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Golfnutter
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The Open Championship – Hoylake

Royal Liverpool Golf Club – where
the elements can test the purest of swings.
The latest winner of golf’s oldest – and to many its most
coveted – trophy will be decided this weekend. Royal Liverpool Golf Club,
located in the small town of Hoylake, on the Wirral Peninsula across the River
Mersey from Liverpool, plays host for the 12th time in its long and illustrious
history.
Before we look at the event itself, a teaser for you enthusiasts: Can you name
the poor sod who has finished runner-up, or joint runner-up, more than anyone
else?
The answer appears below.
Hoylake has a long and distinguished history of golfing firsts. It was
originator and host to the inaugural men’s amateur championship in 1885, which
became The Amateur Championship. It was host to the first ever international
between Scotland and England in 1902. It also hosted the first Home
International matches, and the first transatlantic contest between Great Britain
& Ireland and the USA in 1921, an event which became the Walker Cup.
But it is possibly Royal Liverpool Golf Club’s contribution to the amateur game
that has set it apart from all other clubs in England. Even though, at the end
of the nineteenth century, it was the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews
that took on the role of the governing body in golf as the game developed, it
was at Hoylake that the rules of amateur status were first laid down. The Open
at Hoylake was also the scene of the second leg of Bobby Jones’ historic Grand
Slam in 1930.
Hoylake, a links course whose key defence is wind, is mostly level, although
holes nearest the coast run through sand hills. When this course last hosted The
Open, in 2006, the wind was conspicuous by its absence. The course, baked dry
and playing exceptionally fast, saw that year’s winner, Tiger Woods, use his
driver just once during four rounds. This was the tournament where we saw the
Woods’ 2-iron “stinger” – the tee shot that would stay low and seemingly run
forever. Whatever else it did, it hit balls that evaded pot bunkers thus playing
a major part in helping Woods engineer an 18-under par two-shot victory.
Other notables that finished top-ten in 2006, who will be competing this time
round include: Els, Furyk, Garcia, Cabrera and current OWGR No 1, Adam Scott.
In all, there will be 156 competitors who will play 36 holes of strokeplay on
Thursday 17 and Friday 18 July. The leading 70 players and ties will play a
further 36 holes over the weekend. In the event of a tie after 72 holes, the
players will contest a four-hole playoff. The Champion will be the player with
the lowest four-hole aggregate. If there is still a tie, play will continue over
the 18th until a winner emerges.
As was expected, Tiger Woods’ return to Open Championship golf has dominated
headlines with many so-called analysts belittling his preparation. Sir Nick
Faldo, Paul Azinger, Curtis Strange and even ex-coach Hank Haney have all
expressed negative views on Woods’ apparent lack of appropriate groundwork.
Strange and his fellow ESPN analyst Azinger know full well that Woods playing
golf moves viewer interest like few other sporting events on American TV. If
Woods can contend at the home of his most emotional win, the viewing needle will
go through the roof. ESPN and the other networks will be praying those analysts
got it wrong.
Players I believe representing the ten best bets, using odds from Paddy Power as
at Monday 14 July, are listed in the table below. If pressed to name just one? I
would back Stenson to pick up Sweden’s first major – for men.
Oh, and the perennial runner-up, none other than Jack Nicklaus; 1964, 67, 68,
72, 76, 77, 79. Poor sod indeed!
BBC broadcast times suit us here in Pattaya. Enjoy!
Golfnutter
Name |
Odds |
Comment |
Justin Rose |
14/1 |
Great form with 2 from 2, but no top-10 in last 16 Open
starts. |
Adam Scott |
16/1 |
Form good. Memories of Hoylake good. Not played
recently. |
Rory McIlroy |
16/1 |
Not his favourite event. When good, very good. When
bad… |
Henrik Stenson |
16/1 |
Second last year. Five top-10s from last six starts.
Strong bet. |
Tiger Woods |
22/1 |
Can’t win so soon after surgery… or can he? Loves
Hoylake. |
Martin Kaymer |
22/1 |
Great YTD including a US Open. Past OWGR #1. Back to
best. |
Phil Mickelson |
25/1 |
Defending champion but form not similar to last
year’s. |
Sergio Garcia |
25/1 |
Seven Open top-10s. Good form this year. Putting woes
fixed. |
Matsuyama Hideki |
55/1 |
Creditable 6th last year in first attempt. Won Memorial
in June. |
Jim Furyk |
60/1 |
Has 4 Open top-5s. 2014 form good. The Tour’s top
grafter. |
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