Click arrow to expand 2022 Open Championship odds via BetMGM
2022 British Open Odds
Golfer | Odds |
---|---|
Rory McIlroy | +1000 |
Xander Schauffele | +1400 |
Jordan Spieth | +1600 |
Jon Rahm | +1800 |
Matt Fitzpatrick | +1800 |
Scottie Scheffler | +1800 |
Justin Thomas | +2000 |
Cameron Smith | +2500 |
Collin Morikawa | +2500 |
Patrick Cantlay | +2500 |
Shane Lowry | +2500 |
Will Zalatoris | +2500 |
Dustin Johnson | +3300 |
Tommy Fleetwood | +3300 |
Tyrrell Hatton | +3300 |
Brooks Koepka | +4000 |
Louis Oosthuizen | +4000 |
Sam Burns | +4000 |
Hideki Matsuyama | +4000 |
Viktor Hovland | +4000 |
Joaquin Niemann | +5000 |
Max Homa | +5000 |
Tony Finau | +5000 |
Bryson DeChambeau | +6600 |
Justin Rose | +6600 |
Tiger Woods | +6600 |
Sungjae Im | +6600 |
Seamus Power | +8000 |
Adam Scott | +8000 |
Corey Conners | +8000 |
Gary Woodland | +8000 |
Marc Leishman | +8000 |
Patrick Reed | +8000 |
Ryan Fox | +8000 |
Cameron Young | +8000 |
Abraham Ancer | +10000 |
Billy Horschel | +10000 |
Christiaan Bezuidenhout | +10000 |
Robert Macintyre | +10000 |
Sergio Garcia | +10000 |
Keegan Bradley | +12500 |
Paul Casey | +12500 |
Webb Simpson | +12500 |
Mito Pereira | +12500 |
Thomas Pieters | +12500 |
Aaron Wise | +12500 |
J.T. Poston | +12500 |
Brian Harman | +15000 |
Danny Willett | +15000 |
Jason Kokrak | +15000 |
Kevin Kisner | +15000 |
Lee Westwood | +15000 |
Lucas Herbert | +15000 |
Russell Henley | +15000 |
Victor Perez | +15000 |
Cameron Tringale | +15000 |
Harold Varner III | +15000 |
Talor Gooch | +15000 |
Adrian Meronk | +15000 |
Haotong Li | +15000 |
Joo-hyung Kim | +15000 |
Jordan Smith | +15000 |
Keith Mitchell | +15000 |
Sebastian Munoz | +15000 |
Sahith Theegala | +15000 |
Kurt Kitayama | +15000 |
Francesco Molinari | +15000 |
Emiliano Grillo | +20000 |
Harris English | +20000 |
Ian Poulter | +20000 |
Padraig Harrington | +20000 |
Phil Mickelson | +20000 |
Sam Horsfield | +20000 |
K.H. Lee | +20000 |
Tom Hoge | +20000 |
Kevin Na | +20000 |
Chris Kirk | +20000 |
Dean Burmester | +20000 |
Luke List | +20000 |
Si Woo Kim | +20000 |
Bernd Wiesberger | +20000 |
Erik van Rooyen | +20000 |
Min Woo Lee | +20000 |
Henrik Stenson | +25000 |
Richard Bland | +25000 |
Stewart Cink | +25000 |
Thomas Detry | +25000 |
Adri Arnaus | +25000 |
Mackenzie Hughes | +25000 |
Nicolai Hojgaard | +25000 |
Pablo Larrazabal | +25000 |
Zach Johnson | +25000 |
Jamie Donaldson | +25000 |
Brandon Wu | +25000 |
Dylan Frittelli | +30000 |
Guido Migliozzi | +30000 |
Alexander Bjork | +30000 |
Jason Scrivener | +30000 |
Justin Harding | +30000 |
Laurie Canter | +30000 |
Marcus Armitage | +30000 |
Matthew Jordan | +30000 |
Richard Mansell | +30000 |
Sepp Straka | +30000 |
Thirston Lawrence | +30000 |
Wyndham Clark | +30000 |
Fabrizio Zanotti | +30000 |
Trey Mullinax | +35000 |
Garrick Higgo | +35000 |
Shaun Norris | +40000 |
Shugo Imahira | +40000 |
John Catlin | +40000 |
Ashley Chesters | +50000 |
Brad Kennedy | +50000 |
Ernie Els | +50000 |
Kazuki Higa | +50000 |
Keita Nakajima | +50000 |
Marco Penge | +50000 |
Min-kyu Kim | +50000 |
Scott Vincent | +50000 |
Sihwan Kim | +50000 |
Takumi Kanaya | +50000 |
Yuto Katsuragawa | +50000 |
Zander Lombard | +50000 |
David Law | +50000 |
Anthony Quayle | +75000 |
Ben Campbell | +75000 |
Chan Kim | +75000 |
Min-Gyu Cho | +75000 |
Sadom Kaewkanjana | +75000 |
Aaron Jarvis | +100000 |
Aldrich Potgieter | +100000 |
Alex Wrigley | +100000 |
Barclay Brown | +100000 |
Darren Clarke | +100000 |
David Carey | +100000 |
Dimitros Papadatos | +100000 |
Filiippo Celli | +100000 |
Jack Floydd | +100000 |
Jamie Rutherford | +100000 |
Jediah Morgan | +100000 |
John Daly | +100000 |
John Parry | +100000 |
Jorge Fernandez Valdes | +100000 |
Justin De Los Santos | +100000 |
Justin Leonard | +100000 |
Lars van Meijel | +100000 |
Matthew Griffin | +100000 |
Oliver Farr | +100000 |
Paul Lawrie | +100000 |
Robert Dinwiddie | +100000 |
Ronan Mullarney | +100000 |
Sam Bairstow | +100000 |
Matt Ford | +150000 |
David Duval | +200000 |
Mark Calcavecchia | +200000 |
Stephen Dodd | +200000 |
Golf's final major of 2022 will be a special treat, hosted by one of the best courses in the world.
St. Andrews will host the 150th Open Championship this year, the fifth time it will have done so since the turn of the century. Tiger Woods has two wins here, Louis Oosthuizen has a win and runner-up, and Zach Johnson won a three-man playoff in 2015, the last time the Claret Jug was awarded at the historic course.
Rory McIlroy enters as the betting favorite, and he does so with good reason. The Northern Irishman has been red hot this summer, although he can't match Xander Schauffele's two wins in as many starts. Schauffele also won the JP McManus Pro-Am last week before claiming the Scottish Open title.
Links golf is incredibly unique, but our GolfBet staff has found its favorite picks for the week. Check out who they're backing this week to hoist the Claret Jug at St. Andrews below.
2022 Open Championship Picks
Rory McIlroy +1000 (BetRivers)
Jason Sobel: A year and a month ago, Jon Rahm entered the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines with plenty of narratives in his favor — a venue that held a special place in his heart, a revenge/motivation factor after being forced to WD from the Memorial Tournament after a positive COVID result and, oh yeah, a reputation for being the best player in the world at that given moment. Sure, as the pre-tournament favorite, he owned short odds, but he always felt like the right play that week – one which paid off when he ultimately won.
Well, doesn’t McIlroy feel similar for this one?
Draped with his own collection of narratives entering the year’s final major, Rory has been on a tear over the past few months, posting seven consecutive top-20 finishes, though it’s the majors where he’s played some of his best golf — and I characterize that as “some of his best” because when you win four major titles by the age of 25, then go 0-for-the-next-eight-years, results of second place (Masters), eighth (PGA) and fifth (U.S. Open) only fuel more questions about what he could accomplish if — or when — he finally puts four complete rounds together at one of these events.
The truth is, each of those performances was plagued by a singular inconsistency — either one poor round or one poor stretch of holes or one poor club in the bag that he couldn’t quite figure out.
Why should this week be any different? There are a few reasons.
First of all, his game has appeared more locked in lately, especially from that range of 100-125 yards, which has so curiously befuddled him in recent years. Second, if Mother Nature indeed decides to not cooperate with our schadenfreudistic whims and give us 40 mph winds and sideways rain, birdies will be available in bunches and there’s nobody who piles ‘em up like Rory.
Then there’s the fact that he’s been the game’s most intelligent voice on all matters of recent change, which he told me last month hasn’t served as greater motivation to play better, but it’s easy to see off-course and on-course tenacity going hand-in-hand. And while his Open Championship record is a bit checkered recently, he owns a strong history at this tournament.
Last year’s T46 came in the midst of a discouraging summer, there was no event the previous year and in 2019, with the weight of a nation on his shoulders, he hit his first tee shot OB at Royal Portrush and a furious second-day rally couldn’t put him on the right side of the cutline, but prior to that, he’d finished 2nd-4th-5th-1st in consecutive Open Championship starts. While he missed the 2015 festivities at St. Andrews due to a soccer injury (remember that?), he was T3 here back in 2010.
If you really need another narrative besides all of those, then check out what I wrote in this week’s betting guide. Some of the biggest anniversaries for the biggest tournaments have yielded the biggest names on top of the leaderboard. The idea of Jack, Tiger and Rory helps offer a nice bit of symmetry here.
Cameron Smith +2500 (BetRivers, DraftKings)
Chris Murphy: I am honing in on a very specific skill set this week, as I think the reports of a dried out Old Course will lead to a bit of a short game contest. There are very few players that are better with their wedges than Cam Smith and if he can get that usually hot putter going, he can certainly contend for his first major championship.
Smith was on the list of players I was interested in at the Scottish Open and he was able to grind his way to the weekend on the number last Friday. Those two extra rounds have me much more bullish on his prospects this week as he posted 67/68 over the weekend to ultimately finish T10.
He’s a player that I compare from a short game perspective to former Open Champions like Jordan Spieth and Shane Lowry, both of which have also had great success at this course, but with him providing the best value of the three in the betting markets this week it’s an easy decision to take a shot on the Australian as my best bet heading into St. Andrews.
Cameron Smith +2500 (BetRivers, DraftKings)
Derek Farnsworth: Smith is my favorite play of the week and we are getting a very fair number at +2500. While trends are made to be broken, the two that I have my eye on this week are as follows:
- Eight of the last 10 winners of the Open had a win earlier that season
- Nine of the last 10 winners at St. Andrews had a top three at the Masters
There aren’t many in the field that meet both criteria, but Smith is one of them. He has two wins this year (Tournament of Champions and THE PLAYERS) and he has two top-three finishes at the Masters.
Believe it or not, his putter has been what’s held him back over the last couple of months. Luckily, it came alive last weekend and he vaulted up the leaderboard at the Scottish Open. He has a magical short game, he’s one of the best iron players in the field, and these wide fairways should help his lack of accuracy off the tee.
Jordan Spieth +1800 (BetMGM)
Matt Vincenzi: Jordan Spieth's Open Championship record is incredibly impressive. In 2015, he finished one shot back of a three-man playoff at St. Andrews. Since then, he's been equally as impressive. In five starts at The Open since, Spieth has a win and an additional runner-up to go along with a ninth-place finish. He's arguably the best Open Championship player in the field.
Jordan Spieth is one of the most creative golfers in the history of the sport. He is a shot maker who knows how to use rolling slopes and hills to his advantage. His excellent lag-putting and ability to stick a wedge shot close to the hole are major reasons why he's done so well in links golf throughout his career.
Even when the 28-year-old has struggled over the past few years, he's seemed to always play well at the courses and events that he's historically excelled at. His tee to green game is strong enough this season to where some Open Championship comfortability could be just what is needed to help him find his missing hot putter.
Jordan Spieth +1800 (BetMGM)
Landon Silinsky: Spieth is very likely the premier links golfer on TOUR right now. The man absolutely loves this style of golf and more specifically, the Open Championship.
Spieth won this event at Royal Birkdale back in 2017, outlasting Matt Kuchar as a 23-year old to take home his third career Major. He's been stuck on three ever since, but is absolutely on the short list to win here at The Old Course this week.
Links golf is way different than what we see in the U.S. every week, and it requires a specific skill set. There are tons of hills and bunkers littered throughout the course and knowing how to shape your shots, as well as having an elite around-the-green game is basically a prerequisite.
When you think of those two skills, Spieth immediately jumps to the top of the list. His record at this event has been great, as since his win he's gone T9, T20 and second. These finishes also came in his "down years," so it's clear even when he's not firing on all cylinders he can still dominate a links course in his sleep.
Spieth shook off the rust from his MC at the Travelers with a T10 last week at the Scottish Open, and he should be ready to rock this week. He also finished T4 at this very course in 2015 the last time the Open was held here. He checks every box for me this week and I really believe he could take this thing down.
Tony Finau +4500 (BetRivers, bet365)
Joshua Perry: Finau hasn't played the Old Course, but has solid Open form. He's made all five cuts with no finish worse than 27th. His third in 2019 is the best major finish of his career, so this has been a spot where he's been comfortable in the past.
Outside of a bad driving week at the U.S. Open last month, his ball striking has been solid for a couple months now.
Justin Thomas +2200 (BetMGM)
Bryan Berryman: With the winds forecasted in the single digits for most of the week, the old course appears to be in a very vulnerable position. While the course is expected to play firm and fast, I still think this will turn into a high-scoring affair. The course will play right around 7,300 yards and features a unique par-72 setup with two par 5s, two par 3s, and 14 par 4s.
I believe the R&A will try to protect St. Andrews as much as possible from getting overpowered by modern day golfers. By strategically picking their pin positions, they will force golfers to be precise with their approach shots into these greens, and severely punish them when they miss. Of the 14 par 4s, half of them are slated to play under 400 yards. Wedge play will be paramount to success, and J.T. is one of the best wedge players in the world.
Thomas ranks in the top six over all the available sample sizes for proximity to the hole from both the 75-100 and 100-125 yard ranges. When he does happen to miss, he possesses the elite short game that will be required to get it up and down, ranking 12th in this field in Strokes Gained: Around the Green over the last 50 rounds.
Finally, J.T. ranks fourth in the field in Birdie or Better percentage over the last 50 rounds. With what look like they’ll be stellar conditions this week at St. Andrews, Thomas should be able to fill up the scoreboard on The Old Course, putting him in prime position for a third major championship.