BR
BRENTLEY
ROMINE
Crestview Country Club, which will host the Wichita Open beginning Thursday, sustained significant damage with downed trees, flooding and mangled tournament structures.
Like he has his whole career, Spaun dug deep to win a chaotic U.S. Open for his first major title.
Burns was twice denied relief from perceived temporary water on the 15th hole Sunday at Oakmont before double-bogeying the hole and losing the U.S. Open by five shots.
Four players are under par entering the final round of the 125th U.S. Open. Here’s why they’ll win — and why they won’t.
Lowry shot 17 over over two days at Oakmont, a frustrating performance that included Lowry accidentally picking up his ball on the 14th green Friday without marking it first.
McIlroy smashed a tee marker on Oakmont’s 17th hole on Friday evening, then birdied his last hole to make the U.S. Open cut with a shot to spare.
Burns, statistically the world’s best putter, hooped a clutch par save to shoot 65 Friday at Oakmont and enter this U.S. Open weekend at 3 under.
Perez recorded the second ace in U.S. Open history at Oakmont on Friday.
Koepka, irritated by his game and recent results, finally got things to click again in a major on Thursday at Oakmont, where he opened this U.S. Open in 2-under 68.
Spaun went out in a record 31 and posted just the eighth bogey-free round in U.S. Open history at Oakmont to take the early lead on Thursday.
The toughest job during this week’s U.S. Open, besides playing in the championship, might be trying to find errant shots that find Oakmont’s unprecedented rough.
DeChambeau is playing at Oakmont this week with a new set of prototype irons that he debuted last week at LIV Golf Virginia.
Four years since the world’s top amateurs zig-zagged their ways around Oakmont Country Club, don’t expect that kind of right-brain strategy at this week’s U.S. Open.
Here are six interesting groupings aside from the featured ones for Thursday and Friday at Oakmont.
Rahm has yet to finish outside the top 10 in his LIV starts, and even though he says it’s easier to do so in smaller fields, he’s confident his current game is good enough to win at Oakmont.
Just months after his dad’s death, Matt Vogt, 34, will make his U.S. Open debut in his native Pittsburgh and on a course, Oakmont Country Club, where he caddied before becoming a dentist.
Young flew a 3-wood 26 yards longer than intended on his 72 hole Sunday at the RBC Canadian Open, but he’s still pleased with his game entering the U.S. Open.
Scottie Scheffler will be the pre-championship favorite at Oakmont for good reason, but what about everyone else? Let’s rank them all.
Barbaree, a former standout at LSU, has turned a corner with his game since his now wife, Chloe, jumped on the bag last summer in Canada.
The 28-year-old Nicholas was among four U.S. Open qualifiers out of the final qualifier in Summit, New Jersey, and will make his major debut at Oakmont.
Clanton will make his pro debut on the PGA Tour at this week’s RBC Canadian Open at TPC Toronto.
Arizona State grad Josele Ballester officially declined the KFT membership he received as the No. 3 finisher in the PGA Tour University rankings.
Romero responded to her third-round 84 in a big way on Sunday, firing a 5-under 67, the lowest final-round score by an amateur in championship history.
After missing the cut at the U.S. Women’s Open, Thompson took to social media on Sunday morning to defend her pace of play and maintain that she’s not, in fact, retired.