
Raging McIlroy finds late magic to make cut as Oakmont leaves Lowry at low ebb
With the skies about to open above him, Rory McIlroy pulled himself out of the hellish challenge that has been Oakmont these past 48 hours and fired a heavenly closing birdie to make the cut on Friday night.
Standing on the 18th tee at 7-over for the year's third major, the cutline moving up and down between +6 and +7, McIlroy knew only a birdie could guarantee his run of six-straight US Open cuts made. With playing partners Shane Lowry and Justin Rose having long since succumbed to the horrors of the Pittsburgh course, his was the only fate to be decided. After a post-Masters run that has defied expectations and, at times, belief, McIlroy found a little bit of vintage magic. How badly he needed it.
American Sam Burns had set the pace with a morning 65 which got all the more impressive as Friday progressed in Western Pennsylvania. By nightfall Burns was the outright halfway leader at 3-under, one of just three of the 156 in the field to remain under par. Overnight leader JJ Spaun did his best to cling in there but otherwise those who began in the red felt the creep of the black. Big names joined Lowry and Rose in falling by the wayside too, defending champion Bryson DeChambeau and Ludvig Aberg among them.
From start to finish there were crooked scores everywhere and the organisers even found time in the darkening hours for an absurd weather delay which meant a handful of misfortunates have to return on Saturday morning, when rough weather is expected to play a major factor throughout the third round.
Friday at Oakmont featured plenty of Irish carnage as Lowry leaned into another expletive-laced reaction to major struggles then picked up an inexplicable penalty stroke while McIlroy tossed a club down the fairway on one hole and later smashed a tee marker for good measure.
Birdie for the weekend 🐦@McIlroyRory converts to make it inside the projected cutline @USOpenGolf.pic.twitter.com/KEfvuBrMSa — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 13, 2025
However on his pivotal final hole of the round the Holywood man composed himself to find his best tee-to-cup performance since his third hole the previous day. A perfect drive set him up for his most sparkling wedge of the week finding the last fraction of a degree of undulation to bring the ball back to just four feet. He rolled in the birdie for a 2-over 72 that in the circumstances may be his best round since Augusta.
That's probably an overstatement or a bias towards how he finished it. Because it started in spectacularly hideous fashion, a calamitous double bogey on the first added to with another on the third to push him to 8-over overall and well outside the cut line. From there it was slow progress, in terms of both moment and plain ol actual progress, the pace of play disgracefully slow.
He birdied the 9th to turn in brighter form but gave one back on the 11th and laboured a little until another arrived at the 15th.
Shane Lowry won't be hanging around and won't be eager to ever discuss his visit to Pittsburgh this time around. A 54-hole leader here in 2016, this was a sequel which proved to be a box office bomb.
The Offaly man left with a two-round card that by his high standards looked nothing short of diabolical. He followed up his Thursday 79 with an 8-over 78 to leave the grounds with an ugly +17 to the right of his name on the leaderboard. Below him were just 16 players, a grouping which you wouldn't describe as a golfing who's who but a who's he?
Where to start with Lowry's fiendish Friday? How about the fact that on the 14th green he bent to mark his ball and pick it up but forgot to do the first bit. The vision of the slow dawning of what he'd just done, as he stood with ball in hand and marker in pocket was a vision of what the place can do to the best in the game.
Lowry so rarely looked like a member of the elite unfortunately. Of all the places to need a fast start, Oakmont may be the last you'd pick. Looking for birdies, Lowry found an opening bogey on the confiding 1st and followed it with a double and two more bogeys before he stepped on to the 5th. He was +14 and wanted to be anywhere else. There was a throwback to his misery at Quail Hollow when he repeated his 'f*** this place' line after that third bogey.
His only birdie of the week arrived so late it felt early, on the par-4 7th but there was further woe on the way home, bogeys on 10, the brain fart on 14 and one last bogey on 15. As he congratulated McIlroy for making the cut, Lowry joked and laughed with his friend. 'Rather you than me,' may have been the gist of it.
Lowry spoke to the Examiner last week about how hard he has found recent weeks with his wife and children already back in Ireland for the summer. He has one more event before he heads home for six weeks but as he prepares for a weighty return to the Open at Portrush, there can be no hiding the need for work.
Lowry's 2025 major season reads as follows: a closing 81 at Augusta to plummet down the field, a missed cut at Quail Hollow and a tie for 138th at an Oakmont course where he was widely expected to contend. Not great.
For McIlroy, a wholly unpredictable weekend awaits. As afternoon scores spiked and big names tumbled, some made the point that Scottie Scheffler may have sat at 4-over but in a tie for 23rd, just seven back with only three major wins between him and the lead. McIlroy is just two further back on the course which offers up the least predictability in golf.

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The Irish Sun
32 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
‘One of stupidest things I've ever done' – Shane Lowry speechless after forgetting most basic rule of golf at US Open
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Irish Independent
3 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Miller on McIlroy's post-Grand Slam struggles: ‘Tiger Woods didn't have any trouble going after everything he could get, but not everybody can do that'
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RTÉ News
4 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Shane Lowry laments 'weird couple of days' at US Open after early exit
Shane Lowry summed up his US Open experience as a "weird" couple of days after missing the cut by a wide margin at a punishing Oakmont course. An opening 79 on Thursday had left the Offaly man with a huge salvage job on his hands at the year's third major and it didn't get much better on Friday when he carded a 78 that left him tied for 134th on 17 over and heading home early. Lowry told RTÉ Sport's Greg Allen that very little went his way across the two rounds in Pennsylvania despite some aspects of his play being satisfactory. "I drove it in play a lot (on Thursday), did what I was supposed to do off the tee and then just didn't have the game that I've had for the last while, and then really struggled on the greens and the round got away from me here and that was it," he said. "I sort of let it do what I said I wouldn't do. But that's Oakmont, that's the US Open and I just made too many doubles, too many big mistakes and then when I got a couple of chances, I didn't convert them and I didn't really do much right, other than I drove the ball as good as I've probably driven the ball in a long time. So a weird kind of couple of days." More frustratingly, it's come in a season when he's been largely on his game on the results front. "I felt great coming in here," he said. "It's been a strange sort of year where I've been having some great results but very rarely feel very satisfied with myself and this week is back to the drawing board after this week. "But with scores like that, you can look a million miles away out there. But I feel like I was good in a lot of parts today, just obviously got a horrendous start and what happened at the second was just... problem is I tried a wedge in there to spin it off the green and I've 40 yards for my third shot. It's just hard. "Maybe I should have been more aggressive off the tee but what happened, happened. It's just hard. You see three people are under par. The best players in the world are here and it's just hard." However, Lowry was able to have a chuckle at his own expense for the very basic error he made on the 14th green by picking up his ball without marking it first, incurring a one-stroke penalty. "Probably one of the stupidest things I've ever done," he quipped. "I picked the ball up, had the ball in my hand, turned around to Darren (Reynolds, caddie) and he basically said to me, 'What are you doing?' And yeah, I put it back down, marked it and played on and I knew I was going to get penalised. I didn't know whether it was going to be one or two. But by then, maybe my mind was somewhere else." Next up for Lowry is the Travelers Championship in Connecticut, before a very welcome three-week stretch back home in Ireland. "I've been away from my wife and kids now for a few weeks and it's another week next week so I'm looking forward to getting home and getting back to Ireland and seeing all my friends and family."