Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka Among Top Five British Open Contenders
16th July 2019
Here, AFP Sport looks at five of those expected to challenge for the Claret Jug on Sunday

- The 148th British Open gets underway on Thursday for the first time in 68 years in Northern Ireland at Royal Portrush
- McIlroy tends to be in the mix come the weekend at the Open, with top-five finishes in each of his last four appearances, including his solitary win in 2014
- Koepka has won four of the last nine majors he has played and was also runner-up at the Masters and US Open earlier this year
PORTRUSH, United Kingdom- The 148th British Open gets underway on Thursday for the first time in
68 years in Northern Ireland at Royal Portrush.
Here, AFP Sport
looks at five of those expected to challenge for the Claret Jug on Sunday:
Rory McIlroy (NIR)
The world number
three tees up on home soil desperate to end a five-year wait to win a major.
McIlroy tends to be
in the mix come the weekend at the Open, with top-five finishes in each of his
last four appearances, including his solitary win in 2014.
After two wins on
the PGA Tour this year, including the Players' Championship, McIlroy's
confidence is restored and he also finished in the top 10 at both the US Open
and PGA Championship.
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However, with a
level of pressure even he will have rarely experienced to deliver in front of a
home crowd, will McIlroy sink or swim?
Francesco Molinari (ITA)
The defending
champion arrives in Northern Ireland cold after deciding against playing
in either the Irish or Scottish Open to prepare on the links, instead saving as
much energy as possible for his title defence.
Molinari has not had
a stellar year, winning just once at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, but did
get himself into a winning position at the Masters.
Ultimately, two
shots into the water at Augusta cleared the way for Tiger Woods' sensational
win. But 12 months ago it was the Italian who remained cool under pressure
as others faltered in the final round to win his only major and the links may
favour his game once more.
Brooks Koepka (USA)
The world number one
arrives at the fourth major of the season having been in the top two for each
of the first three.
Koepka has won four
of the last nine majors he has played and was also runner-up at the Masters and
US Open earlier this year.
Already the man to
beat, Koepka has another weapon in his armoury this week as his caddie Ricky
Elliott is a Portrush native and grew up playing the course.
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Sixth in 2017 is
Koepka's best effort at an Open Championship so far, but expect that to change
over the coming week.
Justin Rose (ENG)
Rose's second-place
finish at last year's Open was his best since finishing fourth as an amateur in
1998.
The Olympic champion
was also in contention at the US Open last month until a poor final round cost
him the chance of just a second major.
That was his last
outing, but Rose got to Portrush a week ahead of the tournament and has been
picking the brains of a former Open champion and Northern Ireland native Darren
Clarke.
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Tiger Woods (USA)
After ending an
11-year wait to win his 15th major at the Masters, Woods is going the extra
mile in his preparations as he tries to win a fourth Open Championship by
getting up at 1am at home in the United States to acclimatise to the time
difference once he arrives in Portrush.
"If you want to
succeed, if you want to get better, if you want to win, if you want to
accomplish your goals, it all starts with getting up early in the
morning," Woods said last week as part of a social media promotion with
Nike.
His form since that
memorable victory at Augusta, though, has been far from scintillating. Woods
missed the cut at the PGA Championship and tied for 21st at the US Open.