The 2026 Genesis Scottish Open is underway at The Renaissance Club (July 9-12), and the field is the strongest non-major gathering of the summer: world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Rory McIlroy, No. 4 Matt Fitzpatrick, LIV stars Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton via the co-sanction, and a defending champion, Chris Gotterup, who arrives having won the John Deere Classic just days ago and now chases something nobody has managed since the PGA Tour arrived: a repeat title.
It’s 156 players from the PGA Tour, DP World Tour, and Korea’s KPGA on one leaderboard, playing for $9 million, Open Championship spots, and the best possible momentum heading into Royal Birkdale next week.
The chart below covers the headliners, the defending champ’s history bid, the storylines worth tracking through Sunday, and how to watch. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
Contents
The strongest week outside the majors
The 2026 field is what the co-sanction was built to produce: 156 players spanning three tours, headlined by the world’s top two, Scheffler arriving as the usual favorite and McIlroy as the 2023 champion here with last year’s runner-up finish to avenge, world No. 4 Fitzpatrick, and, through the DP World Tour side of the arrangement, LIV’s Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton, making this one of the rare non-major leaderboards where golf’s divided ecosystem plays the same course in the same wind. The depth beneath the stars is what separates the week from a normal tour stop: essentially everyone with Royal Birkdale ambitions is in North Berwick, because the links crash-course logic (covered in our companion piece on why the pros play this week at all) has made skipping it the contrarian position.
Gotterup’s history chase
The best story in the field belongs to the man defending it. Chris Gotterup won here last year at 15-under, holding off McIlroy for the breakthrough of his career, then nearly doubled at The Open the following week, and he arrives at the Renaissance having just won the John Deere Classic days ago, the hottest possible form line.
His target is a genuine first: no player has successfully defended the Scottish Open since the event became co-sanctioned in 2022, a streak that reflects both the field strength and links golf’s variance. The venue offers him one new wrinkle to solve: organizers have reconfigured the hole routing this year specifically to produce a later-deciding finish, meaning even the course knowledge from his 2025 win comes with an asterisk. A repeat would make him the event’s first true incumbent of the modern era, and, given the tournament’s tune-up track record, an automatic Birkdale favorite.
How to follow the week
The practical guide: rounds run Thursday through Sunday with the cut falling to the top 65 and ties after Friday; U.S. coverage starts at 11 a.m. ET on Golf Channel with streaming on the ESPN App, the pleasant quirk of Scottish golf being that the drama concludes by early afternoon stateside.
Watch three leaderboards inside the one: the trophy race up top ($1.62 million, 500 points, and a Genesis GV60 Magma to the winner), the Birkdale-audition tier just behind it (whoever contends Sunday will dominate next week’s Open previews), and the qualifying scrap further down, where non-exempt players are chasing Open Championship places worth more to them than any check this week pays. This page updates through Sunday’s finish, and the winner’s next appointment, whoever it is, is seven days and one country south.
Final Word
The 2026 Genesis Scottish Open, live now through Sunday at The Renaissance Club: a 156-man, three-tour field with Scheffler, McIlroy, Fitzpatrick, Rahm, and Hatton chasing $9 million and Birkdale momentum; Chris Gotterup, fresh off a John Deere win, attempting the co-sanctioned era’s first title defense on a newly reconfigured routing; Open Championship spots waiting for the leading non-exempt finishers; and golf’s best annual preview playing out on morning television. Sunday crowns a champion; next Sunday tells us what the win meant.
The full payout ladder is in Scottish Open prize money 2026, every past champion is in Scottish Open winners by year, and the logic of the week itself is in why the pros play the Scottish Open.