Shinnecock Hills 2026: Why the US Open Might Just Belong to Europe

Rai holds the Wanamaker, McIlroy has back-to-back green jackets, and Rahm has a score to settle. Europe arrives at Shinnecock Hills with serious intent.

The 2026 major season is two down, two to go. And if the PGA Championship at Aronimink told us anything, it is that European golf is very much here. Aaron Rai’s victory — the first by an English-born player since 1919 — was not an upset so much as a statement. The next examination arrives on 18 June at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, New York, for the 126th US Open. (USGA)

The Venue Makes the Tournament

Shinnecock Hills Aerial View

Shinnecock Hills is one of the oldest clubs in American golf and among its most respected courses. Set on Long Island’s exposed South Fork, it plays firm, fast, and wind-affected — conditions that reward precision over power and patience over instinct. It is, in other words, a course that thinks like a European links. Players who have spent formative years on the Atlantic-facing layouts of Portugal and the British Isles tend to arrive at Shinnecock better equipped than the odds would suggest. (Shinnecock Hills Golf Club)

The Europeans to Watch

Jon Rahm arrives at Shinnecock with a score to settle. Runner-up at Augusta, runner-up at Aronimink — the Spaniard has been the nearly man of the 2026 major season, and a player of his calibre will not stay in second place indefinitely. His ball-striking in links-adjacent conditions is among the finest in the world. The wind off Peconic Bay will not trouble him.

Jon Rahm Teeing Off at a Major

Aaron Rai arrives as reigning PGA Champion — newly exempt, freshly confident, and carrying the kind of momentum that only a first major can generate. Tommy Fleetwood and Shane Lowry, both proven performers on exposed coastal terrain, complete what is shaping up to be a genuinely formidable European contingent. Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Åberg add Scandinavian precision to the mix. Robert MacIntyre, who grew up playing into Scottish headwinds, will be entirely at home. (Golf Digest)

Aaro Rai Iron Stroke

Rory McIlroy arrives as back-to-back Masters champion — the first player to defend the green jacket since Tiger Woods in 2002. A near-miss at Aronimink, where he finished five back of Rai, does nothing to diminish what has been the most sustained period of major-championship golf of his career. The bookmakers have him second only to Scheffler. A US Open title in June would give him two of the year’s first three majors and a second at a tournament he last won at Congressional in 2011.

What Shinnecock Demands

The US Open’s reputation as the most punishing major is earned rather than manufactured. The USGA controls the pace and firmness of the course across four days to make the margin between brilliance and disaster uncomfortably thin. Players who survive tend to be those who accept the conditions rather than fight them. European golf, by and large, produces exactly that temperament.

The Links Connection

Portugal’s northwest coast is better preparation for Shinnecock Hills than it is usually given credit for. Estela Golf Club — three kilometres of Atlantic dune golf north of Porto — has hosted the Portuguese Open and drawn favourable comparisons with the links of Scotland and Ireland. A few kilometres south, Miramar Golf Club has been testing players against the nortada since 1932, its nine holes running alongside the beaches of Espinho on a layout originally designed by Mackenzie Ross. These are not resort courses. They are the kind of places that find out what a player is made of.

Estela Golf Course North Portugal

Players shaped by this kind of golf — exposed, wind-dependent, unforgiving of anything loose — tend to handle a US Open better than the rankings alone would suggest. If the European contingent makes its case at Shinnecock in June, the conditions will feel less foreign than outsiders might assume.

The courses that built that temperament are, in the meantime, available to the rest of us. Explore Porto golf holidays with Tee Times.

A Perfect Morning at Pine Cliffs Golf Course

A review by our CEO, Mr. Carlos Ferreira — sharing his morning on one of the Algarve’s most celebrated coastal layouts.

This morning I had the pleasure of playing at the beautiful Pine Cliffs Resort golf course, and it truly reminded me why golf in the Algarve is considered among the best in Europe. From the moment the sun rose over the Atlantic coastline, the conditions were simply spectacular. Clear blue skies, warm sunshine, and a light ocean breeze created the perfect setting for an unforgettable round.

Tee Times CEO Carlos Ferreira

The course itself was presented in excellent condition. The fairways were immaculate, offering consistent lies throughout the round, while the greens were particularly impressive — fast, firm, and extremely true. Players had to be fully focused on every putt and approach shot, as the pace of the greens demanded precision and good course management. It was the kind of setup that rewards quality golf while still remaining enjoyable for players of all levels.

One of the most striking things this morning was the atmosphere around the course. There was a tremendous turnout, with close to 200 golfers enjoying the magnificent conditions throughout the day. Despite the high number of players, the pace of play remained surprisingly smooth and efficient. Our group completed the front nine in under two hours, which is excellent considering how busy the course was. Credit must go to both the players and the course management for maintaining such a good rhythm during peak conditions.

On the Green Pine Cliffs

Of course, no visit to Pine Cliffs would be complete without mentioning its breathtaking scenery. The dramatic red cliffs, the panoramic ocean views, and the beautifully maintained landscape make every hole memorable. Even between shots, it is impossible not to stop for a moment and appreciate the natural beauty surrounding the course. Few places combine championship golf and coastal scenery quite as effortlessly as Pine Cliffs. For anyone planning a golf break along this stretch of coast, Pine Cliffs is reason enough on its own.

Pine Cliffs Resort Aerial View

The signature par-3 sixth hole, famously played across the cliffs, continues to be one of the most iconic golf holes in Portugal. Standing on the tee box with the Atlantic Ocean stretching endlessly behind the green is an experience that never gets old. It is one of those rare holes where every golfer instinctively reaches for their phone or camera before taking the shot.

Today’s round perfectly captured what makes golf in the Algarve so special: outstanding weather, exceptional course conditions, stunning scenery, and a relaxed but vibrant atmosphere. Whether you are visiting Portugal for a golf holiday or simply looking for a memorable round by the ocean, Pine Cliffs continues to deliver a first-class experience.

After mornings like this, it is easy to understand why so many golfers return to Pine Cliffs year after year.

Double Glory at Vidago Palace — AQUAPOR Circuit Finds Its Round Three Champions

Luciana Reis’ 142-stroke aggregate topped every single competitor, while João Miguel Pereira is making a habit of winning.

For a tournament hosting 73 golfers in the hills of northern Portugal, the 3rd AQUAPOR Circuit 2026 produced remarkably clear outcomes. At Vidago Palace on 16–17 May, Luciana Reis (Arquitectos) and João Miguel Pereira (Aroeira) claimed the titles in the Women’s and Men’s competitions respectively — and both had to earn them. (Federação Portuguesa de Golfe)

Aquapor 3rd Round Winners

Reis Sets the Standard for Everyone

Luciana Reis led after day one, returning a 70 (-2) featuring seven birdies, three bogeys, and a double bogey — a scoreboard that tells a story, not a fairytale. She closed with a composed 72 (par) on day two to finish at 142 (-2). Not just the best Women’s score. The best aggregate across all 73 competitors — fourteen women and 59 men. None of them scored lower. Francisca Rocha (Oporto Golf Club) took second in the Women’s category with 151 (+7), a margin that reflects just how controlled Reis was over two days. (FPG — Round 1 Report)

Pereira Holds Firm as the Field Slips

João Miguel Pereira entered day two level with Diogo Rocha (Oporto Golf Club), both having shot 71 (-1) on the opening round. Pereira’s second-round 74 (+2) wasn’t vintage form — but Rocha’s 79 (+7) made the arithmetic straightforward. Pereira won by a single stroke over João Maria Ivo de Carvalho (Estoril Golf Club), who closed with a tidy 71 to finish at 146 (+2). Rocha, so dangerous after day one, slipped to joint sixth. Golf, as ever, reserves the right to change the conversation overnight. (Federação Portuguesa de Golfe)

The Venue: Vidago Palace

Vidago Palace Golf Course

Vidago Palace is no ordinary backdrop for a national circuit event. Originally laid out by Scottish architect Mackenzie Ross in 1936 as a nine-hole course, it was reimagined by Cameron & Powell and reopened as a full par-72 championship layout in 2010. Set in the Oura Valley in northern Portugal — roughly an hour south of Chaves, near the Spanish border — the course winds through a centenary park before opening out into dramatic hillside terrain. The 17th, a par five played from the highest to the lowest point on the course, is the signature hole and one of the more theatrical finishes in Portuguese golf. The clubhouse was designed by architect Álvaro Siza Vieira. (Vidago Palace)

A Season Taking Shape

Three events into the 2026 AQUAPOR Circuit, and Pereira already has two wins — a fact the rest of the field will be tracking with increasing attention. The circuit opened in January at Morgado do Reguengo, where Amélia Gabin (ADCQL) and José Miguel Franco de Sousa (Estoril Golf Club) took the honours. March brought Quinta do Perú and a first circuit win for Pereira alongside Francisca Salgado (Vale de Janelas). Vidago makes it a double for the Aroeira golfer in 2026. Five champions across three events; five different stories.

What’s Next on the Circuit

The AQUAPOR Circuit resumes at Palmares on 18–19 July — a course that trades northern mountain drama for Algarve coastline, with the beach at Meia Praia stretching out below its fairways. Estela follows in October, and the season concludes at Belas Clube de Campo in November.

If the circuit’s next stop has you thinking about a Portugal golf trip of your own, explore the Algarve’s finest courses — including Palmares — with Tee Times.