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A to Z of the 150th Open Championship: Cameron Smith's mullet, Rory McIlroy's near miss and Tiger Woods' walk

Cameron Smith produced a birdie blitz on the back nine to overhaul Rory McIlroy and win the 150th Open Championship. It was a stunning week on the Old Course at St Andrews, with the home of golf serving up a treat. Ad/> Talk of the Old Course being obsolete was consigned to the rubbish bin, as it was a stunning test.

The OpenMcIlroy hopes 'hero' Tiger gets another Open shot on Old Course at St AndrewsYESTERDAY AT 11:47 The cream rose to the top, with Smith emerging victorious, but there were bits of controversy — with pace of play a bugbear and LIV Golf questions causing tempers to fray. But it was the quality of the golf, and the occasion, that won out. Let us take you through the best bits from the 150th Open.

Open Championship A to Z A is for Australia. Cameron Smith became the fifth Australian, after Peter Thomson, Kel Nagle, Greg Norman and Ian Baker-Finch to win the Open. Smith became the third Australian, after Thompson and Nagle, to win an Open at St Andrews.

Both the 100th anniversary Open in 1960 and The 150th Open at St Andrews were won by Australians. Nagle won in 1960. B is for bunkers.

112 of them to be precise on the Old Course. C is for Cameron. Cameron Young led after round one, Cameron Smith at the halfway mark.

They bounced back to take the first two spots, with Cameron Smith lifting the Claret Jug. And he did it using a Scotty Cameron putter. Well he had to, really.

D is for Duff. Jordan Spieth has always been relatable to weekend golfers, but he reinforced it with a flat duff during his final round. E is for Eight.

Eight birdies fired Cameron Smith to the top of the leaderboard in the final round. F is for Filippo Celli. The Italian youngster had a week he will never forget as his total of five-under

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