Shane Lowry is an Irish golfer from Clara, County Offaly, ranked approximately world number 15, and the 2019 Open Championship winner. His victory at Royal Portrush, the first Open held in Northern Ireland in 68 years, produced one of the most emotional triumphs in the history of major championship golf.
Lowry’s game is perfectly calibrated for adversity. He has a soft touch with his wedges, an excellent short game, and the ability to control ball flight in conditions that reduce other players to frustration. His putting on slow, undulating greens is a strength, and he has an instinctive feel for course management when scoring is difficult, knowing when to play conservatively and when a birdie opportunity is worth the risk. He is not the longest hitter on tour, but his creativity around the greens and his ability to manufacture par saves from impossible positions compensate for any distance disadvantage. His personality is warm, self-deprecating, and entirely Irish: he brings joy to the fans and to the broadcast, even in the worst weather.
The 2019 Open at Royal Portrush was his masterpiece. Lowry built a four-shot lead heading into the final round and, despite torrential rain, enormous pressure from the home crowd, and the ghost of every Irishman who had come close and failed, he closed with a bogey-free 69 to win by six shots. The scenes on the 18th green, with thousands of Irish fans chanting his name in the rain, the Claret Jug raised above his head, remain some of the most powerful images in modern sport. His runner-up finish at the 2016 U.S. Open at Oakmont, where he led entering the final round before a difficult closing 76, showed he can compete on the toughest American courses. That experience at Oakmont made the Portrush performance possible: he had learned what final-round pressure at a major felt like, and he chose not to let it break him the second time.
In 2026, Royal Birkdale is the major that suits Lowry best. His links pedigree, his comfort in wind and rain, and his Open Championship experience make him a serious threat at The Open. Shinnecock Hills also suits his wind-management skills. He will compete at all four: The Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, and The Open Championship. Irish fans can follow in Ireland time.