
The monsters of Oakmont: Three key holes
1st, Par 4, 488 yards — From the very get-go Oakmont dispenses with the faff. The most stripped-bare test in golf doesn't need to indulge in something as fancy as giving its holes names. So, you begin on the 1st.
And it lets you know exactly what you're in for over the next 18. Seen by many as the toughest opening hole in golf, it lived up to that reputation the last time the US Open visited. Back in 2016, Shane Lowry was just one of three players in the top 20 who played it under par.
For most it was a rapid reality check, with a scoring average of almost 4.5, a full half-shot over par. But watch a flyover and you'll wonder why? It's a downhill, straightaway par 4.
The test is its narrow fairway and all of the peril either side, bunkers and that brutal rough waiting. The partially hidden green deceives too with anything off speed or target ready to run off the back. US pro Zac Blair took a novel approach in Tuesday practice, going with a putter from 122 yards back and sending it in to 15 feet. Imagination will be required early and often this week.
.@z_blair from 122 with the putter on 1 at Oakmont….pretty good. pic.twitter.com/POSQjsOh3N — Andy Johnson (@AndyTFE) June 10, 2025
3rd, Par 4, 462 yards — Statistically there will be many tougher holes on the track this week. But none are more iconic. Think the Amen Corner at Augusta, the Old Course's Road Hole, the 17th at Sawgrass. That's what the Church Pew bunker means to this place. Oakmont was originally the work of Pittsburgh steel magnate Henry Fownes, the only course he ever designed.
If you're gonna build one, make it a good'un. It was Fownes' son who was responsible for the sprawling 108-yard long bunker which takes up 28,000 sq ft between the 3rd and long 4th. It features 13 curving 'pews', each three feet tall.
Hugging the entire left side of an uphill par-4 with a blind tee shot and hidden green, the trap has the potential to make a bad start a truly miserable one. Better to pray for divine intervention and steer clear.
10th, Par 4, 461 yards — The second half of a vexing pair of holes at the turn, the first test on the back nine has changed significantly since 2016.
As part of renowned architect Gil Hanse's recent renovation, a new ravine now cuts the fairway in two at a brain-tickling point, 320 yards. The game's biggest hitters will face a tempting conundrum, take it on and be left with a potentially much easier second into another vexing run-off green or play it safe with a fairway wood and land around the 300-yard mark? Xander Schauffele was asked his opinion.
'Take on the ravine? No,' he said. 'I think Bryson is the only one who would think twice about carrying it…' We know one other reigning major champion who'd certainly give it a go.

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


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Robert MacIntyre plans to ride wild horse all the way to US Open glory
In his quest for a breakthrough Major, Scotland's Robert MacIntyre has opted for a rodeo ride where most others are looking for some peace away from the madness. MacIntyre has had top-10 finishes in The Open and the US PGA so far in his career, but not yet in a US Open . The left-hander's opening round 70 at Oakmont had him in high spirits, even if his caddie, Mike Burrow, was left questioning some of his shot selections. 'I like hitting crazy shots,' said MacIntyre. 'I can hit some wild shots. I said to Mike, 'there's going to be some shots that I'm going to say I'm going to hit', and you're going to be like, 'there's an easier shot' . . . I've just got to ride the horse and just let the horse go at times.' READ MORE MacIntyre was true to his word in a round of three birdies and three bogeys that finally left him finding some level of balance after the wild ride. Dates for the diary . . . for next 17 years We know that the Masters has a permanent home at Augusta National, but the United States Golf Association (USGA) has made a pretty good fist of giving golf fans plenty of time to plan future trips to the US Open. Venues have been determined all the way up to 2042, when Oakmont will again be host. More immediately, Shinnecock Hills on Long Island, New York, will play host to next year's championship for a sixth time. Brooks Koepka won on its last staging at the iconic links in 2018. Looking ahead, the 2027 US Open will be held at Pebble Beach in California, the 2028 championship will be at Winged Foot in New York, the 2029 championship goes to Pinehurst, North Carolina and the 2030 event will head to Merion in Philadelphia. Number: 90 The thick and heavy rough at Oakmont has resulted in 90 volunteers – at a time – being assigned the task of ball spotters. Oakmont trickier than pulling teeth Dentist Matt Vogt will be back to the day job, perhaps sooner than he'd have liked, after a tough old day on the course. Vogt, an amateur who qualified through the regional and final qualifying tournaments, said his dental practice in Indiana had probably benefited from the exposure of his appearance in the US Open. However, an opening round 80 left him searching for some ray of light. [ US Open: Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry left battered and bruised from Oakmont slog Opens in new window ] 'It's hard out here because you can't make physical and mental errors,' he said. 'Sometimes you can get away with one or the other, but you can't get away with both. 'You just get behind the eight ball here and honestly, your head starts spinning. That's what it feels like – your head starts spinning out here and it just gets away from you." When asked what had gone wrong, he admitted: 'Everything.' DeChambeau's close shave with the rulebook Defending US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau holds his ball. Photograph: Patrick Smith/Getty It could have been worse for defending champion Bryson DeChambeau, who was saved a penalty for inadvertently placing his ball for a free drop from a spectator pathway rather than dropping it from knee height. DeChambeau's drive on the par-five fourth found thick rough and his next shot finished up on the pathway, from where he was entitled to take a drop. The player asked caddie Greg Bodine to pick up his ball, which he did. However, when DeChambeau decided to play the ball from the pathway, he couldn't, because Bodine hadn't marked the spot. On getting relief back on the fairway, DeChambeau placed the ball, only for an eagle-eyed USGA rules official to intervene. The official informed him of the need to drop from knee height. 'I think the rough is incredibly penalising,' said DeChambeau, who opened with a 73. 'Even for a guy like me, I can't get out of it some of the times, depending on the lie. It was tough. It was a brutal test of golf.' Quote 'It just puts so much pressure on every single part of your game constantly, whether it's off the tee, whether it's putting green, whether it's around the greens or it's the iron shots into the green. Luckily, the wind wasn't too much up today, but it could be a bloodbath out here if it suddenly starts to blow' – Thomas Detry acknowledges life could get very tricky on the Oakmont course


Irish Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Rory McIlroy practises with Shane Lowry as friends paired for opening two rounds
Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry were first out on the course at Oakmont on Tuesday morning ahead of the first round of the US Open. The close pals were in high spirits as they played some holes together early in the morning on the notoriously challenging layout. McIlroy was followed around by his putting coach Brad Faxon, while Shane Lowry's coach Neil Manchip was also with the group. It has been a strange couple of weeks for McIlroy, who has struggled for form following his sensational win at the Masters. At last week's Canadian Open, McIlroy slumped to his worst-ever finish on the PGA Tour as rounds of 71 and 78 saw him finish on nine-over-par and miss his first cut since the 2024 Open Championship. But McIlroy will be hoping to be inspired by Lowry, whom he practised alongside before his historic win at Augusta. The close pals were in high spirits as they played some holes together on the notoriously challenging layout. McIlroy was followed around by his putting coach Brad Faxon, while Shane Lowry's coach Neil Manchip was also walked the course. The pair have also been paired together for their opening two rounds at the US Open. But McIlroy will be hoping to be inspired by Lowry, whom he practised alongside before his historic win at Augusta. McIlroy claimed his first and only U.S. Open title in 2011 but struggled in the tournament for several years afterward, missing the cut four times between 2012 and 2018, including at Oakmont in 2016. But the Holywood man has not finished outside the top ten since 2018 and has gone agonisingly close to winning his second US Open in recent years. At the Los Angeles Country Club in 2023, he lost a duel with Wyndham Clark, finishing one stroke behind the American. And last year, McIlroy was disconsolate after two missed putts from inside five feet saw him defeated by Bryson DeChambeau at Pinehurst. He returns this year, though, as only the sixth man to ever complete the career grand slam.

The 42
4 hours ago
- The 42
JJ Spaun leads at US Open as Pavon attacks, Scheffler struggles
JJ SPAUN was starting to feel intimidated by Oakmont horror stories heading into his first experience of the iconic layout at this week's US Open. Spaun, however, took his nervous energy and channelled it into a bogey-free four-under-par 66 on Thursday to equal the best US Open first round ever fired at the famously challenging course. 'I didn't really feel like I'm going to show a bogey-free round four-under. I didn't really know what to expect especially since I've never played here,' Spaun said. 'But yeah, maybe sometimes not having expectations is the best thing, so I'll take it.' The 34-year-old American began on the back side, made birdies on four of the first eight holes, then closed with 10 pars, some of them grinding long putts or rescues from rough to ease his worries. 'All you've been hearing is how hard this place is, and it's hard to not hear the noise,' Spaun said. 'I was actually pretty nervous. 'But I actually tried to harness that, the nerves, the anxiety, because it kind of heightens my focus, makes me swing better, I guess. 'I get more in the zone, whereas if I don't have any worry or if I'm not in it mentally, it's kind of just a lazy round or whatever out there. 'I like feeling uncomfortable. I ended up feeling pretty comfortable towards the end of the day, but there's a long way to go still.' Advertisement Spaun won his only PGA Tour title at the 2022 Texas Open and this year was second at the Cognizant Classic and Players Championship, losing a playoff to second-ranked Rory McIlroy. 'I didn't win, but it was great for me to lean back on that experience and know I can perform on the biggest of stages and handle it with the pressure,' Spaun said. 'There's going to be a lot of pressure this week, too, and hopefully I can rely on those experiences. 'I've been consistently right there. And everyone knows that the more you put yourself there, the better you're going to have results and the better you're going to play, eventually turn one of those close calls into a win.' South Africa's Thriston Lawrence is one shot adrift of Spaun on 67, with France's Matthieu Pavon making a charge and top-ranked Scottie Scheffler struggling. Alongside Lawrence at three-under was nack-nine starter Pavon, who birdied 12 from inside three feet, the 14th from just inside eight feet and drove the green at 17 for a tap-in birdie. Scheffler endured a roller-coaster round as favourites tumbled, standing on one-over after 12 holes with four bogeys and three bogeys. Two-time Masters champion Scheffler, whose nine wins last year included Paris Olympic gold, has won three of his past four starts, including last month's PGA Championship. He is trying to become the first man to capture consecutive majors since Jordan Spieth in 2015. South Africa's Lawrence, third in last year's European Tour Race to Dubai, drove the green at 17 and sank a four-foot birdie putt then escaped the right rough to par 18 and shoot 67. 'I like a tough test,' he said. 'I feel like it fairly suits me.' World number two Rory McIlroy, who completed a career Grand Slam by winning the Masters, fired a 74. The back-nine starter birdied 11 and 12 but made four bogeys and a double bogey on his second nine. Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau shot 73 with five bogeys and two birdies. 'Pretty disappointed with how I played,' DeChambeau said. Six-time US Open runner-up Phil Mickelson, who turns 55 on Monday, opened with a 74 in his bid to complete a career Grand Slam. - Reed makes an albatross - American Patrick Reed made the fourth albatross in US Open history from the fairway from 286 yards on the fourth hole, the first at any major since Nick Watney in the 2012 US Open at Olympic Club. Ireland's Shane Lowry holed out from the fairway from 160 yards for the first US Open eagle at Oakmont's third hole, but it was his lone bright spot in a round of 79. American Maxwell Moldovan made the first US Open eagle at the first, holing out from the fairway from 189 yards, then looking to the heavens with a smile. He fired a 76. You can view the full leaderboard here – © AFP 2025