logo
Putt free and try hard: Why Sam Burns, the world's best on the greens, is rolling at Oakmont

Putt free and try hard: Why Sam Burns, the world's best on the greens, is rolling at Oakmont

NBC Sports15 hours ago

OAKMONT, Pa. – Sam Burns has a simple answer to why he's, statistically, the world's best putter.
'I practice it a lot,' he says.
Louisiana Tech head coach Matt Terry can confirm. The Bulldogs share a home club with Burns, Squire Creek Country Club in Choudrant, Louisiana, and when Burns isn't on the road, he can often be found on Squire's practice green perfecting his stroke – template work, chalk lines, speed drills, you name it. These days, Burns will sometimes plop his 1-year-old son, Bear, down on the grass, hand him a wedge and get in a few extra putts while the toddler sits there, gnawing on the grip.
'That stuff is why he's so good; it's just constant,' Terry said. 'I tell my guys all the time to just go watch him putt and mirror what he does.
'The dude's the best I've ever seen on the greens.'
The USGA usually gets creative with a handful of its U.S. Open groupings. For example, this week's trio of Burns, Denny McCarthy and Nico Echavarria combined the best three putters in the field, according to the PGA Tour's strokes-gained metric. Burns is unequivocally the best of the bunch. He's the only U.S. Open competitor, per Data Golf, who is gaining more than a shot per round on the greens in the past six months – and he's 0.2 strokes per round better than the next best player, Cameron Smith.
'If you look at putting,' Burns explains, 'the ball is rolling on the ground. There's a lot of imperfections on grass. There's a lot of different lines the ball can go in, depending on the speed, so if you try to be too perfect with putting, it can drive you crazy, so I just try to really read it, put a good roll on it, focus on the speed and hope for the best.'
Added Burns' close friend, Scottie Scheffler: 'He's got good fundamentals, good instinct, and he putts very reactionary. That's really all there is to it.'
The ninth green at Oakmont Country Club is a long way from Squire Creek, both literally and figuratively. Measuring at over 22,000 square feet, the putting surface, which sits in the shadows of Oakmont's farmhouse-style clubhouse, is the largest on property and doubles as the club's practice green. It features a wide variety of challenges, sloping back to front with a large swale through the middle and a mound on the right portion. Friday's hole location was tucked front right, just right of the swale and behind a deep bunker.
At 5 under through 17 holes and on his way to easily the best round so far this week, Burns had no business saving par after tugging his drive into the left penalty area. But he took his medicine, dropped and hit his third shot pin high, 23 feet left of the flag to avoid any chance of dumping one in the sand.
You see, the thing about putting is no one makes everything. Even Burns whiffed on a 5-footer last Sunday in Canada that would've won him his sixth PGA Tour title. He three-putted to lose, too. And on Thursday at Oakmont, he unusually finished in the negative in strokes gained putting, ranking just outside the top 100 of 156 players.
But Burns bounced back with a vengeance on Friday, pouring in over 102 feet of putts, including that clutch par save on the par-4 ninth to solidify a second-round 65 and two-day total of 3-under 137, which left he and Viktor Hovland (1 under) as the only two players in their wave at even par or better.
'That putt was, I don't know, 6 feet of break,' Burns guessed of the putt, which gained him about a stroke on the field alone. 'Yeah, it was a nice one to make for sure.'
Despite his elite skill with the flatstick – his trusty Odyssey Ai-One 7S – Burns finds himself in unfamiliar territory. This is his 21st career major start. Until his T-9 at last year's U.S. Open at Pinehurst, he'd never cracked the top 10 in a major. The physical explanation, at least in recent years, is Burns' iron play hasn't been good enough. He entered this week ranked No. 149 in strokes gained approach, so the fact that he missed just four greens Friday and ranks inside the top 10 in that category through two days probably explains his breakout performance.
But Burns added that he learned something 12 months ago at Pinehurst.
'I just feel like I've tried to play too perfect and tried to force it a little bit at times … around major championship golf courses,' Burns explained, 'and I think especially around here, honestly it kind of forces you to take your medicine because a lot of times that's the only option you have. … You really just have to free it up. It's too hard to try to guide it around here. You're going to hit some in the rough, you're going to hit some in some bad spots, you might as well do it with authority.'
Burns' patience was tested late Thursday afternoon when he quickly went from 3 under to 2 over with a bogey-double-bogey-bogey finish over his last four holes, Nos 15-18.
'It was unfortunate,' Burns said, 'but there was too much good to focus on the little bit of bad.'
A day later, Burns was heading toward his television interview when he walked past Jon Rahm, who was speaking to reporters following a disappointing 75 that dropped him to 4 over.
'I'm too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any perspective,' Rahm said. 'Very frustrated. Very few rounds of golf I played in my life where I think I hit good putts and they didn't sniff the hole.'
Rahm lost about three strokes with the putter on Friday, a performance that ranked him ahead of fewer than 10 players in this second round. Shortly after wrapping his thoughts, Rahm was off to the practice area to figure something out.
As Burns knows, that's the simplest way to holing more putts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend
Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend

CNN

time31 minutes ago

  • CNN

Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend

Sam Burns came into Friday knowing that he could play at Oakmont. He also knew what the course could do to him, having finished with three bogeys and one double bogey during Thursday's opening round. Burns chose not to dwell on how his round ended and instead focused on the five birdies that came earlier. 'I played really well yesterday other than the finishing holes,' he said to reporters after his round Friday. 'So, I think today was just kind of getting mentally ready to come out and try to put a good round together. I feel like I've been playing well coming off last week and into this week and my round yesterday. Really just trying to get yourself in position out here and give yourself as many looks as you can.' What came on Friday might be the round of his life. On this most difficult of courses – only three players are under par after 36 holes – Burns shot a 5-under 65 that left him in sole control of the US Open halfway through the tournament. It's the first time he's had at least a share of the lead at this point in a major championship and was just two shots shy of the course record 63, set by Johnny Miller in the 1973 edition of this tournament. Burns is a five-time winner on the PGA Tour but has only finished in the top 10 at a major once – at last year's US Open at Pinehurst. He's known as one of the best putters on the tour but is coming off a week where his putter failed him at a critical moment. On the first playoff hole of the RBC Canadian Open last week, Burns had a five-foot putt to win the tournament. Instead, his ball hit the lip of the cup and rimmed out; on the second playoff hole he three-putted and would finish in second. This week, there has been no sign of a hangover. 'I think especially around here, honestly it kind of forces you to take your medicine because a lot of times that's the only option you have,' Burns said Friday of playing Oakmont. 'I think for this golf course, you really just have to free it up. It's too hard to try to guide it around here. You're going to hit some in the rough, you're going to hit some in some bad spots, you might as well do it with authority.' 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 Burns will start Saturday with a share of the lead and will have the eyes of the many spectators at Oakmont on him, a stark contrast to Friday when the biggest crowds only paused to watch his shots when Scottie Scheffler's group was passing by a nearby hole. Scheffler and Burns are good friends and often travel together on tour, but it's the No. 1-ranked Texan who is usually in the spotlight. Such was Burns' play on Friday that Scheffler was answering questions about his buddy after his round was over. He plays golf very freely, and he's got really good natural instincts when it comes to his putting,' Scheffler said, 'and a lot of it is just very reactionary. He's got good fundamentals, good instinct, and he putts very reactionary. That's really all there is to it, it's as simple as that.' That's the lesson that Burns learned at Pinehurst No. 2 last year when he finished tied for ninth. It's counterintuitive, especially on such a big stage, but Burns said his whole mindset is based on allowing Oakmont to be the beast that it is. He told reporters he had no real goals for a score he'd like to shoot. He wasn't obsessing over the putts that didn't go in because he felt like doing so would be greedy. And, as one of the players in the tournament without a major championship to his name, the most important thing was taking the pressure off. 'I just feel like I've tried to play too perfect and tried to force it a little bit at times. Sos trying to really be patient and take what the golf course gives me,' Burns said. Oakmont has so far rewarded the players who take a patient approach with it. It has a way of humbling players who try to impose their will on this monster of a track. Take Thriston Lawrence for example. The South African started Friday with a par and then three straight birdies. Playing with confidence, he let his driver hunt after that, going for the big drives that he likes to hit and playing aggressively as he played himself into a three-stroke lead. Oakmont rewarded that confidence with three straight bogeys. Then another. Then two more. Then a double bogey. And when he was about to finish up his round, the skies opened up and USGA officials suspended play for the night, much to his chagrin. This course outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, isn't rewarding many players this week – let alone forgiving their mistakes. Burns' short game, and willingness to take what he gets, is helping him get to the top. 'Look, this golf course is very tough and you're going to get the ball out of position and you're going to get in some spots that are tricky. I think being able to rely on your short game and give yourself a chance at par is really important,' he said. The question now coming into the weekend is how long will Burns stay atop the leaderboard. He's put himself in historically good position – 11 of the last 12 US Open champions were in the top five after the first two rounds. He's sanguine about it all. 'It's a 72-hole golf tournament, and if you can get a round under par out here, no matter if it's 1-under, you'll take it,' he said, adding, 'I'm looking forward to the weekend.' His friend Scheffler hinted there might be a bit more fire underneath that calm exterior. 'Sam is one of those guys, he's like me in a sense that he's a hyper-competitive person,' Scheffler said. 'I think you always dream of having a chance to win these tournaments, and he's put himself in position a few times at majors, and he's in position again.

Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend
Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend

CNN

time33 minutes ago

  • CNN

Sam Burns is playing free at Oakmont's treacherous course. It's put him atop the US Open leaderboard going into the weekend

Sam Burns came into Friday knowing that he could play at Oakmont. He also knew what the course could do to him, having finished with three bogeys and one double bogey during Thursday's opening round. Burns chose not to dwell on how his round ended and instead focused on the five birdies that came earlier. 'I played really well yesterday other than the finishing holes,' he said to reporters after his round Friday. 'So, I think today was just kind of getting mentally ready to come out and try to put a good round together. I feel like I've been playing well coming off last week and into this week and my round yesterday. Really just trying to get yourself in position out here and give yourself as many looks as you can.' What came on Friday might be the round of his life. On this most difficult of courses – only three players are under par after 36 holes – Burns shot a 5-under 65 that left him in sole control of the US Open halfway through the tournament. It's the first time he's had at least a share of the lead at this point in a major championship and was just two shots shy of the course record 63, set by Johnny Miller in the 1973 edition of this tournament. Burns is a five-time winner on the PGA Tour but has only finished in the top 10 at a major once – at last year's US Open at Pinehurst. He's known as one of the best putters on the tour but is coming off a week where his putter failed him at a critical moment. On the first playoff hole of the RBC Canadian Open last week, Burns had a five-foot putt to win the tournament. Instead, his ball hit the lip of the cup and rimmed out; on the second playoff hole he three-putted and would finish in second. This week, there has been no sign of a hangover. 'I think especially around here, honestly it kind of forces you to take your medicine because a lot of times that's the only option you have,' Burns said Friday of playing Oakmont. 'I think for this golf course, you really just have to free it up. It's too hard to try to guide it around here. You're going to hit some in the rough, you're going to hit some in some bad spots, you might as well do it with authority.' 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 Burns will start Saturday with a share of the lead and will have the eyes of the many spectators at Oakmont on him, a stark contrast to Friday when the biggest crowds only paused to watch his shots when Scottie Scheffler's group was passing by a nearby hole. Scheffler and Burns are good friends and often travel together on tour, but it's the No. 1-ranked Texan who is usually in the spotlight. Such was Burns' play on Friday that Scheffler was answering questions about his buddy after his round was over. He plays golf very freely, and he's got really good natural instincts when it comes to his putting,' Scheffler said, 'and a lot of it is just very reactionary. He's got good fundamentals, good instinct, and he putts very reactionary. That's really all there is to it, it's as simple as that.' That's the lesson that Burns learned at Pinehurst No. 2 last year when he finished tied for ninth. It's counterintuitive, especially on such a big stage, but Burns said his whole mindset is based on allowing Oakmont to be the beast that it is. He told reporters he had no real goals for a score he'd like to shoot. He wasn't obsessing over the putts that didn't go in because he felt like doing so would be greedy. And, as one of the players in the tournament without a major championship to his name, the most important thing was taking the pressure off. 'I just feel like I've tried to play too perfect and tried to force it a little bit at times. Sos trying to really be patient and take what the golf course gives me,' Burns said. Oakmont has so far rewarded the players who take a patient approach with it. It has a way of humbling players who try to impose their will on this monster of a track. Take Thriston Lawrence for example. The South African started Friday with a par and then three straight birdies. Playing with confidence, he let his driver hunt after that, going for the big drives that he likes to hit and playing aggressively as he played himself into a three-stroke lead. Oakmont rewarded that confidence with three straight bogeys. Then another. Then two more. Then a double bogey. And when he was about to finish up his round, the skies opened up and USGA officials suspended play for the night, much to his chagrin. This course outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, isn't rewarding many players this week – let alone forgiving their mistakes. Burns' short game, and willingness to take what he gets, is helping him get to the top. 'Look, this golf course is very tough and you're going to get the ball out of position and you're going to get in some spots that are tricky. I think being able to rely on your short game and give yourself a chance at par is really important,' he said. The question now coming into the weekend is how long will Burns stay atop the leaderboard. He's put himself in historically good position – 11 of the last 12 US Open champions were in the top five after the first two rounds. He's sanguine about it all. 'It's a 72-hole golf tournament, and if you can get a round under par out here, no matter if it's 1-under, you'll take it,' he said, adding, 'I'm looking forward to the weekend.' His friend Scheffler hinted there might be a bit more fire underneath that calm exterior. 'Sam is one of those guys, he's like me in a sense that he's a hyper-competitive person,' Scheffler said. 'I think you always dream of having a chance to win these tournaments, and he's put himself in position a few times at majors, and he's in position again.

US Open live leaderboard updates: Round 3 tee times, pairings, how to watch
US Open live leaderboard updates: Round 3 tee times, pairings, how to watch

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

US Open live leaderboard updates: Round 3 tee times, pairings, how to watch

US Open live leaderboard updates: Round 3 tee times, pairings, how to watch Show Caption Hide Caption J.J. Spaun calls it his best putting day of the year J.J. Spaun navigated Oakmont's tough setup with sharp putting and gritty play in round one of the U.S. Open. USGA It could be a long day for several golfers competing in the U.S. Open on Saturday after the second round did not finish on Friday due to weather. Thirteen players did not complete their second round after heavy rainfall and lightning in the area forced event officials to suspend play. The second round will resume at 7:30 a.m. ET. When cuts become official, the third round will begin with Sam Burns (-3 for the tournament) and J.J. Spaun (-2) at the top of the leaderboard. Viktor Hovland (-1), Adam Scott (E) and Ben Griffin (E) round out the top five. Bryson DeChambeau will not defend his 2024 U.S. Open crown any further as he's slated to miss the cut. DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson and Akshay Bhatia all finished 10-over-par. Justin Thomas, Patrick Cantlay and Shane Lowry are among the other big names who will seemingly miss the cut (projected at 7-over). USA TODAY Sports will provide complete coverage of Saturday's third round. Follow along for live updates here: U.S. Open 2025 live leaderboard 1. Sam Burns: -3 (F) (F) 2. J.J. Spaun: -2 (F) (F) 3. Viktor Hovland: -1 (F) (F) T4. Adam Scott: E (F) (F) T4. Ben Griffin: E (F) (F) T6. Victor Perez: +1 (F) (F) T6. Thriston Lawrence: +1 (through 17) (through 17) T8. Russell Henley +2 (F) (F) T8. Brooks Koepka +2 (F) (F) T8. Si Woo Kim: +2 (F) (F) T8. Thomas Detry: +2 (F) Click here to see the complete U.S. Open leaderboard When will U.S. Open second round finish today? Thirteen golfers were still on the course when the second round was suspended for inclement weather. All 13 had completed at least 16 holes, and each will pick up exactly where they left off on Saturday, June 14, beginning at 7:30 a.m. ET. South Africa's Thriston Lawrence, who is tied for sixth on the leaderboard at +1, is among the golfers that still need to complete the second round. Two other golfers – Chris Gotterup (+5 through 17) and Philip Barbaree Jr. (+6 through 16) are hovering around the projected cut line of +7. Where to watch the U.S. Open: TV channel, streaming Saturday 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, 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. Third round: Saturday, June 14 10 a.m.-Noon ET on USA Network, Fubo Noon-8 p.m. ET on NBC, Fubo Watch the U.S. Open on Fubo (free trial)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store