Royal Birkdale (CNN) Jordan Spieth is preparing for mind games, Justin Rose will lean on tips gleaned from Roger Federer, Rory McIlroy says he's a good bet and Henrik Stenson is worried about skydiving with the Claret Jug.

The 146th British Open at Royal Birkdale, which starts Thursday on England's northwest coast, promises to be one of the most open Opens in years.

The past seven majors have been won by first-time winners, although Royal Birkdale has a quirky habit of rewarding former champions and consecutive winners.

"OOOOOOOOO BABY!". Kevin Na with the first ace of the week on the 14th! #TheOpen pic.twitter.com/ZHH4mnpxxF

World No. 3 Spieth, though, thinks the traditional Open weather lottery could discount half the field straight away.

Open history is littered with infamous spells of weather, given the seaside locations of links courses and the changeable British summer climate.

Often one half of the draw -- early or late starters on the first two days -- suffers more than the other. When the tournament was last at Royal Birkdale in 2008 gales and driving rain marked the opening morning, while play was suspended for a spell because of high winds on the Saturday.

'Mind games'

"Most of the time there's at least a group that gets the worst weather," said Spieth, who fell foul of difficult conditions on the Friday at Royal Troon last year.

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"And it's almost impossible to win in that circumstance.

"If it's an afternoon round and the other side has already played the morning, that's when it's tough.

"Because you're like, 'I can't shoot those scores. It's not possible.' And that's frustrating when you think you can play your best and it doesn't happen."

On the other hand, a favorable draw can add pressure to perform, he says.

"It's a mind game that you play with yourself there," said Spieth, who is looking to add to his two breakthrough majors from 2015.

The forecast for Thursday is mostly fine with winds gusting to 20-25 mph in the afternoon, while Friday will be breezy in the morning with outbreaks of rain in the afternoon.

Photos: Best Open golf courses The British Open rotates around 10 of the best links golf courses in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland. St. Andrews (pictured) is known as the "Home of Golf" and its Old Course is arguably the game's most hallowed turf. Hide Caption 1 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses St. Andrews: Golf has been played over the dunes and linksland of St. Andrews since the 15th Century. The clubhouse of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club stands sentinel over the unique layout which starts and finishes in town. Hide Caption 2 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses St. Andrews: There are six courses squeezed onto St. Andrews' links, with the Old Course at their heart. The Road Hole 17th and 18th form an iconic finishing stretch. Hide Caption 3 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses St. Andrews: The Old Course is known for its blind drives over seas of gorse, vast greens, and swales, humps and hollows which require imagination and the ability to use the ground to your advantage. Hide Caption 4 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Birkdale: The 2017 Open Championship will take place at Royal Birkdale in Lancashire, northwest England. It has been in existence since 1897 and is easily recognized by its 1930s art-deco clubhouse. Hide Caption 5 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Birkdale: This powerhouse of a links features flat fairways and fair greens with holes framed by towering dunes. Hide Caption 6 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Turnberry: Perhaps best known now for being owned by US President Donald Trump, Turnberry on Scotland's west coast is a spectacular Open venue which underwent a recent revamp. Hide Caption 7 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Turnberry: The Ailsa course occupies a sublime location overlooking the Firth of Clyde with sweeping views to the Ailsa Craig rock and the Isle of Arran. Hide Caption 8 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Troon: The classic old links on Scotland's Ayrshire coast last hosted the Open in 2016 when Henrik Stenson won a famous duel against Phil Mickelson on the final day. Scotland's Colin Montgomerie (pictured) is a Troon native. Hide Caption 9 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Troon: The course is famed for its devilish par-three eighth hole, dubbed the "Postage Stamp." It's only 123 yards long but provides a stiff test in the wind, with deep bunkers and a thin green. Hide Caption 10 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Carnoustie: Northeast of Dundee on Scotland's east coast lies the fearsome links of Carnoustie, known as one of the toughest courses on the Open calendar. Hide Caption 11 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Carnoustie: The Championship course is on many golfers' bucket list and is famed as the venue where Jean Van de Velde paddled in the burn during a final-hole collapse in 1999. Hide Caption 12 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Muirfield: The jewel in the crown of Scotland's "Golf Coast" of East Lothian, Muirfield is a celebrated if controversial Open venue. Hide Caption 13 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Muirfield: The testing track near Gullane has been mired in controversy after the club voted -- at the second attempt -- to admit female members. Hide Caption 14 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Lytham & St. Annes: Nestled in a pocket of duneland surrounded by houses and a railway track, Royal Lytham in northwest England retains a charming links quality. Hide Caption 15 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Lytham & St. Annes: The relatively short course still provides a tough test with 206 bunkers to navigate. South African Ernie Els won the last Open here in 2012. Hide Caption 16 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Liverpool: Out on the Wirral peninsula to the west of Liverpool lies the course commonly known as Hoylake, a venerable old links overlooking the Irish Sea. Hide Caption 17 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Liverpool: Legendary golf scribe Bernard Darwin once wrote: "Hoylake, blown upon by mighty winds, breeder of mighty champions." Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy have both won the Open here. Hide Caption 18 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal St. George's: The furthest south of the Open venues in England, Royal St. George's is a quintessential links overlooking the North Sea in Kent. Hide Caption 19 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal St. George's: It is a testing mix of undulating fairways, slick greens and daunting bunkers. Hide Caption 20 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Portrush: Hugging Antrim's north coast, Royal Portrush returns to the Open rotation in 2019, the first time the tournament has been hosted outside England or Scotland since it hosted the 1951 event. Hide Caption 21 of 22 Photos: Best Open golf courses Royal Portrush: The Dunluce course is one of the world's most celebrated links layouts hugging the cliff tops and overlooking the Irish Sea with views to Donegal in the west and Scotland in the east. Hide Caption 22 of 22

'Being Roger Federer'

England's Rose says he is determined to "embrace" whatever happens with the weather and make a "non-issue" of it in his mind.

It's part of his drive to emulate some of the qualities of Federer, who he watched from the Royal Box win his record eighth title at Wimbledon last week.

"Roger is the sporting athlete I look up to and can try and model," said Rose, who is bidding to become the first Englishman to win the Open since Nick Faldo in 1992.

Aged 35, Roger Federer won his eighth Wimbledon title this month

"Everything he does is pretty much spot on, the way he handles himself, the grace in which he plays the sport I think is incredible. Mentally how he doesn't give much away I think is a style that's well suited to golf, too.

"Yes, I'm watching the tennis, but I'm watching him more than anything, and seeing what I can pick up. There are a few tricks here and there that you can apply to golf. I've always found it a bit easier to learn from other sportsmen than I have from golfers."

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World No. 4 McIlroy won the Open at Hoylake in 2014 for his third major title, followed a few weeks later by his fourth at the US PGA, but has not won a major since and has struggled for form recently.

He has missed three of his last four cuts, stretching back to the US Open, and is consequently rated a general 20-1 shot with oddsmakers.

"Good time to back me, I think," laughed the Northern Irishman, who didn't cope well with strong winds at the 2011 Open and said at the time, "These conditions, I don't enjoy playing in really."

He laughed at the memory at Royal Birkdale Wednesday, another who has realized the danger of bemoaning your lot and talking your way out of it.

'Sky's the limit

Defending champion Stenson, who beat Phil Mickelson in an epic final-day duel at Royal Troon last year, has vowed to add skydiving to his Claret Jug escapades, which include taking the trophy jet-skiing, should he win again.

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"I don't know which is going to be harder, winning the Claret Jug again or going skydiving afterward because that thought scares me a little bit," the deadpan Swede said Tuesday.

"It won't stop me from trying to win it, though."

Of all the majors, the Open tends to be won by slightly older players, which could further narrow the list of contenders and doesn't work favorably for the 23-year-old Spieth.

"A lot of the younger guys are physically gifted, but they don't have the experience with links golf," said Padraig Harrington, who won his second consecutive Open -- and from the "bad side of the draw" -- at Royal Birkdale in 2008.

"Assuming decent, tough enough conditions, it's a tournament for experience. Everybody can compete short and long hitters. It's not one dimensional."

'Imagination'

The Open is the only one of golf's four majors to be played both outside the United States and on true links golf courses, but Americans have always fared well in it, winning just under 40% of tournaments in the Masters era since 1934.

Of the nine Opens played at Royal Birkdale, Americans have won five.

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But US Open champion Brooks Koepka is adamant it's not where you're from but how you think.

"I love links golf. I think it's the best kind of golf you can play," said the American, who cut his pro teeth on the European circuit.

"So much imagination that goes into it. You can play 10 different shots from the middle of the fairway and I think that's so cool. You've really got to be creative. It's not just a stock shot like it is in America. You just fly it pin-high and hope it stops. Over here you can run it up, you can fly it there, too, if you want."

A scroll through Royal Birkdale's Open roll of honor throws up some interesting narratives.

There have been back-to-back major winners -- Mark O'Meara won the Masters and Open in 1998; and consecutive Open champions -- Harrington won in 2007 and 2008, Tom Watson won his second straight Open at Birkdale in 1983, Lee Trevino won the first of two successive Opens at the course in 1971, as did Arnold Palmer in 1961.

Australian Peter Thomson won his first Open title at Birkdale in 1954 and his fifth and final back here in 1965.

Royal Birkdale, which borders the Irish Sea north of Liverpool, is known as one of the world's great links courses, possibly the "best" course on the Open rotation, according to McIlroy.

"It tests all aspects of your game. You have to drive it well. You have to be smart," he said.

The Claret Jug is there for the taking. The beast of Birkdale stands in the way.