British Open live updates: Leaderboard, TV info for Sunday’s Round 4

British Open live updates: Leaderboard, TV info for Sunday’s Round 4

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Does major golf get better than this?

The 2024 British Open is completely up for grabs after an eventful Saturday reshuffled the leaderboard.

Billy Horschel enters the final round with the lead at 4-under, but he has plenty of competition to fight off if he wants to secure his first major championship. Six golfers (Sam Burns, Thriston Lawrence, Russell Henley, Xander Schauffele, Justin Rose, Daniel Brown) sit one shot behind Horschel at 3-under, and world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler remains in the hunt just two shots back.

USA TODAY Sports provides live updates, highlights and more from Royal Troon Golf Club in the deciding round below.

The forecast for Sunday’s final round calls for a chance of a few brief showers from late afternoon with passing showers possible from early evening. Winds will be out of the southwest at 12-15 mph with gusts of 18-24 mph early and easing slightly later in the day.

High: 17°C (63°F).

Ryan Fox of New Zealand has posted Sunday’s best round for now, firing six birdies for a 4-under 67. He finishes the Open at 5-over.

After going par, par, par on the first hole of the first three rounds, Jordan Spieth opened Sunday’s final round with a birdie and went par, birdie, par through the first four holes.

Spieth bogeyed the par-3 fifth hole, he closed out the front nine a par, two birdies and a bogey, 2-under 34 through the first nine holes. He sits at 5-over through 11.

The Open will be broadcast live on NBC, with coverage also on NBC’s Peacock streaming service. The tentative broadcast schedule is as follows (all times Eastern):

Round 4: Sunday, July 21

  • 4 a.m.-7 a.m.: Peacock
  • 7 a.m.- 2 p.m.: NBC/Peacock

Live coverage and featured groups can be followed on the live stream on Peacock, as well as Fubo.

Follow along for live scoring updates from Royal Troon.

All times Eastern

2:35 a.m. — Darren Fichardt, Andy Ogletree

2:45 a.m. — Luis Masaveu, Young-han Song

2:55 a.m. — Darren Clarke, Tom McKibbin

3:05 a.m. — Ryan Fox, Hideki Matsuyama

3:15 a.m. — Aaron Rai, Rickie Fowler

3:25 a.m. — Tommy Morrison, Corey Conners

3:35 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, Marcel Siem

3:45 a.m. — Jeunghun Wang, Matthieu Pavon

4 a.m. — Thorbjørn Olesen, Jorge Campillo

4:10 a.m. — Matt Fitzpatrick, Richard Mansell

4:20 a.m. — Rasmus Højgaard, Kurt Kitayama

4:30 a.m. — Nicolai Højgaard, Jordan Spieth

4:40 a.m. — Jacob Skov Oleson, Alex Cejka

4:50 a.m. — Phil Mickelson, Robert MacIntyre

5 a.m. — Harris English, Guido Migliozzi

5:10 a.m. — Joaquin Niemann, Mackenzie Hughes

5:25 a.m. — Tom Hoge, Adrian Meronk

5:35 a.m. — Austin Eckroat, Brian Harman

5:45 a.m. — Davis Thompson, Si Woo Kim

5:55 a.m. — Matt Wallace, Abraham Ancer

6:05 a.m. — Max Homa, Jason Day

6:15 a.m. — Sepp Straka, Eric Cole

6:25 a.m. — Emiliano Grillo, Cameron Young

6:35 a.m. — Joe Dean, Ewen Ferguson

6:50 a.m. — Dean Burmester, Patrick Cantlay

7 a.m. — Gary Woodland, Minkyu Kim

7:10 a.m. — Padraig Harrington, Brendon Todd

7:20 a.m. — Calum Scott, Matteo Manassero

7:30 a.m. — Dustin Johnson, Collin Morikawa

7:40 a.m. — Jon Rahm, Alex Noren

7:50 a.m. — Laurie Canter, Chris Kirk

8 a.m. — Sean Crocker, John Catlin

8:15 a.m. — Daniel Hillier, Shubhankar Sharma

8:25 a.m. — Byeong Hun An, Sungjae Im

8:35 a.m. — Matthew Jordan, Justin Thomas

8:45 a.m. — Adam Scott, Shane Lowry

8:55 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Daniel Brown

9:05 a.m. — Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele

9:15 a.m. — Russell Henley, Sam Burns

9:25 a.m. — Thriston Lawrence, Billy Horschel

According to Accuweather, Sunday’s forecast at Royal Troon calls for a morning shower, followed by intervals of clouds and sunshine. Chance of precipitation is 40%. High temperature of 63 degrees.

  • Xander Schauffele (+350)
  • Scottie Scheffler (+375)
  • Billy Horschel (+450)
  • Justin Rose (+800)
  • Sam Burns (+800)
  • Russell Henley (+900)
  • Thriston Lawrence (+1400)
  • Daniel Brown (+2000)
  • Shane Lowry (+2500)

American Brian Harman claimed his first career major by playing four rounds of consistent, steady golf in the soggy conditions at Royal Liverpool to win the 2023 British Open by six strokes.

With only two career victories on the PGA Tour, Harman entered Sunday’s final round with a five-shot lead. He closed with a 1-under 70 as Jon Rahm, Tom Kim, Jason Day and Sepp Straka all tied for second place.

The 152nd British Open tees off at the Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scotland, for the 10th time. Royal Troon first hosted The Open in 1923, when English golfer Arthur Havers defeated American Walter Hagen by one stroke.

Royal Troon went on to host the Open eight more times, most recently in 2016, when Sweden’s Henrik Stenson defeated Phil Mickelson by three strokes to win his first and only major title.

Tiger Woods is a three-time winner at The Open, pulling off victories in 2000, 2005 and 2006.

Woods’ first appearance at The Open was in 1995, when he finished in a tie for 68th place. He’s only appeared at the tournament once during the past four years, and that was in 2022 when he missed the cut. The last time he made the cut was in 2018 when he finished in a tie for sixth place at Carnoustie in Scotland.

Woods missed the cut this year.

Rory McIlroy has won The Open once back in 2014.

McIlroy first appeared at The Open in 2007, when he finished in 42nd place. McIlroy has finished in the top six, six times in eight tournaments dating back to 2014. He tied for sixth last year at Royal Liverpool.

He missed the cut this year.

Masters winner Scottie Scheffler has appeared at The Open three times in his career, with his highest finish coming during his 2021 debut at the event. Scheffler finished in a tie for eighth place that year at Royal St. George’s.

In an interview last weekend with the Times of London, Scottish golfer Colin Montgomerie suggested it might be time for Tiger Woods to retire.

“Aren’t we there? I’d have thought we were past there. There is a time for all sportsmen to say goodbye, but it’s very difficult to tell Tiger it’s time to go,” Montgomerie said.

When asked about those comments on Tuesday, Woods fired back.

“As a past champion, I’m exempt until I’m 60. Colin’s not,” Woods said with a knowing smile. “He’s not a past champion, so he’s not exempt. So he doesn’t get the opportunity to make that decision. I do.” — Steve Gardner

If you’re old enough to remember the origins of Tiger Woods, there’s nostalgic pleasure in the idea he can still dunk on Colin Montgomerie today with just as much flair as he did during the 1997 Masters in a third round that changed the course of golf history.

But Montgomerie, in the full context of his comments in the London Times, isn’t wrong either. What exactly is Woods trying to accomplish by still being out there?

Unless he can do something on the course, we might have to admit that Monty had a point.    

Read Dan Wolken’s entire column.

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