Save for an odd name here or there, recent iterations of The Open have produced leaderboards filled with the who’s who of golf. Scottie Scheffler and Xander Schauffele both won their second major titles of the season by raising the Claret Jug these last two years, as the first three major championships of the season provide breadcrumbs for what to expect at the fourth.While the courses may rotate and the weather may change, quality remains the throughline in major championships, and even more so at an Open, where physical and (more importantly) mental limitations are tested.Royal Birkdale has crowned 10 worthy champions in its history as an Open venue. The list is hitter after hitter, those golfers where only one name is required to remember them: Palmer, Watson, Trevino. An 11th will be added to it this week from a field of 156 men, finalized on Monday when Joe Dean advanced through last chance qualifying.While Birkdale has crowned titans, it has also left room for Cinderella stories to fill in the rest. Chris Wood in 2008 and Justin Rose a decade prior both come to mind. And both ends of the spectrum are likely to rise to the forefront as only four days of major championship golf remain out in front of us before the clock resets, and everyone starts the countdown for April to roll around.
Let’s get into the field at the 154th Open at Royal Birkdale and the top 26 players out of the 156-man field.2026 Open field, ranked1. Scottie Scheffler (Won 2025): Just overwhelmed the field and Royal Portrush en route to his Claret Jug last season. Not quite the same form as he was 365 days ago, but Scheffler is still the world’s best. He has been on the first page of the leaderboard at some point in all three majors this season, though he has yet to cross the finish line. Royal Birkdale will be an execution test, and that may play into the world No. 1’s hands even with the missed cut last week.2. Rory McIlroy (Won 2014): He has been in form during early rounds these last few months but seems to stumble once the weekend rolls around. That was the case at the U.S. Open and in the third round of the off-and-on Scottish Open, but there is enough good to suggest he will be a factor. McIlroy has a win and five other top-10 finishes in his last 10 Open appearances and drove it well at The Renaissance Club.
3. Matt Fitzpatrick (T4 in 2025): Fell short at the Scottish Open with a disappointing weekend, but the consistency and ceiling leave no doubt that he is at least the third-best player in the world at the moment. Iron play has been exceptional, and although the short game left a little to be desired, Fitzpatrick is firmly in form. He sniffed contention at the U.S. Open last month and is on the cusp of grabbing major No. 2.4. Tommy Fleetwood (2nd in 2019): Quietly has five top-15 finishes in a row since missing the cut at the PGA Championship. Fleetwood’s floor continues to put him in elite company, but he will be tested in more ways than one this week as he receives the hometown treatment in Southport. In his last seven Opens, he has five top-20 results, but this time should only improve on that mark as he improves throughout the bag and arrives with a much sharper short game than years past.
Homeward bound. Thank you Scotland!! pic.twitter.com/Yi3CF38CcJ
— Tommy Fleetwood (@TommyFleetwood1) July 12, 2026