GULLANE, Scotland — This already is shaping up as a yellow British Open.
Golf's oldest championship returns to Muirfield after a wet spring that was ideal for growing thick grass, followed by a dry summer that has yielded three "F" words that are ideal for a links course.
Firm. Fast. Fiery.
The yellow hue of the fairways and wisps of knee-high native grass framing them make that obvious. The trick is to figure out how far the ball is going — not in the air, but once it starts bouncing on the ground.
Angel Cabrera set out Sunday to learn on the sixth hole, 461 yards and bending to the left with a bunker on the left side.
The two-time major champion from Argentina hit 4-iron with a right-to-left wind and it stopped a yard short of the bunker. Then he hit a bullet of a driver that he thought was ideal until he reached the crest of a slight hill and didn't see a ball in the fairway. The ball was running so fast that it went through the fairway and into the rough.
"The great thing about links golf is it gives variety and options how to play," two-time Open champion Padraig Harrington said. "You can have three players taking on a shot from the same place, and you might see three very different shots. You see a little bit of everything."
He played his first ball just short of a bunker to the right of the green and stared at it for the longest time, taking an unconventional route that makes links golf so different. Instead of pitching over the sand, he bumped a 9-iron on the ground, along the edge of the bunker, and watched it roll up the slope and down toward the pin.