
Scheffler opens with birdie as US Open leader Spaun starts late
Spaun's four-under par 66 opening round on Thursday matched the lowest first-round score in a US Open at Oakmont and was only the eighth bogey-free first round ever conjured at the iconic layout.
The American's career-low major round put him one stroke ahead of South African Thriston Lawrence with five-time major winner Brooks Koepka and South Koreans Im Sung-jae and Kim Si-woo sharing third on 68.
Spaun, Lawrence and Kim were set for late tee times while early starts were made by Koepka, Im and Rahm, a two-time major winner lurking three adrift after a 69 on Thursday.
Koepka opened Friday with a bogey at the 10th hole, finding right rough and coming up short of the green then missing a 10-foot par putt, but answered with a birdie at 11, sinking an 11-foot putt to return to two-under.
Im also stayed at two-under with a par on the first hole.
Rahm found a right fairway bunker off the first tee then left greenside rough and missed an 18-foot par putt, settling for bogey.
Scheffler opened Friday off the back nine by sinking a birdie putt at 10 from just beyond 20 feet as he tried to rebound from an opening 73, his worst first-round score relative to par in 24 major starts.
Scheffler has won three of his past four starts, including last month's PGA Championship, and hopes to become the first back-to-back major winner since Jordan Spieth in 2015.
Other US stars struggled at Oakmont with third-ranked Xander Schauffele, the reigning British Open champion, on 72, defending champion Bryson DeChambeau on 73 and six-time major winner Phil Mickelson on 74.
England's Justin Rose was on 77 with Ireland's Shane Lowry on 79.
World number two Rory McIlroy, who won the Masters in April to complete a career Grand Slam, was set for an afternoon tee time following an opening 74 including four bogeys and a double bogey in his final nine holes.
The five-time major winner from Northern Ireland shared 62nd after round one, with only the top 60 and ties set to make the 36-hole cut.
Only 10 players cracked 70 in the first round, but 11 of the past 12 US Open winners broke 70 in their first rounds.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
10 hours ago
- France 24
No.1 Scheffler, four-over, says don't count him out at US Open
Scheffler, coming off three wins in his past four starts including his third major at the PGA Championship, fired a one-over par 71 in Friday's second round to stand on four-over 144 for 36 holes. "Mentally this was as tough as I've battled for the whole day," Scheffler said. "There was a lot of stuff going on out there that was not going in my favor necessarily. "I felt like Teddy (caddie Ted Scott) and I did a great job of battling, especially coming down the stretch." Scheffler said that he could have missed the cut with the struggles he faced but instead has himself within reach of victory with a weekend fightback. "With the way I was hitting it was easily a day I could have been going home and battled pretty hard to stay in there," Scheffler said. "I don't think by any means I'm out of the tournament." Scheffler made five bogeys and four birdies in a roller coaster round. "I feel like I battled really hard. It's challenging out there," he said. "I was not getting the ball in the correct spots and paying the price for it. "Felt like me getting away with one-over today wasn't all that bad. It could have been a lot worse. "I anticipated to hit it better... any time you're not hitting it the way (you want), or playing up to my expectations, I think it's frustrating." Scheffler won't be trying to impose his will upon Oakmont as he tries to mount a fightback. "I bounced back really well to a lot of the mistakes that I made," he said. "Forcing it around this place is probably not a good recipe to play too much good golf for me. "You've got to be hitting fairways, you've got to be hitting greens, and hopefully I'll be able to do that on the weekend." Rounds were dragging well beyond five hours with waits on certain holes a factor adding to the tension. "It felt long to me. Both the par-fives we basically walked up on the group in front of us," Scheffler said. "I'm just trying to play. I've got too many concerns other than the pace it takes to get around this place." Scheffler said the delays are not a shock. "With this many players and this tough of a golf course, it's going to take a while," he said. "That's a big piece of property. It just takes time to hit that many golf shots."


France 24
12 hours ago
- France 24
Brilliant Markram takes South Africa to brink of WTC final glory
South Africa reached the close on the third day at Lord's on 213-2 in their second innings, needing just 69 runs to win, with eight wickets still standing. Opener Markram, dismissed for a duck in the first innings, was 102 not out and South Africa captain Temba Bavuma unbeaten on 65 despite spending most of his innings limping with a hamstring injury. The pair have shared an unbroken stand of 143 as South Africa pursue what will be, if they achieve it, the second-highest successful run chase in a Test at Lord's. The highest chase at the London ground is the 344-1, requiring 342, made by the West Indies against England in 1984. But South Africa, whose last International Cricket Council title came at the 1998 ICC Knockout, have such a long history of folding under pressure that their fans will take nothing for granted against serial winners and WTC title-holders Australia. "There was great joy in the changing room for Aiden's hundred and his partnership with Temba is right up there in the history of South African cricket, but the job is not yet done," Proteas batting coach Ashwell Prince told the BBC. South Africa all-rounder Wiaan Mulder said a change in approach had been key to the team's improved batting display on Friday following a meagre 138 all out in their first innings. "We had to go for it whatever they (Australia) got," he told Sky Sports. "There was a lot less fear of failure." South Africa will be desperate to get over the line. In 18 previous attempts in the one-day international and T20 world cups, they have only reached a solitary final -- at last year's T20 World Cup in Barbados, when they fell apart within sight of victory. Starc stars Australia's Mitchell Starc had starred earlier Friday with both bat and ball to put his team in charge and seemingly on their way to victory. The tailender made 58 not out in Australia's second-innings total of 207 and then, in his main role of left-arm fast bowler, dismissed Ryan Rickelton (six) and Mulder (27) to leave the Proteas 70-2. Starc almost had a third wicket when Bavuma got a thick edge only for Steve Smith, in a helmet at an advanced slip position, to drop a fast-travelling catch and leave the field with a finger injury. But with any early moisture in the surface long gone, conditions for batting at a sun-drenched Lord's were now as good as at any time in the match. Markram, aggressive from the outset, punched and pulled Australia captain Pat Cummins for well-struck fours. With Australia appearing to miss absent former captain Smith's tactical input, Bavuma produced the occasional gem of a shot, including a glorious drive down the ground off Cummins. Australia spinner Nathan Lyon almost dismissed both batsmen, with Markram aiming a booming drive at a sharply turning off-break, only to miss the ball completely before it also beat wicketkeeper Alex Carey. Bavuma had made 43 when a slog-sweep off Lyon just evaded a diving Sam Konstas at deep midwicket as the substitute fielder attempted to pull off a low catch, only for the ball to run away for four. Soon afterwards, the diminutive Bavuma, who has a history of hamstring trouble, completed a gritty 83-ball fifty. Markram went to 97 with a brilliant straight-driven boundary off Josh Hazlewood and, shortly before stumps, clipped the fast bowler through midwicket to complete his hundred with an 11th four in 156 balls faced. South Africa enjoyed an early breakthrough at the start of the day's play when paceman Kagiso Rabada had Lyon lbw to leave Australia 148-9 in their second innings. But tailender Starc, dropped by Marco Jansen late Thursday, kept the Proteas at bay, ably assisted by Hazlewood, while making the 11th fifty of his 97-Test career. Part-time spinner Markram eventually succeeded where the frontline bowlers had failed when Hazlewood holed out to end a 59-run partnership for the last wicket.


France 24
13 hours ago
- France 24
Bath 'don't feel burden' of history in Premiership final
Having finished 11 points clear of the Tigers at the top of the regular-season table, Bath saw off rivals Bristol to secure a return to Twickenham, where they were edged out 25-21 by Northampton last year. Van Graan's side ended the club's 17-year trophy drought earlier in the campaign by lifting the Premiership Rugby Cup before winning the European Challenge Cup last month with victory over Lyon in Cardiff. Bath, one of the traditional powerhouses of English rugby, last won the league in 1996 for their sixth title in a decade of dominance. But former Munster coach Van Graan said his men remain focused on writing their own chapter by completing what would be a memorable treble. "When I joined Bath, you look at the history, the tradition, you read up on the club, and you see that this club at a time was incredibly successful, specifically through the 1980s and the 90s," said the South African. "One thing that we all did together is we respect our history, but we started the club at zero in our minds on July 11, 2022 (when he joined the club). "We respect everybody and everything that has gone before, but for us it has been a journey of the last three years. "It is all about this circle and this group of people, whilst loving the people that support this club." He added: "It is another moment in time and we have got an amazing opportunity. There is no expectation and we don't feel any burden. "The only thing we feel is each other and inside of that circle, and that is what we are doing." Bath hammered Leicester 43-15 in May to complete a league double over their historic rivals. But Van Graan has warned against complacency at Twickenham, which will be the last game in charge for Tigers head coach Michael Cheika and for Leicester stalwarts Dan Cole and Ben Youngs ahead of their retirement. "It is definitely a stand-alone fixture," he said. "Obviously, you do your homework and you look at what's worked for you, what didn't, what worked for them, what didn't. "You look at every game in a different way but a final is so unique, it is the last game of the season for both clubs." © 2025 AFP