Even on the calmest of days, the chance to experience Royal Liverpool will blow you away.
The Open returned to Royal Liverpool in 2006 for the first time in 39 years and it was a Championship not to be missed. Tiger Woods battled a heatwave and bone-dry course to lift The Claret Jug. In 2014, Rory McIlroy won his first Open Championship and when these links last hosted The Open, in 2023, it was the American Brian Harman who etched his name into history.
With more than 150 years of history and a unique place in golfing folklore, the chance to play on these ferocious links is one not to be missed.
Tour-Tested. Player-Approved.
Rory Mcllroy
“It's a very strategic golf course off the tee. It's very, very well bunkered and I think the biggest challenge of this golf course is avoiding those pot bunkers off the tee. Just getting really comfortable with the clubs you're hitting off certain tees and whether you challenge the bunkers or not or lay back.
It's a very strategic golf course, which I like. You really have to think your way around it.”
Collin Morikawa
“I've enjoyed it a lot. The course is in front of you. There's not really many blind tee shots, not many blind approaches, a few coming on the back nine, but everything is in front of you.
It really is how much you want to take on the bunkers, how aggressive you want to be off the tee. Is that going to give you a 9-iron versus a 6-iron? Out here, it could be the shot penalty that costs you that momentum swing one way or the other. It could be for your benefit, or it could be the other way.”