
Consistent Shane Lowry returns to site of near glory
Shane Lowry is back at the scene of his first ever major near miss, the one which haunted him for a couple of years afterwards.
The US Open returns to its most storied and characteristic layout, the closest the tournament has to a signature course.
The USGA doesn't operate the same relatively tight rota of courses that they do in the Open Championship. There isn't really a St Andrew's equivalent in the US Open but if there was, Oakmont would probably be it.
The run-in to this US Open has seen the usual proliferation of social media shorts and close-ups of impossibly dense rough and capriciously slope-y greens. The eighth hole treats us to a 289 yard par-3.
The instagram and youtube golfers have all been invited in to have their go at the course in recent weeks, attesting in their usual hyperbolic terms to its difficulty.
This is what distinguishes the US Open from the US PGA Championship, where, by comparison, the tournament is often held at Bland CC. The PGA tends to be solely about the players. In the US Open, the course becomes a leading character.
A golf-watching public wearied by week after week of monotonous birdie-fests, watching Scottie Scheffler hit 32-under par, appear hungry for a bracingly 'traditional' US Open style test. (The Memorial Tournament a couple of weeks ago being an honourable exception.)
In that context, one senses there'll be disappointment among the purists if the winner is six-under par again.
But we have been here before.
In 2017, future LIV defector Kevin Na uploaded a short video of himself pegging his ball into a tangle of rough which he claimed was just off the fairway at Erin Hills.
After a couple of futile efforts to hack it out of there, he issued a plea for past champions to be put in charge of course set-up - rather than the sadistic elders of the USGA, being the obvious inference.
Then, the following Sunday, Brooks Koepka won his first US Open on 16-under par.
The conventional wisdom these days is that with technological advancements, the USGA are almost unable to contrive an over-par winning score without making the course stupid hard.
Seasoned US Open watchers will be familiar with the usual tropes whenever this occurs.
Crazy golf style pin positions. Greens faster than the track at Hockenheim. Sickened players mouthing off about the conditions in every interview, lamenting that they've "lost" the course. Gary Player issuing another impassioned monologue about how the common man would be unable to break 150 around here. Phil Mickelson, +12 on Saturday, thumbing his nose at the organisers by deciding to putt snooker style over the closing holes.
We haven't had a winning score worse than six-under par since 2018, though Bryson DeChambeau was a complete outlier at Winged Foot in 2020, winning by six shots.
After the opening round at LA Country Club in 2023, when both Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele shot 62, there were fears among the traditionalists that the fearsome US Open tests of yesteryear were no longer challenging the modern players.
The sense this time around is we could be in for some proper carnage.
"The stories that came out of here from last Monday was that it was pretty much unplayable," Lowry told RTÉ Sport's Greg Allen this week. "The greens were running at 15 on the stimpmeter. Rory, in particular, I spoke to him about it and he couldn't believe how hard it was."
The talk was similar nine years ago.
Lowry recounted this week how he'd walked off after five holes of his first practice round in 2016 muttering how he was never going to be able to play this course.
Then the rains came on Tuesday and Wednesday. The ground softened.
And Lowry, after an impressive two-under par 68 on Thursday (like most US Open courses, the par here is 70), carded a 65 in his weather interrupted third round - the best round of his career until the 64 on Saturday in Portrush in 2019.
He wasn't considered to be in the front rank of players on the PGA Tour at the time but there was nonetheless a sense he was building towards something big in the lead-up. The previous year, he'd nipped inside the top-10 at the notorious Chambers Bay and then had his biggest win at the WGC event in Firestone.
With play running behind schedule due to dangerous weather on Thurday, Lowry had opened a two-stroke lead on Saturday night with still four holes left to play in his third round.
Things got even better resumed early on Sunday morning - close to lunch-time in Ireland - birdieing the 15th and 17th to take a four stroke lead into the final round.
Then, anxiety seemed to take hold. Lowry turned in 38, by which time his lead evaporated. He wound with a closing 76, the worst score of anyone on the leaderboard.
Dustin Johnson, who'd choked in such excruciating fashion on the 72nd hole 12 months earlier, won with a swagger which belied his previous history on major Sundays. Lowry had to content himself with tied-second, then his best finish at a major.
The failure at Oakmont appeared to nag at him a couple of years as he entered a slump, which he wouldn't fully shake off until his annus mirabilis in 2019.
On the eve of his final round in Portrush, the questions about Oakmont inevitably surfaced. It was only there that the demons were put to bed.
How is Lowry primed for such a test this time around? Statistically, pretty damn good.
Two months ago, Lowry walked off the 18th green on Saturday at Augusta and snapped at reporters that he was sick of answering questions about Rory McIlroy.
"I'm not going to stand here and talk about Rory for 10 minutes. I'm trying to win this tournament as well," Lowry told the press pack.
This week, partly due to McIlroy's woeful struggles with the driver in the past month, Lowry enters as the form Irish player.
The narrative around the 2019 Open Champion has been strangely downbeat in Ireland, as a result of high profile failures to close out victories on Sunday, most gallingly at the Wells Fargo early last May. One suspects the public would be more forgiving if he hadn't contended at all.
The disappointment at the Wells Fargo was still lingering when he turned up at Quail Hollow - or 'f**k this place' as Lowry calls it - two days later. He almost went viral for digging up half of North Carolina after his ball somehow nestled in a deep pitch mark in the middle of the fairway. More negative commentary followed after he narrowly missed the cut - but he had been brutally unlucky not to book a weekend slot and, after a poor front nine on Thursday, didn't play all that bad.
As it stands, the PGA is his only missed cut in his last 13 events.
Lowry returns the site of his near brush with glory in the most consistent form his career. Long stereotyped as a short game wizard, it's his driving and iron play which has been the core strength of his game in recent years, in particular the latter.
This bodes well for is being billed as a classically brutish US Open layout.
"I think it's the best I've ever been," Lowry said this week. "I was going to say I'm getting the rewards. I don't feel like I'm getting the rewards, to be honest.
"Because every Sunday, I come off the golf course, I feel like I'm after getting punched in the gut. With it being a very consistent year, I can't remember the last time I walked off the 18th green happy with myself.
"But there will be some Sunday soon hopefully where I'm walking off that 18th green pretty happy and proud of myself. Hopefully, it'll be this week."
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Shane Lowry's off to a mixed start at the US Open
Shane Lowry experienced the rollercoaster emotions of Oakmont in the most spectacular fashion as a stunning hole-out eagle from 160 yards breathed life into a torturous opening round at the US Open. The Offaly native, among many pundits' picks for the third major of the year, was toiling through his Thursday morning in Pittsburgh, already 4-over through his first 10 holes. He'd taken some of his frustrations out on a fairway microphone on the 17th, his 8th hole. Then on the par-4 2nd, his 11th of the morning, he carded an ugly double bogey which pushed him out to 6-over with the ghosts of Oakmont, where he suffered a Sunday slump in 2016, coming back to haunt him. That's when everything changed. A booming drive down the left of the 470-yard third hole, left Lowry nestled up near the iconic Church Pew bunker. With 160 yards in to the elevated green he sent a crisp, heavenly iron which bounced in front of the pin, slowed just a touch and dropped into the bottom of the cup for the most unlikely eagle. Lowry's reaction was that of a man driven to a maddening brink by his game as he threw his hands into the air with a hint of WTF about the body language. Bringing his total back to 4-over with the scoreable par-5 4th next gave Lowry the chance to turn the tide in a big way. Lowry was playing alongside compatriot Rory McIlroy and Ryder Cup teammate Justin Rose with McIlroy one of just nine players in the early going who were in the red numbers as the brutal rough and bewitching greens of Oakmont bit early.


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
Shane Lowry holes out for stunning eagle at U.S. Open after tough start at the brutal Oakmont
SHANE LOWRY holed out for eagle during the opening round at at U.S. Open 2 Shane Lowry holed out for eagle on the 2nd hole during his first round at the U.S. Open 2 Lowry was playing his 12th hole of the day and was +6 when he landed the eagle Shane Lowry delivered the stunning highlight midway through his round — holing out for eagle from 160 yards on the par-4 third hole at Oakmont, his 12th of the day. The Offaly man was boiling at six-over-par at the time, having made a sluggish start after beginning his round on the back nine alongside Ryder Cup teammates Rory McIlroy and But Lowry's approach at bounced a few times before nipping into the cup for a walk-off eagle, offering a much-needed jolt of momentum in the season's third major. It briefly lifted Lowry back to +4 on a brutally tough day at the notoriously penal Pennsylvania layout. read more on golf The Clara native can take some confidence though, having finished T2 at this venue during the 2016 U.S. Open. World number 12 Lowry has fared well on the tougher But he'll have to get motoring as the course is playing as benign as it possibly can - with conditions expected to get incredibly tough over the coming days. Elsewhere, Most read in Golf Meanwhile, Rory McIlroy will be hoping to put his All the action is live on Sky Sports Golf. 'Looks like a skirt!' – Jason Day leaves US Open viewers in shock with outfit choice during practice round


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
‘Beauty and brains…' – Paige Spiranac sends fans wild as she shares her US Open predictions in busty outfit
PAIGE SPIRANAC has given her US Open tips - but fans were too busy going wild for her busty outfit. The influencer and former LPGA star believes golf stars are in for a difficult time at the tournament. Advertisement 20 Paige Spiranac, Credit: X @PaigeSpiranac 20 Paige Spiranac, Credit: X @PaigeSpiranac The Paige shared her tips for the competition on her Instagram story. She has backed stars such as However, she also backed a couple of lesser-known stars to impress. Advertisement READ MORE ON GOLF "Oakmont is well bunkered with firm, fast greens with thick rough, thicker than a bowl of oatmeal. "This is going to be a true test from start to finish, every single shot. "No surprise the favourites will be Scottie Scheffler and Bryson DeChambeau. Advertisement Most read in Golf "For some dark horses, I am looking at Harris English and Ben Griffin. "I am looking for carnage this week and fingers crossed, we get an over-par winner." 'I'm pumped for you' - Fans love Paige Spiranac's shock new career move into 'big, high-powered executive job' 20 She has backed Scottie Scheffler to impress at the US Open Credit: instagram @_paige.renee 20 She sharted the tips with her followers on social media Credit: Instagram @_paige.renee Advertisement However, fans were far too distracted by her busty outfit, which was a floral white dress. Fans flocked to social media to hail the look. One posted: "Beauty and brains. A rare combination." A second wrote: "You are beautiful." Advertisement A distracted third commented: "What she say?" A fourth said: "She makes a boring sport appear sexy." Another added: "Beautiful dress." Meanwhile, Paige has recently announced that Advertisement The Grass League features both amateur and professional players in team-based formats. Paige boasts millions of online fans after embracing social media to promote her golf journey. The 32-year-old turned pro for a year after playing at the University of Arizona and San Diego State. But her LPGA career failed to take off, with Spiranac swapping the fairway for the online world. Advertisement She has built up a loyal following thanks to a hearty mix of golf tips and A glimpse inside Paige Spiranac's glamorous life... 20 Paige Spiranac has defended her sexy outfits and says she feels comfortable in them Credit: Instagram 20 She gains messages of support whenever she posts a new photo Credit: Instagram @_paige.renee 20 Paige promoted her golfing equipment wearing this tiny, pink leotard Credit: Instagram Advertisement 20 Paige dressed as Harley Quinn for Halloween in 2022 Credit: Instagram @_paige.renee 20 Paige showed off her bum in bright red hot pants to celebrate March Madness Credit: Instagram 20 Paige has also shown her appreciation for baseball in the past Credit: Instagram 20 Paige celebrated a previous US Open in a stars and stripes bikini, eating hot dogs Credit: Instagram Advertisement 20 In an homage to Top Gun, Paige dressed as a sexy fighter jet pilot Credit: Instagram 20 Paige has amassed a strong following across her various profiles Credit: Instagram/_paige.renee 20 Paige used to be a professional golfer but turned into a social media star Credit: Instagram @ 20 Paige shares a series of raunchy pics on a daily basis Credit: Instagram @_paige.renee Advertisement 20 Paige also talks about golf on her popular social media pages Credit: Instagram / @_paige.renee 20 She's a firm believer in her golf advice Credit: Instagram / _paige.renee 20 She has plenty of followers online Credit: instagram @_paige.renee 20 With followers often seeing her on the course Credit: Instagram @_paige.renee Advertisement 20 She regularly shares revealing snaps Credit: Twitter / PaigeSpiranac