Belfast Telegraph

Woods and Thomas keen on local knowledge with Royal Portrush ready for its big moment

- BY PHIL CASEY

IF knowledge is power then local expertise could be everything as Royal Portrush hosts The Open Championsh­ip for the first time since 1951.

Some 68 years after Max Faulkner won the only Open to be staged outside Scotland or England, Portrush has again welcomed the world’s best golfers to Northern Ireland to do battle for the Claret Jug.

The anticipati­on has bordered on the feverish since the R&A made the official announceme­nt in October 2015, news expected after club members voted overwhelmi­ngly in favour of the required course changes the previous August.

The biggest of those saw two new holes — the seventh and eighth — created on the Dunluce Links from land on the adjacent Valley Links, with the existing 17th and 18th holes used for the vast spectator village and media centre.

A sell-out crowd of 237,750 is due to attend, setting a record for an Open staged outside St Andrews, the majority of which will no doubt be hoping one of the Northern Ireland trio of Rory McIlroy, Graeme McDowell and Darren Clarke can claim the title.

Aged 50, Clarke’s chances appear slim, but the 2011 champion, who has a house overlookin­g the course, has been in high demand as a practice partner as players attempt to tap into his reservoir of knowledge.

Former World No.1 Justin Thomas arranged a practice round with McIlroy more than a month ago, while Tiger Woods tried in vain to learn from Brooks Koepka’s caddie Ricky Elliott, a Portrush native who often competed against McDowell when they were teenagers.

“I texted Brooksy and I said, ‘Mind if I tag along and play a practice round?” Masters champion Woods revealed. “I’ve heard nothing.”

Woods has played just 10 tournament rounds since his victory at Augusta three months ago, taking four weeks off before missing the cut in the US PGA Championsh­ip, then finishing ninth in the Memorial Tournament and 21st in the US Open.

The 43-year-old went from Pebble Beach to Thailand on a family holiday and concedes his game is not as sharp as he would like but believes he has no option but to play a limited schedule.

“I want to play as long as I possibly can, and you have to understand if I play a lot, I won’t be here that long,” Woods admitted.

McIlroy may be the favourite but Koepka is again the man to beat, with the World No.1 seeking a fifth Major title in his last 10 starts and a place in history.

Koepka has finished second, first and second respective­ly in the first three Majors of the year. No player in the modern era has placed in the top two in all four Majors in a calendar year.

In contrast, McIlroy has not won a Major since the 2014 US PGA Championsh­ip. However, he set the course record of 61 at Portrush as a 16-year-old and is enjoying the most consistent season of his career with 11 top 10s from 14 starts, highlighte­d by victories in the Players Championsh­ip and Canadian Open.

McIlroy admitted during last week’s Scottish Open it would “mean the world” to win the Open on home soil but has otherwise attempted a low-key approach with a limited number of practice rounds and a determinat­ion to enjoy the occasion.

“One of my mantras this week is ‘Look around and smell the roses’,” said the 30-year-old, whose Open form figures read fifth, fourth, second.

At home: Darren Clarke knows Royal Portrush very well

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