of Offaly since 1982 when Seamus Darby did what he did to Kerry... I heard the supporters in Croke Park yesterday were given updates on Shane's final round in Portrush on the big screens and he would have really appreciated that.
  33. "Hardest Holes". The Open. Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  34. "Player stats". The Open. Retrieved 20 July 2019.
Preceded by
2019 U.S. Open
Major Championships Succeeded by
2020 PGA Championship
2020 Open Championship cancelled
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