2015-07-14



The world No. 1 and defending champ is absent, but the 156-man field at the Open Championship is still loaded.

The Open Championship is the oldest major in golf, but the overhauled method of constructing its field is just two years old. The Open Qualifying Series, which started in November of last year, is a combination of pro tournaments from across the globe and final "open" qualifying sites across Britain.

The U.S. Open whittles some 10,000 qualifying hopefuls into the 65 or so players for its field largely on one big day of sectional qualifying at sites across the United States. The British Open, on the other hand, will take just 12 players through its open qualifying process. These are the lesser-known players and dreamers, while the rest of the field -- the more famous tour pros -- earn their way through the typical world rankings and past performance exemptions.

The field is 156 players deep, the same size of the U.S. Open and PGA Championship. That's as big as it gets in golf. The Masters does things its own way with the green jackets beholden to different stuffy traditions, one of which is taking every effort to ensure the field remains exclusive and below 100 players. The 156-man field can become a logistical challenge at these majors, but The Open usually has the easiest time of handling it. There's ample sunlight in Scotland and England this time of year, so much that the R&A doesn't even need to use split tees like the other two majors with the same field. Instead, everyone goes off No. 1 in some 10 hours of rolling tee times. Sunrise is around 4:45 a.m. and it stays light out well past 10 p.m.

This year's field has already subbed in a handful of alternates after a series of withdrawals. Chris Kirk broke his hand playing with his kids on his farm. Tim Clark could not navigate South Africa's strict new visa laws in time to get to St. Andrews. And then there was the biggest loss of all, world No. 1 Rory McIlroy ripping up his ankle playing soccer. McIlroy is the first player since Ben Hogan in 1954 not to defend his Claret Jug and just the third world No. 1 to miss a major. The course suited Rory perfectly but Russell Knox, a local Scot, gets his spot.

Let's review the 156-man field and just how the R&A builds it. Each player will be listed under the first method he earned entry in accordance with the 40 different ways to get in the field -- e.g. Jordan Spieth qualified five different ways, but his name shows up just once in the first of the Open's 40 ordered exemptions.

Past Champions

Winning The Open does not come with the lifetime invite like the Masters, but it's pretty close. If you're under 60, you will have a spot. And thankfully for that, we get to keep watching John Daly, the 1995 winner at St. Andrews, take his cuts in a major championship. Former winners who declined to play include Nick Faldo, Ian Baker-Finch and Greg Norman (along with McIlroy, who had no choice).

Past Open Championship winners (60 and younger)

Mark Calcavecchia

Stewart Cink

Darren Clarke

Ben Curtis

John Daly

David Duval

Ernie Els

Nick Faldo

Todd Hamilton

Padraig Harrington

Paul Lawrie

Tom Lehman

Justin Leonard

Sandy Lyle

Phil Mickelson

Mark O'Meara

Louis Oosthuizen

Tiger Woods

There's a separate exemption for the 60-and-over crowd that's almost never used. If you have won The Open, and are still contending at 60-plus years of age, you get a five-year exemption. Tom Watson nearly pulled off the most stunning major win in the history of golf in 2009 at Turnberry, where he was one stroke away from a sixth Claret Jug at age 59. That top-10 finish, however, earned him five more years at The Open. That exemption runs out this week and St. Andrews is expected to be the final Open for the championship's dominant five-time winner.

Past Champions, 60 and older, Finishing T10 in past 5 years

Tom Watson

Top 10 from Last Year

All the majors reward the contenders from the previous year. At Royal Liverpool, Rory McIlroy held a comfortable multi-shot cushion for most of the weekend. But there was still that group behind him battling for a coveted early exemption to St. Andrews. Marc Leishman and Edoardo Molinari both relied solely on this exemption to get in the field.

Top 10 (including ties) from 2014 Open Championship

Victor Dubuisson

Rickie Fowler

Jim Furyk

Sergio Garcia

Marc Leishman

Shane Lowry

Graeme McDowell

Edoardo Molinari

Charl Schwartzel

Adam Scott

World Rankings Stars

The biggest chunk of the field comes in through the world rankings points system. Getting over that top 50 threshold is always valuable and triggers exemptions into almost every significant event. The world rankings are also where The Open goes to fill out the final few open spots to get to 156 players in the last few weeks, and also to pick many of the alternates. For example, Richie Ramsay, the most recent alternate to get in with Clark's withdrawal, is 81st in the world rankings. So while it's officially listed as the top 50, the players plucked from the rankings go a bit deeper than that.

First 50 in World Rankings

Daniel Berger

Keegan Bradley

Paul Casey

Jason Day

Jamie Donaldson

Harris English

Matt Every

Branden Grace

Bill Haas

J.B. Holmes

Billy Horschel

Hiroshi Iwata

Thongchai Jaidee

Miguel Angel Jimenez

Zach Johnson

Dustin Johnson

Matt Jones

Martin Kaymer

Russell Knox

Brooks Koepka

Matt Kuchar

Anirban Lahiri

David Lingmerth

Joost Luiten

Hunter Mahan

Ben Martin

Hideki Matsuyama

Francesco Molinari

Ryan Moore

Kevin Na

Ryan Palmer

Ian Poulter

Richie Ramsay

Patrick Reed

Justin Rose

Webb Simpson

Brandt Snedeker

Jordan Spieth

Henrik Stenson

Kevin Streelman

Brendon Todd

Jimmy Walker

Bubba Watson

Lee Westwood

Bernd Wiesberger

Danny Willett

Gary Woodland

Euro Tour and PGA Tour Playoffs Contenders

World rankings points are the best to have, but accumulating FedExCup points and Race to Dubai points also generate plenty of perks. The FedExCup is the PGA Tour's postseason system and the Race to Dubai is the European Tour equivalent. There are four separate exemptions based on those two playoff points systems, rewarding success from last year as well as this season.

Top 30 in Race to Dubai standings from 2014

Thomas Bjorn

Jonas Blixt

George Coetzee

Ross Fisher

Tommy Fleetwood

Stephen Gallacher

Mikko Ilonen

Pablo Larrazabal

Alexander Levy

Marcel Siem

Marc Warren

Romain Wattel

Top 5 (including ties) in Race to Dubai Standings at end of June 2015

Kiradech Aphibarnrat

Qualifiers for PGA Tour's FedExCup finale -- 2014 TOUR Championship

Russell Henley

Morgan Hoffmann

Geoff Ogilvy

John Senden

Cameron Tringale

First 5 (including ties) in FedExCup Standings at end of June 2015

Steven Bowditch

Charley Hoffman

Kevin Kisner

Robert Streb

Recent major winners

All the majors recognize recent winners of the other three majors as well as champions at the so-called "fifth majors" of the PGA Tour and European Tour. Winning the Masters, U.S. Open and PGA triggers a five-year exemption into The Open -- all four have that same reward. Jason Dufner is the only recent major winner that relied on that exemption, cashing in on that 2013 PGA Championship at Oak Hill. Everyone else was already in the field via previously listed exemption.

In addition to the four majors, The Players Championship and the Euro Tour's BMW PGA Championship, the two flagship events on the two main world tours, also hold an elevated place. The winners of those two events get a three-year exemption to the majors. Only two recent BMW PGA winners needed that exemption.

Winners of other 3 major championships past 5 years

Jason Dufner

BMW PGA Championship winners from last 3 years

Byeong-Hun An

Matteo Manassero

World tour winners

The Open is often the most international major, and the R&A sets aside several exemptions for the most accomplished players from some of the lesser-known world tours.

2014 Asian Tour Order of Merit winner

David Lipsky

2014 Australasia Tour Order of Merit winner

Greg Chalmers

2014 Sunshine Tour Order of Merit winner

Thomas Aiken

2014 Japan Open Champion

Yuta Ikeda

Japan Golf Tour money list rankings

Hiroyuki Fujita

Koumei Oda

Adam Bland

Liang Wen-Chong

Amateurs

The first three majors of the season all open up several spots for different amateur winners from around the world. The Masters tends to hold the amateur player in the highest regard, an antiquated nod to founder Bobby Jones, the greatest amateur. Four players this week will play St. Andrews and be ineligible to win prize money.

2015 Amateur Champion

Romain Langasque

2014 U.S .Amateur Champion

Gunn Yang

2014 International European Amateur Champion

Ashley Chesters

No. 1 in 2014 Amateur rankings (McCormack medal)

Ollie Schniederjans

Seniors

The U.S. Open, British Open and PGA all reserve a spot for the prior year's winner of the Senior version of that tournament. Bernhard Langer is the best player on the senior circuit in recent years and he won last year's Senior Open at 18-under ... the next closest guy was 5-under.

2014 Senior Open Champion

Bernhard Langer

Qualifiers

As I noted above, The Open has far fewer spots for those long-shot qualifiers (this year's Cinderella is a factory worker) who play their way through the different rounds of local, regional and final qualifying. Instead, this Qualifying Series hands out spots in the field at several different pro events from Australia to South Africa to the PGA and Euro Tours.

There are 10 different pro events, including the last three on the PGA Tour leading into this week, that have Open spots available. Tom Gillis, who lost to Jordan Spieth in a playoff on Sunday at the John Deere Classic, was the last player in the field via the Qualifying Series. And unlike the U.S. Open, the alternates don't come from the guys who came close at the qualifying sites, but rather the aforementioned world rankings. So these are you entrants who played their way in via qualifying:

Open Qualifying Series winners

Andy Sullivan

Anthony Wall

Brett Rumford

Brian Harman

Carl Pettersson

Daniel Brooks

Danny Lee

David Hearn

David Howell

Eddie Pepperell

Graham DeLaet

Greg Owen

Jaco Van Zyl

James Hahn

James Morrison

Jonathan Moore

Luke Donald

Marcus Fraser

Rafael Cabrera-Bello

Raphael Jacquelin

Rikard Karlberg

Rob Pampling

Scott Hend

Scott Strange

Shinji Tomimura

Soren Kjeldsen

Tadahiro Takayama

Taichi Teshima

Tom Gillis

Tyrell Hatton

Final Qualifying at 4 British sites

Alister Balcombe

Ben Taylor

Gary Boyd

Jordan Nierbrugge

Mark Young

Paul Dunne

Paul Kinnear

Pelle Edberg

Retief Goosen

Robert Dinwiddie

Ryan Fox

Scott Arnold

Show more