Adam Scott’s glittering career reaches one of world sport’s most astonishing milestones at this week’s US Open.
In what is surely one of the greatest achievements ever in the history of Australian sport, the 45-year-old Queenslander will play his 100th consecutive major championship at Shinnecock Hills in New York.
Watch every round of The 2026 U.S. Open LIVE & EXCLUSIVE is Fox Sports, available on Kayo 19-22 June | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1.
But it’s not just on these shores where Scott’s streak is considered a massive deal.
As Fox Golf expert Paul Gow put it to foxsports.com.au: “It’s the story of the US Open.”
And with good reason. Only one other player in the history of the game has not missed a major for 25 years straight – the great Jack Nicklaus.
The Golden Bear somehow played 146 in a row – not missing a major from the 1962 Masters to the 1998 US Open.
It would be quite the feat for Scott to still be going in 2038 at age 57 to break Nicklaus’ record, but given the Queenslander’s illustrious career, it cannot be ruled out.
Scott has aged like fine wine.
Or as he put it when speaking to Australian reporters last week: “I’m too proud to fall off the map.”
Remarkably, Jordan Spieth has the next longest active streak with 52 straight major appearances.
Generally considered as boasting the most beautiful swing in golf, Scott is still making the game look easy.
In fact, that world renowned swing has been the key to the former world No.1’s longevity.
It is one of many components of the 2013 Masters champion’s make up that has transformed the young prodigy from the Gold Coast, via Adelaide and the Sunshine Coast, into golf’s modern day iron man.
Go inside his incredible journey to one of the rarest achievements the sport has to offer.
THE MAKING OF A CHAMPION
Australian golf quickly stood up and took notice of a young Adam Scott.
The talented teen won the Australian Junior title in back-to-back years in 1997 and 1998.
He was a part of Golf Australia’s national junior squads, and he was impossible to ignore.
Scott’s father Phil was a club professional and word spread around the country that he had helped craft a masterpiece.
“Phil Scott, who is a PGA member, the way that he taught his son from the get-go, two or three years of age (has played a big part in Adam’s success),” Gow told foxsports.com.au.
“A couple of simple fundamentals that he did from a technical point of view and gave him a set up that was good. A takeaway that was really good and a downswing that was even better.
“He manufactured that through his own eyes for many, many years.”
“He’s actually balanced his body that he doesn’t get any tension in the wrong spots,” Gow added.
“There’s no compression in his lower back, elbows and his wrists.”
At a time when Greg Norman had been the world’s best player before handing over the mantle to a young Tiger Woods, keen observers in Australia thought the country may have a successor to The Shark on its hands.
“He was the next superstar coming through the system,” Golf Australia’s general manager of high-performance Brad James recalled to foxsports.com.au.
“If you put a swing up of Adam Scott when he was 16 or 17 and you put up a swing of Adam Scott today, you’re always going to know who it is.”
James at the time was a golf coach at the University of Minnesota.
He would often travel home to Australia to scout for budding talents who may be interested in furthering their game within in the US college system.
On one trip to the Gold Coast, James was in awe of what he witnessed.
“I can remember watching him back then at the Greg Norman Junior Masters thinking ‘woah, who’s this kid?’,” he recalled.
“I think he shot 59 or 60 one round there. Whatever it was, it was bloody good.
“In the role, I’d get to watch the best American and the best European kids, and then to come back to Australia and to have the opportunity to watch Adam, I was thinking ‘this kid’s as good if not better than any of those kids’.”
Scott eventually decided to go down the college route, but unfortunately for James, it was in Las Vegas, not Minnesota.
“I remember calling his mum and asking, ‘is Adam interested in playing college golf?’,” James recalled.
“At the time I think they were unsure what pathway they were going to take. I sort of gauged from the conversation that he wasn’t going to play college golf and then recruited another Aussie kid in James McLean.
“Then I found out later on, I’m going to say six months to a year later, that Adam had signed an agreement to join UNLV.”
Initially, James looked like a genius.
Minnesota hosted the 1999 college national championship at US Open and women’s PGA Championship venue Hazeltine.
Current European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald won it that year, but McLean, who went on to play on the PGA Tour, won the year prior.
The Melburnian even broke Phil Mickelson’s 72-hole scoring record.
“So, at the time, I’m thinking ‘I’ve recruited the best player in college golf!” James said with a laugh.
“Adam was a really good player at college golf, but he wasn’t the best.”
Scott, who former Australian professional Peter Lonard described as “squeaky clean”, engaged in an act of sabotage at Hazeltine.
“The night before the first round, I was on the driving range with Adam and James,” James recalled.
“This was when the Big Bertha driver had just come out and Adam says to James ‘can I hit your driver?’”
“James was like ‘yeah, yeah have a hit’ and gives him the driver. Adam proceeds to put a tee in the ground with the ball and while he did that, he leans on James’ shaft and snapped his shaft.
“This is the best player in college golf at the home championships, snapped his biggest weapon.”
A year later, Scott graduated from the college scene and made his major debut.
He has actually played 100 majors already, but his consecutive streak began at the 2001 Open Championship.
Scott’s major career began a year prior at St Andrews.
The 20-year-old qualified just weeks after turning professional but missed the cut as Tiger Woods romped to a famous victory, completing the career grand slam at The Home of Golf at just 24 years of age.
Through his connection with renowned swing coach Butch Harmon, Scott even played a practice round with Woods at the Old Course that week.
“I was a fish out of that water that week,” he recalled to Australian reporters last week.
“I didn’t know what I was doing.”
Regardless, the fire was lit and as Scott made his way on the European Tour, there was no stopping him.
Get all the latest golf news, highlights and analysis delivered straight to your inbox with Fox Sports Sportmail. Sign up now!!!
RISE TO THE TOP TEN IN THE WORLD
In just his fourth major appearance, Scott announced himself to the world with a top ten finish at The Masters.
It was his Augusta National debut and the 21-year-old followed in the footsteps of Nicklaus and Woods by registering a top ten finish when only freshly being allowed to drink alcohol in the US.
The Australian prodigy was certainly beginning to catch the eye of keen onlookers.
Away from the majors, he made a splash by making the semi-finals of the World Matchplay Championship in 2003 – falling to Woods in the final four.
Later that year, he earned a maiden Presidents Cup call-up and then in 2004, he became the then youngest winner of the PGA Tour’s flagship event The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass.
Fellow Australian, and Presidents Cup teammate, Peter Lonard was one of the players Scott defeated in that breakthrough match play run.
“He was very Tiger-like with his demeanour and his swing,” Lonard recalled to foxsports.com.au.
“He was very polished for his age.
“I think everyone thought he had the ability to be one of the best players in the world early days.”
For Lonard, who is now 58, Scott was a bridge between eras in the professional game.
“He was already well versed in every facet of the game when he started as a pro,” he recalled.
“He was what the kids are now, which was virtually unheard of in those days.
“He was comfortably ahead of his time, and it was a sign of things to come.
“In those days, it was quite unusual for a young kid to just step up on tour and just get going.”
Lonard added: “He looked after himself incredibly well.
“The training, the fitness and the recovery. He was ahead of his time in all that.”
The work paid off as Scott cracked the top ten in the world rankings for the first time in 2005 – he has since spent more than 400 weeks as one of the ten best players in the world.
It was the following year that truly kickstarted Scott’s run as a regular major threat, however.
A then career-best tied third in the 2006 PGA Championship, won by Woods at Medinah, followed a top ten at The Open.
By 2008, Scott was the world No.3 behind the mighty duo of Woods and Mickelson.
But it was not all smooth sailing.
That same year he broke a finger in a car door days out from the US Open – he somehow managed to finish tied 26th at Torrey Pines despite the injury.
He then suffered a dip in form for the first time in his career in 2009.
Scott missed the cut in three of the four majors and fell outside the top 50 in the world.
He only snapped his funk with a trip home to win his first Australian Open crown.
“Winning the Australian Open I remember very fondly,” Scott told Australian reporters last week.
“The kind of month leading up to it was a huge turning point in my career.
“2009 had been the worst year of my career.
“I played really poorly that season and at the back end of the year about a month before the Aussie Open, I finished third up at the Singapore Open. I think I finished in the top five at the Aussie Masters leading into the Aussie Open and I might have even had a good result in Dubai as well with the DP World Tour Championship.
“It was a huge turning point and that stretch set me up for the second decade of my career.
“I was a bit lost looking back in the middle of 2009. I just didn’t know what I was doing. I think I missed six cuts in a row in America.
“Most of them only by one, but it may as well be a missed cut by 20. That’s how it feels.
“So, the Aussie Open, I look back on fondly and the confidence I took out of winning in Australia, and the national championship, was huge.”
FOX SPORTS, available on Kayo Sports, is streaming The 2026 PGA Tour LIVE & Exclusive | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1.
OPEN HEARTBREAK LEADS TO MASTERS GLORY
With renewed self-belief, Scott made a huge change in 2011 that would prove to be a key step in the path to a major breakthrough.
With Tiger Woods sitting out the US Open and The Open with a knee and Achilles injury, Scott seized the opportunity to have esteemed caddie Steve Williams temporarily on the bag.
Woods fired the New Zealander, who was once Greg Norman’s looper, soon after and Williams became a permanent member of team Scott.
Their relationship quickly blossomed with top tens at the 2011 PGA Championship and the 2012 Masters.
Before Williams experienced a throwback to his Norman days with the Australian at the 2012 Open Championship.
Scott matched the course record at Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club with a first round 64.
It was a platform for what appeared to be a maiden major title.
The Australian boasted a four-shot lead at the start of the final day and when he birdied the 14th hole, he restored that buffer with four holes left to play.
What was meant to be a procession quickly turned into disaster.
Invoking memories of Norman’s great collapses, Scott bogeyed the final four holes to hand the Claret Jug to Ernie Els by a shot.
“Next time — I’m sure there will be a next time — I can do a better job of it,” Scott said that day.
Those words became prophetic the following year.
That heartbreak would become the catalyst for one of the biggest accomplishments in Australian sport.
“I think because he’s had so many close calls (he keeps pushing for another major),” Fox Golf expert Paul Gow told foxsports.com.au.
“In 2012 (at The Open), he bogeyed the last four and Ernie (Els) won the tournament.
“Some people say he had to have that loss to win The Masters, I don’t think that’s correct.
“I think Adam contends just about every time he tees it up.
“There’s not a golf course out there that doesn’t suit him.”
There has arguably been no golf course that has suited him better than Augusta National.
Scott and compatriot Jason Day were left sharing runner-up honours in 2011 as Charl Schwartzel birdied the final four holes to win the green jacket in one of the most stunning Sunday bursts in Masters history.
But after successive years of contending at Augusta, Scott’s, and Australia’s, time famously came in 2013.
Scott started the final round one shot off the lead, while countryman Day and Marc Leishman were in the hunt until late.
Destiny was finally on Australia’s side.
Scott let out an almighty roar of ‘c’mon Aussie’ after holing his birdie putt on the 18th.
But the job was not done as his final round of 69 ensured he finished level with Angel Cabrera, and a playoff would have to decide it.
That was where Williams proved his worth.
The Kiwi helped read the winning birdie putt on the second playoff hole.
Williams revealed years later that he told Scott that the 15-foot right-to-left putt broke further than he thought because he recalled a similar putt Norman had years earlier.
He was spot on and pandemonium erupted in living rooms, golf clubs, pubs and offices across Australia.
“We like to think we’re the best at everything. Golf is a big sport at home, and this is the one thing in golf we hadn’t been able to achieve,” Scott said at the time.
“It’s amazing that it’s my destiny to be the first Australian to win. It’s incredible.”
The drought breaker also paid tribute to his childhood hero.
“Australia is a proud sporting nation, and this is one notch in the belt we never got,” Scott said at the time.
“It’s amazing that it came down to me today. But there’s one guy who inspired a nation of golfers, and that’s Greg Norman. He’s been incredible to me and all the great golfers. Part of this belongs to him.”
Nowadays, Scott believes he does not cast his mind back to that rainy playoff often enough.
“I probably should reflect on it a bit more. It’s all incredible memories,” he said.
“I think the level of my golf at that time was really outstanding. I also think about the determination I had around that time to make the most of my good play. I was pushing myself quite hard to get there and it happened at The Masters.”
“I’ve started sharing the Masters a little with my kids,” he added.
“They’ve caddied for me in the Par 3. They’ve attended now. They’re a little older. I haven’t sat down and watched The Masters with them, but they’re getting to that age where maybe they could sit through that.”
WORLD NO.1, MORE HEARTBREAK AND DEFYING FATHER TIME
Scott equalled his previous career high ranking of No.3 in the world after donning the green jacket.
He received a hero’s welcome back home in Australia that summer and almost treated his adoring fans to a hat-trick.
Only a Rory McIlroy birdie on the last hole of the Australian Open stopped Scott from a rare triple crown after winning the Australian Masters and the Australian PGA Championship.
Scott was in sublime form at the time with his Augusta triumph serving as the centrepiece of a five-year stretch where he registered a top ten in at least two majors each year.
Despite such a brilliant run, the fact he is not a multiple major winner has meant there was more heartbreak along the way.
The Claret Jug proved elusive once again at the 2013 Open.
He led by a shot heading into the back nine of the final round at Muirfield but lost by four shots to Phil Mickelson.
The Australian made four straight bogeys on the back nine, while Mickelson made four birdies in six holes to finish.
Scott would again finish in the top ten on the British links as well as at the US Open in the following two years.
“He could have won The Masters a couple of times. He could have won a couple of Opens,” Fox Golf expert Paul Gow told foxsports.com.au.
“It just didn’t fall his way.”
The near misses still sting.
When asked if he would trade his 100 straight majors accomplishment for a second green jacket, a Claret Jug, a Wannamaker Trophy or a US Open trophy, Scott said it was a no-brainer.
“Even with my maths I can figure the strike rate out,” he told Australian reporters with a laugh.
That missing second major was something Scott touched on when he charged into a top five finish by going 14-under par for the weekend at Trump National Doral last month.
“Part of me doesn’t want to be the guy yet who just has all these other things that aren’t based around winning events,” he said.
“I would rather win some stuff, and let’s celebrate winning the US Open than just playing in it. I feel like that, but, you know, I can give myself a pat on the back for hanging in there and playing all these events.
“My head’s still really in, like I should be able to compete and win these things, so maybe I don’t see it as much of an accomplishment.
“But I guess if you ask someone who is at two Majors it seems like a long way away. I’ll give myself a pat on the back, but I would love to still win.”
Despite multiple heartbreaks at The Open, it is actually at The Masters where Scott though he was most likely to become a two-time major champion.
“I’m actually a little surprised I haven’t really got it going around Augusta as well since winning,” he said.
“It’s not for a lack of trying. I thought I’d be able to get in contention a little bit more, but it’s proven difficult.
“Anyway, I’m going back for many more years and while I’m still fit and healthy, I think there’s chances for me.”
Scott has always made it clear that he plans to use his lifetime exemption at Augusta National for as long as possible.
The fact he has been a constant presence at the other three major championships has largely been down to the work he has done away from the golf course.
Scott hits the gym most days a week, including during tournaments.
A regiment involving “a lot of work with bands and cables” for speed, flexibility and strength has been the key.
As well as “a lot of ice baths and some physiotherapy” for recovery.
Having grown up on the Gold Coast, Scott also loves surfing but wishes he caught waves more often.
The thinking behind the way he has built and maintained his body his mightily impressive.
“Golfers hit so many balls on one side all the time,” Gow said.
“That basically leads into an ailment comes along – you can be putting too much pressure on your left leg or your right shoulder, or your neck turns the wrong way.
“I think Adam has done a great job over the years to balance his body.
“His left side is as strong as his right side.”
That work has also helped him not only keep up with the modern game but still hit the ball as long as most on the PGA Tour.
Scott believes that he is focus on the process and the day-to-day grind in the gym counteracts the current nature of the sport.
“Everything’s ‘Insta’ this and ‘Insta’ that,” he told Australian reporters.
“I see a big shift from when learning the game in my teenage years and looking up to professionals, consistency was revered.
“I think the way the game’s moved, the top players are still incredibly consistent, but we are all shooting for such a high standard. The reality is that for four to six weeks a year, everyone one has their best scores.
“Those who are slow and steady don’t win this race very much anymore.
“Consistency or longevity, I think, is less desirable today and maybe that’s why this milestone of mine is standing out.”
REJECTING LIV AND US OPEN REGRET
Scott’s strength in his resolve has always been a key trademark of his.
Following the Covid-19 pandemic, the state of men’s professional golf was in disarray with the emergence of LIV Golf.
In the early days in 2022, Scott was widely rumoured to be one of the breakaway league’s biggest targets.
Given his close relationship with former LIV chief executive Greg Norman and his admiration around the world, the Australian looked like the perfect fit.
But ultimately Scott’s desire to not risk his place in the majors led to him rejecting LIV’s advances and staying with the PGA Tour.
In fact, he dived even deeper into the tour he has called home for more than two decades by becoming a player director and attending White House meetings with US President Donald Trump last year as they tried to resolve the conflict between LIV and the PGA Tour.
Scott’s willingness to throw himself into the fire has certainly been appreciated by his colleagues.
“I look at Adam and I look at Justin Rose, two guys that are at a very similar stage in their careers and have probably had two very similar careers, and I look at a lot of their contemporaries or the people that they grew up playing with, and basically all of them chose one route, and these two guys chose another,” Rory McIlroy said before The Memorial Tournament earlier this month.
“I have just so much respect for them to — you know, it would have been very easy for them to take another path at the age that they were, but they both knuckled down and they have been rewarded for that.
“Justin’s had an amazing last couple of years. Adam continues to be one of the best players in the world. Yeah, I have so much respect for those two guys.”
Exactly a year ago, it felt like the golf gods were smiling on Scott once again.
After continuing to front up week after week, year after year, he was in contention at a major once again.
The veteran played his way into the final group in the final round of last year’s US Open.
He was one of the few players in the field to be under par after 54 holes and it seemingly came from nowhere.
“I felt like I had no momentum all year leading into that tournament and I felt like that was a real equaliser that week,” Scott told Australian reporters last week.
“No one playing Oakmont was going to have any momentum. It’s just so brutal. I was kind of shooting even par no matter what course I played. Which isn’t good most weeks on tour, but at Oakmont it is.”
On the final day, however, the heavens opened and drowned Scott’s chances.
Those who got out earlier enjoyed a massive advantage as J.J. Spaun went onto win by holing a monster birdie putt on the 18th green.
Scott felt hard done by.
After a weather delay, he shot seven-over par in 11 holes of rain and darkness.
He ultimately lost to Spaun by seven shots.
Scott believed they should not have been out there as the course was saturated.
The pivotal moment was when a waterlogged lie on the 11th hole led to his ball flying over the back of the green and he made double bogey.
Scott wishes he had handled that instance differently.
“I feel in the moment I was like, ‘I’m not going to be the guy complaining.’ But looking back on it, of course, I think I should have,” Scott told Golf Digest at The Memorial earlier this month.
“Maybe not complain but spoken up after my shot at 11.”
Playing partner Sam Burns complained at one point about his ball being in a puddle on the fairway, but it fell on deaf ears.
Post-round, Scott received a text from USGA officials.
“I think they were just checking my temperature that I wasn’t steaming,” Scott recalled.
“I didn’t reply.”
COUNTDOWN TO THE CENTURY
The previous US Open at Pinehurst was when the prospect of 100 straight majors truly came onto Scott’s radar.
“It was brought up in the media because it was questionable whether I was going to make it or not,” he recalled to Australian reporters last week.
“I went to the qualifying and ended up being the first alternate, but I ended up getting in off my ranking anyway.
“It was a strange year where the world ranking section, I think the Monday of the tournament was the cut-off.
“Someone picked up that it was my 92nd consecutive, so it’s been a little bit of a countdown since then.”
The countdown has gone into overdrive since his brilliant weekend at Trump National Doral last month.
Scott’s tie for fourth that week ensured his world ranking – currently at 49 – would guarantee him a start in both the PGA Championship and the US Open.
Reports had circulated that the USGA were considering offering the Australian a special exemption to guarantee him a place in the field.
That never would have been Scott’s style.
He would not have been comfortable with a handout, nor was he overly comfortable when he and Nicklaus came together at The Memorial for a photo shoot to celebrate the milestone.
Discussing it with Australian media, Scott clearly felt awkward standing alongside the 18-time major champion, but the mood was quickly lightened.
“He kind of congratulated me,” Scott said with a chuckle.
He told Nicklaus that his record is “pretty safe”, and the 86-year-old simply replied: “I know”.
“Maybe that’s good motivation for me to win one or two more majors and I can extend this out,” Scott added again with a laugh and a smirk.
“Try and catch him for another 11 years or something.”
It is easy to imagine what else Nicklaus might have had to say given his answer when asked about Scott during his press conference at The Memorial – which he hosts.
“To be prepared and to be able to stay healthy so you can play is quite an achievement,” Nicklaus said.
“Adam has kept himself in shape. He plays well. He’s 45 now, so you know, he’s got a few more years to play in him.
“Whether he’ll get 40 more (majors), I don’t know.
“Anyway, he’s been a good player, and he’s been right there in a lot of tournaments.
“He’s had the opportunity to win a lot more than he has.”
WHAT’S STILL TO COME?
That last line is what still drives Scott.
He wants to win more, whether that is in majors or elsewhere.
The Presidents Cup is one his desperately wants to win.
The Australian holds the record for the most appearances in the biennial event with 11 but is yet to taste victory with the International team.
He is currently in the automatic places to be on countryman Geoff Ogilvy’s team this September in Chicago.
“I think I can play for another couple years. I’ve come this far. If I can play in a couple more years and contribute a point, then I’d love to be on a winning Presidents Cup team,” Scott said after the 2024 edition in Canada.
He has long been touted as the ideal International team captain when the tournament returns to Australia at Kingston Heath in 2028.
He may still be playing at age 48 and could replicate Tiger Woods’ efforts as a playing captain at Royal Melbourne in 2019.
Another captaincy opportunity on his radar maybe for the Australian team at the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games – if he is not playing having never competed at Olympic level before.
It is obvious why Scott is the perfect candidate for leadership positions when you speak to those who get to witness what happens behind the scenes.
“He 100 per cent goes out of his way any time there’s an Aussie kid playing in any tournament,” Golf Australia’s general manager of high-performance Brad James told foxsports.com.au.
“I’ll talk to (his father) Phil and say, ‘hey Phil, there’s a young guy in the field this week’ and the response is ‘done’. Not even a question asked.
“Those stories you never hear about them and that’s the way Adam operates.”
“He’s phenomenal. He doesn’t get any recognition for it, and he does it without any self-promotion,” James added.
“He’s always there to have a practice round with the guys and to offer them support by sharing his challenges.
“He’s extraordinary on what he does with the young kids coming through the system.
“We couldn’t be thankful enough for what he does behind the scenes.”
That generosity extends away from golf too.
“He has the Adam Scott Foundation that’s huge here in Australia that really helps out people in need and kids in need that need a better education,” Fox Golf expert Paul Gow told foxsports.com.au.
“He does that under the radar. No one ever really talks about it, but I think it’s incredible.”
As for on the golf course, Gow believes Scott has plenty more to give.
“Why wouldn’t he go to 50 something?” he said.
“Vijay Singh, who’s had so many body issues, can play on the PGA Tour still at times.
“It wouldn’t surprise me if Adam Scott played on the PGA Tour until he was 55 if he wanted to.”
PGA Tour events are not what get Scott out of bed in the morning, however.
He clearly wants another major.
Phil Mickelson won the PGA Championship at age 50, so Scott can dare to dream.
He was disappointed with missing the cut in the second major of the year last month.
But Scott found something with a tied 12th finish at The Memorial almost a fortnight ago.
He is brimming with confidence, saying Shinnecock is “right up my alley” because “there’s definitely shades of some Melbourne Sandbelt around there”.
Perhaps the golf gods have been waiting for the perfect moment to add a second triumph to Scott’s script.
ADAM SCOTT’S RESULTS IN 100 STRAIGHT MAJORS STREAK
2001
The Open – T47
PGA Championship – MC
2002
The Masters – T9
US Open – MC
The Open – MC
PGA Championship – T23
2003
The Masters – T23
US Open – MC
The Open – MC
PGA Championship – T23
2004
The Masters – MC
US Open – MC
The Open – T42
PGA Championship – T9
2005
The Masters – T33
US Open – T28
The Open – T34
PGA Championship – T40
2006
The Masters – T27
US Open – T21
The Open – T8
PGA Championship – T3
2007
The Masters – T27
US Open – MC
The Open – T27
PGA Championship – T12
2008
The Masters – T25
US Open – T26
The Open – T16
PGA Championship – MC
2009
The Masters – MC
US Open – T36
The Open – MC
PGA Championship – MC
2010
The Masters – T18
US Open – MC
The Open – T27
PGA Championship – T39
2011
The Masters – T2
US Open – MC
The Open – T25
PGA Championship – 7
2012
The Masters – T8
US Open – T15
The Open – 2
PGA Championship – T11
2013
The Masters – 1
US Open – T45
The Open – T3
PGA Championship – T5
2014
The Masters – T14
US Open – T9
The Open – T5
PGA Championship – T15
2015
The Masters – T38
US Open – T4
The Open – T10
PGA Championship – MC
2016
The Masters – T42
US Open – T18
The Open – T43
PGA Championship – T18
2017
The Masters – T9
US Open – MC
The Open – T22
PGA Championship – T61
2018
The Masters – T32
US Open – MC
The Open – T17
PGA Championship – 3
2019
The Masters – T18
PGA Championship – T8
US Open – T7
The Open – MC
2020
The Masters – T34
PGA Championship – T22
US Open – T38
The Open – cancelled because of the Covid-19 pandemic
2021
The Masters – 54
PGA Championship – MC
US Open – T35
The Open – T46
2022
The Masters – T48
PGA Championship – MC
US Open – T14
The Open – T15
2023
The Masters – T39
PGA Championship – T29
US Open – MC
The Open – T33
2024
The Masters – T22
PGA Championship – MC
US Open – T32
The Open – T10
2025
The Masters – MC
PGA Championship – T19
US Open – T12
The Open – MC
2026
The Masters – T24
PGA Championship – MC
#Adessonews seleziona nella rete articoli di particolare interesse.
Se vuoi leggere l’articolo completo clicca sul seguente link
Source link







