The decisive four-hole burst that led to Xander Schauffele’s stunning Open triumph
The American carded a flawless closing 65 on Sunday to finish nine under par at Royal Troon
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Xander Schauffele won his second major in three months at the 152nd Open at Royal Troon to complete an American clean sweep of the game’s biggest titles in 2024.
Schauffele carded a flawless closing 65 to finish nine under par, two shots clear of overnight leader Billy Horschel and Justin Rose, who led early in the final round and had threatened to become the first English winner of the Claret Jug since 1992.
South Africa’s Thriston Lawrence, who held the lead after 11 holes on Sunday, finished a shot further back in fourth following a 68.
Schauffele, who registered a major record of 21 under par to win the US PGA at Valhalla in May, is the first player to win two majors in a year since Brooks Koepka in 2018.
The 30-year-old world No 3 is also the seventh American winner in the last eight Opens at Royal Troon – Sweden’s Henrik Stenson having denied Phil Mickelson in a thrilling duel in 2016 – and he will head to Paris to defend his Olympic title in brilliant form.
On the 18th green Schauffele celebrated what was a lifelong dream. “Oh man... it’s been quite a journey,” he said after being handed the Claret Jug.
“I feel very honoured hearing my name called with ‘Open champion’ right after it. It’s something I have dreamed of for a very long time.”
Schauffele, who has now finished no worse than 18th in his last 10 starts, was eighth in the Masters and seventh in the US Open either side of his US PGA triumph, where he birdied the 72nd hole to edge out Bryson DeChambeau by a shot.
Rose was bidding to become the first qualifier to lift the Claret Jug since Paul Lawrie in 1999, while the 4,053-day gap since his 2013 US Open victory at Merion would have set a new record.
The prospects looked good when Rose birdied the second and fourth to overhaul Horschel and again when he birdied the eighth, only for a bogey on the 12th to halt his momentum at just the wrong time.
Playing alongside Horschel, Lawrence was reaping the rewards for an aggressive approach as birdies on the third, fourth, seventh and ninth gave him the lead before Schauffele, who had covered the front nine in 34, produced a decisive burst.
A stunning approach to the 11th left Schauffele with a tap-in for the only birdie all day on the daunting par four, another on the 13th took him into a share of the lead and Lawrence’s bogey on the 12th handed Schauffele an advantage he would never relinquish.
Further birdies on the 14th and 16th gave Schauffele the luxury of a three-shot lead and he completed a nerveless display with pars on the final two holes before Rose birdied the 18th to round off a superb 67.
Horschel birdied the 16th, 17th and 18th to join Rose in second, with Lawrence another shot back after saving par on the last despite hitting his second shot into the face of a bunker and watching it fly back over his head onto the fairway.
Ireland’s Shane Lowry, who held a two-shot lead at the halfway stage before struggling to a 77 on Saturday, shot 68 in the final round to finish sixth, with Jon Rahm, Sungjae Im and Scottie Scheffler three strokes further back in a share of seventh.
Masters champion and world No 1 Scheffler had been within two of the lead until amazingly four-putting the ninth for a double bogey.
PA