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The 126th U.S. Open marks Adam Scott's 100th consecutive major start, a milestone rooted in his amateur career.
Adam Scott’s 100th consecutive major championship start at the 2026 U.S. Open is a milestone built on longevity, consistency and one of the most admired swings in modern golf. But before the green jacket, the World No. 1 ranking and more than two decades on golf’s biggest stages, Scott was a standout amateur with a résumé that hinted at everything to come.
From back-to-back Australian Boys’ Amateur titles to 100 consecutive major championship starts, Adam Scott’s career remains one of golf’s best examples of amateur promise becoming professional permanence.
Scott first emerged as one of Australia’s top young players by winning the Australian Boys’ Amateur Championship in 1997, then defending the title in 1998. Those back-to-back national junior victories helped establish him as one of the country’s brightest prospects and placed him firmly within Australia’s elite player-development pathway.
His amateur career soon stretched beyond Australia. In 1997, Scott qualified for the U.S. Junior Amateur at Aronimink Golf Club, gaining early experience against top international competition. He later played college golf at UNLV, joining one of the strongest programs in the country during a nationally prominent period for the Rebels.
Junior Golf
1997 & 1998 Australian Boys’ Amateur champion
International Test
Qualified for the 1997 U.S. Junior Amateur
College Golf
Played at UNLV before turning professional
Though his time at UNLV was brief, it helped prepare Scott for the next step. By 2000, while still an amateur, he was already proving he could compete with professionals. He tied for sixth at the Moroccan Open and tied for fifth at the Benson & Hedges International, results that showed his game was close to tour-ready before he officially turned professional.
Milestone Moment
Scott’s major streak began at the 2001 Open Championship and has carried through multiple generations of the game.
That path gives Scott’s 100-major milestone added meaning. During that span, Scott became the first Australian to win the Masters, rose to World No. 1 and remained a fixture in major championships long after many careers would have faded.
For the AmateurGolf.com audience, Scott’s story is a reminder that elite professional careers often begin in familiar places: junior championships, national squads, college programs and early tests against stronger fields.
His rise was not built on one breakthrough moment, but on the steady development of a game that could travel, adapt and last.
From junior golf in Australia to one of the rarest longevity marks in major championship history, Adam Scott’s career remains a model of what amateur promise can become.

Equipment Note
Adam Scott plays the Titleist Pro V1 golf ball.
Scott’s equipment choices have long reflected the same theme as his career: control, consistency and trust. According to Titleist, Scott plays the Titleist Pro V1, a ball he has leaned on because it fits the way he wants to see the ball fly.
In a Team Titleist feature on why Pro V1 is the right golf ball for Scott, he explained that spin and launch are central to his testing process. Scott said he naturally produces low spin, so he looks for a ball that gives him the control he needs without forcing him away from his preferred flight window.
Scott on Pro V1
“Because I naturally produce very low spin, I need a bit more high spin in the ball. And I think Pro V1 complements that.”
That is especially relevant in major championships, where firm conditions and demanding setups often reward precise distance control and predictable ball flight. Scott also told Titleist that once the ball is coming out in his preferred window, he feels comfortable working it both ways and flighting shots down when needed.
His advice for amateurs was just as direct: find the golf ball that fits and play it exclusively. Scott said using one ball removes a variable, helps players stay dialed in on distance control and can reduce doubt during a round.

Ball
Titleist Pro V1
Fit Priority
Spin, control and a trusted flight window
Amateur Takeaway
Pick one ball and remove a variable

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