2022 Open Championship

Golf tournament

Golf tournament
  • European Tour
  • PGA Tour
  • Japan Golf Tour
StatisticsPar72Length7,297 yd (6,672 m)Field156 players, 83 after cutCut144 (E)Prize fund$14,000,000Winner's share$2,500,000ChampionAustralia Cameron Smith268 (−20)Location map
St Andrews is located in the United Kingdom
St Andrews
St Andrews
Location in the United Kingdom
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St Andrews is located in Scotland
St Andrews
St Andrews
Location in Scotland
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St Andrews is located in Fife
St Andrews
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← 2021
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The 2022 Open Championship, officially the 150th Open Championship, was a golf tournament played 14–17 July on the Old Course at St Andrews, Scotland. The championship was won by Cameron Smith with a score of 268, 20 under par, one stroke ahead of Cameron Young.

Originally scheduled for 15–18 July 2021, the championship was put back one year after the 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, ensuring that the sesquicentennial celebration was at the "home of golf".[1]

Organisation

The Open Championship is organised by the R&A, and is included in the PGA Tour, European Tour, and Japan Golf Tour calendars under the major championships category. The tournament is a 72-hole (4 rounds) stroke play competition held over 4 days, with 18 holes played each day. Play is in groups of three for the first two days, and groups of two in the final two days. Groupings for the first two days are decided by the organisers, with each group having one morning, and one afternoon tee time. On the final two days, players tee off in reverse order of aggregate score, with the leaders last. After 36 holes there was a cut, after which the top 70 and ties progress through to compete in the third and fourth rounds. In the event of a tie for the lowest score after four rounds, a four-hole aggregate playoff will be held to determine the winner; this will be followed by sudden-death extra holes if necessary until a winner emerges.

Venue

The 2022 event was the 30th Open Championship played at the Old Course at St Andrews.[2] The most recent was in 2015, when Zach Johnson won the four-hole playoff for his second major title.

Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Burn 375 4 10 Bobby Jones 386 4
2 Dyke 452 4 11 High (In) 174 3
3 Cartgate (Out) 398 4 12 Heathery (In) 348 4
4 Ginger Beer 480 4 13 Hole O'Cross (In) 465 4
5 Hole O'Cross (Out) 570 5 14 Long 614 5
6 Heathery (Out) 414 4 15 Cartgate (In) 455 4
7 High (Out) 371 4 16 Corner of the Dyke 418 4
8 Short 174 3 17 Road 495 4
9 End 352 4 18 Tom Morris 356 4
Out 3,586 36 In 3,711 36
Source:[3] Total 7,297 72

Previous lengths of the course for The Open Championship (since 1950):[4]

  • 2015: 7,297 yards (6,672 m)
  • 2010: 7,305 yards (6,680 m)
  • 2005: 7,279 yards (6,656 m)
  • 2000: 7,115 yards (6,506 m)
  • 1995: 6,933 yards (6,340 m)
  • 1990: 6,933 yards (6,340 m)
  • 1984: 6,933 yards (6,340 m)
  • 1978: 6,933 yards (6,340 m)
  • 1970: 6,957 yards (6,361 m)
  • 1964: 6,926 yards (6,333 m)
  • 1960: 6,936 yards (6,342 m)
  • 1955: 6,936 yards (6,342 m)

Field

The Open Championship field is made up of 156 players, who gained entry through various exemption criteria and qualifying tournaments. The criteria included past Open champions, recent major winners, top ranked players in the world rankings and from the leading world tours, and winners and high finishers from various designated tournaments, including the Open Qualifying Series; the winners of designated amateur events, including The Amateur Championship and U.S. Amateur, also gained exemption provided they remain an amateur. Anyone not qualifying via exemption, and had a handicap of 0.4 or lower, can gain entry through regional and final qualifying events.

Criteria and exemptions

Each player is classified according to the first category in which he qualified, but other categories are shown in parentheses.[5][6]

1. The Open Champions aged 60 or under on 17 July 2022

2. The Open Champions for 2011–2021

3. Top 10 finishers and ties in the 2021 Open Championship

  • Daniel Berger (4,12,15) did not play.[b]

4. Top 50 players in the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) for Week 21, 2022

5. Top 30 in the final 2021 Race to Dubai standings

6. Recent winners of the BMW PGA Championship (2018–2021)

7. Top five players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2022 DP World Tour Rankings through the BMW International Open

8. Recent winners of the U.S. Open (2017–2022)

9. Recent winners of the Masters Tournament (2017–2022)

10. Recent winners of the PGA Championship (2016–2022)

  • Jimmy Walker did not play.

11. Recent winners of the Players Championship (2019–2022)

12. The top 30 players from the 2021 FedEx Cup Playoffs

13. Top five players, not already exempt, within the top 20 of the 2021–22 FedEx Cup points list through the Travelers Championship[e]

14. Winner of the 2021 Visa Open de Argentina

15. Playing members of the 2021 Ryder Cup teams

16. Winner of the 2021–22 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit

17. Winner of the 2021–22 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit

  • Shaun Norris (18)

18. Winner of the 2021 Japan Open Golf Championship

19. Winner of the 2022 Asia Pacific Open Golf Championship Diamond Cup

20. Top two players on the 2020–21 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List

21. The top player, not already exempt, on the 2022 Japan Golf Tour Official Money List through the Japan Golf Tour Championship

22. Winner of the 2021 Senior Open Championship

23. Winner of the 2022 Amateur Championship

24. Winner of the 2021 U.S. Amateur

25. Winner of the 2022 European Amateur

26. Recipient of the 2021 Mark H. McCormack Medal

27. Winner of the 2021 Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship

28. Winner of the 2022 Latin America Amateur Championship

  • Aaron Jarvis (a)

Open Qualifying Series

The Open Qualifying Series for the 2022 Open Championship consists of 12 events. Places are available to the leading players (not otherwise exempt) who finished in the top n and ties. In the event of ties, positions went to players ranked highest according to that week's OWGR.[11]

Location Tournament Date Spots Top Qualifiers
South Africa Joburg Open 28 Nov 2021 3 10 Ashley Chesters, Thriston Lawrence, Zander Lombard
Singapore SMBC Singapore Open 23 Jan 2022 4 12 Sadom Kaewkanjana, Yuto Katsuragawa, Tom Kim, Sihwan Kim
Australia Vic Open 13 Feb 2022 3 10 Ben Campbell, Matthew Griffin, Dimitrios Papadatos
United States Arnold Palmer Invitational 6 Mar 2022 3[g] 10 Talor Gooch (4), Chris Kirk
Japan Gateway to The Open Mizuno Open 29 May 2022 4 12 Justin De Los Santos, Brad Kennedy, Anthony Quayle, Scott Vincent
Netherlands Dutch Open 29 May 2022 3 10 Ryan Fox, Adrian Meronk, Victor Perez
Canada RBC Canadian Open 12 Jun 2022 2 8 Wyndham Clark, Keith Mitchell
Korea Kolon Korea Open 26 Jun 2022 2 8 Cho Min-gyu, Kim Min-kyu
Ireland Horizon Irish Open 3 Jul 2022 3 10 John Catlin, David Law, Fabrizio Zanotti
United States John Deere Classic 3 Jul 2022 3 10 Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Emiliano Grillo, J. T. Poston
Scotland Genesis Scottish Open 10 Jul 2022 3 10 Jamie Donaldson, Kurt Kitayama, Brandon Wu
United States Barbasol Championship 10 Jul 2022 1 5 Trey Mullinax

Final Qualifying

Final Qualifying events were played on 28 June at four locations. Four qualifying places were available at each location, with 72 golfers competing at each.[12]

Location Qualifiers
Fairmont St Andrews David Carey, Robert Dinwiddie, Lars van Meijel, Alex Wrigley
Hollinwell Barclay Brown (a), Oliver Farr, Richard Mansell, Marco Penge
Prince's Jack Floydd, Matt Ford, Ronan Mullarney, Jamie Rutherford
St Annes Old Links Marcus Armitage, Sam Bairstow (a), Matthew Jordan, John Parry

Additional players added to the field

In order to fill additional places or replace exempt players who had withdrawn prior to the start of the Championship, and maintain the full field of 156, additional players were either taken in ranking order from Official World Golf Ranking at the time they were added, or from Final Qualifying.[6]

From the Week 26 (26 June) Official World Golf Ranking:[13]
From the Week 27 (3 July) Official World Golf Ranking:

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, 14 July 2022

PGA Tour rookie Cameron Young had a two-shot lead after a bogey-free round of 8 under par, two shots ahead of pre-tournament favourite Rory McIlroy.[14] Defending champion Collin Morikawa opened with a level-par 72 while three-time winner Tiger Woods double-bogeyed the first and continued to struggle there on, finishing at 6 over.[15]

Place Player Score To par
1 United States Cameron Young 64 −8
2 Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy 66 −6
T3 England Robert Dinwiddie 67 −5
Australia Cameron Smith
T5 England Barclay Brown (a) 68 −4
United States Talor Gooch
Norway Viktor Hovland
United States Dustin Johnson
Australia Brad Kennedy
United States Kurt Kitayama
United States Scottie Scheffler
England Lee Westwood
Source:[16]

Second round

Friday, 15 July 2022

Cameron Smith took the lead on a score of 131, the lowest 36-hole score in Open Championship history at St. Andrews.[17] Cameron Young fell to second place, two strokes behind, after a second-round 69. Viktor Hovland and Rory McIlroy were a further stroke behind in a tie for third place. 83 players made the cut of level par, including four amateurs. Defending champion Collin Morikawa missed the cut by a stroke.

Place Player Score To par
1 Australia Cameron Smith 67-64=131 −13
2 United States Cameron Young 64-69=133 −11
T3 Norway Viktor Hovland 68-66=134 −10
Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy 66-68=134
5 United States Dustin Johnson 68-67=135 −9
T6 England Tyrrell Hatton 70-66=136 −8
United States Scottie Scheffler 68-68=136
T8 United States Patrick Cantlay 70-67=137 −7
United States Talor Gooch 68-69=137
Australia Adam Scott 72-65=137
United States Sahith Theegala 69-68=137
Source:[16]

Third round

Saturday, 16 July 2022

Viktor Hovland and Rory McIlroy each shot rounds of 66 to tie for first after the third round at −16. Cameron Smith, who shot 73, and Cameron Young, who shot 71, dropped back to four strokes behind at −12. McIlroy was trying for his second Open title and first major victory in eight years while Hovland was looking for his first major.[18]

Place Player Score To par
T1 Norway Viktor Hovland 68-66-66=200 −16
Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy 66-68-66=200
T3 Australia Cameron Smith 67-64-73=204 −12
United States Cameron Young 64-69-71=204
T5 South Korea Kim Si-woo 69-69-67=205 −11
United States Scottie Scheffler 68-68-69=205
7 United States Dustin Johnson 68-67-71=206 −10
T8 England Matt Fitzpatrick 72-66-69=207 −9
England Tommy Fleetwood 72-69-66=207
Australia Adam Scott 72-65-70=207
Source:[16]

Final round

Sunday, 17 July 2022

Summary

Cameron Smith came from four strokes behind to win the Open. He made eight birdies in his round of 64, which was joint low round of the tournament, and was the lowest final round score by a champion at St Andrews. Cameron Young made an eagle on the final hole to finish one stroke back. Rory McIlroy, third round co-leader, managed only two birdies in his round and finished a further stroke behind. Viktor Hovland, the other third round co-leader, shot a two-over-par 74 to finish tied for fourth with Tommy Fleetwood. Smith's total of 20 under par tied the to-par record in a major, last reached by Dustin Johnson at the 2020 Masters Tournament.[19]

Final leaderboard

Champion
Silver Medal winner (low amateur)
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion
Top 10
Place Player Score To par Money ($)
1 Australia Cameron Smith 67-64-73-64=268 −20 2,500,000
2 United States Cameron Young 64-69-71-65=269 −19 1,455,000
3 Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy (c) 66-68-66-70=270 −18 933,000
T4 England Tommy Fleetwood 72-69-66-67=274 −14 654,000
Norway Viktor Hovland 68-66-66-74=274
T6 United States Brian Harman 73-68-68-66=275 −13 465,900
United States Dustin Johnson 68-67-71-69=275
T8 United States Patrick Cantlay 70-67-71-68=276 −12 325,667
United States Bryson DeChambeau 69-74-67-66=276
United States Jordan Spieth (c) 71-69-68-68=276
Leaderboard below the top 10
Place Player Score To par Money ($)
T11 Mexico Abraham Ancer 71-68-73-65=277 −11 231,000
South Africa Dean Burmester 71-73-67-66=277
England Tyrrell Hatton 70-66-73-68=277
Thailand Sadom Kaewkanjana 71-67-74-65=277
T15 Australia Lucas Herbert 70-68-73-67=278 −10 165,583
South Korea Kim Si-woo 69-69-67-73=278
Italy Francesco Molinari (c) 73-71-66-68=278
Australia Anthony Quayle 74-69-68-67=278
United States Xander Schauffele 69-70-72-67=278
Australia Adam Scott 72-65-70-71=278
T21 England Matt Fitzpatrick 72-66-69-72=279 −9 120,286
United States Billy Horschel 73-69-70-67=279
United States Kevin Kisner 74-70-65-70=279
Australia Min Woo Lee 69-69-73-68=279
Republic of Ireland Shane Lowry (c) 72-68-69-70=279
United States Trey Mullinax 71-73-66-69=279
United States Scottie Scheffler 68-68-69-74=279
T28 Canada Corey Conners 71-71-71-67=280 −8 90,917
United States Tony Finau 73-71-70-66=280
South Africa Dylan Frittelli 70-71-69-70=280
Belgium Thomas Pieters 75-67-67-71=280
United States Harold Varner III 73-67-72-68=280
United States Will Zalatoris 73-67-71-69=280
T34 Belgium Thomas Detry 70-69-74-68=281 −7 68,906
United States Talor Gooch 68-69-75-69=281
Scotland Robert MacIntyre 70-74-69-68=281
France Victor Perez 71-69-71-70=281
Spain Jon Rahm 73-67-71-70=281
United States Sahith Theegala 69-68-74-70=281
England Lee Westwood 68-71-73-69=281
United States Aaron Wise 72-67-71-71=281
T42 United States Sam Burns 72-69-77-64=282 −6 51,000
United States Chris Kirk 75-68-69-70=282
United States Jason Kokrak 72-70-72-68=282
South Africa Thriston Lawrence 69-71-73-69=282
Poland Adrian Meronk 75-68-70-69=282
T47 Italy Filippo Celli (a) 74-67-71-71=283 −5
South Africa Garrick Higgo 72-69-76-66=283 40,600
Japan Yuto Katsuragawa 71-68-75-69=283
South Korea Tom Kim 69-71-72-71=283
United States Patrick Reed 72-68-76-67=283
England Jordan Smith 73-71-72-67=283
T53 England Paul Casey 71-72-71-70=284 −4 35,656
England Robert Dinwiddie 67-77-71-69=284
Denmark Nicolai Højgaard 73-67-71-73=284
Australia Brad Kennedy 68-72-72-72=284
Chile Joaquín Niemann 69-74-73-68=284
United States Justin Thomas 72-70-72-70=284
Australia Jason Scrivener 72-71-71-70=284
Netherlands Lars van Meijel 74-70-71-69=284
England Danny Willett 69-73-73-69=284
T62 Republic of Ireland David Carey 72-67-73-73=285 −3 33,625
United States Russell Henley 70-72-68-75=285
Colombia Sebastián Muñoz 73-71-71-70=285
England John Parry 69-74-70-72=285
England Ian Poulter 69-72-70-74=285
United States Cameron Tringale 71-71-74-69=285
T68 South Africa Christiaan Bezuidenhout 73-71-68-74=286 −2 32,525
Spain Sergio García 75-66-72-73=286
England Richard Mansell 73-71-68-74=286
Japan Hideki Matsuyama 71-72-76-67=286
T72 United States Kurt Kitayama 68-73-73-73=287 −1 32,013
Scotland David Law 72-69-77-69=287
T74 England Marcus Armitage 71-72-71-74=288 E 31,763
Philippines Justin De Los Santos 71-73-70-74=288
T76 Spain Adri Arnaus 74-70-73-72=289 +1 31,513
United States Wyndham Clark 71-73-76-69=289
Cayman Islands Aaron Jarvis (a) 75-69-72-73=289
T79 England Barclay Brown (a) 68-70-77-75=290 +2
England Laurie Canter 72-70-74-74=290 31,325
T81 England Sam Bairstow (a) 72-72-79-69=292 +4
South Korea Im Sung-jae 71-73-74-74=292 31,200
83 England Jamie Rutherford 73-70-78-75=296 +8 31,075
CUT New Zealand Ben Campbell 74-71=145 +1
Wales Jamie Donaldson 76-69=145
South Africa Ernie Els (c) 70-75=145
South Africa Justin Harding 74-71=145
United States Max Homa 73-72=145
Japan Takumi Kanaya 74-71=145
South Africa Zander Lombard 77-68=145
United States Keith Mitchell 76-69=145
United States Collin Morikawa (c) 72-73=145
South Africa Louis Oosthuizen (c) 71-74=145
United States Webb Simpson 71-74=145
Sweden Henrik Stenson (c) 75-70=145
Zimbabwe Scott Vincent 69-76=145
United States Brandon Wu 71-74=145
Sweden Alexander Björk 75-71=146 +2
England Richard Bland 78-68=146
New Zealand Ryan Fox 71-75=146
Australia Matthew Griffin 74-72=146
Argentina Emiliano Grillo 78-68=146
England Matthew Jordan 74-72=146
United States Chan Kim 74-72=146
South Korea Lee Kyoung-hoon 69-77=146
United States J. T. Poston 73-73=146
United States Keegan Bradley 76-71=147 +3
United States John Catlin 74-73=147
United States John Daly (c) 73-74=147
England Matt Ford 71-76=147
Republic of Ireland Pádraig Harrington (c) 69-78=147
United States Zach Johnson (c) 72-75=147
Italy Guido Migliozzi 73-74=147
Japan Keita Nakajima (a) 72-75=147
South Africa Shaun Norris 74-73=147
England Aaron Rai 75-72=147
England Ashley Chesters 75-73=148 +4
South Korea Cho Min-gyu 75-73=148
Japan Rikuya Hoshino 75-73=148
Canada Mackenzie Hughes 73-75=148
United States Brooks Koepka 73-75=148
United States Kevin Na 72-76=148
Republic of Ireland Séamus Power 73-75=148
Austria Bernd Wiesberger 72-76=148
United States Stewart Cink (c) 78-71=149 +5
Japan Kazuki Higa 73-76=149
United States Sihwan Kim 76-73=149
China Li Haotong 73-76=149
United States Luke List 76-73=149
United States Phil Mickelson (c) 72-77=149
England Marco Penge 76-73=149
Chile Mito Pereira 75-74=149
Paraguay Fabrizio Zanotti 72-77=149
United States Harris English 76-74=150 +6
Wales Oliver Farr 76-74=150
United States Tom Hoge 74-76=150
South Korea Kim Min-kyu 73-77=150
Australia Marc Leishman 76-74=150
South Africa Aldrich Potgieter (a) 74-76=150
United States Gary Woodland 74-76=150
Wales Stephen Dodd 77-74=151 +7
Argentina Jorge Fernández-Valdés 74-77=151
Scotland Paul Lawrie (c) 74-77=151
Republic of Ireland Ronan Mullarney 73-78=151
Australia Dimitrios Papadatos 77-74=151
England Sam Horsfield 76-76=152 +8
Japan Shugo Imahira 80-72=152
Austria Sepp Straka 81-72=153 +9
United States Tiger Woods (c) 78-75=153
Northern Ireland Darren Clarke (c) 79-75=154 +10
England Jack Floydd 75-79=154
Australia Jediah Morgan 79-76=155 +11
England Alex Wrigley 82-73=155
United States David Duval (c) 82-74=156 +12
Spain Pablo Larrazábal 75-81=156
United States Mark Calcavecchia (c) 83-82=165 +21
Source:[16]

Scorecard

Final round

Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Par 4 4 4 4 5 4 4 3 4 4 3 4 4 5 4 4 4 4
Australia Smith −12 −13 −13 −13 −14 −14 −14 −14 −14 −15 −16 −17 −18 −19 −19 −19 −19 −20
United States Young −11 −11 −12 −13 −14 −14 −15 −15 −14 −15 −15 −15 −16 −17 −17 −17 −17 −19
Northern Ireland McIlroy −16 −16 −16 −16 −17 −17 −17 −17 −17 −18 −18 −18 −18 −18 −18 −18 −18 −18
Norway Hovland −16 −16 −16 −15 −15 −15 −15 −15 −15 −15 −15 −16 −15 −15 −15 −14 −14 −14

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Eagle Birdie Bogey
Source:[16]

Notes

  1. ^ Calcavecchia was 62 years old, but was given an exemption into the event following cancellation of the 2020 event and injury in 2021.[7]
  2. ^ a b Daniel Berger withdrew due to a back injury; he was replaced by Sahith Theegala.[8]
  3. ^ a b Justin Rose withdrew shortly before his scheduled first round tee time due to a back injury; he was replaced by Rikuya Hoshino (first reserve Alex Norén (67) was unavailable, not having travelled to Scotland).[9][10]
  4. ^ a b Erik van Rooyen withdrew before his tee time due to a neck injury; he was replaced by Aaron Rai.[9][10]
  5. ^ All players in the top 20 were already qualified.
  6. ^ Exemption forfeited by turning professional.
  7. ^ Only two players in the top ten were not already qualified.

References

  1. ^ "Open Championship canceled for fourth time in 150-year history due to coronavirus". Golf.com. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
  2. ^ McLauchlin, Brian; O'Neill, George (12 July 2022). "The Open: Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Jon Rahm on St Andrews Old Course". BBC Sport. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  3. ^ "St Andrews – The Old Course". Archived from the original on 21 September 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  4. ^ "Media guide". The Open Championship. 2011. pp. 19, 203. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  5. ^ "The 150th Open - Exemptions". The Open Championship. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  6. ^ a b "The 150th Open - Entry terms and conditions" (PDF). The Open Championship. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  7. ^ Hall, Mike (20 April 2022). "Mark Calcavecchia Set For Incredible PGA Tour Milestone". Golf Monthly. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  8. ^ "Injured Daniel Berger withdraws from the Open, replaced by Sahith Theegala". ESPN. Associated Press. 8 July 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b Stafford, Ali (14 July 2022). "The 150th Open: Justin Rose withdraws ahead of his opening round at St Andrews due to injury". Sky Sports. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  10. ^ a b Schupak, Adam (14 July 2022). "2022 British Open: Justin Rose withdraws from 150th Open at St. Andrews". Golfweek. USA Today. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  11. ^ "The Open Qualifying Series / All You Need To Know". The Open Championship. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  12. ^ "Final Qualifying". The Open Championship. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  13. ^ Dempster, Martin [@DempsterMartin] (1 July 2022). "Six players secure places in 150th Open through OWGR" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  14. ^ Bull, Andy (14 July 2022). "Rory McIlroy's carefree 66 at the Open shows a player in control of his game". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  15. ^ "The 150th Open - round one as it happened at St Andrews". BBC Sport. 14 July 2022. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d e "The Open Championship: Leaderboard". ESPN. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  17. ^ "Open Championship lowest score: Cameron Smith chases Tiger Woods' historic two-decade old record". Sporting News. 16 July 2022. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  18. ^ "Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland avoid blunders, share lead at Open Championship". ESPN. Associated Press. 16 July 2022.
  19. ^ "Cameron Smith wins Open Championship ahead of Cameron Young, Rory McIlroy". ESPN. Associated Press. 17 July 2022.

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