
US Open 2025 tee times, groups, schedule for Round 4
US Open 2025 tee times, groups, schedule for Round 4
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2025 U.S. Open: Oakmont gears up to host its 10th championship
Oakmont and the USGA is looking to give the world's top players a tough challenge and fans a unique experience at the 125th U.S. Open Championship.
The U.S. Open concludes Sunday with the fourth and final round of the event at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania.
Sam Burns (4-under-par for the tournament) remains at the top of the U.S. Open leaderboard for a second straight day and will tee off Sunday afternoon.
J.J. Spaun (-3) has remained competitive and enters the final day tied for second with Adam Scott (-3).
Scott shot a 67 in the third round to move up two spots on Saturday. Spaun and Burns both shot a 69.
Jordan Smith (+15), Matthieu Pavon (+16) and Cam Davis (+19) all sit at the bottom of the leaderboard. The trio will open the fourth round in the morning.
The event will be back on schedule for the final day, after a weather delay suspended play in the second round on Friday and forced an early morning on Saturday to finish out the round. The third round was also pushed back from its originally scheduled start as a result, but finished on Saturday evening.
US Open pairings: Round 4 tee times and groups
*All times listed are Eastern
7:52 a.m.: Cam Davis
8:03 a.m.: Matthieu Pavon, Jordan Smith
8:14 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Harris English
8:25 a.m.: Ryan McCormick, Taylor Pendrith
8:36 a.m.: Johnny Keefer, Michael Kim
8:47 a.m.: James Nicholas, Brian Harman
8:58 a.m.: Philip Barbaree Jr., Sungjae Im
9:14 a.m.: Niklas Norgaard, Denny McCarthy
9:25 a.m.: Daniel Berger, Tony Finau
9:36 a.m.: Rory McIlroy, Andrew Novak
9:47 a.m.: Adam Schenk, Mackenzie Hughes
9:58 a.m.: Justin Hastings (a), Matt Fitzpatrick
10:09 a.m.: Collin Morikawa, Rasmus Hojgaard
10:20 a.m.: Ryan Fox, Corey Conners
10:36 a.m.: Patrick Reed, Laurie Canter
10:47 a.m.: Jon Rahm, Tom Kim
10:58 a.m.: Maverick McNealy, Xander Schauffele
11:09 a.m.: Si Woo Kim, Jhonattan Vegas
11:20 a.m.: Aaron Rai, Trevor Cone
11:31 a.m.: Jordan Spieth, J.T. Poston
11:42 a.m.: Brooks Koepka, Thomas Detry
11:58 a.m.: Jason Day, Chris Kirk
12:09 p.m.: Keegan Bradley, Sam Stevens
12:20 p.m.: Matt Wallace, Ryan Gerard
12:31 p.m.: Ben Griffin, Victor Perez
Where to watch the US Open: TV channel, streaming Sunday
The 2025 U.S. Open is being broadcast by NBC and USA Network, with the two networks splitting coverage for the third and final rounds. All rounds of the U.S. Open will be live streamed on Peacock, usopen.com, the USGA app and Fubo, which offers a free trial. Peacock will also broadcast U.S. Open All-Access, its whip-around style offering, for every round.
Final Round: Sunday, June 15
9 a.m.-12 p.m. on USA Network, Fubo
12-7 p.m. on NBC, Peacock, Fubo
Watch the U.S. Open on Fubo (free trial)
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New York Times
34 minutes ago
- New York Times
Woeful start for McIlroy
Burns shot a 65 to gain a one-stroke lead over J.J. Spaun with only Viktor Hovland joining them under par as familiar faces struggled Getty Images Sam Burns' sterling score of 65 highlighted Round 2 of the 2025 U.S. Open at Pennsylvania's Oakmont Country Club. Burns shot a second-round 65, and at 3 under, he has a one-shot lead over first-round leader J.J. Spaun. Viktor Hovland is at 1 under. No other players are under par, thanks to late second-round collapses from Thriston Lawrence and Thomas Detry, among others. Several more prominent golfers continued struggle with the challenging course at Oakmont. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is at 4-over-par, seven strokes back of the lead. Rory McIlroy, the 2025 Masters champion who nearly won this event last year, barely made the cut. Bryson DeChambeau, who edged out McIlroy to win the 2024 U.S. Open, missed the cut entirely. Some heavy downpours in the evening forced the horn to sound at roughly 8:15 p.m. ET with a few golfers still on the course, just finishing up their last handful of holes. The USGA is expected to finish second-round play early Saturday. Follow live coverage here. -3: Burns -2: Spaun -1: Hovland E: Adam Scott, Ben Griffin, Thomas Detry Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Oh dear. Rory McIlroy can only dig his ball out of the fairway bunker, immediately ending any faint hopes he might have had of starting his round with a birdie. He then catches a flier out of the rough, his ball bouncing hard on the green before disappearing into the lush green cabbage at the back of the green. He's able to wedge out of that at the first time of asking, which is something, but is left with an 18ft putt for bogey, which he misses. So it's an opening double and he slides back to +6. Getty Images Sam Burns fired himself into contention with a superb 65 today and has just been interviewed by Sky Sports in the UK. 💬 He said: 'Yesterday I played extremely well. It was tough to finish how I did but today was all about reframing yesterday. I needed to get back mentally, because it feels as though my game is in a good spot. And it was really solid. 'You have to be on the fairway around here. The rough is just so tough. So driving the ball well is extremely important and I was able to do that today.' Getty Images Brooks Koepka started so well today before somewhat fading away, eventually shooting a 74 to head into the weekend at +2. He's back on the range with Pete Cowan, no doubt trying to work out some kinks ahead of this third round tomorrow. Getty Images Rory McIlroy really struggled on the front nine yesterday, after an impressive start to his round on the back. … and, unfortunately for the reigning Masters champion, it's not a great start on the first today. He dumps his drive in one of the fairway bunkers down the left. Getty Images James Nicholas with an up and down day. The American, who was up at the top of the field after a fine 69 yesterday, endured a terrible front nine. A double bogey on the first, a quadruple on the fifth, and three successive bogeys from Holes 7 through 9. After the turn, he's warming up again. Two pars, then three consecutive birdies, finally bring a grin to his face. Big cheers from the fans, and he raises his arms to ask for more. Great that he's having fun out there on an extremely tricky course. Hugh Kellenberger/The Athletic The organized chaos that is No. 9 green, which doubles as a practice green, is really something. And that's before you add on the scores of fans walking right next to it. Getty Images Here is Bryson DeChambeau, the defending champ, who receives plenty of cheers, whoops and hollers ahead of his first strike. His tee shot is slightly to the side, in the semi-rough. Decent lie. Can he put himself in a good position for the weekend with an under-par round today? He's not wearing Tiger red today, instead opting for a patriotic blue and white number. Getty Images Brooks Koepka finishes off a 4-over-par 74 with back-to-back bogeys. The two-time U.S. Open winner is at 2 over after two rounds. He had eight bogeys today. He's still only six shots off the lead, but it's not the type of round we expected from Koepka, who was in a confident spot after his 68 in the first round. Getty Images The first green at Oakmont puts your local crazy golf course to shame. It slopes rapidly away from the player, which meant J.J. Spaun only had to give his 30ft birdie putt attempt from the front of the green the lightest of tickles. And it's a great effort, trickling its way a fraction past the cup, to leave the easiest of pars. A confident start from our leader. Getty Images Oh, Sam Burns, what a putt. He judges a curling left-to-right putt up the hill on the ninth to absolute perfection and the ball drops to cheers. He's followed yesterday's 72 with a 65 today. Round of his life? The average round is trending between 74 and 75! Getty Images The long par-three eighth is such a beast of a hole. Viktor Hovland is its latest victim, carding a bogey that sees him slide back to -1 for the tournament, in a tie for fifth. He didn't get nearly enough on his tee shot which left a fairly ludicrous 77ft putt. He got it to within 15ft but that's a lot to make par and in the end he had to settle for a bogey. Ouch, Sam Burns had to take a penalty drop on the ninth, the final hole of his second round. The American, currently tied second and a shot off the leader J.J. Spaun, just pinged the ball up to the green with his third shot at the par four. It will be a very tricky putt for par. I reckon he'll do well to finish with a bogey, which would be just the second of his fantastic Friday. Let's see... Getty Images Rory McIlroy is out on the range warming up. He's away in half an hour. Like J.J. Spaun, he'll be starting his round on the difficult first hole. McIlroy once again skipped talking to the media yesterday after his disappointing opening 74. He has come in for some criticism for this decision, as you would probably expect and, speaking on Sky Sports, Paul McGinley has said he's surprised by McIlroy's silence. 💬 He said: 'Not doing the media is very un-Rory like. The guy who's probably the best in the media has decided now for, what, five rounds in a row at majors not to engage at all with anybody. 'It speaks more to him being not being contented at all, which is surprising after completing the Grand Slam.' Getty Images Sam Burns is currently on pace for 10.88 strokes gained total. That number will change throughout the day. Nobody has gained 11 or more strokes on the field in a U.S. Open round since 1980, when Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf both opened with 63s at Baltusrol. Here we go then… J.J. Spaun is ready to tee off on the very intimidating first. But Tom Kim is up first. The 22-year-old, who is +2 for the tournament, hasn't been having a great season and misses the fairway to the left. Next up is our overnight leader. He found the short stuff with his tee shot on this hole yesterday and does so again today. It's a peach, battered right down the middle of the fairway and he's in position A1. J.J. Spaun, the leader of the 2025 U.S. Open, has wrapped up his pre-round practice and is making his way to the first hole. He's starting on the tougher front nine and is going to have to roll with the punches until he hits the turn. Getty Images As if to underscore the point of how hard life is here at Oakmont Country Club, only seven players are under par. Out of 156! Getty Images Scottie Scheffler is starting to right the ship as his second round winds down. The world No. 1 knocks in a six-footer for birdie to improve to 3-over-par with two holes to play. Viktor Hovland remains at 2 under after lagging his 76-foot birdie putt to two feet from the cup. Page 2


Newsweek
44 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Wyndham Clark Loses Temper, Goes Berserk in U.S. Open Locker Room
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Oakmont Country Club has never been kind to golfers, and the 125th U.S. Open proved no different. The course's brutal setup left even the best players frustrated. Bryson DeChambeau, the defending champion, missed the cut after a 10-over finish. Shane Lowry, who had already made headlines for his hot-mic F-bomb, struggled through Rounds 1 and 2, ultimately failing to advance. And then there was Phil Mickelson, who quietly exited after posting 8-over, possibly bidding farewell to the U.S. Open. But while disappointment was widespread, no one took their frustration out on Oakmont's loker room—except Wyndham Clark, allegedly. CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 19: Wyndam Clark hits a tee shot during the Pro-Am prior to the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands on June 19, 2024 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by)... CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 19: Wyndam Clark hits a tee shot during the Pro-Am prior to the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands on June 19, 2024 in Cromwell, Connecticut. (Photo by) More Getty Images Clark, the 2023 U.S. Open champion, had a rough week. He carded consecutive rounds of 74, missing the cut by a single stroke with a bogey on his final hole. His frustration boiled over, and according to reports, he trashed the locker room at Oakmont Country Club. NUCLR GOLF shared images from inside the dressing room, showing broken lockers and scattered debris. Without context, the scene looked like a break-in, but it was Clark who had allegedly damaged the venue. 🚨🥾🚪 #NEW: Wyndham Clark allegedly damaged several lockers in the change room at Oakmont Country Club following a missed cut, per @TronCarterNLU. Additionally, Clark recently destroyed a T-mobile sign at the PGA Championship not long ago. Is this behaviour acceptable? — NUCLR GOLF (@NUCLRGOLF) June 15, 2025 Tron Carter of the "No Laying Up" podcast confirmed the incident, posting on X: "Multiple sources confirming that the Blow Pig really got after it in the Oakmont locker room. Super classy, desecrating one of the most historic spots in golf AND on the heels of his behavior at Quail Hollow. Probably time to put him in the cooler for a few months." Clark's temper has been an issue before. Just last month, he smashed a T-Mobile sign at the PGA Championship after a poor drive. He later apologized, admitting, "My actions were uncalled for and completely inappropriate. I hold myself to a high standard, and yesterday I fell short of those standards." Wyndham Clark under fire Fans weren't letting this latest outburst slide. The comment section on Carter's post was filled with outrage. "That's a historical locker room too, I'd ban him from ever playing there again," one fan wrote. Another demanded action: "He should be suspended. Imagine being a guest at a club and doing that after the round." Comparisons were drawn to Rory McIlroy, who had destroyed a tee marker on the 17th hole after a failed drive. Some fans argued that Clark's behavior was worse, calling him "immature" and suggesting a three-month suspension. Others pointed out that Scottie Scheffler had also damaged the fairway in frustration during Round 1, fueling calls for stricter discipline across the Tour. With Round 4 set to begin Sunday morning, all eyes will be on the final showdown. Sam Burns leads at 4-under, with Adam Scott and J.J. Spaun one shot back. But for Clark, the tournament is over—and the fallout from his actions is just beginning. More Golf: Scottie Scheffler's U.S. Open Hopes Staring at Historic Difficulty


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Rory McIlroy is pretty much over this edition of the US Open
Rory McIlroy just wants to go home. After three rounds at Oakmont Country Club at this year's US Open, the Northern Irishman is over it. When asked what he wanted from Sunday's final round after a frustrating first three rounds at the 125th US Open, the Masters champion said: 'Hopefully a round in under four-and-a-half hours and get out of here.' McIlroy's triumph at Augusta earlier this year made him the sixth golfer in history to complete the career grand slam. It was his first major championship win in more than a decade after multiple close calls, and the golf world collectively wondered whether McIlroy could go on to huge success in 2025 with the Masters monkey off his back. That's not been the case, not by a longshot. The five-time major winner has cut a frustrated figure throughout this week's US Open outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He's been seen throwing clubs, smashing tee box markers, tossing his putter into the air after missing putts and – as he did at the PGA Championship last month – blowing off reporters after his rounds. When he spoke on Saturday after his 4-over 74, McIlroy admitted that he hadn't felt the same after his Masters win. 'You don't know how you're going to react to such a – I wouldn't say a life-altering occasion, but at least something that I've dreamt about for a long time,' he said, adding 'I have felt a little flat on the golf course afterwards.' McIlroy is a crowd favorite here at Oakmont, attracting some of the largest galleries on the course. Spectators holler 'Let's go, Rory!' whenever he walks past, whether that's after one of the two birdies he carded on Saturday or the six bogeys that left him shaking his head. But it seems no amount of support is cutting through McIlroy's frustration at the moment. He managed to book himself a weekend tee time with a remarkable closing stretch on Friday, playing 2-under after starting his round with two double bogeys on the first three holes. The question on everyone's lips during his Friday afternoon struggle was simple: 'Is Rory going to miss the cut?' A brilliant birdie on 18, set up by one of the best approach shots hit by McIlroy since that Sunday playoff at Augusta, wasn't so much fueled by his competitive nature as it was his apathy toward playing another two days at the US Open. 'It's funny. It's much easier being on the cut line when you don't really care if you're here for the weekend or not,' he told reporters with a laugh. 'I was sort of thinking, 'Do I really want two more days here or not?' So, it makes it easier to play better when you're in that mindset.' Unlike his friend and early-rounds playing partner Shane Lowry – whose rage at the course was clear from the start, including a moment when he dropped a four-letter expletive caught by a hot mic after missing a putt on Friday – McIlroy is still here. It seems that it's much to his chagrin – especially at the prospect of answering questions from the media. McIlroy said earlier this month that he didn't speak to the media at the PGA Championship in May because he was angry after it was reported that his driver was nonconforming ahead of the tournament, expressing that information was supposed to be confidential and someone leaked it. Ahead of the RBC Canadian Open, McIlroy stressed to reporters that speaking to the media wasn't something required of players. When asked about those comments on Saturday, he said he wasn't trying to force PGA Tour officials to require players to speak to the media. Instead, his desire to skip post-round interviews is purely frustration with the media and he'd continue to skip talking after rounds if he didn't feel like it. 'I feel like I've earned the right to do whatever I want to do, yeah,' he said. The 125th US Open is being played for a record tenth time at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania where CNN's Patrick Snell is in the rough to show you just why the famed country club has long been considered one of the toughest courses in the country. #cnn #news #sports #golf #usga #usopen #oakmont #golfing #oakmontcountryclub The beast that is Oakmont's setup for this tournament is punishing players who make the tiniest mistake. McIlroy is no different and, while he feels like he's played 'OK' this week, the mental game is weighing on him. 'That's the name of the game this week is staying patient, and try to do a good job of it out there, but it's one of those golf courses that you can lose patience on pretty quickly,' he said. He added, 'It's very difficult. You got to be on every single shot. You know if you miss a fairway you're going to be scrambling for par. You know if you miss your landing spot even coming from the fairways by a couple yards, these greens repel the ball into rough and you're up against collars and it just makes things very, very tricky. So, yeah, you got to be totally on your game.' It's clear that McIlroy is not on his game, a disappointing fact that has led to viral moments of anger that will be the lasting memories of his 2025 US Open. With next month's Open Championship being held in his home nation's Royal Portrush, McIlroy will be hoping to get himself out of this funk and back toward the top of the leaderboard. He tees off for his final round of the US Open on Sunday morning, hours before the leaders arrive on the Oakmont grounds as they push for the trophy that McIlroy won in 2011. If his demeanor on Saturday is any indication, he'll be long gone by the time the 18-inch, sterling silver cup is raised.