
Mondays at major championships are sleepy affairs: players milling about on the practice green, trading gossip and tinkering with their strokes; caddies pacing out yardages and scouting the pitches on the putting surfaces; fans aimlessly wandering, welcome to their pick of seats (or napping perches) in mostly empty grandstands.
But this Monday at the 154th Open Championship offered something different: not just meaningful golf but also golf that could, if the stars align above England’s wind-battered northwest coast, change the trajectory of a player’s career.
The opening morning of this 11th of Royal Birkdale’s Opens marked the inaugural playing of the so-called Last-Chance Qualifier, a clever Royal & Ancient concoction that gave a dozen players who narrowly came up short in Final Qualifying one final shot at nabbing a spot on this week’s tee sheet — and fans onsite a rooting interest on an otherwise uneventful day.
The participants came by way of a handful of exemption categories, including but not limited to players who were barely boxed out from the Official World Golf Ranking cutoff; the 2026 British Amateur runner-up (Matt Moloney); and players who finished one position behind those who advanced via Final Qualifying (which is how YouTuber Wesley Bryan punched his ticket to LCQ). Eighteen holes of stroke play for a chance to play, beginning Thursday, for the Claret Jug, her good self. Cool stuff.
But enough lede-burying!
The champion of this grand golfing experiment’s debut was exactly the kind of player you’d like to see win the Hail Mary Invitational, a pro with such a regular-Joe past that they call him … well, “Joe.” That would be Joe Dean, a 32-year-old from Sheffield who got up and down from a pot bunker on 18 to post a two-under 68 and edge his countryman, Andrew Wilson, for LCQ bragging rights.
If Dean’s name rings even the faintest of bells, that might be because he made headlines at the 2024 Open at Royal Troon for working himself into early contention just a few months removed from driving a delivery truck for a British grocery-store chain. “I had a great time doing it,” Dean said Monday. “Met some really good friends and grounded me really well.”
Dean took the job in early 2020, when he was struggling to find his way in the pro game and largely playing one-day tournaments and mini-tour events. Making ends meet as a competitive golfer isn’t easy in most corners of the pro game, so Dean did what needed to do, picking up a delivery job in the early days of COVID after some urging from his girlfriend, Emily Lyle. He stuck with the gig for the next four years.
In the fall of 2023, a pack of Dean’s friends pitched in to cover his costs for DP World Tour Q-school. Dean advanced through every stage and earned his card for the 2024 season. But with few winnings to his name, he was still scraping by. That changed in February 2024, when Dean broke through with a runner-up finish at the Kenya Open, worth about $225,000. “Life-changing,” he said at the time. His fine play continued that season with his star turn at the Open (while bunking in a motor home) and, at season’s end, a 37th-place finish in the Race to Dubai standings.
This year, Dean is 67th in the race, but his best form has come in recent weeks, with two top-10s in his last three starts and now his win at the maiden LCQ. “One-day events, I seem to play better,” Dean said after his two-birdie, one-eagle round Monday. “I don’t quite know why, the mentality of trying to keep the same [aggressive play] throughout any round and every round.”
Unlikely as it may be, Dean has an even bigger event next week. He’s getting married to Lyle, who also happens to be his caddie. Lyle first picked up Dean’s bag when he turned pro in 2016. The partnership didn’t last (professionally!) with another of Dean’s friends looping for him in recent years. But Lyle, who is an accomplished amateur golfer, rejoined her fiancée at the KLM Open last month (where they tied for third) and has been with him for his last three starts.
“It is a very hard dynamic,” Dean said Monday. “Even when things are going well out there, it’s still not a nice walk in the park. It’s very stressful. It’s demanding. … I will say that the good thing is I’m self-sustainable. So I have the yardage book. I just literally need Em to carry the bag in, probably just to talk rubbish to.”
Come next Tuesday, that rubbish will be replaced with solemn vows and sweet nothings, on the occasion of the couple’s nuptials.
Why the Tuesday date?
“It was cheaper,” Dean said, laughing.