A relentless Scottie Scheffler has sealed his first British Open triumph by four shots as he turned the final day of the tournament into a procession at Royal Portrush.
The 29-year-old American world number one started out with a four-stroke lead and apart from one mid-round blip, never looked like relinquishing his iron-like grip as the chasing pack were left scrapping for minor places on Sunday.
Scheffler resembled a towering giant among men all week on the glorious Causeway Coast, rekindling memories of 15-times major winner Tiger Woods in his pomp, and he rubber-stamped his fourth major title with a clinical final-round 68.
After tapping in for his par in front of a packed 18th green grandstand, Scheffler’s laser-focus finally cracked and he threw his white cap skywards before hugging caddie Ted Scott and enjoying a tearful embrace with his wife Meredith and son Bennett.
“Thanks to the fans for all the support. I know I wasn’t the fan favourite today so I appreciate you guys coming out to support, overall it’s been a great week,” Scheffler, the third successive American to win the Open and fourth in five years, said after lifting the Claret Jug.
The Open
Royal Portrush
Scottie Scheffler (USA) – 17-underHarris English (USA) – 13-underChris Gotterup (USA) – 12-underLi Haotong (CHN) 11-underMatt Fitzpatrick (ENG) 11-underWyndham Clark (USA) 11-under
Other scores
Xander Schauffele (USA) 10-under*Rory McIlroy (Nth Ire) 10-underMarc Leishman (AUS) Level
* Last year’s champion
Take the dominant Scheffler out of the equation and the 153rd Open would have been a thriller with the leaderboard underneath him chopping and changing all weekend.
In the end, Harris English was the best of the rest on 13-under after a 66 with fellow American Chris Gotterup, winner of last week’s Scottish Open, a further shot back.
The only Australian in the field to make the final two rounds, Marc Leishman, finished in a tie for 52nd on level par, after a final-round 75.
Huge galleries descended on the course all week and thousands arrived on a sunny Sunday hoping to witness a Rory McIlroy miracle.
But Northern Ireland’s favourite sporting son, who began six shots behind Scheffler, was unable to mount a charge and ended up in a tie for seventh on 10-under along with 2024 champion Xander Schauffele and Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre.
“I wish I had have been closer to Scottie going into today and been able to make a real push,” said McIlroy, who completed his career Grand Slam by winning this year’s Masters.
“But he’s been on a different level all week and he’s been on a different level for the last two years to the rest of us.”
Despite the vocal crowd support from local fans at Royal Portrush, Rory McIlroy could not find a way to victory, finishing seven shots back from Scottie Scheffler. (Â AP: Francisco Seco)
Li Haotong, the first Chinese man to go out in the final group of a major, finished tied fourth on 11-under with England’s Matt Fitzpatrick and American Wyndham Clark.
Scottie Scheffler
Golf major titles
The Masters: 2022, 2024The PGA Championship: 2025The Open Championship: 2025
Scheffler has now three legs of his career Grand Slam and needs a US Open crown to complete the set.
He is also the first player in more than 100 years to win his first four majors by three strokes or more and the first world number one to win the Open since Tiger Woods in 2006.
“When you play against the best they make it look easy and you can’t quite figure out why they are so good,” said England’s Justin Rose, who finished on seven under.
“He is unconventional in some of his technique but the golf ball doesn’t lie. He does everything really well and his record with a 54-hole lead is Tiger-esque.”
Those thinking or even hoping that Texas-based Scheffler might stumble on a layout featuring holes known as Calamity Corner and Purgatory should probably have known better.
On the last nine occasions Scheffler had gone into the final round of a PGA Tour event ahead, he emerged victorious. His three previous major wins also came after a 54-hole lead.
A sense of anticipation brewed as the leading groups reached the first tee but when Scheffler birdied the first, fourth and fifth holes to move eight strokes clear the only question seemed to be whether he could eclipse Woods’s modern era Open record winning margin of eight strokes at St Andrews in 2000.
Even when errors did creep in, he simply rolled in long par-saving putts on the sixth and seventh holes to crush the spirit of those hoping for an unlikely collapse.
Only when he double-bogeyed the eighth after failing to get out of a bunker did Scheffler look like a mere mortal, his lead was suddenly sliced to four strokes.
But it proved false hope for those pursuing a giant of golf, and a birdie at the ninth and another at the 12th hole steadied the ship. All that needed deciding then was who would come second to golf’s undisputed powerhouse.
Reuters/ABC