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- The Good in Golf - Issue 24.7.1
The Good in Golf - Issue 24.7.1
Open Championship and FREE Open Golf Pool!
You know … in todays golf world we hear a lot about the Good of the Game. But really, what is the Good of the Game? What is the Good in Golf? Well, that is why we are here. In each edition of this newsletter, we will recognize and promote something that is Good about this Game - the people, places, events or experiences that truly exemplify The Good in Golf. It will All Be Good! No negativity, no drama, no bashing, no crises, no hot takes. Just The Good in Golf. You, our readers, are welcome to send us suggestions - something that you think should be included. Please email us at [email protected].
We are a FREE newsletter. Enjoy! Spread the word. Thank you!

Exciting news! This year The Good In Golf is running a FREE Fantasy Golf Pool for the Major Championships. Entry is free for all readers of this newsletter, and anyone else you would like to invite.
We’re using Majors Challenge, a very user-friendly online platform. Simply pick a team of golfers playing in the tournament and follow the action on their real-time leaderboard. Full rules are available on the site.
This week it’s the Open Championship Golf Pool!
First place wins a $100 Amazon Gift Card
To join the fun and enter our group, be sure to click the link below and create your account:
Good luck and have fun!

This is a MAJOR Week, and that is always a Good Thing in Golf.
It’s the Open Championship from Royal Troon, Scotland!
The Open, or British Open, as many still call it, is one of the most anticipated golf tournaments of the year for most people, probably right next to the Masters.
I had the privilege of working The Open for a period of 8 years, for GOLFweb.com, and ABC Sports, and it was an experience I will never forget.
But even now that I watch it back home, it’s still such a cool thing to wake up at 6am, flip on the TV, and watch LIVE Major Championship Golf from The Open on such iconic LINKS golf courses.
So THE OPEN week, is a great week, clearly one of the Good Things in Golf, and I just can’t wait for it to start.
I hope you all enjoy it as well.
We are not into tournament previews and making picks here. There are far better sources for that. We feel the best is the GolfStats Insider newsletter. You can get that HERE.
The 152nd Open Championship at Royal Troon
from PGATOUR.com (link)
Golf’s oldest major is returning this week to a treasured venue for its 152nd edition. This marks The Open Championship’s 10th time visiting Royal Troon, and it comes 101 years after the tournament was first played there. World Golf Hall of Famers Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson and Tom Weiskopf are among the champions at Royal Troon, which is best known for the tiny, but treacherous, Postage Stamp par 3.
Before The Open gets underway, here are nine things you need to know about the course.
1. The Ayrshire Coast
Royal Troon is situated on Scotland’s west coast, on the far side of Glasgow. While not as well known as Scotland’s East Lothian, this region still offers some of the game’s richest links.
Troon is located along the sandy, windswept coast of the Firth of Clyde, a large bay framed by Northern Ireland to the south and the Kintyre Peninsula to the north that opens up to the North Atlantic. Royal Troon is at the midpoint of a 21-mile stretch of shorefront dunes land that includes such wonderful layouts as Prestwick, St. Nicholas, Western Gailes, Dundonald Links, Gailes Links, Irvine GC and West Kilbride.
2. Its evolution
Royal Troon is now a 45-hole private club that abuts an active commuter train line on its eastern flank. It occupies the crumpled, sandy dunes land between the shoreline and what used to be farmland, and its ninth green is only 600 yards from the main runway at Glasgow Prestwick Airport.

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
Royal Troon has evolved from an initial six-hole layout designed in 1878 by Old Tom Morris protégé Charlie Hunter. Six years later, it was expanded to 18 holes by club professional George Strath. A major refinement came in 1910 at the hands of 1883 Open Champion Willie Fernie, whose work created the current routing and what quickly became two of the course’s most famous holes, the Postage Stamp par-3 eighth, and the par-4 11th hole known as “Railway” because of its proximity to the rail line, which forms an uncomfortably-close boundary. Royal Troon’s Old Course derived much of its more demanding bunkering and playing character in 1922 through an extensive renovation by five-time Open Champion and (future) World Golf Hall of Famer James Braid. That came a year before Troon hosted its first Open, which saw England’s Arthur Havers upset defending champion Walter Hagen by one shot.
The club’s other 18-hole layout, the Portland Course, circulates inland, to the east and south, and owes its present routing to a fresh 1921 design by Alister MacKenzie, another World Golf Hall of Famer. The club also has a nine-hole, par-3 layout called Craigend. Troon’s main clubhouse, aligned immediately behind the 18th hole of the Old Course on a perpendicular axis, is a classic stone Victorian structure designed in 1888 by Glasgow-based building architect Henry Edward Clifford. The club received its “royal” designation as part of its centenary celebration in 1978.
3. Three in one
The Old Course at Royal Troon offers a variety of experiences in a single round.
It’s best to get ahead early at Royal Troon, then simply hang on for dear life. The first six holes play downwind over crumpled terrain, and the opening trio consists of three short par 4s all under 400 yards.
Two of the next three holes are par 5s that play downwind, usually reachable in two despite measuring 599 yards and 623 yards, respectively.
The next six holes, by contrast, amble through sand dunes and steeper terrain at the far end of the golf course. The start of the back nine presents two of the hardest long par- s in championship golf, thanks to narrow fairways, a prevailing headwind from the left and out-of-bounds close in on the right. Things don’t get much easier for the final six holes, a brutal finish that continues the trek into the breeze. The par-3 17th measures more than 240 yards, with players hitting long irons (or more) to a tabletop green. The finishing hole, which measures nearly 460 yards, features a heavily bunkered fairway.
The five par 4s on the front nine have an average length of 393 yards; on the back nine, the six par 4s average 472 yards – a 79-yard gap that’s exacerbated by the fact that many of them play into the wind.
“From the 10th tee onwards, it's a long way home,” said Colin Montgomerie, a longtime Royal Troon member.
4. A new look
British golf designer Martin Ebert has been Royal Troon’s consulting architect for more than two decades. It's a role he holds at several other Open rota courses, including Turnberry, Royal Portrush, Carnoustie, Royal Lytham & St. Annes, Royal St. George’s, Royal Birkdale and Royal Liverpool.
For this year’s Open Championship, Ebert’s edits included a half-dozen back tees that added 201 yards to the course. The three par 5s have all been lengthened. The course has been lengthened 2.8% since it last hosted The Open eight years ago, which corresponds exactly to the additional 2.8% of distance the average PGA TOUR player has gained in that span.
Some modest bunkering was added to the landing areas on several holes, as well. Along the way, the club’s nine-hole, par-3 course, Craigend, was dramatically redesigned. It also was moved to find higher, drier ground and provide target greens for the temporary practice range for The Open.
Royal Troon spectator infrastructure has also been expanded to accommodate an expected 250,000 spectators for the week – as many as 45,000-50,000 per day during the championship rounds. The viewing stands feature 13,300 seats, the largest of which will overlook the 18th fairway. That grandstand will hold more than 4,000 people.
Course superintendent Billy McLachan will have his full crew of 38 at the ready, supplemented by a dozen other staff and volunteers from the R&A and other clubs.

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
5. Postage Stamp
Royal Troon’s shortest hole also is its most famous.
The par-3 eighth is only 123 yards long, the shortest of any hole in The Open rota. From a platform tee above sandy broken ground, golfers target a tiny green that’s just 2,500 square feet.

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
The small pedestal of a putting surface is framed by five intensely deep bunkers and steep slopes of short grass that repel mishits. The hole heads due west, with the prevailing wind coming in from the player’s right. It is usually the first shot of the day that a player is hitting into the wind, and the short approach requires him to control both his distance and trajectory. On a calm day, the hole requires nothing more than a wedge. The wind can necessitate a mid-iron, however.
“You're playing downwind for seven holes then you have to turn around and hit off this elevated tee to this green that looks like the size of this table into the wind,” said Justin Leonard, who won the 1997 Open at Royal Troon.
Gene Sarazen was 71 years old when he aced the hole in the 1973 Open Championship (he holed a bunker shot for birdie the following day, playing the hole in three strokes for the two rounds he played that week).
“For many years, the Postage Stamp hole had haunted me,” Sarazen once told the Palm Beach Post. “When the clubhead came into contact with the ball, I had the same feeling when I had my double-eagle (at Augusta National) in 1935. When the crowd roared I realized that the ball was in the hole. I knew there was no better way to close the books on my tournament play.”
Herman Tissies made a 15 on the hole in 1950, needing 12 strokes to get out of a greenside bunker.
No. 8 even derailed Tiger Woods in his first Open as a professional. He was making a serious final-round charge after a Saturday 64 vaulted him into contention, but he overshot the green and made a triple bogey.
The short hole played slightly over par in 2016, with the field averaging 3.1 strokes. Despite not having any water, it played slightly more difficult than TPC Sawgrass’ island-green 17th that year (3.09 to 3.02).
"When the wind is rollicking in from the sea, as it so often is, this is scarcely a hole for the chap whose nerves are fidgety,” George Trevor wrote in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle back in 1923. It still holds true today.
6. Railway
While the Postage Stamp can befuddle players in more subtle ways, Royal Troon’s 11th hole hits them with a show of brute strength.
The 490-yard par 4 plays even longer because of the prevailing wind, and thick gorse and out-of-bounds wait on each side of the fairway to deliver a harsh penalty. This hole, nicknamed “Railway,” is among the most difficult at any Open venue.

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
Stretched to its limit with a back tee hard against the eastern boundary wall that separates the golf course from the train tracks, the hole heads straight northwest into the teeth of the wind.
At the tee shot landing zone some 300 yards away, the fairway starts to narrow down from 35 yards to 28. The out-of-bounds stakes along the rail line are just 20 yards from the fairway’s right side.
The tracks are even tighter to the right side of the green, but players who shy away from them must contend with a deep pot bunker that guards the green’s front-left corner. The slightest imprecision in ball striking is grievously punished, such as in the first round of The Open in 1962 at Troon, when defending U.S. Open champion Jack Nicklaus took a 10 here on his way to an 80.
The hole played to a 4.6 scoring average in 2016, making it the hardest hole on the PGA TOUR that year.
7. A long history
Troon has been quite the stage through nine Open Championships. The first one in 1923, saw Englishman Arthur Havers prevail over defending champion Hagen by a single stroke. Hagen went on to win the 1924 Open Championship, and then two more (1928, ’29).
Perhaps the biggest surprise of that first Open at Royal Troon, however, was the fact that 1922 U.S. Open champion Gene Sarazen failed in final qualifying to make the championship at all; in those days, having just won a major did not spare you from having to play your way into the championship just like everybody else.
South Africa’s Bobby Locke won his second consecutive Open Championship in 1950 at Royal Troon, winning what would become the second of four claret jugs he claimed in his remarkable career. With his flat cap, plus-fours, hickory shafted putter, and at times painfully slow play, he was a powerful presence on the course. His win at Troon came during a streak from 1947 through 1950 that saw him win 11 times in 59 appearances on the PGA TOUR.
When The Open returned to Royal Troon 12 years later, fans saw another Hall of Famer successfully defend his title. Arnold Palmer won the 1962 Open a year after claiming the claret Jug at Royal Birkdale. Massive crowds cheered Palmer as he dominated Troon with a winning total of 12 under par, six shots better than runner-up Kel Nagle. (Palmer lost to Nagle by a shot two years earlier at St. Andrews, halting Palmer’s bid for the Grand Slam after he won that year’s Masters and U.S. Open).
Having convinced fellow American pros to join him in playing the event, Palmer’s presence gave a powerful boost to the championship and to the whole business of British golf in general.
Tom Weiskopf’s win in the 1973 Open Championship at Troon came in the middle of a torrid nine-week stretch that saw him win five times – at Colonial, Charlotte, Memphis, The Open and the RBC Canadian Open. It was the lone major championship for Weiskopf, who was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame this year.
Nobody carried the weight of more expectations into the Open Championship in 1982 than a young Bobby Clampett. And after rounds of 67-66 (11 under par), he held a five-shot lead going into the third round. It appeared those high hopes for the 22-year-old would be validated. But rounds of 78-77 on the weekend brought him tumbling back to earth. Clampett was never the same, and Tom Watson won to continue his incredible record in The Open. By successfully defending the next year, Watson completed a remarkable nine-year stretch that saw him win five Open Championships.

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
8. Recent opens
Mark Calcavecchia added another chapter to Greg Norman’s major letdowns by beating him in a four-hole aggregate playoff in 1989 (Australia’s Wayne Grady, who’d go on to win the 1990 PGA, also was in the playoff). Calcavecchia holed a 50-foot par putt on the 11th hole, then birdied 18 to join the playoff.
Norman shot a course-record 64 in the final round, which looked like it would be enough to overcome a seven-shot deficit to Grady, the 54-hole leader. Not even two birdies by Norman on the playoff’s opening two holes could secure a win, in large measure due to a disastrous final hole (the 18th) that saw him pick up without finishing after finding two bunkers and hitting his third shot out-of-bounds into the clubhouse area.
Justin Leonard was one of the game’s young stars when he won the 1997 Open Championship at 25 years old. He won the U.S. Amateur, NCAA Championship and had two wins apiece in the Western and Southern amateurs during his decorated amateur career. He won twice on the PGA TOUR before arriving at Royal Troon, as well.
A final round 65 closed a five-shot deficit behind Sweden’s Jesper Parnevik, who ended up in second place, three shots back, with Northern Ireland’s Darren Clarke.
Todd Hamilton was still glowing in the aura of his first PGA TOUR win at The Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches earlier that season when he came to Royal Troon in 2004 for the Open Championship. He consistently recovered greenside with pars by chipping with a hybrid 3-wood and won a four-hole aggregate playoff with South Africa’s Ernie Els.
The Open Championship in 2016 saw Royal Troon stage an epic final round, final pairing showdown between Phil Mickelson and Sweden’s Henrik Stenson. Shot for shot, birdie for birdie, they parried each other’s shot making down the stretch, with Stenson’s 63 besting Mickelson’s 65 and tying the record for lowest-ever major score. That left Stenson at a major championship record 20-under par, one better than Mickelson and an amazing 14 shots better than third-place finisher J.B. Holmes.
9. What to watch for
Watching on TV at home, the impact of an Open Championship played on a true links course can be very strong, if at times controversial. The grass is browned out, the bounces wild and seemingly unfair at times, the wind is always a major factor, and the natural setting becomes part of the charm and the mystique of a round rather than a simple frame or background. These are all takeaways that could enhance one’s appreciation of golf at one’s home course considerably.
Golf aesthetics are a tricky thing. For those accustomed to a lush green landscaped lawn, Royal Troon will take some getting used to. But as Martin Ebert says, Royal Troon “has a special quality to it, due as much to the strength of its holes as to its natural setting.”
Small wonder the club carefully metes out its guest tee times. A round here is a treasured component of any Scottish golf journey.
Holes and Yardage - Royal Troon
Hole | Par | Yardage | Name |
1 | 4 | 366 | Seal |
2 | 4 | 380 | Black Rock |
3 | 4 | 376 | Gyaws |
4 | 5 | 599 | Dunure |
5 | 3 | 220 | Greenan |
6 | 5 | 623 | Turnberry |
7 | 4 | 403 | Tel-el-Kebir |
8 | 3 | 123 | Postage Stamp |
9 | 4 | 440 | The Monk |
36 | 3,530 | ||
10 | 4 | 450 | Sandhills |
11 | 4 | 498 | Railway |
12 | 4 | 451 | The Fox |
13 | 4 | 473 | Burmah |
14 | 3 | 200 | Alton |
15 | 4 | 502 | Crosbie |
16 | 5 | 572 | Well |
17 | 3 | 242 | Rabbit |
18 | 4 | 458 | Craigend |
35 | 3,845 | ||
71 | 7,276 |
NBC Sports surrounds the 152nd Open Championship at Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scotland, with comprehensive live coverage July 18-21 across NBC, Peacock and USA Network.
In total, NBC Sports will present nearly 50 hours of live championship coverage Thursday-Sunday – and more than 200 hours of live coverage from Royal Troon including featured groups, featured hole and Golf Central Live from The Open studio coverage.
First and Second-round coverage begins before each day’s first tee shot on Peacock and will conclude after the final putt drops, giving fans comprehensive coverage of this year’s championship.
Former World No. 1 and Current European Ryder Cup Captain Luke Donald Serves as Analyst Alongside Dan Hicks
Peacock’s Coverage Includes Four Featured Groups Each Day and Featured Hole Coverage of Iconic Par-3 “Postage Stamp” 8th Hole
Golf Central Live From The Open Provides Pre- and Post-Championship Coverage on GOLF Channel and Peacock; Johnson Wagner Reprises On-Course Role
Transcript – Dan Hicks, Luke Donald, Brad Faxon and Jim “Bones” Mackay Preview 152nd Open Championship

Courtesy of ScotlandWhereGolfBegan.com
Former World No. 1 and current European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald serves an analyst for NBC Sports’ coverage of the Open Championship alongside Dan Hicks. Donald made his debut as an analyst with NBC Sports at the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches and the Arnold Palmer Invitational earlier this year. This year’s event marks the 26th career Open Championship broadcast for Mike Tirico and his fourth at Royal Troon, the site of his first Open Championship broadcast in 1997 where Justin Leonard captured the Claret Jug.
Yesterday, Hicks and Donald joined analyst Brad Faxon and on-course reporter Jim “Bones” Mackay on a media conference call to preview next week’s Open Championship. Click here for a full transcript.
Play-by-Play/Analyst Pairings
· Dan Hicks/Luke Donald
· Mike Tirico/Brad Faxon
· Terry Gannon/Paul McGinley
· Steve Sands/Notah Begay III
On-Course Reporters
· John Wood / Smylie Kaufman / Jim “Bones” Mackay / Curt Byrum
Interviews
· Cara Banks
How To Watch – Thursday, July 18 – Sunday, July 21 (all times ET)
· TV – NBC, USA Network
· Streaming – Peacock, NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app
Date | Peacock | USA Network | NBC/Peacock |
Thursday, July 18 | *1:30-4 a.m./3-4:15 p.m. | 4 a.m. – 3 p.m. | |
Friday, July 19 | *1:30-4 a.m./3-4:15 p.m. | 4 a.m. – 3 p.m. | |
Saturday, July 20 | 5-7 a.m. | 7 a.m. – 3 p.m. | |
Sunday, July 21 | 4-7 a.m. | 7 a.m. – 2 p.m. |
*coverage will begin shortly before the first scheduled tee time at 1:30 a.m. ET
NBC Sports will also complement its comprehensive Open Championship coverage with live featured groups Thursday-Sunday on Peacock, showcasing two morning groups and two afternoon groups each day of the Championship. Peacock will also showcase a featured hole feed highlighting the iconic par-3 ‘Postage Stamp’ 8th hole during the week.
NBC Sports will utilize a number of its commentators throughout featured groups and featured holes coverage, supplemented by Sky Sports and world feed commentators, including:
· Play-by-play: Damon Hack / Tom Abbott / Todd Lewis
· Analyst/on-course reporters: Johnson Wagner / John Cook / Arron Oberholser / Karen Stupples / John Wood / Richard Boxall
GOLF CENTRAL LIVE FROM THE OPEN
NBC Sports surrounds the championship with on-site studio coverage on Golf Central Live From The Open on GOLF Channel and Peacock. Rich Lerner anchors post-round and primetime editions of Live From alongside Brandel Chamblee and Paul McGinley, with Johnson Wagner reprising his on-course role throughout the week with live interviews and shot re-enactments. In addition, Live at the Range will air Monday-Wednesday at 4 a.m. ET and Tuesday-Wednesday at 11 a.m. ET.
Broadcast Team
· Hosts: Rich Lerner / Damon Hack
· Analysts: Brandel Chamblee / Paul McGinley / Arron Oberholser / Notah Begay III
· Reporters/Contributors: Todd Lewis / Eamon Lynch / Rex Hoggard / Ryan Lavner
· On-course: Johnson Wagner
Date | Golf Central – Live From The Open* |
Monday, July 15 | 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. (encores beginning 7 p.m.) |
Tuesday, July 16 | 6–11 a.m. (encores beginning 1 p.m.) |
Wednesday, July 17 | 6-11 a.m. (encores beginning 1 p.m.) |
Thursday, July 18 | 3-5 p.m. (encores beginning 8 p.m.) |
Friday, July 19 | 3-5 p.m. (encores beginning 10 p.m.) |
Saturday, July 20 | 3-5 p.m. |
Sunday, July 21 | 2-4 p.m. |
*all times ET, post-round coverage begins following conclusion of play |
Enjoy the 2024 Open Championship at Royal Troon!
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