Perspective
British Open 2021: The best quote from Day 1 at the Open belongs to a supermarket truck driver
David Cannon/R&A
Nicholas Poppleton is a 27-year-old Englishman who plays on the minor-league EuroPro Tour and supplements his income by working weekends as a supermarket truck driver, and we can all agree that “Nicholas Poppleton” is a perfect name for a 27-year-old Englishman who plays on the minor-league EuroPro Tour and supplements his income by working weekends as a supermarket truck driver. Poppleton, who entered the week at No. 984 in the World Ranking, is making his Open debut, earning an invite to Royal St. George’s thanks to winning a local qualifier by three shots. Judging by the leader board it was an inauspicious start for Poppleton, making six bogeys and a double en route to a five-over 75.
But Poppleton—whose partner served as a first-responder during the pandemic, working as a nurse at a makeshift hospital—seemed appreciative of the opportunity and kept his round in perspective.
“Yeah, privilege and honor to play the event,” he said Thursday afternoon. “Just to be playing golf at the moment with the way the world is is just a privilege.”
And that is fine and good and refreshing. But Poppleton followed that remark with the quote of the day.
When asked to describe what was going through his mind on the first tee, Poppleton was brutally honest in his assessment.
“I cacked in my pants, but I've hit it a couple times over the week, so, yeah, my caddie did a good job trying to chill me out,” Poppleton said. “But I don't think—I think that's what you play for, isn't it? Everyone dreams of that moment. Everyone has cacked their pants and topped it off the first. If you do, you just think, I had a chance to play in The Open, so it's just awesome.”
For those in need of translation, “cacked” is an Old English word that means … well, exactly what you think it means. If that wasn’t enough, Poppleton had fun with the lack of fans following him at day’s end.
“Yeah, when you're off last they -- I think they got fed up and gone off by then,” Poppleton said of the few in attendance late Thursday afternoon. “I flagged it into 16 and there was just couple greens guys clapping. Oh, yeah, class.
“So, yeah, it was great on the first and amazing, but I think everyone had a long day at the Open and decided it wasn't worth sticking around the Poppleton shooting five over.”
Standing in T-137, Poppleton will need a strong push on Friday to make it to Saturday. But if 18 holes are all that remains of his Open bid, the man can find solace in making the most of the spotlight. Long life “the Poppleton.”
MORE BRITISH OPEN 2021 STORIES FROM GOLF DIGEST:
- British Open 101—Everything you need to know about this year at Royal St. George’s
- What the first Open in two years—and with COVID protocols—will look like
- How to watch the British Open on TV and streaming online
- The top 100 players competing at Royal St. George’s, ranked
- Exclusive drone footage of every hole at Royal St. George’s
- The major that never happened: The story behind the cancellation of the 2020 Open
- 31 things you might not remember about the 2011 Open at Royal St. George’s
- James Bond-writer Ian Fleming’s golf passion stirred at Royal St. George’s
- The 15 best Open Championships, ranked
- 11 of history’s most unlikely Open champions
- The Bryson Experiment faces links golf for the first time
- Is winning a major an effective or misleading predictor of success? Yes