logo
U.S. Open 2025 live updates: Leaderboard, best pairings for the second round at Oakmont

U.S. Open 2025 live updates: Leaderboard, best pairings for the second round at Oakmont

USA Today2 days ago

U.S. Open 2025 live updates: Leaderboard, best pairings for the second round at Oakmont
How's that for an opener? The U.S. Open 2025 is underway with 18 holes in the books after Thursday's first round at Oakmont Country Club, the highest-ranked private course on the Golfweek's Best state-by-state list.
Now it's on to Round 2. If you want leaderboard updates, scores, tee times, highlights and more from the first round, you've come to the right spot.
U.S. Open 2025 leaderboard
Keep tabs on the U.S. leaderboard, scores and tee times here. Here's what the top of the leaderboard looked like after the first round. These are the only golfers under par after 18 holes.
Pos. Golfer Score 1 J.J. Spaun -4 2 Thriston Lawrence -3 T3 Si Woo Kim -2 T3 Brooks Koepka -2 T3 Sungjae Im -2 T6 Ben Griffin -1 T6 Thomas Detry -1 T6 Jon Rahm -1 T6 Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen -1 T6 James Nicholas -1
Where and how to watch the U.S. Open
Second round, 6:30 a.m. ET to 5 p.m. ET, Peacock
Second round featured groups, 7 a.m. ET to 1 p.m., usopen.com, USGA App, DirecTV, YouTube TV
Second round, 1 p.m. ET to 7 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock
Second round, 7 p.m. ET to 8 p.m. ET, Peacock
Second round, 3 p.m. ET to 8 p.m., Sirius XM Radio
Live from the U.S. Open, 8 p.m. ET to 10 p.m. ET, Golf Channel
See the complete TV and streaming lineup for the entire week here.
What's the projected cutline at the U.S. Open?
The USGA, which runs the championship, set the cut for the low 60 and ties. After Thursday's first round, that would make the projected cutline 3 over. That would put these guys in jeopardy with 18 holes to play Friday.
Pos. Golfer Score T49 Hideki Matsuyama 4 over T49 Matt Fitzpatrick 4 over T49 Wyndham Clark 4 over T49 Rory McIlroy 4 over T79 Joaquin Niemann 5 over T98 Patrick Cantlay 6 over T98 Justin Thomas 6 over T98 Jason Day 6 over T119 Justin Rose 7 over T133 Shane Lowry 9 over
Who won the U.S. Open the last time it was at Oakmont?
That would be Dustin Johnson in 2016. This is the 10th U.S. Open at Oakmont, the most of any golf course.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NOTES AND QUOTES – NBC SPORTS' COVERAGE OF THE 125TH U.S. OPEN (THIRD ROUND)
NOTES AND QUOTES – NBC SPORTS' COVERAGE OF THE 125TH U.S. OPEN (THIRD ROUND)

NBC Sports

time5 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

NOTES AND QUOTES – NBC SPORTS' COVERAGE OF THE 125TH U.S. OPEN (THIRD ROUND)

Sunday's Final Round Coverage Begins at 9 a.m. ET on USA Network and Continues on NBC and Peacock at Noon ET 'He answered a lot of questions about himself today – but tomorrow will be the biggest day of his career.' – Dan Hicks on Sam Burns (-4, Leader) 'It really seems like physically and mentally that Adam Scott is in complete control of his game and his mind.' – Smylie Kaufman on Scott (-3, T-2nd) 'If he were to go on to win tomorrow, remember that shot today.' - Terry Gannon on Viktor Hovland's shot from the rough on No. 17 to a few feet Mini Episodes of the GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav Post Nightly STAMFORD, Conn. – June 14, 2025 – NBC Sports presented third round coverage of the 125th U.S. Open from Oakmont Country Club on NBC, Peacock, and USA Network, including on-site post-round coverage on Golf Central Live From the U.S. Open on GOLF Channel. Sunday's final round coverage begins at 9 a.m. ET on USA Network and continues on NBC and Peacock at noon ET. Saturday's coverage included a visit to the broadcast booth by 18-time major winner Jack Nicklaus, who won his first major title at the 1962 U.S. Open at Oakmont. 125th U.S. Open – Third Round Leaderboard ON SAM BURNS (-4, Leader) Hicks: 'He answered a lot of questions about himself today – but tomorrow will be the biggest day of his career.' Terry Gannon on his par at No. 7: 'That's a U.S. Open par.' Kisner on his pre-shot routine: 'He does his routine almost every single shot I've ever seen him hit. He's always trying to keep that club face outside of his hands and he checks it with his eyes before he goes back to set and hit his shot. That routine gets him super comfortable with where he's putting the golf club on every swing.' Brad Faxon on Burns' putting following birdie on No. 13: 'Scottie Scheffler has said that Sam is one of these guys that has good fundamentals, good instincts and he putts very reactionary. That's a good compliment from the best in the world.' Kisner on Burns' long birdie putt left short from the front of No. 16: 'The guys have been leaving this putt short all day long.' Jim 'Bones' Mackay: 'It's funny – as the guys were walking up to the green, someone in the crowd was yelling that the guys have been short from the front of this green all day long.' ON ADAM SCOTT (-3, T-2nd) Hicks following Scott's birdie on No. 13: 'You get the feeling that Adam Scott is kind of a favorite? That was a heck or a roar.' Kaufman prior to his birdie on No. 17 to tie for the lead: 'This is a putt you almost expect to make has a player. Just a cup or two out on the right side, but I think that Adam Scott is licking his chops here. It really seems like physically and mentally that Adam Scott is in complete control of his game and his mind.' ON J.J. SPAUN (-3, T-2nd) Begay III: 'He's just been really solid in a lot of areas of the game…Really seems to be comfortable with his golf swing, but more important he's been comfortable in the moment.' Hicks: 'There is confidence in that putter.' Faxon: 'I think hearing what he said about his experience at the PLAYERS, playing against Rory when he said he was the most nervous he's ever been, particularly in the playoff on Monday morning...I really think that experience is going to help him down the stretch at Oakmont.' ON VIKTOR HOVLAND (-1, 4th) Faxon following his missed birdie on No. 7: 'It gets frustrating when you hit good shots and you don't make (the putts), you just have to remind yourself, 'I can keep doing this. I'm going to keep hitting good putts. I have to go through my process.'' Hicks after his birdie on No. 10: 'That's why Hovland says he has been in a good state of mind. Even though you're going to pick up bogeys like he did early in the round, he knows he's hitting well and he doesn't get into panic mode.' Kisner: 'I love this look in his face. He's just so stoic.' Smylie Kaufman: 'I talked to his caddie Shay Knight and he said just about every iron he has hit today, there's been a little bit more juice in it. There's been about four or five extra yards that there haven't expecting.' Terry Gannon on Hovland's shot from the rough on No. 17 to a few feet: 'If he were to go on to win tomorrow, remember that shot today.' ON TYRRELL HATTON (+1, T-6th) Kisner: 'He always seems to be around in these majors on the weekend.' Hicks: 'U.S. Open, Tyrrell Hatton, and Oakmont? Sign me up. Around this place, it could send even Hatton to a whole new level.' ON SCOTTIE SCHEFFLER (+4, T-11th) Hicks on Scheffler's putting today: 'He just hasn't been able to continue that really good putting streak that he's had by winning three of his last four starts.' Scheffler to Cara Banks post-round on the mental grind of Oakmont: 'Collin, Viktor and I were laughing in scoring yesterday because there was one instance yesterday where Collin kind of walked through my line because he got flustered by chipping it over the green. Viktor did the same thing on the hole before because he had played a little hockey and then I had messed up some scores on Collin's card so we're sitting there laughing in scoring like, 'What are we doing out there?' Maybe once or twice a year you mess up somebody's score, and I messed up two of Collin's yesterday so it's challenging in a lot of different senses and it's especially challenging when you're not hitting the ball where you're looking, but overall, I still have an outside chance going into tomorrow.' ON RORY MCILROY (+10, T-49th) Begay III on Rory McIlroy's performance: 'I give him a little bit of a pass with the career Grand Slam. Now he's just trying to figure out, 'What are my goals now?' For a decade, it was, 'I need to win The Masters.' What does he want his new set of goals to be to make his mark on the game?' JACK NICKLAUS WITH MIKE TIRICO Nicklaus to Tirico on winning his first major at the 1962 U.S. Open at Oakmont: 'I remember playing very well and managing my game. Barbara and I were 22-year-olds at the time. It was fun. Jackie with us was eight months old. It's a lot of things to remember but I remember I played basically 17 weeks in a row coming into the U.S. Open.' Nicklaus on playing with Arnold Palmer at Oakmont in 1962: 'People have asked me that a thousand times. I never heard the people. I was a 22-year-old kid with blinders on. I had one focus of mine at that's to win a golf tournament…I felt like this was my year and I came in here not realizing, or just dumb enough, to (not) know that there was a guy named Arnold Palmer that lived in western Pennsylvania. But anyway, I played well and Arnie played well. A lot of guys played well that week, we shot one-under par. That was a good score at a U.S. Open. And it still is.' Nicklaus on the mental approach of playing major events: 'The one thing you have to do is be patient. You know that you can't force things at a U.S. Open. When you force things, that's when you make mistakes, that's when you get killed…I always liked golf courses where par was important. I never liked a golf course where 20-under par was something that you strived for. It then became a putting contest, and you really can't play that way. You have to play a total different mindset on that type of a golf course. But here, Oakmont's a challenge. It's the roughest stuff, the fairways are appropriate width, the greens are usually firm and fast. It's what an Open should be.' ON OAKMONT Brandel Chamblee on the 2025 U.S. Open: 'It was kind of sleepy for the first two-and-a-half days or so. It's like the whole championship took a couple of Ambien. Then it was like the girl in Pulp Fiction that got stabbed with the adrenaline – it woke right up.' Mike Tirico on Oakmont: 'With the set up, it is the way the game is played today and the classic test of golf and where the two intersect. And that's why the leaderboard has some throwbacks there, guys who won majors ten, 12 years ago. It's an interesting mix. It's cool. It's not the same thing week-in, week-out and that's what makes all of it, plus the national championship on the line, so entertaining.' Kevin Kisner on if Oakmont is the toughest U.S. Open course: 'I'd rate it as the toughest mental test. I think it's relentless, it's exhausting. All day you're on the grind and just over and over again mentally, you just get beat up. I love that the premium here is driving the golf ball in the fairway, and that starts right there at the first…I really love the idea of what the USGA tries to accomplish and that's get every club in the bag dirty. I think that's a cool motto to try to accomplish.' Notah Begay III on the changing conditions at Oakmont: 'The golf course has changed a little bit with all the moisture that came overnight. The greens are more receptive and the fairways softer…It really favors the players that trap the ball a little bit more.' Gary Koch on making adjustments mid-tournament: 'So much of golf, at this level, is about knowing how to correct yourself. It's not like other sports where you have a manager or coach.' GOLF CHANNEL PODCAST WITH REX & LAV As part of NBC Sports' comprehensive U.S. Open coverage, new daily episodes of the GOLF Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav, hosted by senior writers Rex Hoggard and Ryan Lavner, will post nightly. The podcast sees the two longtime scribes discuss and debate the latest news and hottest topics in the sport, and this week's daily mini-pods will recap each round of the U.S. Open, discuss the major storylines from the championship, and look ahead to the following day's play. Click here to listen to the latest episode on YouTube and Apple Podcasts. --NBC SPORTS--

2025 U.S. Open: Final-round pairings, tee times at Oakmont Country Club, how to watch
2025 U.S. Open: Final-round pairings, tee times at Oakmont Country Club, how to watch

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

2025 U.S. Open: Final-round pairings, tee times at Oakmont Country Club, how to watch

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability are subject to change. There's one round left in the U.S. Open at the Oakmont Country Club and even though Sam Burns maintained the one-shot lead he held at the beginning of the third round on June 14, numerous contenders behind him are ready to step into the breach should he falter. So far, the five-time PGA Tour winner has been rock-solid since a second-round 65. Advertisement Burns shot 69 to finish at 4-under-par 206, one shot clear of J.J. Spaun (69) and Adam Scott (67, matching the day's low round with Carlos Ortiz). Viktor Hovland (70) is 1-under and Ortiz is even par. Sam Burns leads the U.S. Open by one shot entering the final round at the Oakmont Country Club on June 15. US Open leaderboard There are seven players within six shots of Burns. One who bears watching is the 44-year-old Scott. He and world No. 1-ranked Scottie Scheffler (4-over and tied for 11th) are the only players among the top 20 on the leaderboard who have won major championships. Scott won the 2013 Masters and while he didn't play the U.S. Open well at the start of his career, he's made 11 of the last 14 cuts and posted three top-10 finishes. Adam Scott matched the day's low round with a 67 on June 14 in the third round of the U.S. Open. He is tied for second entering the final round at the Oakmont Country Club. How to watch the final round of the US Open Golf Channel, Golf Central's Live From The U.S. Open 7 a.m.–9 a.m. USA Network, 9 a.m.–12 p.m. Peacock, U.S. Open All-Access, 10 a.m.–12 p.m. NBC, 12 p.m.–7 p.m. Golf Channel, Golf Central's Live From The U.S. Open 7 p.m.–9 p.m. Featured Groups, USGA App, Peacock, DirecTV, YouTube TV, times and groups to be determined. Advertisement Watch the U.S. Open with free trial on Fubo Final-round US Open pairings, tee times Oakmont Country Club, all players start at No. 1 7:52 a.m.: Cam Davis 8:03 a.m.: Matthieu Pavon, Jordan Smith 8:14 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Harris English 8:25 a.m.: Ryan McCormick, Taylor Pendrith 8:36 a.m.: Johnny Keefer, Michael Kim 8:47 a.m.: James Nicholas, Brian Harman 8:58 a.m.: Philip Babaree, Jr., Sungjae Im 9:14 a.m.: Niklas Norgaard, Denny McCarthy 9:25 a.m.: Daniel Berger, Tony Finau 9:36 a.m.: Rory McIlroy, Andrew Novak 9:47 a.m.: Adam Schenk, Mackenzie Hughes 9:58 a.m.: Justin Hastings (a), Matt Fitzpatrick 10:09 a.m.: Collin Morikawa, Rasmus Højgaard Advertisement 10:20 a.m.: Ryan Fox, Corey Conners 10:36 a.m.: Patrick Reed, Laurie Canter 10:47 a.m.: Jon Rahm, Tom Kim 10:58 a.m.: Maverick McNealy, Xander Schauffele 11:09 a.m.: Si Woo Kim, Jhonattan Vegas 11:20 a.m.: Aaron Rai, Trevor Cone 11:31 a.m.: Jordan Spieth, J.T. Poston 11:42 a.m.: Brooks Koepka, Thomas Detry 11:58 a.m.: Jason Day, Chris Kirk 12:09 p.m.: Keegan Bradley, Sam Stevens 12:20 p.m.: Matt Wallace, Ryan Gerard 12:31 p.m.: Ben Griffin, Victor Perez 12:42 p.m.: Russell Henley, Emiliano Grillo 12:53 p.m.: Max Greyserman, Christiaan Bezuidenhout 1:04 p.m.: Nick Taylor, Scottie Scheffler 1:20 p.m.: Chris Gotterup, Marc Leishman Advertisement 1:31 p.m.: Cameron Young, Robert MacIntyre 1:42 p.m.: Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Thriston Lawrence 1:53 p.m.: Tyrrell Hatton, Carlos Ortiz 2:04 p.m.: Viktor Hovland, J.J. Spaun 2:15 p.m.: Adam Scott, Sam Burns This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: 2025 U.S. Open: Final-round pairings, tee times, how to watch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store