GULLANE, Scotland — If Graeme McDowell is hanging around Muirfield beyond Friday, the rest of the British Open field had better watch out.
The Northern Irishman has been consistently inconsistent since the Masters in April, missing five cuts and claiming three wins in his eight events. He's either back home from a tournament on a Saturday or raising a trophy on a Sunday.
So, which way is he leaning for the British Open?
"I think links-style golf is in my blood," McDowell said Tuesday, "and I always feel like I revert back well to it. I naturally and instinctively play well in the wind."
Given the long-range forecast, the wind may not be too much of a factor this week but the seventh-ranked McDowell clearly fancies his chances on Scotland's east coast.
He has just one top-10 finish in his nine Opens — that coming last year when he played in the final pair on the Sunday at Lytham but shot 75 to tie for fifth — but his recent wins at the French Open and the World Match Play Championship in Bulgaria have come on what he described as "linksy" courses.
And then there was a victory at the RBC Heritage at Hilton Head, standing tall on a wind-swept Sunday before outlasting Webb Simpson in a playoff.
McDowell grew up playing links golf at Royal Portrush, the home course of 2011 Open champion Darren Clarke, and feels right at home every time the — links-based world's oldest major comes around.