
The Open Championship 154: Golf's wildest major arrives this July
This July brings one of those dates every golf enthusiast marks in red on the calendar. The 154th edition of The Open Championship is about to arrive, and with it, all the magic—and chaos—that characterizes the oldest golf tournament in the world. If you think golf is boring, wait until you see this.
The major nobody can predict
The Open Championship is no ordinary tournament. Alongside the Masters, the US Open and the PGA Championship, it forms part of the four major championships on the professional circuit, which in golf is equivalent to winning a World Cup. But this is where things get truly wild: unlike other tournaments where pure technique prevails, here factors come into play that completely escape the player's control.
This year the battle takes place at Royal Birkdale Golf Club, in Southport (England), a historic course located by the sea that perfectly exemplifies why The Open is so unpredictable. It is what in golf is known as a "links" course: uneven terrain, wild dunes, untamed vegetation and, most importantly, weather conditions that can change minute by minute. Wind and rain are not mere obstacles here; they are protagonists of the competition.
Four days of pure tension
The format is elegant in its simplicity, but brutal in its demands. Players have four consecutive days, from Thursday to Sunday, to play 18 holes each day and complete the course with the fewest strokes possible. By the end of Sunday, someone will claim the title of "Champion Golfer of the Year."
What is interesting is that after the first two days, the "cut" is made: only the best-ranked players continue competing over the weekend. This means that some narratives are resolved very early and others are defined in the final holes.
A cast of stars (who can stumble)
As is customary in any major worth its salt, The Open brings together the biggest names in the world rankings. Scottie Scheffler, the world number one, will be there, along with Rory McIlroy and Spaniard Jon Rahm, among others. But here is the key: on a links course, anyone can trip up. Extreme conditions can neutralize the favourites and offer golden opportunities to players with experience in difficult terrain and the ability to adapt to the unexpected.
According to mundodeportivo.com, this margin for surprise is precisely what sets the Open apart from other majors and makes it one of the most thrilling sporting spectacles of the year.
For the beginner: it's easier than you think
If golf seems incomprehensible to you, The Open Championship is paradoxically an excellent entry point. Basic concepts like "par" (the ideal strokes on a hole), "birdie" (one stroke less than ideal) or "bogey" (one stroke more) are understood quickly. And the narrative of the competition hooks you on its own: impossible comebacks, errors that cost a tournament, tight finishes decided in the final holes.
It is football, but without a ball. Rivalry, drama, luck and talent all mixed together in an extraordinary place. Who wins when the wind blows at 40 kilometres per hour and it rains sideways? That is the question that defines The Open Championship.
Source: mundodeportivo.com


