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The Open Championship is a celebration — of golf’s beginnings, its past champions, its DNA, its homelands. For the last seven years, since the PGA Championship moved to May, it has also served as the final chapter of golf’s major season — the last chance for players to etch their names into history before the eight-and-a-half-month wait for the Masters begins.

It’s also the final time of the year that the faces of golf, the players around whom the sport revolves, face a unique opponent: grand, existential, possibly unanswerable questions about dreams, legacy, the long arc of pro golf, mortality and everything in between.

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This week at Royal Birkdale has been no different. While major championships bring stress and often chippy interactions in press conferences, the players are normally in a jovial mood at the Open, happy to be playing a different style of golf in the place where the game was born and feeling good about their chances to accomplish a lifelong dream of becoming Champion Golfer of the Year (again, in some cases). So when odd, philosophical questions come their way (they always do), players seem more willing to entertain and ponder something bigger than how far their 6-iron might run this week.

The introspection started with Tommy Fleetwood, the local star who grew up in Southport and used to sneak onto Royal Birkdale as a kid. Now 35, Fleetwood is still chasing his first major championship. He has eight career major top-10s, including runner-up finishes at the 2018 U.S. Open and 2019 Open Championship. But Tommy Lad hasn’t recorded a major top-10 since the 2023 Masters, and as such, was asked to confront the possibility that he’ll never become a major champion.

As we’ve come to expect from Fleetwood, he took an optimistic view of the still-long road ahead while also admitting that his pursuit in golf can’t only come down to four tournaments a year. That would be a disservice to the work he has put in chasing his dreams.

“I’ll have to wait and find out,” Fleetwood said on Monday at Royal Birkdale. “There’s no doubt about it, I think winning majors is kind of like the ultimate accolades in our sport. It’s a difficult one. I don’t think I want to sort of look towards the future and worry about or think that I have to win a major to feel fulfilled. I think, like everyone else out here, we spend our lives giving it everything, and it might happen for me, it might not. I don’t want to think about it as if it doesn’t happen, all of those hours I spent chasing my dreams, what was it for, kind of thing. Whatever happens in my career, I will have — I’ll be able to look back and say that I gave it everything and I had an amazing time doing it. I would definitely much prefer to have a major or two or three on my resume by the time my career is over. Whether that happens or not is sometimes out of your control, but I think making sure you have a great time chasing it is the ultimate thing.

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“Dreams do come true, we watch it all the time, but you’ll never find out if yours will unless you chase it. Mine might come true; it might not. I think I’ve done a lot in my career so far, but yeah, there’s still plenty more to go. Until my time is up, I’ll keep trying and keep working hard, and hopefully you can ask me that question again at some point, and I’ll be able to tell you how I actually feel.”

News

Jordan Spieth is different. But so is Royal Birkdale. Maybe that’s a good thing

Jordan Spieth is different. But so is Royal Birkdale. Maybe that’s a good thing

By: Josh Schrock

Monday was the appetizer for the Open Championship’s platter of big, existential questions. Tuesday was the main course.

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Soon-to-be 46-year-old Justin Rose, who had his own Birkdale moment as an amateur in 1998 before missing 21 cuts in a row to begin his pro career, was asked if his career — one major, World No. 1, Olympic gold medal, etc. — is everything he envisioned when he turned pro after Birkdale in 1998 or if he would want a do-over.

One of golf’s great thinkers, Rose admitted that he would’ve liked to have done more in some areas; there are near-misses that could’ve gone his way and changed how he’s viewed. But overall, 28 years into a pro career, Justin Rose has zero regrets and believes that what he craves is still on the horizon.

Read the full article here

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