Jackson who?

Jackson who?

Maiden visit to Europe results in first links experience — leads after round one at Royal Birkdale.

Jackson Suber of the United States tees off on the first hole during Day One

Southport, England. The depth of talent throughout pro golf globally has intensified throughout each year of the 21st century. Credit the career of Tiger Woods for providing such an incentive for young aspiring golfers to enter the competitive arena. Indicative of that ongoing trend is the wide variety of players and countries on display at this year’s Open Championship.

Familiarity with links golf has proven to be a clear asset for many through the years of The Open but the outright leader at the 154th Open is an American named Jason Suber.

The 26-year-old had never been to Europe until this week and to add to his newness is his lack of any prior experience in playing a links course. In fact, this week’s event marks only his third appearance in a major championship. He competed in last month’s US Open at Shinnecock Hills and missed the cut.

Suber played collegiately at the University of Mississippi and was a standout player there. He turned professional in 2022 and followed the predictable pathway that many aspiring golf talents take in working their way up to the PGA Tour via a successful stint competing on the Korn Ferry Tour and earning his Tour card.

Jackson Suber of the United States walks off the 18th green after finishing his round during Day One of the The 154th Open Championship at Royal Birkdale
Jackson Suber (Oisin Keniry/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

Interestingly, Suber’s 65 was scored during the more turbulent wind conditions prevalent in the afternoon period of round one.

Ranked 115th in the world, Suber’s golf form on the PGA Tour has seen a steady rise of consistency. After a slow start in 2026 that featured four missed cuts in eight events, Suber raised the level of his play with a fourth-place finish at The CJ Cup Byron Nelson.

Two other high finishes have been accomplished since then – a T4 at the RBC Canadian Open and a T6 at the recently held John Deere Classic. It was his high finish in the Canadian Open that provided him entry into The Open Championship.

Suber’s opening nine holes proved to be a wash between two birdies and two bogies. But when he reached the inward half, his momentum got started with birdies at the 10th and 11th holes.

“Things just really started going after the birdie on 10. I just felt like the momentum was really in my favor,” said Suber. “Just kind of kept the ball in good spots and didn’t put much pressure on my game to make pars.”

154th Open at Royal Birkdale logo

A lone bogey occurred at the par-4 13th but that was quickly righted with a stellar finish that included two birdies at 14 and 16 and the highlight of the round scoring an eagle at the par-5 17th.

His opening round of 65 leads England’s Daniel Brown and South Korea’s Sungjae Im by one. Nine golfers are another shot back at 67 — includingtwo-time US Open winner Bryson DeChambeau. World number one player Scottie Scheffler is in a large group another shot back at 68.

What did Suber know of Royal Birkdale before actually playing the course?

“I think I watched a YouTube video on every hole at Birkdale on Friday last week or Thursday, but besides that, yeah, just — I have a stats guy that’s helped me, of course, so just knowing that the pot bunkers are no good and stay out of those.”

A Suber victory would be reminiscent of another equally unknown player — Ben Curtis who captured the Claret Jug in his first major appearance when winning The Open at Royal St. George’s in 2003.

Suber is well aware such discussion is premature at this point. He knows the demands of links course can quickly change but his anxiety is more acute with another aspect in coming to the UK for the first time.

When asked if he had ever driven on the other side of the road, Suber replied he had not done so. When pressed why not — his matter-of-fact retort was succinct and on point — “Because I’m trying to make it here for four days.”

All eyes will now be watching if Suber can avoid a debilitating golf crash over the next 54 holes. A steady hand and resolute discipline will be certainly called upon.

Thisa & Thata

• Following Louis Oosthuizen’s withdrawal there are 14 former Champions playing at Royal Birkdale this year, two fewer than last year at Royal Portrush.

• With the last four places in the field claimed through the Genesis Scottish Open and the Last Chance Qualifier there are still players from 28 countries in the field for The 154th Open.

• Louis Oosthuizen’s withdrawal did not affect the numbers as his place was taken by fellow South African, Aldrich Potgieter. The countries are (number of players in brackets): Argentina (1), Australia (7), Austria (2), Belgium (1), Canada (2), Chile (1), China (1), Colombia (1), Denmark (3), England (21), Finland (1), France (6), Germany (2), Ireland (4), Italy (2), Japan (8), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (3), Northern Ireland (3), Norway (3), Scotland (2), South Africa (8), South Korea (6), Spain (6), Sweden (5), Thailand (1), USA (54) and Zimbabwe (1). Jackson Suber 65 (-5)

• Jackson Suber is playing in The Open for the first time and is leading after the first round. Four of the past five Opens have been led, or jointly-led, after the first round by a player competing in their first Open (2022 – Cameron Young, 2023 – Christo Lamprecht, 2024 – Dan Brown, 2026 – Jackson Suber).

• Suber’s round featured an eagle at the par-five 17th and six birdies, playing the second nine in 31 (five-under-par). Dan Brown and Sungjae Im 66 (-4) Playing in his third Open, Dan Brown is towards the top of the leaderboard for the second time after the first round.

Daniel Brown of England plays a shot on the third hole during Day One
Daniel Brown (Stuart Franklin/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

• Brown led in 2024 at Royal Troon with a 65 in the first round. Brown’s round today featured seven birdies. Brown finished tied-tenth at Royal Troon. Sungjae Im is playing in his sixth Open and equaled his best round with a 66 (previously scored at Royal Troon in the third round of 2024). Im finished tied-seventh at Royal Troon.

• Bryson DeChambeau’s first round of 67 is his fourth consecutive round under 70 in The Open (second round 2025 to first round 2026). DeChambeau’s last four rounds in The Open of 65, 68, 64, 67 add up to 264, which would equal the lowest winning total in any previous staging of The Open (Henrik Stenson, 2016 at Royal Troon). In his ninth appearance in the Championship, DeChambeau’s round of 67 is his lowest first round in The Open.

• Francesco Molinari 67 (-3) sits in the group of nine players at three-under-par. The 2018 Champion scored his best round in The Open since the third round of 2022 in his 18th appearance.

• Scottie Scheffler’s round of 68 was the lowest score by a defending Champion in the first round since Zach Johnson’s opening 67 in the first round of 2016. Scheffler is on a current streak of five consecutive rounds under 70 in The Open (first round 2025 to first round 2026). The record for most consecutive rounds under 70 is seven by Ernie Els (first round 1993 to third round 1994).

Scottie Scheffler of the United States tees off on the fourth hole during Day One
Scottie Scheffler (Stuart Franklin/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

• The Champion in 2022, today’s round of 68 is Collin Morikawa’s first round under 70 in The Open since his triumph at Royal St George’s.

• Royal Birkdale member Matthew Baldwin hit the first tee shot of The 154th Open at 6:35 this morning. Baldwin qualified through Final Qualifying at Dundonald (69, 71 – 140, -4) finishing in joint-second place and is making his fourth appearance in The Open (first since 2019). Baldwin’s best performance in The Open came on his debut in 2012 at Royal Lytham and St Annes when he finished tied-23rd. Baldwin scored a two-over-par 72 in the first round.

• Hardest /Easiest Hole: The hardest hole of the first round was the 6th with a stroke average of 4.353. There were ten birdies, 89 pars, 50 bogeys, six double-bogeys and one other, a seven for Matthew Jordan. The easiest hole of the day was the par-5 17th with a stroke average of 4.699, one of six holes that played under par (the 2nd, 5th, 9th, 10th, 14th and 17th).

• There were three eagles, 62 birdies, 72 pars, 17 bogeys and two double-bogeys on the 17th. The eagles were scored by Jackson Suber, Tom Sloman and Harry Hall.

Jackson Suber of the United States tees off on the first hole during Day One of the The 154th Open Championship at Royal Birkdale
Jackson Suber (Stuart Kerr/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

• Bogey-free rounds: Ryo Hisatsune (68) and Kristoffer Reitan (69) were the only players that managed to complete bogey-free rounds in the first round of The 154th Open. There were 14 bogey-free rounds in total in The Open at Royal Birkdale in 2017.

• Longest Drive, Fairways Hit and Greens in Regulation: Alistair Docherty averaged the longest drive in the first round with 364.1 yards. Drives are measured on the 14th and the 17th. Gary Woodland hit the longest drive of the day with a drive of 372.4 yards on the 14th.

• Scottie Scheffler was at the top for driving accuracy in the first round with 13 of 14 fairways hit.

• Alex Fitzpatrick was the most accurate in the greens in regulation statistic hitting 17 of the 18 greens.

• Jackson Suber was the best putter in the first round, taking 24 putts over the 18 holes, an average of 1.33 putts per green.

• Amateur Leaderboard:

Player Score
Lev Grinberg 71 (+1)
Alejandro de Castro Piera
73 (+3)
Mason Howell 73 (+3)
Jack Buchanan 73 (+3)
Tim Wiedemeyer
73 (+3)
David Howard 74 (+4)
Fifa Laopakdee 75 (+5)
Mateo Pulcini 75 (+5)
Nevill Ruiter 76 (+6)
Stuart Grehan 77 (+7)

• Eventual Champions’ Positions: After the first round getting off to a good start at The Open is nearly a must. In the 122 Opens to have been held since the format was changed to 72-holes in 1892, 113 Champions have been within five strokes of the lead after the first round. Only nine Champions have not been within five strokes of the lead after the first round (JH Taylor 1895 – six strokes behind the lead; Harry Vardon 1896 – eleven behind; James Braid 1906 – six behind; George Duncan 1920 – eight behind; Walter Hagen 1929 – six behind; Gary Player 1959 – seven behind; Peter Thomson 1965 – six behind; Seve Ballesteros 1979 – eight behind; Mark O’Meara 1998 – seven behind). Harry Vardon’s comeback from eleven strokes behind after the first round is the biggest of these comebacks by a Champion.

• In the last 45 Opens, only one player has come back from more than five strokes behind after the first round (O’Meara 1998). Similarly, of those 122 Opens, only nine players have won The Open after not being in the top 20 at the end of the first round (George Duncan 1920 – tied 24th after the first round; Gary Player 1959 – tied 40th; Peter Thomson 1965 – tied 23rd; Mark Calcavecchia 1989 – tied 25th; Ian Baker Finch 1991 – tied 29th; Mark O’Meara 1998 – tied 62nd; Ernie Els 2002 – tied 23rd; Todd Hamilton 2004 – tied-40th; Pádraig Harrington 2008 – tied-38th). Mark O’Meara’s comeback from tied-62nd is the biggest comeback in terms of position on the leaderboard. 26 of the 122 Champions since 1892 have been in the lead or joint-lead after the first round. The last player to do so was Jordan Spieth at Royal Birkdale in 2017.

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Pos.PlayerTo ParR1
1Jackson Suber-565
T2Sungjae Im-466
T2Dan Brown-466
T4Thomas Detry-367
T4Robert MacIntyre-367
T4Francesco Molinari-367
T4Alex Smalley-367
T4Bryson DeChambeau-367
T4Ryan Gerard-367
T4MJ Daffue-367
T4Pierceson Coody-367
T4Cameron Young-367
T13Henrik Stenson-268
T13Jordan Smith-268
T13Victor Perez-268
T13Joakim Lagergren-268
T13Ryo Hisatsune-268
T13Scottie Scheffler-268
T13Si Woo Kim-268
T13Nick Taylor-268
T13Sepp Straka-268
T13Bud Cauley-268
T13Collin Morikawa-268
T24Alex Fitzpatrick-169
T24Matthew Southgate-169
T24Ben Griffin-169
T24Tyrrell Hatton-169
T24Tommy Fleetwood-169
T24Jon Rahm-169
T24Antoine Rozner-169
T24Matt Wallace-169
T24Laurie Canter-169
T24Kurt Kitayama-169
T24Shaun Norris-169
T24Keegan Bradley-169
T24Aldrich Potgieter-169
T24Kristoffer Reitan-169
T24Shane Lowry-169
T39Andy SullivanPar70
T39Michael ThorbjornsenPar70
T39Min Woo LeePar70
T39Russell HenleyPar70
T39Viktor HovlandPar70
T39Justin ThomasPar70
T39Kazuma KoboriPar70
T39Jack McDonaldPar70
T39Eugenio ChacarraPar70
T39Sami ValimakiPar70
T39Tom KimPar70
T39Johnny KeeferPar70
T39Jayden SchaperPar70
T39Lucas HerbertPar70
T39Chris GotterupPar70
T39J.J. SpaunPar70
T39Brooks KoepkaPar70
T39Jacob BridgemanPar70
T39Cameron JohnPar70
T39Marcus PlunkettPar70
T59Max Homa+171
T59Rickie Fowler+171
T59Jake Knapp+171
T59Tom McKibbin+171
T59Liv Grinberg(a)+171
T59Hennie Du Plessis+171
T59Jose Luis Ballester+171
T59Travis Smyth+171
T59Sam Stevens+171
T59Akshay Bhatia+171
T59Rasmus Højgaard+171
T59Alex Noren+171
T59Maverick McNealy+171
T59Thomas Sloman+171
T59Ryutaro Nagano+171
T59John Parry+171
T59Sahith Theegala+171
T59Bernd Wiesberger+171
T59Corey Conners+171
T59Billy Horschel+171
T59J.T. Poston+171
T59Aaron Rai+171
T59Ludvig Åberg+171
T59Xander Schauffele+171
T59Patrick Cantlay+171
T59Nico Echavarria+171
T85Matthew Baldwin+272
T85Daniel Hillier+272
T85Ryan Fox+272
T85Joe Dean+272
T85Angel Ayora+272
T85Kota Kaneko+272
T85Hideki Matsuyama+272
T85Caleb Surratt+272
T85Frederic LaCroix+272
T85Michael Brennan+272
T85Keith Mitchell+272
T85Haotong Li+272
T85Marco Penge+272
T85Michael Hollick+272
T85Patrick Reed+272
T85Adam Scott+272
T85Nicolai Højgaard+272
T85Rory McIlroy+272
T85Matt Fitzpatrick+272
T85Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen+272
T85Sam Bairstow+272
T106Michael Kim+373
T106Andrew Novak+373
T106David Duval+373
T106Harris English+373
T106Jason Day+373
T106Jordan Spieth+373
T106Alejandro De Castro Piera(a)+373
T106Cameron Smith+373
T106Darren Clarke+373
T106Casey Jarvis+373
T106Mason Howell(a)+373
T106Keita Nakajima+373
T106Jesper Svensson+373
T106Jack Buchanan(a)+373
T106Sam Burns+373
T106Wyndham Clark+373
T106Tim Wiedemeyer(a)+373
T106Peter Uihlein+373
T106Alistair Docherty+373
T106Naoyuki Kataoka+373
T106Bard Bjoernevikl Skogen+373
T106Kazuki Higa+373
T128Martin Couvra+474
T128Dan Bradbury+474
T128Stewart Cink+474
T128Brian Harman+474
T128David Puig+474
T128David Howard(a)+474
T128Francesco Laporta+474
T135James Nicholas+575
T135Fifa Laopakdee(a)+575
T135Mateo Pulcini(a)+575
T135Scott Vincent+575
T135Justin Rose+575
T135Tiger Christensen+575
T135Matt McCarty+575
T142Ren Yonezawa+676
T142Eric Cole+676
T142Max Greyserman+676
T142Joaquin Niemann+676
T142Daniel Berger+676
T147Matthew Jordan+777
T147Jeong Woo Ham+777
T147Stuart Grehan(a)+777
T147Adrien Saddier+777
T147Harry Hall+777
T147Jiho Yang+777
T147Nevill Ruiter(a)+777
154Gary Woodland+878
155Austen Truslow+979
156Padraig Harrington+1080

M. James Ward

A long-time member of both the GWAA and MGWA. The 68-year-old has covered all facets in golf since 1980 — including reporting on over 100 major championships and 13 Ryder Cup matches. His writings have appeared in various outlets. On a personal level, has played over 2,000 courses globally and is lead reviewer for Top 100 Golf Courses. 

Previously served for 17 years as national course rating panelist for Golf Digest. Has also personally competed in USGA Championships. Resides in the metro New York City area with his wife Celeste. Favorite quote paraphrased for golf — “You are what your golf score says you are.”

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Updated: July 17, 2026