The 154th Open Championship arrives at Royal Birkdale from 16 to 19 July 2026, bringing golf’s oldest and most storied major back to the Southport links for the first time since Jordan Spieth’s extraordinary victory in 2017. With a world-class field, an iconic venue and a hometown hero desperate to finally lift the Claret Jug on his own doorstep, this year’s Open promises to be a special edition of a timeless event.
Royal Birkdale has hosted The Open nine times, producing champions of the highest calibre — from Lee Trevino and Tom Watson to Padraig Harrington and Phil Mickelson. The Lancashire links, nestled among imposing sand dunes and unforgiving rough, demands both precision and nerve. It is a course that rewards the complete golfer, and in a field loaded with talent, the margins between triumph and heartbreak have never been finer.

The Hometown Hero: Tommy Fleetwood
If there is one player the galleries at Royal Birkdale will be willing home above all others, it is Tommy Fleetwood. The 35-year-old was born in Southport and grew up just minutes from the 18th green, and few storylines in modern golf are more compelling than his pursuit of the Claret Jug on his local course. Fleetwood has long been among the world’s elite players — a former Race to Dubai champion and a Ryder Cup stalwart — but a major title has eluded him throughout his career. Royal Birkdale represents arguably his greatest opportunity, and the roar of the home crowd is certain to be a force multiplier for a player who thrives on atmosphere.

Spieth’s Return to Birkdale
Nine years ago, Jordan Spieth produced one of the great Open Championship performances, including a dramatic recovery from the dunes on the 13th hole that has already passed into golfing legend. The American arrives back at Birkdale with a point to prove after a period of inconsistency, but links golf — with its emphasis on imagination, creativity and ground game — remains his natural habitat. A second Claret Jug at the same venue would rank among the sport’s most remarkable achievements.

The Course: What Makes Royal Birkdale So Demanding
Royal Birkdale is unique among links courses in that its fairways run relatively flat through valleys between the dunes, rather than rolling unpredictably across open ground. This means approach shots from the fairways are relatively true — but the penalty for missing the short grass is severe, with thick willow scrub and dense rough waiting to swallow errant drives. The par-70 layout rewards accuracy off the tee above raw power, making ball-striking a premium quality. Wind direction will be decisive, as it invariably is at an Open Championship, and players who can shape shots in both directions will hold a crucial advantage.
The Wider Contenders
Beyond Fleetwood and Spieth, the field is deep with contenders. World number one Rory McIlroy arrives having rediscovered his best form after an inconsistent stretch. Scottie Scheffler, the reigning Masters champion, will look to add links major credentials to his growing collection of titles. Among the Europeans, Shane Lowry — himself a former Open champion — will relish the conditions, and Jon Rahm cannot be discounted despite his recent LIV Golf commitments limiting his competitive preparation on the European and PGA Tours.
For golf fans, this is the major that most purely distils the essence of the game — wind, skill, creativity and history combining on a course that has witnessed some of the sport’s defining moments. Royal Birkdale is ready, and the 154th Open Championship is set to deliver another chapter worth remembering.



