Welcome to This Sporting Planet, your definitive source for The World’s View of Sports! 🌍🎙️

Get ready for golf’s oldest major! 🤩 This week on This Sporting Planet, we’re diving into The Open Championship 2025 at the legendary Royal Portrush! ⛳️

We’re joined by Former Silver Medal Winner, European Tour winner and Ryder Cup player Chris Wood, who shares frank insights into his mental health struggles over the last few years. Chris opens up about:
– The intense anxiety and pressure of professional golf led to burnout and a personal breakdown.
– His journey to a better place involved overcoming difficult times and rediscovering a renewed passion for the game.
– The vital support systems within the golf tour for player well-being.
– Why speaking out about mental health in sport is crucial for athletes everywhere.

Finally, Chris, alongside Natalie Sawyer (UK), Todd Harris (USA), and Edward Russell (Asia), gives you the ultimate Open preview:

What makes Royal Portrush a “true test” of links golf is its challenging doglegs and unpredictable winds.

Predictions for golf’s biggest names like Scottie Scheffler (can he conquer links play?), Rory McIlroy (can he bounce back after the Masters?) and British hopeful Tommy Fleetwood!

An exclusive, emotional story from Chris about his 2009 Open performance and the shot that nearly won him the Claret Jug!

Don’t miss this powerful conversation and comprehensive major preview! 🎧

Chapters for Easy Navigation:

0:00 – Introduction & The Open Preview
1:12 – Royal Portrush: What Makes It Special for The Open
2:45 – The Pressure of The Open for British Players
3:46 – Chris Wood’s 2008 (Amateur) & 2009 (Pro) Open Memories
6:12 – The Emotional Impact of Near Misses in Golf
7:49 – Royal Portrush: Course Analysis & Atmosphere
13:33 – The Open Atmosphere & Shane Lowry’s 2019 Win
16:15 – What Type of Golfer Excels at Royal Portrush?
17:58 – Predictions for The Open: Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy & Tommy Fleetwood
22:55 – Chris Wood’s Mental Health Journey: Starting the Discussion
23:14 – The Personal Struggle & Burnout in Golf
26:13 – Recovery & Rediscovering the Love for Golf
28:15 – The Importance of Normalising Mental Health Discussion
31:15 – Tour Support for Player Well-being
33:15 – Chris’s Current Game & Future Goals
36:55 – The Open’s Prestige in America
40:00 – Royal Portrush’s Challenge & Weather Impact
42:24 – Time-Friendly Major for Global Audiences
46:11 – Outro & Upcoming Episodes

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The video features a discussion about who might win an upcoming golf tournament, with names like Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy mentioned ⛳️. The participants share their opinions, consider recent performance, and make predictions about the possible outcomes. The panel offers their insights on who they believe will take the top spot, with names like Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy in the mix. They also reflect on past performances and speculate on potential outcomes, providing some excellent golf analysis. Don’t miss their predictions for the upcoming tournament!

Who do you think or who do you want to win? They’re two different things. But I do think it’s quite hard to overlook Scotty Sheffller just because of the form he seems to be in. Xander Schoffley, he’s won before. Can he do it again? He seems due. If we had said that Mroy would be coming into his home open with three wins and a major under his belt, he’d be a shoeing. I got further and further away really from what I feel was my golf swing. I was on the phone to my parents. I just after one of the rounds and I just broke down. I was in absolute bits inside. I’ve never ever felt like I want to stop. Even if you reach the peak, you can still suffer. There there’s a whole lot more of the dedication that goes to this. It is a full family commitment. The weather over here currently is beautiful. I was going to say, what about Yeah. All this cold elements. It’s going to be a little too hot. It’s a little too hot. Welcome to this sporting planet, the world’s view of sport. This week from the UK, America, and Singapore. This is a show that brings together international voices who are passionate about sport and live and work in the regions where major events are taking place. This week we’re focusing on a small town of just 6,000 people or so in Northern Ireland and it’s going to be the center of the golfing world for the next week. Yeah, definitely going to be more than 6,000 people I think once the open gets underway. Port Rush going to be feeling a little bit busier. 275,000 people descending on County Antrum to see if a home favorite can win the clar jug. just as Shane Larry did six years ago. And with Rory Mroy fresh off the back of completing the career grand slam in April, hopes are high for another home party in 2025. But while local fans are hoping for a British winner, America is sending over an army of talent in the form of defending champion Xander Schoffley and world number one golfer Scotty Sheffller. Can either of them walk away victorious? That’s the big question. Plus, later on, we’ve got an incredibly frank and honest chat with golfer Chris Wood, who finished tied third at the 2009 Open, but has been struggling with his mental health over the last few years. That’s an incredibly powerful discussion you won’t want to miss right here on the Sporting Planet. Edward Russell here in Singapore alongside Natalie Sawyer in the UK and Todd Harris from the USA. We are three majors down in men’s golf for 2025. What a year it’s been, by the way, so far. And there’s just one more to go. The Open at Royal Port Rush. It’s the first time the course has hosted the championship since home favorite Shane Larry delighted the fans in 2019 to claim the Clarret Jug. And there are so many story lines heading in to this year. From Roy Mroy looking to make his 2025 even better after finally after so many years completing the career grand slam at the Masters. What about world number one Scotty Sheffller aiming for his first title? First things first, you two. Who do we think will win? Natalie, quick prediction from you to kick things off. Oh, it’s who do you think or who do you want to win? They’re two different things, aren’t they? I mean, listen, Scotty Sheffller, we know how incredible he is. He’s in good form as well, coming into Royal Port Rush. I think in his last five tournaments, he’s finished inside the top 10. Um, so, you know, he’s doing pretty well having uh won the Byron Nelson, won the PGA Championship recently, and the Memorial Tournament as well. I I wonder if Link’s play is a bit of a trickier one for him because the open of all the majors is the one that he struggles on the most. Having said that, he’s finished what? Tied for seventh. That’s his worst if you want to call it worst. Um I think a lot of people will be happy with tying for sec for seventh though. Um but I do think it’s quite hard to overlook Scotty Sheffller just because of the form he seems to be in. But like I say, there’s a who you think might win and who you’d like to see win. And I would love love to see Tommy Fleetwood win this one. What a guy. I mean, one of the nicest guys out there. Um, consistent consistently inside the top 20 when it comes to the world rankings for what, nearly a decade. I mean, look what happened at the Travelers Championship not that long ago, leading with just a couple of holes to go and then sadly it all goes wrong and Keegan Bradley wins it. Um, and it’s been a long time since the open has actually seen an English player come away with victory. Synic Fowler in fact was the last to do it in 1992 and I just think he’s just one of those nearly men Tommy Fleetwood and it would just be so nice to see him come away with a major and then who knows what happens after that. It could lead to to more big big victories because he’s yet to win on the PGA tour as well. So I’m just hoping that something clicks for him. And Fleetwood has quite possibly the best golf nickname of all golfers to ever have the great white all that stuff. Throw it out the window. Tommy Fleetwood is the man. Um I’m with Natalie. Who would you like to win? Who you think’s going to win? Um I think Roy Moy could do himself a solid if he get past his situation with dealing with the media. He he could do very well there. Of course he he’s won there before. Um Scotty Sheffler to Natalie’s point. He’s number one for a reason. I’m going to throw out two names though and I don’t know why they’re coming to me because I think about their game, but someone like Akal Marawa um I think would do well there. Um also Xander Schoffley. I mean, he obviously he’s won before. Can he do it again? He seems due and and he seems to just really understand that course really well. So, um, Rory would be a great great winner, but again, I don’t know what’s happened to Simpson the Masters. I think we all talked about this on the show a few months back of once he’s cleared that hurdle of the Masters, he’s got that monkey off his back kind of thing, he’s going to just unleash and still waiting for the unleash. Well, he did say, you know, that he lost a bit of motivation after finally completing that grand slam. But if anything can motivate him, it is of course an open at home. Um I just don’t think he’s going to be be able to handle the pressure to be honest because what the last time the open was in Port Rush, he was the favorite. He was supposed to be the hometown hero and he hit his opening his very first shot. I think his opening t-shirt out of bounds and then missed the cut. It’s funny, isn’t it? Because you think that if we had said that Mroy would be coming into his home open with three wins and a major under his belt, he’d be a shoein. But he doesn’t seem to be any of our favorites. I’m going to go for John Ram because it’s about time he won another major. That’s it. Short and sweet. I like it. Uh look, we’ll talk more about it in just a moment, but first I wanted to speak to someone who played at the Open the last time. It was at Port Rush. Chris Wood is also trying to qualify actually for this year’s event. Something he may well have done by the time you hear this podcast. He won the silver medal for the best amateur at the 2008 Open and then finished tied third uh the following year at Turbury. So here’s some of the chat I had with Chris Wood if you don’t mind. If we talk about Royal Port Rush and you played it in 2019, like I mentioned, lots of lots of the top golfers who played in that event have spoken about what a course it is. Darren Clark has called it a masterpiece. Shane Lowry who won said everyone was raving about it. What makes it do you think so special then? I think the everybody always knew the golf course was the at a level where it is absolutely capable of holding an open championship. I think it became about the infrastructure around the tournament. The open is just a mega event now and you know 300 300,000 people during the four tournament days come and Port Rush is a small village and town and and it was whether that was capable of hosting it. Um the first time I played Port Rush was probably 2 or 3 years into my professional career and um it was blowing a gale and I just thought this course is so hard and we got rain I think a 16 a par three. I can’t remember the name they call it, but it’s it’s an evil name they give it. And it’s because it’s like say about 220 yards and it just drops off all the way down to the right and like I think maybe the prevailing wind is in out the left. It’s just a horrible hole. And then they changed the I think they changed 17 and 18 because we played the Irish Open there I think maybe in about 2015. a friend of mine, Jamie Donaldson, won that and um they changed a couple of the finishing holes ready for the open and the course is spectacular. Um it’s it’s a tough venue, but again, what we’ve experienced playing events in Northern Ireland or Ireland, the Irish Open over the years, the support is just you cannot beat it. Um, and like you say, the open not being there for 60 years, it was always going to be a spectacular open. And I think it came as a bit of a let’s see how we go at Port Rush and you know, six years later the open’s back there. Um, usually it’s sort of seven, eight, nine years before you go back to to a venue. So yeah, it was a it was a huge success and obviously given that Rory’s coming back as a Grand Slam winner this year is going to make it, you know, just as just as good if not better. I know you’ve been speaking about mental health and your own game as well. If you’re happy to, are you able to tell us a little bit about the journey you’ve been on with all of that? Yeah, I mean I yeah I um since 2019 really I I really struggled on the course. Um I was working with coaches from 2015 to 2018 where I had a year of playing the best golf career and I and I won the BMW PGA. I won in the Austrian Open. I got into the RDER Cup. Um, and towards the end of 2016, I could start to feel things in my swing that weren’t familiar. Um, the ball flight I was hitting became very weak. Um, but I knew where the ball was going, so I was, you know, I was playable. Um, 2017, I don’t think I had any standout results, but I was, I think I finished nicely in the order of merit. 2018 I had three runners up finishes, but I knew this doesn’t feel right. Something’s not right. And I and I went to see another coach and and um yeah, ended up hitting seriously destructive shots with my driver in particular that led me to not have the driver in the bag. Um which when you’re competing on tour, you’re just giving up so much over the course of a week. And I was practicing and practicing and hitting worse shots and feeling like, well, I’m with a great coach. Keep doing what he’s saying. Keep doing what he’s saying. And I got further and further away really from what I feel was my golf swing. So that led me to a point of complete burnout in 2023 where losing my card on tour was what made me stop. Um, and I went and played a couple of events in South Africa early 2023 on the challenge tour because, you know, you feel like you should play. And I was on the phone to my parents. I just after one of the rounds and I just broke down and I was in absolute bits and um I came home straight away came home and uh that was it. And the first time back on the golf course in the summer that year, my coach who’s sort of more than a coach, like a really good friend, was like, “Right, let’s get back on the golf course, but we’re going out with a six iron and a putter for nine holes.” So, I didn’t have any trauma attached to those clubs. So, it was a it was a light way to step back into the into the game. But weirdly, I was watching a lot of golf. Like I watched it all on the telly and I’m just sat there thinking I can hit that shot. I I can feel how I can hit that shot. And I suppose that’s what’s kept me in it really is. I my inner belief has never left me. you have really difficult really difficult times and um you but inside I’ve never ever felt like I want to stop and that’s what’s kept me going um to the point where I am today where I’m still working towards getting my card back. Um, but each day I practice, I feel like I’ve like we’ve got a little saying amongst my team that I work with, like every day we want to make the boat go faster. Like I’m the boat. How do we make the boat go faster? So the foot’s down every day to try and to try and get better. And um it’s become so much more about no more trauma for me. um which is very refreshing to hear from coaches rather than golf swing technique and keep hitting balls and that going down that road again. So so yeah, this has been a difficult period but um you know I’m lucky I’ve got a great great home life. Um busy with four kids but um I’ve got a trooper of a wife who who takes a lot of the hit on that side of things. So, uh, yeah, we’re, um, yeah, I’m in a much better place. Thanks to Chris. And as ever, if you want to hear the full chat with him, you can head over to our This Sporting Planet YouTube channel and, uh, it’ll have more of that frank and honest issue that he discussed about when he was referring to his own mental health struggles over the last few years. And it does seem Edward and Todd that we are seeing more and more highlevel elite athletes talking about the struggles of mental health. Um and you know Chris was saying it there. We mentioned in our last podcast when we briefly mentioned the world aquatics that Adam Py won’t be there for Great Britain because he’s dealing with his own mental health problems as well. um you know it’s something that we do need to talk about more and Chris was very open about it and says he wants to talk about it because it’s it should be normalized at the end of the day. Yeah, absolutely. And I think you’re right in saying that it isn’t something that has just become more apparent and more people are suffering. It’s just become easier to talk about and we’re hearing that more people are indeed suffering from that and it’s something isn’t it when we talk about sport obviously we’re so used to physical injuries that are so obvious and so apparent and there’s a very easy uh pathway to heal from that. You go to the doctors, you do your physio, you do your rehab, but it’s a lot harder when it when it’s mental because a lot of the times you don’t even know as Chris was saying there that there’s necessarily something not working quite right up there. Yeah. Yeah. And I think it’s so refreshing uh being the elder statesman in the room. I will say that when I be began my career, this was not something you would necessarily discuss or even ask the question about. So uh kudos to you Natalie. I think it was a great interview. Um Chris did a fantastic job normalizing it. And I think the best thing that I came away from is he seems to be in a good place. You know, he mentioned his wife and his kids and he and it’s and he’s got balance and and I think that is beyond everything else. his mental health is the most important thing and that’s going to allow him to go forward and I think uh there’s a lot of athletes who have struggled that their entire lives of never coming to grips with you know I have some weaknesses I have some doubts about my game or where I am or my position and and they’ve now come to grips with hey maybe I can talk to someone about this so um it was a great interview and gosh I I now I just want to root root for Chris Wood. Yeah I hear you. I mean the other thing that was a standout I must say that again you’ll be able to hear in full on our YouTube channel was he was talking about what the tour have done for him and in fact it was the tour that really highlighted and alerted him to seeking more help with this because he went to one of the tour doctors and that’s where they all started really getting the help that he’s now been having and and since those conversations that he’s had the tour have now implemented not just because of him but in general they’ve implemented sort of special if you like rest rooms where when they finished uh one of their rounds, for example, if they want to, they can go into this room where it’s just nice, cozy, comfy chairs. It’s all very quiet. It’s all sort of serene. It’s just a time for you to just relax after, you know, four hours, three and a half hours, whatever it is out on the course. So, you know, it seems as though golf are really gripping, getting a getting to grips with it, doing what they can to help their sports men and women. And what you also have to remember is again within that conversation I had with Chris, we talked about the differences between an individual sports person and somebody that’s in a team. Now it can affect you the same way. Of course it can. But within a team, let’s say a football team, you know, you have your teammates around you who can g you up, who can, you know, maybe spots there’s an issue with you. Whereas if you’re on your own, yeah, you might have family, you might have your your caddy or an odd coach, but they might not see the differences as much, let’s say. Listen, I mean I mean I’m just assuming there, but I just think there’s also that differences with individuals and team team mates, shall we say? No, I was going to raise that exact point and I think you look with tennis players, with golfers, you do have a small team, but this team may consist of your family and your coaches and they might not necessarily be people that you want to divulge things to and it’s a lot harder to hide in a small team as well. I guess if you’re having an off day in a football team, ideally the rest of your teammates will be able to lift you up and you know uh the responsibility for scoring goals or defending whatever it is falls on their shoulders as well. Whereas in an individual sport, the results are purely your own. The responsibility is purely your own. And if you have a bad day, your entire tournament is gone and people will criticize you in the media for that. And they have no one else to criticize but you. So I guess it is a whole lot more pressure in an individual sport. It makes me want to go back and watch the Netflix series, you know, Drive to Survive in full swing and now get a real appreciation of what these athletes are going through. I mean, that documentary does a great job of kind of taking behind the curtain. But u again, Natalie, the interview was great. Chris Wood was so open and honest that it makes me think, wow, there there’s a whole lot more of the dedication that goes to this. It is a full family commitment and and it comes with some with some pitfalls. M and I think Edward your point there about you know especially golfers and tennis players you you’re the you’re the main earner aren’t you and if you don’t win your caddy doesn’t get the money your coaches doesn’t get you know they don’t get the money and then your family don’t get the money so a lot of pressure that they have to deal with and again to normalize it and actually to say you even if you reach the peak you can still suffer and again earlier on we mentioned Rory Maroy and and maybe you know winning as he did at Augusta he’s got that monkey off his back But you’ve gone from the incredible highs of doing that to now dealing with well what do I do next? And Chris Wood actually did advise it in that interview. Uh he said what Rory should do is he should seek out Tiger Woods. He should seek out someone like a NovakJovich that have just been multiple multiple multiple major winners and just ask them how do they keep it going? How do you dig yourself up once more? And again I thought that was really sound advice. Yeah. Yeah. And I wonder whether Rory’s um battle with the media in a way is is him trying to compartmentalize what’s going on in his mind and not constantly be bombarded with questions from elsewhere because obviously the media wants the best story and they want you to react in a certain way so that can be their headline. But it can’t be easier when people are constantly questioning your desire and your ability. Another telling point of that interview, Natalie, that you had with Chris Wood was when he said he went out with a coach and he said, “We’re going to go out and we’re going to take two clubs, a sixiron and a putter.” And I started thinking to myself, “Oh my gosh, if I only had two clubs in the bag, um, yeah, putter would have to be one of them, but I would probably take out a nine because I can’t hit anything else straight. So the driver stays home, the hybrid doesn’t come out, a two iron, no way I can control that. So I’m probably taking out a pitching or a nine and a putter and see if I can’t get around. Edward, what are you taking in your bag? Definitely not a driver because every time I try and drive it’s uh it’s a crapshoot whether or not it actually makes contact with the ball or not. So a putter, I’m a more of a short game person. I’ll go a putter and yeah, a nine iron makes sense actually, doesn’t it? I’ll go with that one as well. But I do like the fact that it’s all about kind of just taking the sport back to basics and I guess in some ways rediscovering your love for the sport from way back when where maybe you did just have two clubs in your bag. All right, Natalie, you taking out the big dog? Come on. What are your two clubs? Well, you’ve got to have a golf bag first of all, don’t you? I don’t even have one, so I wouldn’t even know. I mean, I’ve only really I’ve never even played around a golf to my shame. I’ve done the old driving range, but that’s what I’ve had the driver. So, that’s what I’d be keeping with, but I’m clearly going to have to take the putter if I’m going out because um you know, I I’d like to think I’m getting as close as I can to the hole. But, um and then simple little dinking. Um but it’s not as easy as that. And having played crazy golf, I’m I don’t think I’d do very well on on a normal golf course. Let’s put it that way. But let’s get back to the open, shall we? which I know in the US, Todd, it is the British Open, but we’re calling it the Open. Um, it’s the first one and the only one that is played out of the USA as well. I mean, how much prestige is is the Open given in America? Massive. And and I think it’s on par, honestly, with Wimbledon, with uh Roland Geros. There’s a few events that I think are around the world that really stop American sports fans in their tracks. Um, I think the tour to France is kind of in that same category that people appreciate what it is. They appreciate the tradition. And when you talk about the open, which I fully embrace now, just the open. Um, you go to a place like Royal Port Rush where in the summertime in a lot of the states it is hot. I mean, we’re talking, and I’ll do the quick conversion, we’re we’re talking 30 35 to 42 degrees um Celsius. And so, it is a really warm time. So, to see people walking around and complain, oh, the the open, it’s very chilly here. It’s like I would pray for a nice chilly breeze right now. But it it’s just the tradition of Lynx golf and and the history of the sport and how it’s come from where it is and and and to see these athletes going back to a course that maybe doesn’t look as as glamorous as say an Augusta, but it is it is going to put you to the test. Oh, it certainly is. I mean, we saw it last year, didn’t we, at Royal Trune when when Zanza won it. It was rainy, it was windy, it was cold. I mean shlet setup I think at one point it’s the coldest he’s been out on a course for a long long time. Um it is a real test. It’s a test of your character if the harsh weather sets in. And you know that course at Royal Port Rush, it has chasms. It has narrow fairways. It has the elements that you’ve got to deal with. That c that um par 316th that Chris Wood mentioned is called Calamity Corner. It’s got that name for a reason. It’s hard. Um, so you really have got to be up for it to to even just make the cut, I think. Um, now the weather over here currently is beautiful. It’s a little I was going to say, what about Yeah. All this cold element stuff. It’s going to be a little too hot. It’s a little too hot. You know, if we want it to not be like a clean sweep of American success that it feels like it’s always being at this present moment, bar Rory Mory at Augusta, then we want it to be Link’s weather, don’t we? just so it’s a real test of everyone’s game really. Um, but yeah, right now here in the UK, we are sweltering. Well, we should not be hypothesizing what the weather is going to do because we all have enough experience to tell us that the UK weather has a mind of its own. And we have no idea what it’s going to do tomorrow, let alone by the time the open rolls around. But yeah, if it is hot and sunny over there, then that course is going to play hard and fast. Whatever the weather does, it’s going to be a real challenge for all the golfers, and we can’t wait to see who comes out on top. The kind of good thing actually in this part of the world when it comes to watching golf is this is the most time friendly major I can think of um because you know we’re used to watching the Premier League. We’re used to watching Wimbledon. We’re used to watching UK and Europe based sports over here which go kind of from 6:00 p.m.ish until midnight 1:00 a.m. So we’re used to staying up a little bit late. It’s not as bad as watching the US sports which means that you have to be up until 4:00 or 5:00 a.m. in the morning and you don’t know whether you’re having dinner whilst you’re watching or you’re having breakfast. So looking forward to watching the open. Anyway, that’s about it for this episode. Make sure you subscribe to the show via your favorite podcast provider so you never miss an episode. And please do give us a like and a review and a follow and everything else you want to give us as well. Hey, we wouldn’t say no to money. Uh remember on Spotify, you can now watch our episodes as well as listen to them. So please do let us know what you think. Plus, if you’re watching this on YouTube, get involved in the discussion in the comments. We’d love to hear what you thought about everything we did or discussed or talked about or what Edward or Natalie were wearing. So, just let it all flow. Hey, we’re fashionistas. No. Uh, there is so much to look forward to in the next few weeks, including the women’s open, which will take center stage right after the men’s is concluded at Port Rush. And there’s a small matter of the women’s rugby world cup as well. We’ll be back on Wednesday the 16th of July discussing all of that. But until then, from myself, Edward, and Todd, as well as the whole This Sporting Planet team, thanks for listening. [Music]

2 Comments

  1. So nice to hear athletes being more open about their mental health – acts as such an inspiration for all of us. We should all the thankful to Chris and others for sharing their stories ❤

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