
Robert MacIntyre hails opening 70 at US Open as ‘one of my top-10 rounds'
While star names Rory McIlroy, Bryson DeChambeau and Justin Rose all floundered on the notoriously difficult Oakmont course in Pittsburgh, MacIntyre's 70 has him in a strong position after Thursday's opening round.
The 28-year-old believes that replicating that scoring over the next three days will see him walking away as champion on Sunday night.
Welcome to the red zone!
Bob MacIntyre 🏴 gets to under par for the first time today. pic.twitter.com/nOG6n1p2LG
— U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 12, 2025
'I'm delighted with that,' he said. 'That was superb. That's up there.
'I mean, it's in the top 10 of rounds that I've played. It's just so hard. Honestly, it's just every shot is like you're on a knife edge.
'But overall, honestly, I don't know if it's good or bad to have a level-par, but that's almost as good as I've got.
'I know that it will get tougher, but a level-par round today, if you shoot four level-par rounds, you're walking away with a medal and a trophy. I'm sure I'll take that.'
MacIntyre could have been in an even better position had he not bogeyed the 18th, but his consistency from the tee underpinned his excellent start.
'I played absolutely beautifully, to be honest, off the tee, because that's where the real punishment is and that's as good as I can drive the golf ball,' he said.
'I wasn't really hitting long drives. I wasn't trying to hit long drives.
'I was just trying to stay in the short stuff and manufacturing shots, whether it was 3-wood, whether it was driver, just try to hit the shape that I needed to find the fairway.
'I've never played a golf course as hard.'

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


South Wales Guardian
29 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
Victor Perez tames brutal Oakmont with hole in one at US Open
With the brutal Oakmont course causing havoc for the world's top players, Perez decided the best idea was to take the punishing rough and treacherous greens out of the equation. At the 192-yard par-three sixth hole, his seven-iron tee shot was rifled towards the flag in the middle of the green, bounced three times and rolled into the hole. 🚨 ACE ALERT 🚨 Victor Perez 🇫🇷 with a great shot and an even better celebration! — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 Perez celebrated wildly, chest-bumping his caddie James Erkenbeck before taking congratulations off playing partners Jacob Bridgeman and Adam Schenk. It moved him from three over par to one over and repaired some of the damage of a triple-bogey eight on the par-five 12th.


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Victor Perez tames brutal Oakmont with hole in one at US Open
At the 192-yard par-three sixth hole, his seven-iron tee shot was rifled towards the flag in the middle of the green, bounced three times and rolled into the hole. 🚨 ACE ALERT 🚨 Victor Perez 🇫🇷 with a great shot and an even better celebration! — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 Perez celebrated wildly, chest-bumping his caddie James Erkenbeck before taking congratulations off playing partners Jacob Bridgeman and Adam Schenk. It moved him from three over par to one over and repaired some of the damage of a triple-bogey eight on the par-five 12th.


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Victor Perez tames brutal Oakmont with hole in one at US Open
With the brutal Oakmont course causing havoc for the world's top players, Perez decided the best idea was to take the punishing rough and treacherous greens out of the equation. At the 192-yard par-three sixth hole, his seven-iron tee shot was rifled towards the flag in the middle of the green, bounced three times and rolled into the hole. 🚨 ACE ALERT 🚨 Victor Perez 🇫🇷 with a great shot and an even better celebration! — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 Perez celebrated wildly, chest-bumping his caddie James Erkenbeck before taking congratulations off playing partners Jacob Bridgeman and Adam Schenk. It moved him from three over par to one over and repaired some of the damage of a triple-bogey eight on the par-five 12th.