HOYLAKE, England — Nine years ago, the resplendent orange Rickie Fowler wore against the backdrop of Hoylake’s cement-colored palate seemed like it glowed a little brighter. At the 2014 Open Championship, Fowler was still in his mid 20s, wearing a flat-billed, white and orange Puma hat with his website stitched on, sporting a golf swing that was far flatter, and a putter head that was much smaller.
Five years into his professional career, at the time, it felt like Fowler was starting to make real progress toward what at one point felt inevitable, guaranteed even: Winning. A lot.
He had just notched a top-five finish at the Masters that year and added a second-place finish in the U.S. Open at Pinehurst. For a player who had only one PGA Tour win but countless attention, sponsorship deals and hype to his name, these performances at the majors felt overdue. The early part of 2014 hinted at Fowler being close, but even in those tournaments prior to The Open, he had been eight and six shots respectively behind the eventual winner.
It wasn’t until Hoylake that year that it felt like Fowler had a shot. Going into Sunday nearly 10 years ago, Fowler was six shots back from Rory McIlroy, who led the field. Fowler needed birdies and no bogeys. He made five of the former and none of the latter and got as close as three shots back after birdieing the 15th hole. Fowler played the course Sunday four shots better than McIlroy, but it wasn’t enough.
At the time, Fowler viewed his runner-up as a harbinger.
“It feels like I should be here,” Fowler said after the final round in 2014. “There’s plenty more to come.”
Later that year, however, Fowler would lose to McIlroy again by two strokes, this time at the PGA Championship. It was another top-5 finish — the first American to finish top-5 in every major of a single year — that wasn’t good enough to beat the player who was taking over the game in the way many had expected Fowler would.
“I definitely have some catching up to do,” Fowler said of McIlroy’s multiple major wins at the time. “But I am getting closer.”
Early on, there was an expectation that Fowler’s career would take on a linear trajectory. After early struggles, 2014 was the start of a proof of concept that culminated in Fowler’s biggest win of his career at the the 2015 Players’ Championship. That, however, was never supposed to feel like the mountaintop. And yet it was.
Fowler’s decline since hasn’t been gradual, either. But as he arrives at the site of that 2014 Open once again with no majors to his name, this season has felt like a turning point from an up-and-down last few years. More than that: His success on the PGA Tour (13 top-15 finishes, one win) has felt like it’s building up to something. The sport is far deeper than it was back in 2014, but Fowler, now 34, will try again this week in hopes of turning one of those close calls into a major win and capitalize on what feels like his best shot.
“I’ve always thought between the Masters and the Open, those are the two places where I feel like I have a better shot to win,” Fowler told ESPN Wednesday. “I love playing links golf and I’ve had success over here.”
He paused and smiled.
“But definitely like to think this won’t be the last Open I play in.”
On Tuesday at Royal Liverpool, with the rain washing out any sunshine left from the day prior, Fowler paced himself around the course where he nearly won his first major. As he took several conservative irons off the tees while some of his playing partners took woods, the only orange in sight was the inner tint on his sunglasses and the spikes on the bottom of his shoes. He wore blue and gray and, under an umbrella, took notes in his yardage book. He carried his water bottle and spent less time on the greens than others.
The putter now is bigger — an Odyssey mallet that resembles a Star Wars spaceship — and the swing is steeper, a product of work that Fowler has put in with Butch Harmon, but one that has also required plenty of commitment and an ability to continue to put process above results.
“Being that I’ve been one of the best players in the world, I knew what I was capable of, but it’s tough when you’re struggling for that long of a period of time,” Fowler said.
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The recipe is working. This year, Fowler is back in the limelight once again — this time for his golf more so than anything else. Sure, he still wears his patented orange on Sundays. He’s still represented by Puma and has a crop of sponsors stitched around his clothes and gear. But even if the hue hasn’t changed, everything feels a bit more muted, refined and buoyed by a different perspective.
“Having gone through everything from earlier in my career, having success or not and then struggling the last few years. I’m in a position now where I’m not scared to fail,” Fowler said. Yeah, I’ve dealt with all of that. So yeah, it’s more go out there and give it our all.”
Just a few weeks ago at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, Fowler didn’t fail. The improvements he’s made coalesced into his first PGA Tour win since 2019. The victory, secured by a 12-foot putt on the 18th hole, elicited a reaction from Fowler that appeared to be less about celebration and more about relief, confirmation even, that all the work he has put in leading up to this season had paid off.