Calum Scott | |
Birth Date: | 20 October 2003 |
Birth Place: | Nairn, Highland, Scotland |
Residence: | Lubbock, Texas, U.S. |
Status: | Amateur |
Masters: | DNP |
Usopen: | DNP |
Open: | T43: 2024 |
Pga: | DNP |
Calum Scott (born 20 October 2003) is a Scottish amateur golfer. He came to prominence by winning the silver medal, as the leading amateur, in the 2024 Open Championship at Royal Troon.[1] [2]
Scott was born in 2003 in Nairn, the Scottish Highlands, and begun representing Scotland internationally in 2017.[3] He was runner-up at the 2020 Northern Open. Scott finished 3rd at the 2022 European Amateur in Spain, behind Filippo Celli and Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, and 4th in 2024, 2 strokes behind American Tommy Morrison. He finished 3rd at the 2023 St Andrews Links Trophy behind Alex Maguire and Albert Hansson, and was runner-up in 2024, 2 strokes behind Seb Cave of England.
In 2021, Scott followed in the footsteps of his brother Sandy and enrolled at Texas Tech University, to start playing with the Texas Tech Red Raiders men's golf team alongside Ludvig Åberg.[4]
He represented Great Britain & Ireland at the 2023 Walker Cup at St Andrews Links and won two points from four matches. He helped to beat Ben James and Caleb Surratt in the Saturday morning foursomes, but lost, 3 and 2, to Surratt in the opening match of the closing Sunday singles.[5]
In 2024, Scott won the Open Amateur Qualifying Series to earn a start at the 152nd Open Championship after recording a second, quarter-final, and fourth-place finish in the St Andrews Links Trophy, The Amateur Championship, and European Amateur, respectively.[5] At Royal Troon he shot an eight-over 292 to finish tied 43rd alongside Brooks Koepka and Max Homa. He beat the 11 other amateurs in the field to win the Silver Medal as the leading amateur, three strokes ahead of Tommy Morrison and Jacob Skov Olesen.[6] [7]
Source:[8]
Tournament | 2024 | |
---|---|---|
Masters Tournament | ||
PGA Championship | ||
U.S. Open | ||
The Open Championship | T43LA |
Amateur
Source:[8]