GULLANE, Scotland — Not many people believed Adam Scott when he said he would take nothing but positives away from the British Open last year, despite blowing a four-shot lead with four holes remaining by closing with four straight bogeys at Royal Lytham & St. Annes and losing by one shot to Ernie Els.
It was crushing. Surely, it must have been devastating.
"I think if I sat there and watched someone else do what I did, it would have been devastating," Scott said in June. "I didn't feel that way. I felt like I played good enough to win and I almost had in my head. It wasn't heartbreaking like I would imagine it looked, or if I'd watched someone else do it."
Scott rebounded quickly by winning the Masters about nine months later. It didn't make up for losing the British Open, but his assessment of his game was proven correct.
"If there is such a thing as golf gods, I think they heard the prayers of Adam Scott's fans," Paul Azinger said this week.
Not everyone is so fortunate.
There is plenty of heartache in the British Open, and not everyone recovers, even if they have major championships to soothe them.
Here are five examples of heart-breaking moments in golf's oldest championship: