Zach Johnson skips Senior Open for
John Deere and opens with 64 to trail by one shot
[July 03, 2026]
SILVIS, Ill. (AP) — Zach Johnson is skipping three majors for
the John Deere Classic, which feels like a major for the Iowa
native. He made the decision pay off Thursday with an eagle-birdie
finish for a 7-under 64 that left him one shot out of the lead.
Lucas Glover and Zac Blair played in the morning and each posted a
63, a good start for both as the PGA Tour heads into the final two
months. Both are well outside the top 100 in the FedEx Cup.
Johnson, a 50-year-old in his first year on the PGA Tour Champions
and already with two victories, never considered anything but the
John Deere Classic even with the U.S. Senior Open in Ohio this week
at Scioto.
He used putter from off the green for a 45-foot eagle on the par-5
17th, and capped off his round with a shot into 12 feet for a
closing birdie.
“I just love being here, and I'm comfortable, obviously,” said
Johnson, who won the John Deere Classic in 2012. "My scorecard ... I
know that' an ingredient this week, but it's not everything. I can't
stress it enough. I'm just appreciative of having a partnership with
John Deere and feeling like a long, long-distance son to this area.

“A lot of affinity, a lot of affection.”
Along with skipping the U.S. Senior Open this week, Johnson did not
enter the British Open at Royal Birkdale, where he is exempt for 10
more years. He also is skipping the Senior British Open at
Gleneagles, where he played in the 2014 Ryder Cup.
Instead, Johnson is playing a senior major next week at Firestone.
His reasoning for skipping the two British events is because he
didn't think he could play four straight weeks.
The immediate goal is to play four rounds on the TPC Deere Run,
where hot weather is expected to yield thunderstorms over the next
few days.
Glover, who goes on the PGA Tour board next year, is at No. 119 in
the FedEx Cup. His exemption from winning back-to-back weeks in 2023
— including a FedEx Cup playoff event — ends after this year. Blair
is at No. 160 and has been playing where he can, along with Korn
Ferry Tour events.
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“Playing golf professionally is pretty stressful,
especially for me,” Blair said. “I’ve kind of always been right in
that 125 to 150 spot my whole career. So every start is important.
Just trying to do a good job of playing well, whichever kind of tour
I’m playing on. It’s still golf at the end of the day, which is
fun.”
Glover began the year recovering from surgery for a
torn labrum in his left shoulder, and to put together a round like
his 63 was encouraging to know good golf is still in there. And it
helps being on a property that brings good memories.
“Even struggling like I have this year, you pull down the driveway
somewhere you’ve had success, it gives you a good feeling. Yeah,
always liked it here,” Glover said.
Stephan Jaeger and Lee Hodges joined Johnson at 64. Jaeger is at No.
60 in the FedEx Cup, wanting to be sure he's among the top 70 in six
weeks to qualify for the postseason. The BMW International Open in
Munich is this week on his home course of Eichenried.
Jordan Spieth, playing the Deere for only the second time since
winning in 2015, had a double bogey on the 18th hole in the middle
of his round and closed with a bogey for a 69
Scoring was good, as usual, with 20 players at 66 or lower. That
included NCAA champion Preston Stout, who takes over as the No. 1
amateur in the world because Jackson Koivun turned pro.
Koivun made his professional debut and it was a struggle. He wound
up with a 73, leaving him in danger of missing the cut.
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