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US Open: Rory McIlroy makes cut as defending champion DeChambeau bows out at Oakmont

US Open: Rory McIlroy makes cut as defending champion DeChambeau bows out at Oakmont

The Guardiana day ago

Clubs were thrown but the towel was not. Rory McIlroy battled Oakmont's treacherous setup and his own frustrations to survive for the weekend at the 125th US Open. As McIlroy clung on, high-profile exits from Pennsylvania included the defending champion Bryson DeChambeau, Tommy Fleetwood, Dustin Johnson, Joaquin Niemann, Justin Thomas and Shane Lowry. In epitomising how Oakmont can mess with the mind, Lowry earned a one-stroke penalty after lifting his ball on the 14th green while forgetting to mark it. The Irishman could only laugh and, to be fair, did.
McIlroy's day began with two double bogeys inside three holes. By the 12th, the Masters champion flung his iron 30 yards down the fairway in anger at a loose shot. Five holes later, McIlroy broke a tee marker after cracking it with his three-wood. Yet amongst this was admirable fighting spirit; McIlroy fired an approach shot to within 4ft of the 18th hole, a birdie ensuring a 72 for a six-over aggregate. McIlroy last four, played in two under, were crucial. The madcap nature of this US Open is such that McIlroy will believe he has a squeak of winning. Only three players – Sam Burns, JJ Spaun and Viktor Hovland – are under par. Burns leads the other two by one at minus three.
Welcome to Grindsville, Pennsylvania. Any golfer standing still was doing wonderfully well. They assessed four foot putts as if they were instead the Gaokao Exam. Smelling salts might as well have replaced energy drinks in the locker room. George Duangmanee shot 86, 89 on his US Open debut. The poor fella did not birdie a single hole amid a string of unmentionables. If watching elite golfers being reduced to quivering wrecks is your thing, this major constitutes essential viewing.
DeChambeau's departure at 10 over is still a shock. The Californian added a 77 to Thursday's 73. Thomas four-putted from 22ft, the low point in back-to-back rounds of 76. Johnson, who won here in 2016, continues his slide towards early retirement.
Denny McCarthy branded five and a half hour Oakmont rounds as 'a punch in the face.' The steam was just about visible from Jon Rahm's ears as he assessed his 75. 'I'm too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any perspective,' said Rahm. 'I am very frustrated. Very few rounds of golf I played in my life where I think I hit good putts and they didn't sniff the hole, so it's frustrating.' Whether Rahm thought pin placements were unfair was left for others to ponder. At four over, he remains a contender.
Scottie Scheffler has matched Rahm's aggregate. 'Gosh, dang it' bawled Scheffler after a wayward drive, which is as close as he will ever come to an expletive-laden tirade. 'I battled really hard,' Scheffler said. 'It's challenging out there. 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. Around this golf course I don't think by any means I'm out of the tournament.' Scheffler was still on the practice range three hours after he walked from the final green.
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Against this grisly backdrop, the Friday performance of Burns was exceptional. Burns converted from 20ft at the 9th, his last, for a five under par 65. Three under par claimed the clubhouse lead; Burns could sit back and watch the rest suffer. 'The golf course is really too difficult to try to figure out what's a good score and what's not,' Burns explained. 'You're really just shot by shot and trying to play each hole the best you can. If you try to be too perfect with putting it can drive you crazy, so I just try to really read it, put a good roll on it, focus on the speed and hope for the best. I have tried to play too perfect and tried to force it a little bit at times. So now I am trying to really be patient and take what the golf course gives me.'
Hovland lurks. The Norwegian found himself in precisely the place you would rather not be on this course, 80ft from the hole on the final green. Hovland calmly two-putted, his 68 meaning one under par at halfway. In this Ryder Cup year, Hovland's return to form is excellent news for Europe and their captain Luke Donald.
'I've just been in a really nice mental state this week,' said Hovland. 'Both of my rounds have been very up and down. I feel like a couple times if it would have happened at another tournament, for example, I could have potentially lost my mind there a little bit. But I felt like I kept things together very well.' Indeed, Hovland played his closing stretch in level after a double bogey on his 11th.
Brooks Koepka twice reached three under on the back nine, his front half. Koepka bogeyed three in succession around the turn before dropping further shots at the 4th, 8th and 9th for a 74. Two over par might frustrate Koepka given his second round start but he is firmly in the mix.
Koepka is arguably the most fascinating actor in this show; a one-time major specialist, he has produced inauspicious results since winning the 2023 US PGA Championship. Koepka missed the cut both at that event and the Masters this year. At Quail Hollow last month, Kopeka was heckled over his decision to accept tens of millions to perform on the LIV Tour. Whether it was that viral moment, a heart-to-heart with his straight-talking coach Pete Cowen or simply the ironing out of technical flaws, Koepka suddenly looks a threat once again. Oakmont is unlikely to faze him. It has already done exactly that to countless others.

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Overall leader Sam Burns is 7/4 to claim his first major title at the US Open - as the final round gets underway at the Oakmont Country Club today
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LIV Golf star famous for his temper tantrums spots his own weakness amid push to win US Open
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LIV Golf star famous for his temper tantrums spots his own weakness amid push to win US Open

English star bang in the mix as he hunts Major and Ryder Cup success Fired-up Tyrrell Hatton will keep having head-off moments as he chases a stunning double at Oakmont. The English star is in the mix for a first-ever Major title at the US Open having put together three excellent opening rounds to sit just five behind leader Sam Burns. ‌ Fiery Hatton is known to lose his cool, but the torturous lay-off in Pennsylvania is leading to rivals also having temper tantrums. That suits the 33-year-old perfectly as he smiled: 'I have a 'head off' wherever I play, so everyone comes to the US Open and seems to have a 'head off' and I guess it brings them to my level for a week. I am not going to change.' ‌ Success for Hatton will signify a huge breakthrough his career and also secure his cherished place in The Ryder Cup team for Bethpage. He was a stalwart for Luke Donald alongside Jon Rahm in the Rome win over United States and, despite LIV status, looks set for New York in September. Oakmont triumph would seal the deal and he said: 'I knew at the start of the year and certainly last year when I signed with LIV that the majors were going to be very important for me. But yeah, I'd love to finish off a strong week for World Ranking points, Ryder Cup points, Race to Dubai points. There's a lot to play for. At the end of the day, I just have to go out there and try my best and I can't really worry about that. I just have to focus on one shot at a time and that's what I'll try and do. 'I'm sure if you've won majors in the past, you know that you can get over the line in a major, but still, at the end of the day, it's another golf tournament and for the most part you're playing against a lot of the guys week in, week out. On your day you have to trust that you can compete and beat anyone and have that self-belief, which I think everyone in the field this week will have that. You just go out there and try your best and see where you end up.' Hatton has dealt with the punishing track superbly, but it has still gotten under his skin at times as he said: 'I don't see the need to have so much rough in the side slopes of the bunkers. The bunkers, the faces on them are so severe, if you go in them off the tee, you're not really reaching the green for the most part. Certainly around the green, if you go in the bunker and you're short-sided anyway, they've done a hell of a job raking them this week because they're so flat and almost certainly you feel like you're on a bit of a downslope, so they're still hard to play out of. You're really struggling to hit a bunker shot close anyway. 'But that's how they've set it up this year and it doesn't matter if I don't agree with it or every player in the field doesn't agree with it. Everyone has to deal with it. It's just how it is. I've struggled this year really off the tee since the LIV season started, to be honest. I had a great week at Desert Classic, but since then I feel like I've struggled and that's been one thing that's probably held me back from finishing higher up in the tournaments I've played so far.

Tyrrell Hatton keeps his cool to charge into US Open contention
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Tyrrell Hatton keeps his cool to charge into US Open contention

Tyrrell Hatton joked that the brutal Oakmont course at the US Open has brought everyone down to his level of mental fragility after bursting into contention going into the final round. Hatton is known for his tendency to explode, often breaking clubs and getting angry on the course. The punishing conditions of the famous course in Pennsylvania have tested the patience of all 156 players with Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and Shane Lowry among those who have lost their temper. Hatton certainly found no need to lose his composure during a third-round 68, which propelled him up the leaderboard and in with a shot of winning a first major on Sunday night. He fired five birdies and sits five shots behind overnight leader Sam Burns who, at four-under-par, holds a one-shot lead over JJ Spaun and Adam Scott. The 33-year-old Hatton said: 'I have a 'head off' wherever I play so everyone comes to the US Open and seems to have a 'head off' and I guess it brings them to my level for a week. 'I am not going to change, but hopefully I can play like I did today again tomorrow. That will certainly help me keep as calm as possible. 'I am five behind, a lot can happen out there. I would certainly be very happy with another 68. We will see how it plays out. I'll try my best. To finish two under, I'm very happy.' Scotland's Robert MacIntyre is a further two shots back at three-over-par and still has '100 per cent' belief he can win on Sunday. MacIntyre described his opening round level-par 70 as one of the best of his life, but he bettered it just 48 hours later to card a 69. Asked if he can win, he replied: 'One hundred per cent. I wouldn't be here if I didn't believe that, it's a simple answer, yes. 'I'm just delighted to be in it, going into tomorrow if I can shoot the number I know I can shoot, then why can't it be me? 'Tomorrow I have got to go out there, give it my best, don't try and focus too much on trying to win, just go out there, hit the shots, then come 15, 16, see where are sitting and decide whether to roll the dice or not.' American Ryder Cup player Burns has his first major in his sights after a one-under-par 69. He exchanged the lead with his playing partner Spaun throughout a tense 18 holes, but took an outright lead when Spaun bogeyed the 18th after a wayward tee shot. Adam Scott rolled back the years in his pursuit of a first major in 12 years, firing a three-under-par 67 to be tied for second with Spaun. Viktor Hovland is the only other man in the red at one under. It is as you were for world number one Scottie Scheffler, who carded an even-par 70 to remain at four-over-par. Scheffler maintained he was still in contention after Friday's second round, but failed to make any ground on the leaders, his three birdies cancelled out by three bogeys. But he is still not giving up hope, saying: 'It's going to be really tough for me to catch them, but I think right now I'm seven shots back, which around this place, I mean, anything can happen. 'Do I feel like I'm out of the tournament? No. Do I wish I played a little bit better today? Yeah, of course. 'But it's just one of those deals where I put myself in this position. It's not the position I want to be in, but I've done a good job of hanging in there and staying in the tournament.'

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