Over 150 players begin the final men's Major of the season with lofty ambitions and dreams of stamping their names into golfing folklore with an Open Championship victory in the country where golf is believed to have originated, Scotland.
But for some, those hopes will be dashed all too early and they will have to wait at least several more months before having another crack.
Of all four men's Majors, The Open presents the most likely chance that golfers will compete in all four days, however. The Masters is the strictest with just the top-50 and ties making it through, while the US Open is 60 and ties and the PGA Championship is the top-65 and ties.
The Open Championship cut ensures that the top-70 players and ties make it through to the weekend to battle it out for the famed Claret Jug. That means, of the 158 competitors that begin with high hopes on Thursday, around half are sent packing after 36 holes.
Up until 1985, The Open made two cuts - one after the second round and another after the third round. But the rules were changed the following year, leaving just one cut after 36 holes.
There is no 10-shot rule at The Open either, which was a common system utilised in various tournaments in the past, but it is no longer a feature in the Majors. Quite simply, the 10-shot rule meant that golfers within 10 strokes of the lead made the cut, no matter what position they were in. The highest number of players to make it through to the weekend was 113 at the 1991 Open at Royal Birkdale.
Given the vagaries of links golf, the cut mark can vary dramatically from year to year. At last year's 151st Open at Royal Liverpool, it fell at three-over, with 76 players progressing to the weekend and the likes of Collin Morikawa, Keegan Bradley, and Joaquin Niemann narrowly missing out.
It's not all bad news though, as everyone who tees it up in The Open receives a share of the prize money on offer, which has been increased to $16.5 million for 2023.
The top-10 players who don't make the weekend at Troon will still get $12,350 as a consolation. The next 20 will receive $10,300, while everyone else will walk away with $8,750 just for making it to The Open.
The Open Cut Line History
* Lowest tournament score to par