WARREN LITTLE, DYLAN BUELL, JARED C. TILTON and ANDY LYONS/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE  RORY McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele and Shane Lowry are expected to go all out when they see action in the 153rd British Open starting Friday (Manila time) at the Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland.
GOLF

The stage is set

Rory comes home; big guns chase Claret Jug

Agence France-Presse

PORTRUSH, United Kingdom (AFP) — Rory McIlroy will be roared on in his homeland as the 153rd British Open gets underway at Royal Portrush on Thursday while world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler seeks his first Claret Jug.

McIlroy returns to Northern Ireland as the Masters champion but determined to make amends for his disastrous start at Portrush six years ago when a quadruple bogey at the opening hole on his way to a first-round 79 saw him miss the cut.

The world is the star attraction for the close to 280,000 spectators set to attend the four days of play at the final major of the year.

Scheffler, though, is the favorite despite having never won the British Open before, while defending champion Xander Schauffele is aiming to put a frustrating year behind him.

McIlroy, who tees off at 15:10 local time alongside Ryder Cup teammate Tommy Fleetwood and American rival Justin Thomas, may have to battle the worst of blustery weather for the opening round with thunderstorms forecast early evening.

But the man who announced himself as a star of the future by breaking the course record at Portrush with a 61 as a 16-year-old 20 years ago, is confident after ending his 11-year major drought at the Masters in April.

“When I was looking at the calendar for 2025, this was the tournament that was probably circled even more so than the Masters for different reasons,” said McIlroy, who finished second at the Scottish Open last week.

“It’s lovely to be coming in here already with a major and everything else that’s happened this year. I’m excited with where my game is.”

Scheffler’s eighth-place finish at the Scottish Open stretched his streak of top-10 finishes to his last 10 tournaments, a run which includes three victories.

The American has also added to his major haul this year by winning his third at the PGA Championship.

Yet, Scheffler’s comments on the eve of the tournament that his is “not a fulfilling life” caught the eye.

“There’s a lot of people that make it to what they thought was going to fulfil them in life, and you get there, you get to number one in the world, and they’re like, ‘What’s the point?’” Scheffler said.

“It feels like you work your whole life to celebrate winning a tournament for like a few minutes. It only lasts a few minutes, that kind of euphoric feeling.”

Schauffele is craving that winning feeling after failing to hit the heights of his two major wins in 2024.

The world No. 3 has not won a tournament since lifting the Claret Jug a year ago and has not even managed a top-five finish in 12 tournaments this year.