Scottie Scheffler hits the reset
button for the British Open after a rare missed cut
[July 15, 2026]
By DOUG FERGUSON
SOUTHPORT, England (AP) — Scottie Scheffler finally heard about the
text his PGA Tour friend never sent, a reminder that even the No. 1
player in golf with four majors and more than 20 victories doesn’t
know everything.
It was a list of things to do on the weekend after missing the cut.
“He was like: ‘Hey, you can practice at the facilities. You can
still go to the gym. You can also go to the next tournament.’ It was
basically all my options,” Scheffler said Tuesday ahead of the
British Open. “He never sent it to me, but he told me about it.”
The reason the text was created — without being sent, to Scheffler's
disappointment — was missing the cut at the Scottish Open, his first
missed cut in nearly four years, a streak of 78 consecutive cuts
that was the longest since Tiger Woods set the record (142) from
1998 to 2005.
Frustrating, yes. Despair? Hardly.
“You never want to have a weekend off, but going into a tournament
when you're defending, there's always a bit more stuff to do,”
Scheffler said. “So it wasn't the worst thing in the world.”
Among his duties was officially returning the claret jug he won last
year at Royal Portrush, a ritual the Royal & Ancient has turned into
a ceremony. Then, it was playing an exhibition with Jordan Spieth,
Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Rose and others.
But key to Scheffler's early arrival was Royal Birkdale, which has
hosted the British Open more than any other links course in England
since it first joined the rotation in 1954.
He had never seen it. Scheffler had not seen conditions like this —
a combination of yellow and brown, which translates to firm and
fiery in a links vocabulary. St. Andrews came close in 2022, but Jon
Rahm recalls the greens still being soft enough to allow for low
scoring.

Scheffler ticked off two items on his friend's list — he went to the
gym in Scotland and then headed to the next tournament. That allowed
him time to play 18 holes on Sunday, and to limit his energy in
sunbaked Blighty to nine holes on Monday and Tuesday.
His general assessment: “The ball is just going to run forever.”
Is it driver to take it over the bunkers and possibly reach the
green on the 393-yard, downwind 16th hole, or hit iron off the tee?
Is the redesigned fifth hole at 321 yards worth trying to reach with
a pond to the right, a series of bunkers short and a wee part of a
wee burn to the left?
“On each hole there's a good bit of strategy. There's a decent
amount of thinking,” Scheffler said. “If it wasn't as firm as it is
now, there would be as much decision-making. But I think with the
firmness, it creates a whole lot more challenges.”
Rose is among four players — and at 45, the youngest — to have
played Royal Birkdale three times in the Open dating to 1998. He was
a 17-year-old amateur that year, full of joy and optimism when he
holed out a wedge for birdie on the 18th to tie for fourth. He
didn't finish in the top 50 his two times as a professional.
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US golfer Scottie Scheffler plays out of the bunker during a
practice round at the British Open Golf Championship at Royal
Birkdale, Southport, England, Monday, July 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Peter
Morrison)

Rose certainly has more experience than Scheffler,
but only to a point.
“A links course is interesting because you never really get to know
them that well,” Rose said. "Like 2008 I think it was, weather was
dreadful. It was wet. You might have been hitting 2-irons and
3-woods into par 4s, and now you could be flicking 52-degree wedges.
“A golf course can play so differently decade to decade when we come
back that you never really get to know the course that well.”
Scheffler said he felt at peace about his game, and he certainly
looked the part. His game didn't look deplorable in the Scottish
Open, just a matter of not hitting it terribly close and not making
many putts and then moving on.
It was no less frustrating — Scheffler is a killer when it comes to
competing, which is one reason he has been No. 1 longer than anyone
since Woods — but it was filled with perspective.
“I don’t think it hurts as much as coming close to winning and
finishing second,” Scheffler said. “I felt like coming in second at
Travelers hurt more than missing the cut, but missing the cut is
significantly more frustrating is how I would describe it.”
He's had plenty of experience finishing second. Scheffler's lone
victory this year was his first tournament in January at The
American Express. Since then, he has had four runner-up finishes,
including the Masters. The most recent was a playoff loss to Viktor
Hovland at the Travelers Championship two weeks ago when Scheffler
missed a 4-foot slider.
“I think just towards the end of the season, you get a little
tired,” Scheffler said. "I got a couple days off, reset the mind,
reset the body, and just kind of get back to feeling even and at
peace. I've had a very solid year, but like I said, frustrating at
times because I’ve been close and I haven’t been able to get it done
like I have been in years past.
“I'm excited to try and defend my title this week.”
That hasn't been done at the British Open since 2008 when Padraig
Harrington won at Royal Birkdale. One week could change Scheffler's
outlook on the year. But it's a week that presents a test the likes
of which he hasn't seen all year.
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