
Scheffler, McIlroy or DeChambeau
Here, the PA news agency looks at some of the main contenders for the year's third major championship.
Scottie Scheffler
Scottie Scheffler won the US PGA Championship at Quail Hollow (David J. Phillip/AP)
Scheffler recovered from a relatively slow start to the season to win the CJ Cup Byron Nelson by eight shots in his adopted home state of Texas and followed up with a five-shot victory in the US PGA Championship for his third major title.
The world number one was a 19-year-old amateur when he held the clubhouse lead after bad weather brought the first day's play to an early end the last time Oakmont hosted the US Open in 2016 and it would be no surprise to see his name on top of the leaderboard again nine years on.
Rory McIlroy
A U.S. Open champion at 22. The career grand slam now. Congrats, Rory. 👏 pic.twitter.com/yJKhLOC9si
— U.S. Open (@usopengolf) April 13, 2025
McIlroy could only follow his Masters triumph with a share of 47th in the US PGA at Quail Hollow, a venue where he had won four times before, and declined to speak to the media after every round.
The world number two's driver was deemed non-confirming earlier in the week and he struggled off the tee, but McIlroy – who missed the cut at Oakmont in 2016 and in each of the next two US Opens – has come to relish the tough test it provides and his form figures since 2019 read 9-8-7-5-2-2.
Bryson DeChambeau
Bryson's clutch bunker shot forever immortalized at Pinehurst No. 2. pic.twitter.com/UEhi8TXRhV
— U.S. Open (@usopengolf) April 14, 2025
DeChambeau has become a fixture on major championship leaderboards since his move to LIV Golf, his US Open win last year one of five top-six finishes in his last six starts.
DeChambeau led after two holes of the final round of the Masters before fading to a closing 75 and also failed to convert a promising position in the US PGA before finishing in a tie for second, but his 2020 victory at Winged Foot proved he can overpower a traditional US Open-style venue, with Oakmont very much in that category.
Shane Lowry
Shane Lowry held a four-shot lead after 54 holes when Oakmont last staged the US Open in 2016 (Zac Goodwin/PA)
Lowry held a four-shot lead after 54 holes at Oakmont in 2016, but struggled to a closing 76 to finish three shots behind Dustin Johnson.
Three years later he converted the same advantage into his first major title in the Open Championship at Royal Portrush and although he has not won as often as a player of his ability should, five of his six DP World Tour victories have come in prestigious events.
Jon Rahm
Tough finish for me on Sunday but hats off to Scottie on an amazing win – always love the battle! Thanks to the PGA of America, all of the volunteers, fans, and everyone at Quail Hollow Club for putting on a great event. Taking lots of positives with me for the rest of the year,… pic.twitter.com/lMH79aEKPX
— Jon Rahm Rodriguez (@JonRahmOfficial) May 21, 2025
Rahm made a welcome return to contention in the majors with his performance in the US PGA Championship, where he wiped out a five-shot deficit to claim a share of the lead after 11 holes of the final round, only to drop five shots on the closing three holes after Scheffler had responded with two crucial birdies.
He won his first major in the 2021 US Open at Torrey Pines and added the Masters title in 2023 but had struggled to produce his best form following his shock move to LIV Golf at the end of 2023.
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The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Rory McIlroy shoots second-round 78 and misses cut at Canadian Open
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BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
McIlroy 'concerned' for US Open after driver issues
Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy says he is "concerned" by his form heading into the US Open next week after struggling with driver issues at the Canadian Open. The 36-year-old missed the cut at the Canadian Open on Friday, finishing nine over par and 149th in a 153-man Masters champion shot an eight-over-par 78 during his second round as he struggled to get to grips with a new previous driver was ruled non-conforming on the eve of last month's US PGA Championship, with the Northern Irishman going on to finish 47th in North Carolina. With a new 44-inch driver in hand, McIlroy found just 13 of 28 fairways in Toronto and he made a quadruple-bogey eight on the par-four fifth hole after a disastrous tee-off."Of course it concerns me," said McIlroy."You don't want to shoot high scores like the one I did today. I felt like I came here, obviously with a new driver, thinking that sort of was going to be good and solve some of the problems off the tee, but it didn't. "Obviously going to Oakmont next week, what you need to do more than anything else there is hit fairways. I'm still sort of searching for the missing piece off the tee. Obviously for me, when I get that part of the game clicking, then everything falls into place for me. Right now that isn't. Yeah, that's a concern going into next week." With play starting on 12 June, McIlroy has little time to iron out his issues from the the five-time Major winner says he will test several drivers in the coming days to find the right one. "I'm going to have to do a lot of practice and a lot of work over the weekend at home and try to at least have a better idea of where my game is going into next week," said McIlroy."I went back to a 44-inch driver this week to try to get something that was a little more in control and could try to get something a bit more in play. But if I'm going to miss fairways, I'd rather have the ball speed and miss the fairway than not."I'd say I'll be testing quite a few drivers over the weekend."


Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Rory McIlroy gambles with major change to strengthen his bid for US Open glory
Rory McIlroy will be among the favourites at the US Open next week - and the Northern Irishman is using the Canadian Open to trial a new club ahead of driving at Oakmont Rory McIlroy has made the decision to change his driver in the run-up to the US Open. McIlroy is currently competing at the Canadian Open and is using the tournament to try out a different club ahead of the US Open at Oakmont Country Club next week. The Northern Irishman has endured a difficult spell with his driver of late, after his previous club failed an inspection before last month's US PGA Championship. His driver was taken off him two days before the tournament after testing showed it had become more springy than allowed. He later admitted he was 'p***ed off' the news of the failure had leaked into the media – and McIlroy is now having to make changes in response. He has swapped the TaylorMade Qi10 driver, which he used to win the Masters in April, for the brand's newer Qi35 model. McIlroy tried it out at Oakmont last week before giving it its first official test at the RBC Canadian Open at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley, where he hit an opening-round 1-over round of 71. 'It was my first outing with a new driver, and I felt like that went pretty well,' he said after hitting nine of 14 fairways. 'I hit some drives that I liked and that I liked to see, so that was encouraging. 'It's hard with the driver – the one I had been playing with previously, when I missed it, I was a little bit left. Then my miss with this one is a little bit right. It's just trying to figure that out and manage it a little bit. It's a nice feeling to get up the middle of the fairway and fully release it and know it's not going to go left on you.' The Qi35 isn't too different from McIlroy's old Qi10, with the same nine degrees of loft and the same Fujikura Ventus Black shaft. However, it is slightly shorter, which he hopes will give him more control off the tee at the US Open, where he triumphed in 2011. It's not entirely new to him. McIlroy used the Qi35 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational earlier in the season, but the switch comes after his old Qi10 failed a routine test before the US PGA Championship. McIlroy was irritated that the news – which is supposed to stay confidential – was leaked and refused to speak to reporters at the tournament. 'It was supposed to stay confidential,' he said. 'Two members of the media were the ones that leaked it. I didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted, either, because I'm trying to protect Scottie [Scheffler]. 'I'm trying to protect TaylorMade. I'm trying to protect the USGA, PGA of America, myself. I just didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted at the time.'