Scottie Scheffler, Padraig Harrington
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Royal Portrush, Pádraig Harrington and British Open
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Two-time champion Padraig Harrington says he will be "very nervous" hitting the opening tee shot at the 153rd Open Championship on Thursday but does not want to be viewed as a "ceremonial golfer".
Two-time major winner Padraig Harrington will have the honour of striking the first tee shot when the 153rd Open Championship returns to Royal Portrush on Thursday, launching golf's oldest major back onto Northern Ireland's dramatic County Antrim coastline.
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Tennis World on MSNHarrington reveals surprising emotions before first shot: I expected the nervesGolf fans shared their excitement before the start of this year's The Open Championship. The moment that attracted the special attention of fans was Padraig Harrington's first shot at the 154th Open Championship. The Irish golfer left a deep mark by participating in this prestigious tournament, even winning twice.
Such a sustained gloriously golden period was barely imaginable when Harrington was bogeying Muirfield's last hole to miss out on a four-man shootout for the title 23 years ago. At that stage Portrush native Fred Daly, the Open champion of 1947, had provided the island of Ireland's only major success.
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The job of opening these majors tends to go to players of an older vintage, guys once great who aren’t about to threaten the leaderboard come the thick end of the four days. Harrington’s competitive n
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Padraig Harrington came out on top of a major championship that felt more like match play, closing his final round with seven straight pars at the U.S.
The Don Harrington Discovery Center is hosting a supply drive to gather materials for its outreach programs, field trips and public demonstrations.
The Irishman is a two-time winner of The Open - and believes it is bigger and better than ever after matching the U.S. majors