McIlroy shares Scottish Open lead with 65; Yellamaraju T-26 on debut
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Rory McIlroy fired a five-under-par 65 on Thursday to share the first-round lead at the Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick, Scotland, using the tournament as a final tune-up before next week's Open Championship. The Northern Irishman is joined at the top of a five-way tie by Bernd Wiesberger (Austria), Tom Kim (South Korea), Patrick Cantlay (United States), and Rasmus Højgaard (Denmark).
McIlroy's Round: Eagle Ignites the Back Nine
McIlroy, making his first competitive start since finishing tied for 32nd at the U.S. Open, began on the 10th tee and struggled early, trading birdies with bogeys on the 10th and 18th holes to turn in modest shape. The round changed completely when he holed an 18-foot eagle putt on the par-five first hole. He followed with birdies on the seventh and a sensational chip-in from off the green at the eighth to surge into a share of the lead.
How the Co-Leaders Got There
Cantlay posted arguably the cleanest card of the day — a bogey-free, five-birdie round — crediting a heavier putter for helping him adapt to the slower greens. Wiesberger, in the midst of a career resurgence, overcame an early bogey with seven birdies across a blistering 10-hole stretch, before a late dropped shot pegged him back to 65. Kim carded six birdies against a single bogey, extending his strong record at the venue where he finished third in 2022. Højgaard, playing his first competitive event since late May, briefly held the outright lead at six under before a double-bogey on the 16th hole; a bounce-back birdie on the 17th salvaged a share of the top spot.
Indian-Origin Players: Mixed Opening Day
For players of Indian origin, the first round produced contrasting results. Indo-Canadian debutant Sudarshan Yellamaraju carded a steady two-under 68 — featuring four birdies and two bogeys — to sit tied for 26th, a promising start in his first appearance at the event. Sahith Theegala, supported by Hero, battled to an even-par 70 to sit tied for 75th. Aaron Rai, the 2026 PGA Championship winner and 2020 champion of this event, endured a difficult one-over 71, leaving him tied for 99th and needing a low second round to make the cut.
A Congested Leaderboard
Scoring conditions at The Renaissance Club were near-perfect, with sunshine and light winds allowing nearly half the 156-player field to finish under par on day one. A seven-player group sits just one stroke back at four-under 66, headlined by five-time Major champion Brooks Koepka, alongside Kurt Kitayama, Andrew Novak, Michael Thorbjornsen, Min Woo Lee, Angel Ayora, and Oliver Lindell. At three-under 67 sit 2024 champion and local favourite Robert MacIntyre, fellow Scot Calum Hill, former Masters champion Danny Willett, and English Ryder Cup stars Tommy Fleetwood and Matt Fitzpatrick.
Scheffler and Defending Champion Also in Contention
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler opened with a two-under 68, though the American expressed disappointment at not capitalising on the par fives. Defending champion Chris Gotterup also carded a 68, keeping himself well within range heading into the second round.
With the leaderboard tightly packed and the Open Championship looming, the second round at North Berwick is set to further separate the contenders from the pretenders.