Scheffler seeks back-to-back major wins at formidable Oakmont
Top-ranked Scottie Scheffler tries to become the first back-to-back major winner in a decade by taking this week's 125th US Open, which tees off Thursday at intimidating Oakmont.
Not since Jordan Spieth captured the 2015 Masters and US Open has anyone swept consecutive major crowns, but two-time Masters champion Scheffler is on a hot streak.
The 28-year-old American has won three of his past four starts, including a third major title at May's PGA Championship and defending his Memorial title two weeks ago.
This week, however, offers a severe test with thick high rough, tricky bunkers and sloped greens known for lightning-fast speed.
"This is probably the hardest golf course that we'll play, maybe ever, and that's pretty much all it is," Scheffler said. "It's just a different type of test."
Scheffler arrives after a rest week as the oddsmakers' favorite over world number two Rory McIlroy and defending champion Bryson DeChambeau.
"I don't pay attention to the favorite stuff or anything like that," Scheffler said. "Starting Thursday morning we're at even par and it's up to me to go out there and play against the golf course and see what I can do."
Fourth-ranked Collin Morikawa, a two-time major winner, expects brutal rough off most every missed fairway.
"Overall you have to hit the ball really well. You know you're going to get penalized even on good shots," Morikawa said.
"Step number one is to hit it in the fairways. I don't think people understand how thick the rough is. It's not wispy like the club is going to go through. This is just thick. Clubs will turn over.
"You're going to see guys trying to hit pitching wedge out and it's going to go 45 degrees left because that's how thick the rough is."
The 7,372-yard, par-70 layout offers a vast array of bunkers and a course where many trees were removed to produce an expansive feel.
"Extreme challenge," two-time major winner Jon Rahm said. "Even when you just stand on the putting green, seeing the whole property, you know you're somewhere special. It's quite iconic."
McIlroy, who won the Masters in April to complete a career Grand Slam, has top-10 US Open finishes each of the past six years.
He declared Oakmont "a big brute of a golf course."
"You're going to have to have your wits about you this week all the way throughout the bag, off the tee, into the greens, around the greens. It's going to be a great test."
Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau, a winner last month at LIV Golf Korea, seeks his third US Open after wins in 2020 and 2024.
The 31-year-old American is trying to become only the eighth back-to-back US Open winner, the first since compatriot Brooks Koepka in 2017 and 2018.
"Everybody knows this is probably the toughest golf course in the world right now, and you have to hit the fairways, you have to hit greens, and you have to two-putt, worst-case scenario," DeChambeau said.
"When you've got those putts inside 10 feet, you've got to make them. It's a great test of golf."
- 'All-around challenge' -
Phil Mickelson, a six-time major winner who turns 55 on Monday, seeks an elusive title to complete a career Grand Slam after six runner-up US Open finishes, most recently in 2013.
"It's pretty much an all-around challenge," said 2013 US Open winner Justin Rose. "You have to put the ball in play off the tee. That's not the biggest challenge. Fairways are somewhat generous, 30-odd yards wide.
"That's because it's all about the greens. The real skilled hitters can get it into those greens, not get on the wrong side of those contours."
js/rcw

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

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Golfers bring golf to new audiences through online content creation
The game of golf is rapidly growing in popularity among the next generation. One of the reasons behind that surge is YouTube. Golfers are using the social media platform to give fans access like never before. Advertisement YouTube helped 2024 U.S. Open Champion Bryson DeChambeau redefine his image by taking fans behind the scenes and showing them his day-to-day life. He now has more than 2 million followers and, earlier this week, we learned he is sharing some content creation tips with none other than Phil Mickelson. 'It's been great getting to help him a little bit. It's so funny because he's taught me a bunch in short game, so we kind of exchange ideas in that, in that role, he teaches me a couple things out of the bunker wedges. And I'll be like, All right, you know, here's something we do for our channel that makes it a little more interesting,' said DeChambeau. Golfers and creators George and Wesley Bryan, known as The Bryan Bros, have more than half a million subscribers on YouTube. Ahead of the 125th U.S. Open, they took the course at Oakmont. 'We play golf, film it and put it on the internet,' said George Bryan. Advertisement It may sound simple. but the brothers and Grant Horvat are bringing the sport to an audience in a way it's never been delivered before. 'We travel around the major championship courses, play for two rounds and see if we make the cut at the previous major that was there,' said George Bryan. 'It's a way to combine professional golf and YouTube golfing for people to see, like, how do we stack up these pros, but also highlight amazing venues like this?' They want to take golf fans of all ages inside moments they have never experienced before. 'To feel and see a test that the pros are going to play it. You know, feel lost, feel confused, feel like you want to give up the game. It's like that's all the emotions you feel in a US Open,' said George Bryan. Advertisement Their goal in all of this stems from their dad introducing them to golf at a young age. The impact they're making on the youth is one that's surprising even to themselves. The brothers say their journey has been both difficult and as beautiful as advertised. Download the FREE WPXI News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Channel 11 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch WPXI NOW
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Bryson DeChambeau Gets Candid About Decision That Nearly Led to Penalty at US Open
Bryson DeChambeau Gets Candid About Decision That Nearly Led to Penalty at US Open originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The consensus around this year's U.S Open at Oakmont Country Club is that the course is as difficult as any. Advertisement With unpredictable greens, rough that has the best players in the world looking like amateurs and difficult hole lengths, it wouldn't be shocking if the mindset of some of this year's 156-man field is just to limit the damage when possible. For world No. 10 player, and face of the LIV Golf League, Bryson DeChambeau, he almost made things extra difficult for himself on Thursday. On the par-5 4th four, DeChambeau's tee shot ended up in a bunker. On his next shot, he escaped the bunker but found more trouble, as his ball ended up on a crosswalk. This led to DeChambeau taking a drop, but in what was a near-disaster for his score, he did so incorrectly. Bryson DeChambeau lines up a putt on the Streicher-Imagn Images DeChambeau's caddie picked up the ball and placed it on the forward side of the crosswalk. A decision that the USGA rules revealed was not allowed, but also initiated the process of a drop. Advertisement If he didn't take the drop, the official revealed he would have been assessed a one-stroke penalty. However, his issues didn't end there as after taking the official's advice, DeChambeau placed the ball on the ground. An act that led to the official alerting him he had to physically drop the ball, and not place it. Had he hit the ball after placing it down, it would have been a two-stroke penalty. Following the near-disaster, that saw him nearly penalized twice, DeChambeau muttered "That was dumb." Despite all of the issues he had on this one shot, he still ended up recording a par on the hole. As for the rest of his day, it wasn't as smooth as DeChambeau likely would have hoped. Advertisement The 2024 U.S. Open winner racked up five bogeys, and finished the day 3-over, which currently has him tied for 60th. Related: Patrick Reed Records Rare Achievement at US Open This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 12, 2025, where it first appeared.


Hamilton Spectator
an hour ago
- Hamilton Spectator
At the US Open, Patrick Reed hits the rarest of shots
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Patrick Reed made the third double-eagle of his career Thursday. He's still only seen one of them go in. Reed raised his hands to the sky, wondering what happened when he unleashed a 3-wood from 286 yards in the fairway of the par-5 fourth hole at the U.S. Open. It was a beauty. The ball bounced three times then rolled toward the hole and into the cup. The so-called albatross is considered the rarest shot in golf, with only a few hundred dropping a year, compared to more than 30,000 holes-in-one. Reed said the best one he hit came at a tournament in Germany, when he came out in the morning to finish the last four holes after getting rained out the night before. He had two par 5s left and his wife, Justine, was urging him to attack those and get to 3 under. He parred the first, then made double eagle to close. 'Two hours later, she was back at home and said, 'Way to finish the par 5s,'' Reed said. 'I said, 'Did you actually look at the scorecard?' She said, 'No, I just saw you were at 3 under.' She clicked on it, and just looked at me. Hey, she told me to get to 3 under, she didn't tell me how to do it.' The only one Reed saw came at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio when he was a kid. He hit driver off the deck onto the green while the group in front of him was still putting. 'They turned around and looked at me, then they all started jumping because they watched the ball roll right past them and disappear,' Reed said. 'I didn't know I could get there.' This marks just the fourth albatross at the U.S. Open since the event started keeping such records in 1983. The 2018 Masters champion joins T.C. Chen (1985 at Oakland Hills), Shaun Micheel (2010 at Pebble Beach) and Nick Watney (2012 at Olympic). Despite the 2 on No. 12, Reed finished at 3-over 73 after finishing with triple bogey on No. 18. 'I was doing pretty well there until that last hole,' Reed said. ___ AP golf: