DP World/PGA Tours : the 153rd Open Entry List
Mother Nature ! After a week they dubbed the "Scottish Riviera" at North Berwick with stunning sunshine, warm breeze, a burnt out Renaissance Club and Scots with sunburns, can you believe there is nothing but rain, rain and more rain in their forecast all this week !
Talk about Mother Nature smiling on the Scottish Open !
Now that was the good news, but she is not being so kind, as the golfing world makes the short trip over the Irish Sea to Belfast, then up the coast to Royal Portrush for this week's 153rd Open.
There is rain in the forecast Tuesday right through Sunday at various times, with winds 8-27kph. This according to "The Weather Network"
A field of 156 players are assembling in Northern Ireland for the last of this year's four men's Major Championships.
Chris Gotterup, Nicolai Højgaard and Matti Schmid earned spots via the Genesis Scottish Open, the final event in The Open Qualifying Series.
Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland is one of the world’s leading courses and the only Irish layout to host The Open. The Dunluce Links – one of two Championship courses at the site along with the Valley Course – shares an impressive North Atlantic backdrop with views of Scotland and Donegal.
This marks the third time The Open has been hosted at this renowned coastal links course, following previous staging's in 1951 and 2019, and just the third occasion the championship is contested outside Scotland and England.
Hometown favourite Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry and still world #1 Scottie Scheffler headline a stacked international field looking to win the coveted Claret Jug. Rory set the course record of 61 as a 16 year old in a qualifying round.
To see the full field list, click here.
Who is the defending champion?
Xander Schauffele won his second Major Championship of 2025 at The 152nd Open as a flawless 65 saw him break free from a congested leaderboard and earn a two-shot victory at Royal Troon.
By doing so, he became the first player to win two Majors in the same season since Brooks Koepka in 2018, and also the third American winner of the Claret Jug in the last four editions.
England's Justin Rose and American Billy Horschel were the nearest challengers after rounds of 67 and 68 respectively, one clear of South Africa's Thriston Lawrence.
As with the other three Major Championships, the tournament is decided over 72-hole stroke play with 18 holes a day over four days, weather permitting.
Each player has one morning and one afternoon tee time over the first two days, in groups of three.
The cut at the Open is made after the second round is fully completed, as the top 70 players and ties go on to face two more rounds.
The final two rounds are generally played in groups of two, with last place going off first and the leaders going out last.
What does the winner receive?
Among the benefits enjoyed by The Open winner are:
• The Claret Jug
• The Gold Medal
• Title of ‘Champion Golfer of the Year’
• Entry to all future Open Championships until the age of 55
• Five-year exemptions to The Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open and Players Championship
• Automatic invite to three of the five senior Majors once the player turns 50, with a one-year invitation to the US Senior Open and a lifetime invitation to the Senior PGA Championship and Senior Open Championship
* $3,100,000 US.
The 153rd Open will be televised in 199 countries and territories, enabling golf fans to watch the world’s best players compete for the Claret Jug.
europeantour.com
Bryan Angus