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Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Why Royal Birkdale's Brown Fairways Will Make the 2026 Open Championship Unforgettable


(SOUTHPORT, England)
— At The Open Championship, plenty of things can change without altering the tournament's identity. The skies can be bright blue or wrapped in gray clouds. The clubhouse can be built from sandstone or draped in ivy. Even the bunkers can feature different edges and still remain just as punishing.

But one element changes everything.

The color of the fairways.

When an Open Championship course turns from emerald green to shades of gold, tan and brown, the championship transforms. The ball stops behaving the way modern golfers expect, and suddenly imagination becomes just as important as power.

Royal Birkdale has reached that point.

After weeks of dry weather across England's northwest coast, the fairways have baked into the same firm, fast conditions that produced some of the greatest Open Championships of the modern era. Think St. Andrews in 2022, Carnoustie in 2018 or Hoylake in 2006, where Tiger Woods famously carved his way around the course with stingers that seemed to roll forever.

This is links golf at its finest.

Just a few miles away at Royal Lytham & St. Annes, where Cameron Smith and Lucas Herbert practiced last week, the turf has taken on the same golden-brown appearance. If the dry weather continues, even next month's Women's Open could be played on similarly firm terrain.

For this week's championship, though, Royal Birkdale is already delivering exactly what Open fans hope to see.

Firm fairways expose every weakness.

Golfers who struggle to control their ball often become uncomfortable when the ground is this hard. A shot that lands perfectly can take one extra bounce and race into thick fescue or a deep bunker.

The best links players, however, embrace the challenge.

Instead of simply firing wedges into greens, they're forced to hit knockdown irons, use slopes creatively, judge dozens of yards of rollout and even putt from well off the green. Caddies become even more valuable, calculating not only carry distances but how far every shot will release once it lands.

It's golf that rewards creativity rather than just athleticism.

The conditions also wear players down mentally. With 156 competitors spread across long summer days, competitors will spend hours walking pavement-hard fairways while constantly calculating unpredictable bounces. Every shot demands complete attention.

Modern professional golf has conditioned fans to admire perfectly green courses. Augusta National has become famous for its immaculate shades of green every April, while many PGA Tour venues encourage high, soft approach shots that stop quickly.

The Open asks different questions.

Here, what happens after the ball lands often matters more than what happens in the air.

That's what makes links golf so captivating. Every bounce creates suspense. A perfectly struck shot can become a disaster—or an average shot can receive a fortunate kick.

Royal Birkdale offers the best of both worlds. It's plenty long enough to challenge today's power hitters, but its firm playing surfaces force players to think strategically rather than simply overpower the course.

Several holes—including Nos. 5, 13, 17 and 18—should provide some of the week's most fascinating bounces, rewarding golfers willing to use the ground instead of fighting it.

Even England's Aaron Rai couldn't believe how dramatically the course changed.

"It was quite lush when I came here and relatively soft as well, fairways and greens," Rai said Tuesday. "So it was quite a surprise playing a few holes on Sunday, seeing it as brown as it was in the space of, I think, 10 days."

The weather forecast suggests more sunshine, more wind and, most importantly, no significant rain.

For golf fans, that's excellent news.

Because while green may be beautiful, nothing produces a more entertaining Open Championship than fairways baked brown by a British summer. Every bounce becomes an adventure, every shot a puzzle, and every round a reminder that links golf was never meant to be predictable.

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