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Golf’s Greatest Stars Ready for Royal Birkdale Test at Open Championship

THE OPENING DOG-LEG AT ROYAL BIRKDALE, A STERN PAR-4 TO START THE DAY

SOUTHPORT, MERSEYSIDE, ENGLAND – It’s been ten years since the world’s greatest golfers have tackled mighty Royal Birkdale for an Open Championship. There are some changes to the golf course, primarily to equate the difficulty of the nines and to diversify the par-3s. But the links golf challenges of Birkdale endure, as does the unpredictability of wind and weather. Storied, venerable Birkdale is ready. And it’s fascinating to hear the players’ varied reactions to both the course and their own preparation.

Tommy Fleetwood is the hometown boy this week. Starting as a teen who snuck onto Royal Birkdale “once or twice” as he put it, the reigning FedEx Cup champion is still seeking his first major championship victory, and with every fan from Manchester to Liverpool cheering for him the excitement around him is palpable.

“For anybody that was lucky enough to grow up in the town of Southport. It’s such a golfing town, and The Open at Birkdale holds such a special place in the area. Yeah, it’s a dream just to be competing in an Open here, so I feel very, very lucky,” he began earnestly. “Excited for the opportunity to play in front of everybody. It’s very rare to have an opportunity to play a tournament, let alone The Open, in the town where you grew up in front of fans that were all there to support you. Very excited.”

Still, that an awful lot of added pressure as well as added support. It’s a double-edged sword, but one that the affable Fleetwood handles it with aplomb and grace.

“I think what you do have to deal with is how much you want it and your own expectations, but I think at the same time, I’m no different to any other person in terms of every single person that is playing in The Open dreams of winning in The Open and wants to win it,” he noted candidly. In one way it’s no different than anybody else in that sense. I just think I am the lucky one that gets to have home support and use that as like really, really positive fuel.”

Positive fuel has been coursing through Wyndham Clark veins lately, that’s for certain. Despite all of New York actually heckling him during the final round of last month’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills, he still held on for the victory.

That took the ultimate in guts. Of course, Clark handled the expected questions about his trials and tribulations getting along with everyone on tour, but his open-hearted answers speak well to the man, who earnestly wants second chances. And as far as his chances this week? He certainly has the game plan. He sems ready for the unique strategic problems a fast and firm Birkdale presents.

“I think you’re really going to need a good caddie to tell you how far the ball is rolling out. Then yeah, you’re going to have to hit shots and really be strategic. I mean, you might hit a 4-iron that goes over 300 yards, and then you’ve got to look at a bunker and go, it’s 320. How do we stay short of that because we can’t cover it? But that makes it fun,” he stated. I personally enjoy majors like this.”

Still a bit of an enigma on tour, journalists asked Clark about a weirdsville training aid they saw him practicing with…a coat hanger?

“Mondays are my technical days. You won’t see me doing a bunch of that stuff the rest of the week,” he revealed, laughing. “My swing’s gotten a little off. I kind of hit it kind of crappy, especially on Sunday — or just yesterday. Yeah, the coat hanger is for wrist angle, trying to get a little more inflection in my left wrist so I can square the face more. That’s just what it is.”

JOR4DAN SPIETH, IN 2017, TRYING TO REACH THE 13TH GREEN FROM BLACKPOOL OR MANCHESTER OR SOMEWHERE MILES FORM THE GREEN

Jordan Spieth, winner of the last Open at Birkdale, in 2017 had a similar, more detailed analysis. No one will ever forget Spieth’s 3-wood on the 13th hole in the final round from perdition on the 13th hole to a round saving bogey (of all things) but that shot and save triggered a 5-under in three hole stretch to zoom past a shell-shocked Matt Kuchar.

“It dried up this week. It’s going to play quite different than the last time we were here. We’ve had an opposite wind too the last couple days. So, we’ll see what happens with the wind direction because that’s everything out here, right? Holes that are close to being drivable become mid to long irons, and just with the wind switch, the difference into and down are so dramatic over here that picking a strategy is going to be key, and it’s going to be quite different than the last time I was here,” he warned. “It’s almost impossible to overestimate the wind. I feel like I underestimate it every single time the first three or four days that I’m playing golf here. Whether it’s a cross-wind or it’s into or down, the effect on the golf ball is magnified almost double what it is in the States…5-irons are running out to 300 yards [and] you have to be careful because they put bunkers right at that number before the dogleg on half the holes. It’s important to get over here and really get your distance control, the total distance control dialed in. It’s firmer around the greens, making it more difficult. We can’t [use] a 60 degree and fly balls and spin it a lot, those shots are a lot harder when it’s firmer around the greens. It can bounce into it a lot easier. You have to be super precise.”

Matt Fitzpatrick echoed Spieth’s thoughts. Particularly in links golf, he stated, there is such a wide variety of shots that you can play. Birkdale allows you to play a lot of different shots, he agreed, but it’s most important to commit fully to whatever shot you do choose.

“I think there’s a fine balance. You’ve got to have it tough but fair. I think, when it gets really firm, you obviously have to err on the side of caution with course setup and how that plays. You don’t want that randomness,” he observed. I think the tougher the golf course, normally the better players come to the top that are playing well. That’s sort of the best way to sort of separate any tournament. But you obviously don’t want it to get out of hand where it becomes a little bit lucky.”

Fitzpatrick feels his game is rounding into shape just in time. The 2022 U.S. Open winner at Brookline’s The Country Club is a links golf master, and his prior experience playing Royal Birkdale are an added plus.

“Hopefully I’ve not peaked yet, but I just think I’m doing a lot of good stuff this year. Short game’s been really, really good, and so has my irons. That’s a first for me. My irons have never really been a strength. I’ve had good seasons but never really taken advantage of that,” he confided. “The level of experience and maturity I have, I guess, with playing and being in these situations is obviously much better now, even than before 2022. So, I think that’s obviously a big help as well.”

The Open begins Thursday morning. This is the 11th Open Champion ship conducted at Royal Birkdale. It first hosted the Open in 1954, when legendary Aussie golfer Peter Thomson won his first of five Claret Jugs.