
USGA announces purse for 2025 U.S. Open, no change in prize money from 2024
USGA announces purse for 2025 U.S. Open, no change in prize money from 2024
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Rory McIlroy on motivation after Masters win
Rory McIlroy admits he didn't expect how hard it would be to find motivation after his Masters triumph.
USGA
The U.S. Open has the largest purse of the four men's major championships, but this year, the number isn't increasing from 2024.
The U.S. Golf Association announced Wednesday the purse for the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club would remain $21.5 million with the winner taking home $4.3 million. It's the largest prize in professional golf outside of the PGA Tour's Players Championship and Tour Championship, though the latter is considered bonus money and not official earnings.
The winner of the first U.S. Open in 1895 took home $150.
In addition, every player in the field will make at least $10,000, for that's the amount given to competitors who miss the cut.
The purse at the 2025 Masters was $21 million, the largest in the tournament's history, with Rory McIlroy pocketing $4.2 million. At the 2025 PGA Championship, the purse was $19 million, with Scottie Scheffler taking home $3.42 million. The 2025 Open Championship purse has yet to be announced, but it was $17 million in 2024, with Xander Schauffele taking home $3.1 million.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
41 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Phil Mickelson walks in silence in possibly his last U.S. Open
OAKMONT, Pa. — As Phil Mickelson, aka Lefty, aka Phil the Thrill, aka FIGJAM, aka one of the two most famous golfers of the 21st century, teed off Thursday in what might be his final U.S. Open, there were more security guards than journalists following him. And there were two security guards. Clad in HyFlyers gear, looking more trim than he ever did during his apex of popularity, Mickelson — like many of his fellow competitors at Oakmont — played well on the back nine and struggled on the front. And like most of his fellow competitors, he walked in virtual silence from the galleries, with only an occasional 'Go Phil!' punctuating the silence. Advertisement By this point, Mickelson's fall from golf's good graces isn't just well-documented, it's canon. Once the darling of the golf world — the rascally, cocky yin to Tiger Woods' steely yang — Mickelson lived a charmed life, getting himself into and out of trouble both on and off the golf course. He somehow radiated arrogant confidence while remaining a hero of the everyman. But then the Saudis came calling, and Mickelson couldn't resist their siren call, or the chance to stick it to the PGA Tour. Even though Mickelson turned out to be right about the ways the PGA Tour needed to change, the way he went about it with cynical opportunism turned the majority of his former fans against him. Advertisement Mickelson and the U.S. Open have a long and complicated history all their own. He's finished in second place six different times, an incredible run of almost-good-luck that's kept him from claiming the career grand slam. Matters bottomed out in 2018, when Mickelson, in frustration, hit a still-moving ball at Shinnecock en route to a T48 finish. He's missed the cut at four of the last five U.S. Opens, including the last three in a row. And as of this year, he's all out of the exemptions that he'd earned for winning the 2021 PGA Championship … meaning, if he wants back in, he'll need to either receive a special exemption from the USGA, or play his way back in. 'We hope he earns his way in, and I think he'd tell you the same thing,' USGA chief championships officer John Bodenhamer said on Wednesday. 'That's what he did last time. We gave him one, and then he went out and won the PGA Championship. So, wouldn't put it past him.' Phil Mickelson gives a thumbs up as he takes part during the first round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Oakmont Country Club. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster) (ASSOCIATED PRESS) Expecting a performance that would qualify him to play in another U.S. Open is a pretty tall order at this point. Mickelson has three top-10 finishes in seven LIV Golf events this year, including a T4 last week in Virginia where he spent time in the lead. Advertisement For a moment on Thursday, it appeared that momentum had carried through to Oakmont. He made the turn at even par, good enough to stay within sight of the leaders. But a bogey-bogey-double start to his second nine effectively crushed his day, leaving him eight strokes behind clubhouse leader J.J. Spaun. Mickelson declined to speak to the media after he finished, and will have perhaps just one more opportunity to perform before a U.S. Open gallery. Thirty-one years ago, Arnold Palmer also bade farewell to the U.S. Open, also at Oakmont. He walked up the 18th hole to waves of applause and tears. Regardless of how his career has flickered in the last few years, Mickelson will likely receive the same treatment. It will be a well-deserved coda to his career, but you can't help but wonder what the reception would be without the last few years coloring his reputation.


San Francisco Chronicle
41 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
US Open players get that sinking feeling, straight down into the rough at brutal Oakmont
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Gary Woodland, the 2019 U.S. Open champion, waved the rules official over. Certainly, a ball buried that deep in the rough had to have embedded into the soft turf below when his off-line drive on the 12th hole landed with a thunk. No such luck, the official told him. The rough at Oakmont is just deep — and thick and hard to escape. Instead of taking a free drop for an embedded ball, Woodland had to replace it where he found it, get out his wedge, take a hack and pray. That resulted in Woodland's first blemish in a back nine of 6-over 41 at the U.S. Open on Thursday. It turned a promising round that began with three birdies into a 3-over 73 slog. Woodland's was one of dozens of tales from the rough — gnarly, thick and sometimes downright impossible — that make an Open at Oakmont as tough as they come. 'Even for a guy like me, I can't get out of it some of the times, depending on the lie,' said defending champion Bryson DeChambeau, who makes a living on overpowering golf courses and gouging out of the thick stuff. 'It was tough. It was a brutal test of golf.' DeChambeau was at even par when he nuked his second shot over the green and into the rough in back of the 12th green. The grass opened up his club face on the third and rifled the ball into more rough. He needed two more shots to advance the ball from there to the fringe. He shot 73. 'If you miss the green, you miss it by too much, you then try to play an 8-yard pitch over the rough onto a green that's brick hard running away from you,' Scotland's Robert MacIntyre said after his round of even-par 70. 'It just feels like every shot is on a knife edge.' Punishing the best in the world is exactly how the superintendents at what might be America's toughest golf course planned it. For the record, they do mow this rough. If they didn't, there's a chance some of the grass would lay over itself, allowing the ball to perch up instead of sink down. The mowers here have blades that use suction to pull the grass upward as they cut, helping the grass stand up straight and creating the physics that allow the ball to sink to the bottom. Which is exactly where Rory McIlroy found his second shot, then his third, after failing to gouge his drive out of the lush green fescue located right of all that 'regular' rough on the par-4 fourth. He made 6 there on his way to 74. On No. 3, top-ranked No. 1 Scottie Scheffler hit his tee shot into the famous church pew bunker, then cooked his second shot up the hill and over the green. The rough opened up his clubface on the chip, sending the ball into the second cut of fringe. He got down in two to save bogey there. Patrick Reed hit the shot of the day. It was a 286-yarder from the fairway that hit the green and dropped in for only the fourth albatross — a 2 on a par 5 — in recorded U.S. Open history. If only he could have stopped there. His ensuing drive was so far left, it landed in the rough near the eighth tee box. He hacked across the fairway into more rough and scrambled to save bogey. Later, Reed short-sided his approach on No. 9, moved the next shot from the rough about 5 feet and needed to get up and down for bogey. Maybe J.J. Spaun figured it out the best. With the dew still slickening the grass for his early tee time, Spaun chipped in from a gnarly lie on his first hole to open the Open with a birdie. He only hit eight of 14 fairways and 12 of 18 greens, but that was good enough for a 4-under 66, which sent him home with the lead and a chance to watch the afternoon players suffer. 'I like feeling uncomfortable,' Spaun said. ___
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Rory McIlroy's driver issues will be punished like never before at Oakmont
There is tough and there is Oakmont tough. 'I played last week and birdied the last two – for an 81,' Rory McIlroy revealed. He was laughing as he said it, but inside a sizeable chunk of the Northern Irishman must be dreading the 125th US Open. The good news for the field is that the test has softened in the last seven days. 'There's been some rain since and it's much more benign,' McIlroy said. 'It was nearly impossible that Monday.' Advertisement The bad news for McIlroy is that the rough remains brutal, and there will be no chance to launch birdie-escapology after errant tee shots, as it was at Augusta two months ago when he completed the career grand slam. 'A bit like at the Players [which he also won earlier this year], you can play recovery golf at the Masters, find gaps through the trees from the pine needles,' he said. 'This place won't let you do that. You've got to chop your ball out and then just try to make a par with a wedge in your hand. It's much, much more penal if you do miss. So hopefully I can hit a few more fairways than I have been hitting and give myself some opportunities.' It is fair to say that McIlroy did not sound overly convinced about his candidature here this week. In fact, his mood was flat and his body language portrayed that of a legendary sharpshooter going into a Mexican stand-off knowing that his duelling pistol is wonky and misfiring. McIlroy announced that he was pleased with his emergency sessions last weekend after a missed cut at the Canadian Open and feels more confident off the tee. 'What did I learn?' he said. 'I learnt that I wasn't using the right driver.' McIlroy will be punished at Oakmont if he continues to struggle off the tee - Getty Images/David Cannon Equipment yarns are never the most gripping for the uninitiated outsiders, but McIlroy's troubles with the club he loves most, and in which many respects has defined his career, have been intriguing. Advertisement At last month's US PGA Championship, he declined to talk to the press after it had been leaked that his Qi10 driver with which he had conquered Augusta had failed a random test. Over time, the faces become thinner and thus springier, and it is routine for drivers suddenly to become non-conforming. He had done nothing wrong – this is routine on tour – but McIlroy was forced to switch heads two days before the start of the season's major. The same fate befell Scottie Scheffler and the world No 1 shrugged off the distraction to lift the Wanamaker Trophy. McIlroy was asked on Tuesday if the late change had affected his challenge at Quail Hollow, where he finished tied 47th. 'It wasn't a big deal for Scottie, so it shouldn't have been a big deal for me,' he said. Maybe, but McIlroy is not Scheffler and has previously admitted that he finds it difficult to jump from one head to the next. 'Every driver sort of has its own character,' he said here. What is clear is that the personality of the TaylorMade Qi35 does not suit, because he has gone back to the Qi10 model and immediately located at least a tad of positivity. He and TaylorMade will pray this is the end of the saga. Rory McIlroy has swapped to older-generation TaylorMade driver - Getty Images/Andy Lyons His many admirers will also be craving for a switch in the McIlroy narrative since his Augusta glory (when after an 11-year major drought, he finally joined Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Gene Sarazen and Ben Hogan in winning all four majors). McIlroy concedes that the issue has not just been technical, but emotional as well. Advertisement 'It's just been trying to find the motivation to go back out there and work as hard as I've been working,' he said. 'I worked incredibly hard on my game from October last year, all the way up until April this year, and it was nice to sort of see the fruits of my labour and have everything happen. 'You have to enjoy what you've just accomplished, but at some point, you have to realise that there's more golf left to play this season – here, Royal Portrush [in next month's Open], the Ryder Cup [in New York in September]. Those are obviously the three big things I'm looking at for the rest of the year. 'But, I do believe that after chasing a goal for the better part of a decade and a half, and finally achieving it, that I'm allowed a little bit of time to relax. However, here at Oakmont, I certainly can't relax this week.' McIlroy ended an 11-year wait for the career grand slam when he won the Masters in April - Reuters/Pilar Olivares Indeed, there is no respite on this remorseless examination, where balls will be lost in the thick stuff, where four-foot putts will run off these treacherous greens and where temperaments will boil over into the self-detrimental. Advertisement In this shape, with his driving so suspect and with the hangover remaining so eminently evident, McIlroy cannot be fancied to equal Sir Nick Faldo's European record of six majors. But golf can be decidedly odd and, as he has been handed a dream draw for the first two rounds alongside his close friend Shane Lowry, and another ally in Masters runner-up Justin Rose, the world No 2 could fix his radar and quickly rediscover that swagger and elan. No more 81s, however. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.