2024 British Open Preview & Tee Times: Everything To Know About Royal Troon
The British Open is coming to Royal Troon for this season’s fourth and final Major championship. Find bigger golf betting odds at the best sportsbooks to increase your potential payouts. Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, and Xander Schauffele have opened as the favorites in British Open odds for The 152nd Open.
Calling all folks and blokes! A convergence of the best golfers in the world across the PGA TOUR, DP World Tour, and LIV Tour brings us to the final Major of 2024. Royal Troon Golf Club is set to host the 152nd running of the Open Championship. Last here in 2016, this marks The Open’s first return since Henrik Stenson (-20) and Phil Mickelson (-18) famously dueled in a league of their own. JB Holmes was the next closest contender, finishing 3rd at -6. We’ll get the week kicked off with our usual course preview and look at the British Open odds.
2024 British Open Odds
Here are the top-25 players in British Open odds this week. Click on the odds to bet now. To find British Open longshots, browse prices for the entire field on our Open Championship odds page or search by player name in our Odds Finder tool.
The 152nd Open Championship
Scottish Links Golf
I love everything about The Open. Links golf is golf in its purest form. It rewards thoughtful, strategic, and creative play with true hazards to penalize a reckless bomb-and-gouge approach. In the case of Royal Troon, we’ll see strategically placed pot bunkers, gorse bushes, and minuscule greens defining its identity, sitting heavily exposed on the Scottish coastline. With constant undulations and scarce flat lies in the fairway, this marks a welcomed respite from the “Trackman golf” wave that has taken over modern golf recently, as the removal of pure distance advantage at The Open Championship gives this event a more accessible feel to the field at large compared to the other three majors on the schedule.
Betting The Open
From a golf betting perspective, The Open presents a challenge as one of the most difficult events of the year to use data predictively. The reasons for that include the randomness of weather and its significant effect on certain waves versus others, the absence of any historical ShotLink/Strokes Gained data to model off of, and the fact that links golf is an entirely different animal. Case in point, we have plenty of players in the field whose last 12 rounds have been played across TPC Deere Run, Detroit Golf Club, and TPC River Highlands. That’s not exactly translatable to what lies in store ahead at Royal Troon, so my betting decisions for this week will be more anecdotally based, using stat modeling directionally to guide those decisions.
I expect this recently modernized version of Royal Troon to continue to reward the top, in-form players from tee to green yet again. I’m looking to isolate the most consistent total drivers who excel in SG: Approach and Scrambling, particularly from the sand. With Troon susceptible to high winds and inclement weather, it will be crucial to monitor the weather forecast throughout the week, as is always the case at any British Open.
Without further ado, let’s run through the key facts and info about Royal Troon Golf Club ahead of the 2024 British Open. Scroll to the bottom for complete outright odds and to compare prices across the best sportsbooks in your state. Click on any PGA TOUR odds bet now.
BRITISH OPEN FIELD AT A GLANCE
The field contains 158 players for the 152nd Open Championship. Four spots remain up for grabs between top qualifying finishers at the previous week’s Scottish Open and ISCO Championship. A majority of the field qualified by way of a top-50 Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) or by a top-30 ranking from the 2023 DP World Tour season.
Sixteen spots were up for grabs in Final Qualifying, which brought added drama for top players, LIV or otherwise, who were blocked out by their diminishing OWGR rank. Justin Rose, Abraham Ancer, Sam Horsfield, and Matthew Southgate are notables who were on the outside looking in before punching their tickets to Troon by way of Open qualifying. Sergio Garcia – with 99 career Major appearances under his belt – pleaded for a special exemption, citing himself as the solution to combat the declining Open Championship. Nevertheless, he will be at home this week, so golf fans will have to muster up excitement in other ways at the 152nd Open.
Additional qualifying criteria include recent major champions and top placements in the national open championships across international tours, with the next available OWGR-ranked players rounding out the field. This shapes up as the most top-heavy major this year as every OWGR top-50 player will be teeing it up (except for Cam Davis, whose Rocket Mortgage Classic victory catapulted him to OWGR No. 39 after the top-50 qualifying window had closed).
Cam Davis, Thomas Detry, Aaron Rai, Taylor Pendrith, and Alex Noren are the first alternates on call, each in great form and suitable fits for the course should there be any withdrawals.
DP World Tour, LIV Players In Action
A major hosted by the R&A means a stark difference in the field composition compared to a usual week on the PGA TOUR. From the DP World Tour, the top-30 players in the 2023 Final Race to Dubai Rankings and the first five players on the 2024 Race to Dubai Ranking not otherwise exempt have gained entry into this week’s field. Frankly, the DP World Tour’s continued path as a feeder Tour for top European talent like Matthieu Pavon, Min Woo Lee, Robert MacIntyre, and Nicolai Hojgaard earning full-time membership on the PGA TOUR in recent years offers little hope for the talent left over to measure up to this field at Royal Troon. The top players from the DP World Tour to watch out for this week, however, include Keita Nakajima, Rasmus Hojgaard, and Sebastian Soderberg.
On the LIV side, a total of 15 players have qualified through past exemptions, highlighted by Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Joaquin Niemann, and Cam Smith will headline as top contenders. Henrik Stenson and Phil Mickelson famously dueled at the last Open Championship at Royal Troon in 2016, and both will return to represent the Majesticks and HyFlyers in 2024.
Much to the dismay of the British patrons in 2023, Brian Harman emerged as the Cinderella winner of the 2023 Open Championship at Royal Liverpool and is back for his defense of the Claret Jug in 2024. Cam Smith, Collin Morikawa, Shane Lowry, Francesco Molinari, Jordan Spieth, Henrik Stenson, Zach Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els, Darren Clarke, Stewart Cink, Louis Oosthuizen, Padraig Harrington, John Daly, and Tiger Woods represent the list of former champions back in Troon this week.
INTRODUCTION To ROYAL Tr00n
Established in 1878, Royal Troon Golf Club holds plenty of history in the game of golf. It is set to host The Open Championship for the 10th time since 1923, and has consistently had its name called on the Open rota every 10 or so years. After granting membership to Women in 2016, Royal Troon hosted the 2020 Women’s Open Championship, where Sophia Popov emerged as the unlikely winner.
The list of past champions at Royal Troon is a decorated one, with Henrik Stenson, Todd Hamilton, Justin Leonard, Mark Calcavecchia, Tom Watson, Tom Weiskopf, Arnold Palmer, Bobby Locke, and Arthur Hayes representing past Open Champions on these grounds. Stenson’s victory in 2016 ended an interesting trend of six consecutive American winners here since 1962. A proper test of Links golf, one would still expect European-born players with more experience in Links conditions to have the upper hand at Royal Troon.
Like many of the other storied courses on the Open rota, Troon’s history dates back centuries. It was first designed 146 years ago by George Strath and Willie Fernie as a five hole course. In 1923, James Braid led the effort to construct the Old Course, the same 18-hole layout that is still played today. In 1978, Troon was granted “Royal” status to commemorate in centennial anniversary.
When you think of a proper Links course, Royal Troon checks every box. It’s a coastal venue heavily exposed to wind and inclement conditions. It features humps and hollows throughout its undulating fairways, leading to constant uneven lies and unpredictable rollouts. Deep pot bunkers are strategically placed throughout the fairways and greenside areas to place a particular emphasis on accuracy and conservative play. Inaccurate ball-strikers will be met with lateral punchouts for any misfires. Natural gorse bushes are prevalent but primarily neighbor the greens at Royal Troon.
What gives Royal Troon its unique identity compared to other links courses on the Open rota is its miniscule greens. The greens here are a quarter of the size of St. Andrews and will place heightened importance on precise approach play and Scrambling, whereas your traditional links venue may otherwise place importance on lag putting.
Changes Since 2016
Not a ton has materially changed at Royal Troon since we were last here eight years ago, however modifications have been made to adapt to modern technology, primarily in the form of new tee boxes. Nine new tee boxes in total have been built ahead of the 2024 Open Championship, which will add nearly 200 yards in total and 1-2 extra clubs on these holes if played from the tips. The most notable change comes to No. 4, which has elongated from a 555-yard gentle handshake of a par-5, to a 600-yard behemoth where birdies will need to be earned.
Hole No. 17, already one of the most daunting closing Par-3s in Major championship golf, has been pushed back to 242 yards, and will be a very nervy test for contenders down the stretch on Sunday, especially if winds are up. Below is a quick snapshot of how the hole compositions have evolved from 2016 to 2024.
Breaking Down Royal Troon
A 7,385-yard par-71, Royal Troon has nearly an identical makeup to the 2023 Open host, Royal Liverpool. By contrast, however, Royal Troon places a more heightened importance on accurate ball striking, with an opportunity for approach marksmen to separate, particularly when conditions are calm.
Royal Troon is intentionally split into three six-hole acts, affectionately referred to as “Heaven, Purgatory, and Hell.”
The first six holes are the best opportunity on the course to find birdies, so players will need to come out of the gates hot to play themselves into contention. This opening stretch typically plays downwind and features three par-4s under 400 yards and two scorable Par-5s when the wind is helping.
The “Purgatory” stretch from holes 7-12 is where players will truly be tested, playing into the wind with significant penalty for wayward ball-striking, whether it be runouts into fairway pot bunkers or natural gorse bushes in play.
In the final six holes, players will hold on for dear life and gladly accept a score of even par coming home. It’s a stark contrast from Valhalla, host of the 2024 PGA Championship, where contenders simply could not find bogeys coming home, regardless of where their tee shots and approaches ended.
Overall, Royal Troon offers more birdie opportunities than your typical Open Championship venue, and with no weather carnage expected, it should crown a winner in the 15 to 20-under-par range. It sets up to be a course where top mid-iron players with control of their driver can truly separate when winds are calm, not unlike what we’ve seen at Pebble Beach.
Signature Holes
A telltale sign of a great and exciting course is the presence of signature, memorable holes, and Royal Troon has them in spades. Hole No. 8, known as “Postage Stamp“, features a miniscule green and an elevated tee box for added suspense with all of its treacherous surround pot bunkers in plain sight. It’s a popular site for triples or worse, as Tiger Woods learned here in 1997.
No. 11, “The Railway“, played as the most difficult par-4 on TOUR in 2016. An OB railway runs throughout the right side of the hole and is in play for both the tee shot and approach into the green, with wind direction typically pushing towards the railway. In 2024, they’ve made a concerted effort to keep this playing as the most difficult hole on the course, adding 16 extra yards with a new tee box. It will now play 498 yards.
EVENT HISTORY AND COURSE COMPS
It’s been eight years since we last saw Royal Troon host the British Open. Surprisingly, quite a few 2016 contenders return to the field this week. Last we were here, Henrik Stenson and Phil Mickelson each headlined a mono-e-mono duel, lapping the next closest contender by 11 strokes. Tyrrell Hatton made his Open Championship debut that week with a T5 finish. Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Zach Johnson, Gary Woodland, Emiliano Grillo, and Matthew Southgate round out the list of players who finished under par at the 2016 Open and return to this year’s field.
British Open History
No two British Open courses are exactly the same, but every venue on the rota shares a British links design. Weather understandably had a different impact each year, but tournament history can still go a long way in predicting the types of players whose games suit this unique style of play.
Ten players avoided missing the cut over the last five British Open contests (min. three starts): Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Tommy Fleetwood, Robert MacIntyre, Viktor Hovland, Cameron Smith, Jordan Spieth, Rickie Fowler, Byeong Hun An, and Shubhankar Sharma.
Fourteen players finished in the top 15 multiple times at the British Open in the last five years: Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Tony Finau, Shane Lowry, Patrick Cantlay, Robert MacIntyre, Brian Harman, Jon Rahm, Tyrrell Hatton, Brooks Koepka, Viktor Hovland, Dustin Johnson, and Jordan Spieth.
Over the last five years, the top 10 players in British Open Event History are: Jordan Spieth, Tommy Fleetwood, Rory McIlroy, Tony Finau, Xander Schauffele, Brooks Koepka, Shane Lowry, Brian Harman, Jon Rahm, and Rickie Fowler. No surprises on this list, but it’s interesting to note that all 10 are past Ryder Cup players with experience playing in a high pressure European atmosphere.
Course Comps
I usually spend the majority of my research time identifying the best course comps to project recent results within the past year onto the field. In Majors, I tend to de-prioritize the importance of Comp Course History, as the atmosphere of a standard TOUR event is not comparable to that of a Major. In the case of the British Open, it’s typically best to prioritize performance on other links courses, whether it be the Scottish Open, Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, or past British Open venues.
Comparing Royal Troon To Other Links Venues
The Open is the most challenging event to look back on and measure course suitability simply by referencing a leaderboard. Taking 2016, for example, Phil Mickelson and Henrik Stenson entered with opposite profiles. Phil was an aggressive bomber with great touch around the greens, and Stenson was a deadly accurate marksman with his 3-wood off-the-tee and precise iron play. Ultimately, they were able to separate massively from the rest of the field, primarily aided by an advantageous weather split, where they were off the course for the worst of the weather conditions.
All things being equal, Royal Troon should play most similarly to Royal Liverpool among recent Open venues. Neither course is prohibitively long, and a patient, experienced Links player will manage to separate here by conservatively avoiding trouble. There is a clear path for accurate plodders to follow the Brian Harman blueprint and pound fairways and greens in regulation into submission.
By contrast, however, Royal Troon’s tiny greens place a heightened importance on precise iron play, both with wedges inside 100 yards and mid-irons from 150-200 yards.
In many ways, we should expect Royal Troon to play the opposite of The Old Course at St. Andrews, where Cam Smith ultimately prevailed. At Royal Troon, lag putting is deprioritized, and players who can aim to the middle of these greens and sink enough 20-footers should allow themselves to gain separation. It’s possible that a driver-heavy approach could pay dividends for longer hitters at Royal Troon, in the same way it could at Pinehurst No. 2, however there is a drastic penalty for wayward misses here that was not the case at St. Andrews.
If weather conditions remain calm, then Royal Liverpool, Royal St. George’s, Royal Portrush, Carnoustie, and Muirfield also serve as solid comps to reference from.
Stateside Comps
Leaving the proper links comps behind, the logical first stateside comparison from a profile and leaderboard overlap standpoint would have to be Pebble Beach, particularly in its more challenging routing for the 2019 U.S. Open. Both courses are not diabolically long and are characterized by tiny greens and exposure to the windy coastline. Henrik Stenson, Gary Woodland, and Rory McIlroy finished in the top 12 at both the 2016 Open at Royal Troon and the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. Phil Mickelson, runner-up here in 2016, has also famously dominated at Pebble Beach with four career victories.
Another course where Phil Mickelson has enjoyed recent success (and no, for the record, I do not love Mickelson’s prospects to contend at Royal Troon in 2024), The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, maybe the best stateside representation of what Royal Troon has to offer. Another coastal venue sitting heavily exposed to high winds, converting short putts and scrambling around tricky undulated greens is a skill set that should translate from the 2021 PGA Championship to here. Distance was more of a pre-requisite at the Ocean Course than it is at Royal Troon, but Total Driving remains a crucial skill set at both.
On a more tertiary basis, I’ve always felt that desert golf offers the best proxy for links conditions for stateside comps. Both share firm and fast conditions and quirky hazards for tee shots that run off the fairway. Tom Kim, Tony Finau, Jon Rahm, and Rickie Fowler highlight a long list of players with overlapping success in desert and links conditions. With that in mind, TPC Scottsdale and TPC Summerlin are worth a reference for firm and fast courses that penalize misses off the tee.
Wrap that all together, and the top 10 players in comp course history are: Collin Morikawa, Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, Hideki Matsuyama, Rory McIlroy, Ludvig Aberg, Keegan Bradley, Matthieu Pavon, Tony Finau, and Patrick Cantlay.
KEY STATS TO CONSIDER WITH BRITISH OPEN ODDS
- SG: APP / Prox: 150-200
- Bogey Avoidance / Double Bogey Avoidance
- SG: OTT / SG: OTT (<7,200-yard Courses)
- SG: ARG / Scrambling Gained / Sand Saves
- SG: Putting (Total) / SG: P (Slow Greens)
- SG: TOT (High Winds)
- Major Championship History (L5 Years)
- Open Championship or Links Course History
- Course & Comp Course History
Given the different types of shots required at an Open Championship links course, it’s not a week to blindly follow the stat model. The shot-making on standard TOUR courses doesn’t necessarily translate. History has shown, however, that players in top form entering the Open tend to leave with the Claret Jug. Few surprise winners emerge. Since 2012, every winner has fallen inside the OWGR top 40, including 200-1 longshot Brian Harman last year.
Windy links courses can deprioritize the importance of SG: APP, with well-struck shots going unrewarded on tight runoffs. At Royal Troon, however, that trend is combatted with its presence of tiny greens and the importance of high greens in regulation to avoid its many pot bunkers surrounding the greens. With fair conditions expected (at least for now), I’m taking a stance on the importance of elite iron play first and foremost at Royal Troon. The top 10 in terms of SG: APP coming into this week are: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Corey Conners, Tony Finau, Rory McIlroy, Sepp Straka, Ludvig Aberg, Si Woo Kim, Lucas Glover, and Shane Lowry.
Position off-the-tee remains crucial at Royal Troon, as is the case at most proper links courses. The top 10 in SG: OTT leading into this week are: Scottie Scheffler, Min Woo Lee, Ludvig Aberg, Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau, Jordan Smith, Collin Morikawa, Joaquin Niemann, Viktor Hovland, and Jordan Spieth.
To account for select holes where players will be forced to take less than driver, the top-10 in SG: OTT on Short, Positional courses includes Scheffler, Aberg, Morikawa, Hovland, Xander Schauffele, Sungjae Im, Austin Eckroat, Maverick McNealy, Sepp Straka, and Tommy Fleetwood.
Custom Stats
Weighted Short Game is a crucial stat this week. Links golf tends to produce much larger and slower greens than we would typically see on the PGA TOUR. Looking at a combination of SG: P (L36), SG: P (Slow Greens), SG: ARG, and Sand Saves, the top-10 players on and around the greens equipped to handle this course are: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Hideki Matsuyama, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Denny McCarthy, Maverick McNealy, Sam Burns, and Robert McIntyre.
Taking a simple view of those who rank above-average in SG: OTT, SG: APP, Prox: 15-200, SG: ARG, and Weighted Putting, just eight players remain: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka, Davis Thompson, and Sungjae Im.
The perfect profile of player for this week should be above average in both the Driving Accuracy, SG: APP, SG: OTT (Short Positional Courses), Major History, Comp Links History, and SG: ARG. That’s very specific criteria, but nine players check each box: Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Corey Conners, Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Joaquin Niemann, Tyrrell Hatton, and Tom Kim.
PLAYER SPOTLIGHT: Tom Kim
I understand he’s only 22 years old, but through and through, Royal Troon is a quintessential Tom Kim course.
Compared to Royal Liverpool where he fell runner up to Brian Harman in 2023, Royal Troon will serve as a near mirror image of the precise game plan required to contend, but with an added emphasis on iron play. That should shift the paradigm even more in Kim’s favor as he continues to narrowly inch closer to his first career Major title.
No stranger to the game’s biggest stages, Kim was recently seen taking Scottie Scheffler down to the wire in a playoff defeat at The Travelers Championship. He’s made it abundantly clear he relishes the game’s biggest stages with his standout performance at the 2021 Presidents Cup and four international wins since turning pro in 2022.
Where Kim lacks in experience, his partnership with Paul Tesori should pay dividends, as Tesori has co-authored a similar positional strategy alongside Webb Simpson to the tune of seven top-40 finishes at The Open since 2011. And despite his limited experience, that youthful exuberance may be the x-factor needed to get out to a hot start at Royal Troon, as an aggressive style of play is needed to capitalize on the first six scorable holes.
Links Specialist
What draws me so much to Tom Kim in British Open odds is how the lack of spin he generates is not hurt on short, positional courses. Though low ball speed should be a deterrent in modern golf, Kim has used it to his advantage in his first three PGA TOUR victories at TPC Summerlin and Sedgefield CC where accuracy is rewarded. In links golf, a lack of spin on tee shots and approaches allows for a more piercing ball flight, less likely to be swept up in gusting winds.
Kim has been unflappable in Links conditions to start his early career, finishing T47 and T2 in his first two starts at The Open and T6 and 3rd in his first two appearances at the Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club. As of Sunday morning, he remains in the mix once again in North Berwick, entering Sunday inside the top 15.
No. 9 overall in my model this week, Tom Kim’s elite iron play, Links history, precision off the tee, and past putting performance on slow greens make him an ideal candidate to avoid trouble and contend at Royal Troon this week.
2024 BRITISH OPEN ODDS: DFS PLAYER POOL
With all the course-fit profiles in mind, I’m leaning early toward the below player pool. Naturally, I’m looking their way in the 2024 British Open odds as well. I’ve broken the list down by projected pricing/odds tier for DraftKings.
UNDERDOG GOLF DRAFT RANKINGS TIERS
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Tier 1
Xander Schauffele
Rory McIlroy
Scottie Scheffler
Tier 2
Tommy Fleetwood
Ludvig Aberg
Collin Morikawa
Viktor Hovland
Brooks Koepka
Tyrrell Hatton
Tier 3
Tom Kim
Tony Finau
Robert MacIntyre
Jordan Spieth
Min Woo Lee
Brian Harman
Tier 4
Russell Henley
Sepp Straka
Jason Day
Dean Burmester
Sungjae Im
Corey Conners
Tier 5
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
Shubhankar Sharma
Maverick McNealy
Russell Henley
Matthieu Pavon
2024 British Open Odds Model Breakdown
In my model, I’m emphasizing SG: APP, SG: OTT, Driving Accuracy, SG: ARG, Weighted Putting (L36, 3-Putt Avoidance, Approach Putting, Slow Greens),and Major History (L5 Years) followed by a balanced mix of Prox: 150-200, Bogey or Worse Avoidance, Scrambling Gained, Good Drives Gained, Sand Saves, and SG: TOT (Comp Links Courses).
British Open Odds: Model Favorites
Unsurprisingly, it’s world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler who comes out on top of the model. Ranking No. 1 in SG: OTT, SG: ARG, SG: APP, Bogey Avoidance, and Major History, it’s tough to argue against Scheffler’s chances to pick up his third career Major championship, however with finishes outside the top-20 in each of his last two Open Championship appearances, there is hope for the rest of the field. The odds agree with Scheffler as the prohibitive favorite, but with random weather conditions looming, I’m less intimidated by Scheffler as I’ve felt most other weeks on the PGA TOUR.
After Scheffler, the rest of my model’s top 10 rounds out with: Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa, Rory McIlroy, Hideki Matsuyama, Ludvig Aberg, Tommy Fleetwood, Russell Henley, Tom Kim, and Christiaan Bezuidenhout.
Demonstrating remarkable restraint, I kept patient without a single futures bet placed on British Open odds. I’m hoping to have a clear understanding of any weather split advantages in such a weather-impacted event. When the weather outlook is more clear, I’ll look to build my betting card around Collin Morikawa, Tom Kim, and Tony Finau. Check back in later this week for more updates.
Best of luck navigating 2024 British Open odds!
- Join TheLines.com’s free sports betting Discord channel, where we are talking British Open odds all week. John will also share his betting card in the staff-golf-bets channel.
How to Watch 2024 British Open
Thursday, July 18 – Round 1
1:30 a.m. – 4 a.m., Peacock (streaming)
4 a.m. – 3 p.m., USA Network
3 a.m. – 4:15 p.m., Peacock (streaming)
Friday, July 19 – Round 2
1:30 a.m. – 4 a.m., Peacock (streaming)
4 a.m. – 3 p.m., USA Network
3 p.m. – 4:15 p.m., Peacock (streaming)
Saturday, July 20 – Round 3
5 a.m. – 7 a.m., USA Network
7 a.m.-3 p.m., NBC (streaming on Peacock)
Sunday, July 21 – Round 4
4 a.m. – 7 a.m., USA Network
7 a.m. – 2 p.m., NBC (streaming on Peacock)
2024 Open Championship Tee Times
Time (ET) | Players |
---|---|
1:35 a.m. | Justin Leonard, Todd Hamilton, Jack McDonald |
1:46 a.m. | Alex Noren, Tom McKibbin, Calum Scott |
1:57 a.m. | Jesper Svensson, Vincent Norrman, Michael Hendry |
2:08 a.m. | Younghan Song, Daniel Hillier, Ryosuke Kinoshita |
2:19 a.m. | Min Woo Lee, Ryo Hisatsune, Abraham Ancer |
2:30 a.m. | Nicolai Hojgaard, Adam Scott, Keita Nakajima |
2:41 a.m. | Francesco Molinari, Justin Rose, Jasper Stubbs |
2:52 a.m. | Justin Thomas, Sungjae Im, Matthew Southgate |
3:03 a.m. | Nick Taylor, Matt Wallace, Laurie Canter |
3:14 a.m. | Sebastian Soderberg, Matteo Manassero, Shubhankar Sharma |
3:25 a.m. | Zach Johnson, Austin Eckroat, Thornjorn Oleson |
3:36 a.m. | John Daly, Santiago de la Fuente, Aaron Rai |
3:47 a.m. | Stewart Cink, Chris Kirk, Dominic Clemons |
4:03 a.m. | Stephan Jaeger, Adam Schenk, Joaquin Niemann |
4:14 a.m. | Adam Hadwin, Lucas Glover, Christiaan Bezuidenhout |
4:25 a.m. | Tony Finau, Russell Henley, Matthieu Pavon |
4:36 a.m. | Jon Rahm, Tommy Fleetwood, Robert MacIntyre |
4:47 a.m. | Ludvig Aberg, Bryson DeChambeau, Tom Kim |
4:58 a.m. | Brian Harman, Viktor Hovland, Sahith Theegala |
5:09 a.m. | Rory McIlroy, Max Homa, Tyrrell Hatton |
5:20 a.m. | Keegan Bradley, Will Zalatoris, Gordon Sargent |
5:31 a.m. | Harris English, Maverick McNealy, Alexander Bjork |
5:42 a.m. | Guido Migliozzi, Sean Crocker, Tommy Morrison |
5:53 a.m. | David Puig, John Catlin, Gun-Tack Koh |
6:04 a.m. | Thriston Lawrence, Dan Bradbury, Elvis Smylie |
6:15 a.m. | Nacho Elvira, Minkyu Kim, Darren Fichardt |
6:26 a.m. | Mason Anderson, Masahiro Kawamura, Sam Hutsby |
6:47 a.m. | Ewen Ferguson, Marcel Siem |
6:58 a.m. | C.T. Pan, Romain Langasque, Yuto Katsuragawa |
7:09 a.m. | Rikuya Hoshino, Angel Hidalgo, Richard Mansell |
7:20 a.m. | Corey Conners, Ryan Fox, Jorge Campillo |
7:31 a.m. | Ernie Els, Gary Woodland, Altin Van der Merwe |
7:42 a.m. | Henrik Stenson, Rasmus Hojgaard, Jacob Skov Oleson |
7:53 a.m. | Louis Oothuizen, Billy Horschel, Victor Perez |
8:04 a.m. | Sepp Straka, Brendon Todd, Jordan Smith |
8:15 a.m. | Denny McCarthy, Taylor Moore, Adrian Meronk |
8:26 a.m. | Jason Day, Ben An, Rickie Fowler |
8:37 a.m. | Alex Cejka, Eric Cole, Kurt Kitayama |
8:48 a.m. | Darren Clarke, J.T. Poston, Dean Burmester |
9:04 a.m. | Phil Mickelson, Joost Luiten, Dustin Johnson |
9:15 a.m. | Padraig Harrington, Davis Thompson, Matthew Jordan |
9:26 a.m. | Wyndham Clark, Hideki Matsuyama, Brooks Koepka |
9:37 a.m. | Tiger Woods, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay |
9:48 a.m. | Collin Morikawa, Sam Burns, Si Woo Kim |
9:59 a.m. | Shane Lowry, Cameron Smith, Matt Fitzpatrick |
10:10 a.m. | Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, Cameron Young |
10:21 a.m. | Akshay Bhatia, Tom Hoge, Sami Valimaki |
10:32 a.m. | Emiliano Grillo, Ben Griffin, Mackenzie Hughes |
10:43 a.m. | Yannik Paul, Joe Dean, Andy Ogletree |
10:54 a.m. | Ryan van Velzen, Charlie Lindh, Luis Masaveu |
11:05 a.m. | Kazuma Kobori, Jaime Montojo, Liam Nolan |
11:16 a.m. | Daniel Brown, Denwit Boriboonsub, Matthew Dodd-Berry |
11:27 a.m. | Jeung-Hun Wang, Aguri Iwasaki, Sam Horsfield |