
Insane: Unsuspecting Reed lands albatross at US Open
Patrick Reed made the third double-eagle of his career on Thursday - and he's still only seen one of them go in.
Reed raised his hands to the sky, wondering what happened when he unleashed a three-wood from 286 yards in the fairway of the par-5 fourth hole at the US Open.
It was a beauty. The ball bounced three times then rolled towards the hole and into the cup. The so-called albatross is considered the rarest shot in golf, with only a few hundred dropping a year, compared to more than 30,000 holes-in-one.
Reed said the best one he hit came at a tournament in Germany, when he came out in the morning to finish the last four holes after getting rained out the night before. He had two par 5s left and his wife, Justine, was urging him to attack those and get to three under.
He parred the first, then made double eagle to close.
"Two hours later, she was back at home and said, 'Way to finish the par 5s,'" Reed said. "I said, 'Did you actually look at the scorecard?' She said, 'No, I just saw you were at three under.' She clicked on it, and just looked at me. Hey, she told me to get to three under, she didn't tell me how to do it."
The only one Reed saw came at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio when he was a kid. He hit driver off the deck onto the green while the group in front of him was still putting.
"They turned around and looked at me, then they all started jumping because they watched the ball roll right past them and disappear," Reed said. "I didn't know I could get there."
This marks just the fourth albatross at the US Open since the event started keeping such records in 1983. The 2018 Masters champion joins T.C. Chen (1985 at Oakland Hills), Shaun Micheel (2010 at Pebble Beach) and Nick Watney (2012 at Olympic).
Despite the two on No.12, Reed finished at three-over 73 after finishing with triple bogey on No.18.
"I was doing pretty well there until that last hole," Reed said.
Patrick Reed made the third double-eagle of his career on Thursday - and he's still only seen one of them go in.
Reed raised his hands to the sky, wondering what happened when he unleashed a three-wood from 286 yards in the fairway of the par-5 fourth hole at the US Open.
It was a beauty. The ball bounced three times then rolled towards the hole and into the cup. The so-called albatross is considered the rarest shot in golf, with only a few hundred dropping a year, compared to more than 30,000 holes-in-one.
Reed said the best one he hit came at a tournament in Germany, when he came out in the morning to finish the last four holes after getting rained out the night before. He had two par 5s left and his wife, Justine, was urging him to attack those and get to three under.
He parred the first, then made double eagle to close.
"Two hours later, she was back at home and said, 'Way to finish the par 5s,'" Reed said. "I said, 'Did you actually look at the scorecard?' She said, 'No, I just saw you were at three under.' She clicked on it, and just looked at me. Hey, she told me to get to three under, she didn't tell me how to do it."
The only one Reed saw came at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio when he was a kid. He hit driver off the deck onto the green while the group in front of him was still putting.
"They turned around and looked at me, then they all started jumping because they watched the ball roll right past them and disappear," Reed said. "I didn't know I could get there."
This marks just the fourth albatross at the US Open since the event started keeping such records in 1983. The 2018 Masters champion joins T.C. Chen (1985 at Oakland Hills), Shaun Micheel (2010 at Pebble Beach) and Nick Watney (2012 at Olympic).
Despite the two on No.12, Reed finished at three-over 73 after finishing with triple bogey on No.18.
"I was doing pretty well there until that last hole," Reed said.
Patrick Reed made the third double-eagle of his career on Thursday - and he's still only seen one of them go in.
Reed raised his hands to the sky, wondering what happened when he unleashed a three-wood from 286 yards in the fairway of the par-5 fourth hole at the US Open.
It was a beauty. The ball bounced three times then rolled towards the hole and into the cup. The so-called albatross is considered the rarest shot in golf, with only a few hundred dropping a year, compared to more than 30,000 holes-in-one.
Reed said the best one he hit came at a tournament in Germany, when he came out in the morning to finish the last four holes after getting rained out the night before. He had two par 5s left and his wife, Justine, was urging him to attack those and get to three under.
He parred the first, then made double eagle to close.
"Two hours later, she was back at home and said, 'Way to finish the par 5s,'" Reed said. "I said, 'Did you actually look at the scorecard?' She said, 'No, I just saw you were at three under.' She clicked on it, and just looked at me. Hey, she told me to get to three under, she didn't tell me how to do it."
The only one Reed saw came at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio when he was a kid. He hit driver off the deck onto the green while the group in front of him was still putting.
"They turned around and looked at me, then they all started jumping because they watched the ball roll right past them and disappear," Reed said. "I didn't know I could get there."
This marks just the fourth albatross at the US Open since the event started keeping such records in 1983. The 2018 Masters champion joins T.C. Chen (1985 at Oakland Hills), Shaun Micheel (2010 at Pebble Beach) and Nick Watney (2012 at Olympic).
Despite the two on No.12, Reed finished at three-over 73 after finishing with triple bogey on No.18.
"I was doing pretty well there until that last hole," Reed said.
Patrick Reed made the third double-eagle of his career on Thursday - and he's still only seen one of them go in.
Reed raised his hands to the sky, wondering what happened when he unleashed a three-wood from 286 yards in the fairway of the par-5 fourth hole at the US Open.
It was a beauty. The ball bounced three times then rolled towards the hole and into the cup. The so-called albatross is considered the rarest shot in golf, with only a few hundred dropping a year, compared to more than 30,000 holes-in-one.
Reed said the best one he hit came at a tournament in Germany, when he came out in the morning to finish the last four holes after getting rained out the night before. He had two par 5s left and his wife, Justine, was urging him to attack those and get to three under.
He parred the first, then made double eagle to close.
"Two hours later, she was back at home and said, 'Way to finish the par 5s,'" Reed said. "I said, 'Did you actually look at the scorecard?' She said, 'No, I just saw you were at three under.' She clicked on it, and just looked at me. Hey, she told me to get to three under, she didn't tell me how to do it."
The only one Reed saw came at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio when he was a kid. He hit driver off the deck onto the green while the group in front of him was still putting.
"They turned around and looked at me, then they all started jumping because they watched the ball roll right past them and disappear," Reed said. "I didn't know I could get there."
This marks just the fourth albatross at the US Open since the event started keeping such records in 1983. The 2018 Masters champion joins T.C. Chen (1985 at Oakland Hills), Shaun Micheel (2010 at Pebble Beach) and Nick Watney (2012 at Olympic).
Despite the two on No.12, Reed finished at three-over 73 after finishing with triple bogey on No.18.
"I was doing pretty well there until that last hole," Reed said.

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Daily Telegraph
22 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
Adam Scott in contention at the US Open, Cameron Smith hits major career low
Don't miss out on the headlines from Golf. Followed categories will be added to My News. Adam Scott is among the contenders at the half way mark but it was Jason Day who got the better of Oakmont in the second round as Cameron Smith and Min Woo Lee missed the cut at the US Open. Scott sits in fourth place at even par overall, three shots behind leader Sam Burns after a second successive round of 70. The 2013 Masters champion will be joined on the weekend by Day (+3), who shot the equal second best round of the day with a three-under par 67 to move into a share of 12th, Marc Leishman (+6) and Cam Davis (+7). Adam Scott is in contention at the US Open. Picture: Warren Little / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP Watch every round of the 2025 US Open LIVE & EXCLUSIVE on FOX SPORTS, available on Kayo. | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer. As his scorecards suggest, Scott has been one of the most consistent golfers across the opening 36 holes on a brutal layout that contributes to wild fluctuations in scoring for most of the field. 'I guess I would have expected to be in this position if you said even par through two rounds,' Scott said. 'It's just hard out there. It's hard to keep it going when guys have got on a run. It seems like they've come back a bit. 'I'm playing old-man-par golf at the moment.' The 44-year-old made three birdies for the day, including one to kick-off his round at the first hole – where he stuck his second shot from 212 yards out on the long par 4 to a little more than six feet from the hole. He drained a near 22-footer for birdie at the par 4 tenth, and stuck a wedge to roughly six feet at the short par 4 14th to set up another birdie. Scott was once again impressive off the tee and with his irons, hitting nine of 14 fairways and 13 of 18 greens in regulation. His iron play had been letting him down of late, he even said it was the worst part of his game, but rediscovering his groove has him buoyant about his chances of claiming a second major title. Scott, who is playing in his 96th successive major, was asked if that feat goes underappreciated, and said that 'maybe it does'. 'But I'd be pretty proud of winning this thing on the weekend,' he added. 'Right now, that's really what I'm here to do, and I feel like there's probably not been many signs to anyone else but me the last month or six weeks that my game is looking better. 'But I definitely feel more confident than I have been this year. I feel like this is what I've been working towards. Adam Scott during the second round of the 125th U.S. Open. Picture:'I was kind of in the mix late at the PGA, and now kind of putting myself in this one for the weekend. It's a long way to go, but I feel like my game is in good enough shape to do this.' Scott was then asked how energised he was to be in this position at his age, to which he said, 'I have a put together a nice career, but I think another major more would really go a long way in fulfilling my own self, when it's all said and done.' 'HOW I USED TO DO IT': DAY'S OLD SCHOOL MOVE Only Burns' second round 65 and overnight leader J.J. Spaun's opening round 66 bettered Jason Day's 67. The former world No. 1 fired four birdies and an eagle as he was back to his best after dealing with troublesome wrist and neck injuries in recent times. The eagle came at the par 5 12th, his third hole of the day, as Day drained a 20-foot putt after launching a 3-wood from more than 300 yards out onto the green. Two holes later, he stuck a wedge to tap-in range for birdie at the 14th and chipped to inside five feet to set up another birdie at another short par 4, the 17th. Back-to-back birdies courtesy of a pearler of a tee shot at the par 3 sixth and holing a near 25-footer at the par 4 seventh then wrestled back momentum in the late stages of his round. The 2015 PGA champion was pleased with his work on the greens as he needed only 27 putts for the round with help from his stellar short game. 'Putted a lot better today. Obviously I hit it nice on the front side, which was the back side,' Day said. 'I got into a little bit of trouble kind of midway round. Just didn't, just started missing a few greens. 'Then kind of settled it a little bit with a birdie on 6 and 7 for me. So that was, it was a big day to come back and shoot 3-under to make the cut.' Jason Day looks on from the 18th green at the U.S. Open. Picture:Day's change in fortunes with the flat stick came after some old school improvisation after the feel and look was off. 'I bent my putter. Yeah, no, I just manually bent it myself. Stood on it,' he said. 'That's kind of how I used to do it back in the day. 'It just hadn't been looking very good to me personally, kind of looks a little bit hooded, the grip's on a little bit closed too, so that's not a positive for me. 'But I bent it enough to make it look more open, which is good.' Jason Day lines up a putt on the second green at Oakmont. Picture: Gregory Shamus / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP As for his chances across the weekend, Day is confident he can continue to make up ground after a disappointing opening round of 76. 'I feel like you're going to make bogeys out here and try and get the birdies when you can,' he said. '3-over right now, if I can just keep climbing the leaderboard, get into contention on Sunday that would be great.' In his first major since 2022, Marc Leishman advanced to the weekend despite shooting the worst round of the day among his countrymen with a 75. Marc Leishman collapsed in the second round but still made the weekend. Picture: Getty Images via AFP Leishman's first round 71 had him well-placed but then he held his nerve to make the cut across the back nine after reaching the turn in 40. Meanwhile, Cam Davis made the cut on the number with a second round 73. Davis bogeyed his second last hole to put himself under the pump, but calmly two-putted for par at the par 4 ninth, his final hole, to advance. Cam Davis also advanced to the weekend. Picture: Getty Images via AFP 'A LITTLE TOO LATE': SMITH'S WORST RUN CONTINUES Cameron Smith will not play the weekend for the fourth straight major championship. The 2022 Open champion is officially in the worst stretch of his career in the majors after missing the cut by two shots at +8. Smith signed off on a second round 73 that included a back nine fight back in a last-ditch attempt to salvage his tournament. The LIV star made birdies at 11, 14, 15 and 17, but a front nine of 41, which included a three-putt triple bogey at the first, and bogeys at the 16th proved too costly. Cameron Smith did not make the cut. Picture: Getty Images via AFP Smith hit 13 of 18 greens in regulation in the second round, but his much-lauded putting deserted him around the 36 holes, taking 63 putts which ranked him 138th out of a field of 156. 'We've all known about his driver struggles but it's that club in the bag that has kind of left him,' former Australian professional James Nitties said on commentary. 'We all know how good of a putter he is and he's doing it now (on the back nine), but it's a little too late.' Min Woo Lee also did not make the weekend. Picture: Getty Images via AFP Min Woo Lee also finished one shot worse at +9, but was much improved in his second round with a 72. The 26-year-old simply made life too difficult for himself after a first round 77 and missed the cut for the second straight major. Originally published as Adam Scott in contention at the US Open, Cameron Smith officially hits major career low

News.com.au
32 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Adam Scott in contention at the US Open, Cameron Smith officially hits major career low
Adam Scott is among the contenders at the half way mark but it was Jason Day who got the better of Oakmont in the second round as Cameron Smith and Min Woo Lee missed the cut at the US Open. Scott sits in fourth place at even par overall, three shots behind leader Sam Burns after a second successive round of 70. The 2013 Masters champion will be joined on the weekend by Day (+3), who shot the equal second best round of the day with a three-under par 67 to move into a share of 12th, Marc Leishman (+6) and Cam Davis (+7). Watch every round of the 2025 US Open LIVE & EXCLUSIVE on FOX SPORTS, available on Kayo. | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer. As his scorecards suggest, Scott has been one of the most consistent golfers across the opening 36 holes on a brutal layout that contributes to wild fluctuations in scoring for most of the field. 'I guess I would have expected to be in this position if you said even par through two rounds,' Scott said. 'It's just hard out there. It's hard to keep it going when guys have got on a run. It seems like they've come back a bit. 'I'm playing old-man-par golf at the moment.' “I’m playing old-man-par golf at the moment.â€� 🤣 Adam Scott is the only player in the field without an over-par round at the @usopengolf. — PGA of Australia (@PGAofAustralia) June 13, 2025 The 44-year-old made three birdies for the day, including one to kick-off his round at the first hole – where he stuck his second shot from 212 yards out on the long par 4 to a little more than six feet from the hole. He drained a near 22-footer for birdie at the par 4 tenth, and stuck a wedge to roughly six feet at the short par 4 14th to set up another birdie. Scott was once again impressive off the tee and with his irons, hitting nine of 14 fairways and 13 of 18 greens in regulation. His iron play had been letting him down of late, he even said it was the worst part of his game, but rediscovering his groove has him buoyant about his chances of claiming a second major title. Scott, who is playing in his 96th successive major, was asked if that feat goes underappreciated, and said that 'maybe it does'. Adam Scott still *very* much in this thing. Remains even par and just three off the lead. — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 'But I'd be pretty proud of winning this thing on the weekend,' he added. 'Right now, that's really what I'm here to do, and I feel like there's probably not been many signs to anyone else but me the last month or six weeks that my game is looking better. 'But I definitely feel more confident than I have been this year. I feel like this is what I've been working towards. 'I was kind of in the mix late at the PGA, and now kind of putting myself in this one for the weekend. It's a long way to go, but I feel like my game is in good enough shape to do this.' Scott was then asked how energised he was to be in this position at his age, to which he said, 'I have a put together a nice career, but I think another major more would really go a long way in fulfilling my own self, when it's all said and done.' Adam Scott will win this thing. That gives him 5 year major exemption + Open next month which will take his consecutive majors total to 117. Needs 147 to top Jack. He’ll be 57 then and probably better looking than now and hitting it further than now. — Ewan Porter (@ewanports) June 13, 2025 'HOW I USED TO DO IT': DAY'S OLD SCHOOL MOVE Only Burns' second round 65 and overnight leader J.J. Spaun's opening round 66 bettered Jason Day's 67. The former world No. 1 fired four birdies and an eagle as he was back to his best after dealing with troublesome wrist and neck injuries in recent times. The eagle came at the par 5 12th, his third hole of the day, as Day drained a 20-foot putt after launching a 3-wood from more than 300 yards out onto the green. Two holes later, he stuck a wedge to tap-in range for birdie at the 14th and chipped to inside five feet to set up another birdie at another short par 4, the 17th. Back-to-back birdies courtesy of a pearler of a tee shot at the par 3 sixth and holing a near 25-footer at the par 4 seventh then wrestled back momentum in the late stages of his round. Jason Day is the first to eagle No. 12 in this year's championship 🇦🇰 The Aussie gets to 5 over par. — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 The 2015 PGA champion was pleased with his work on the greens as he needed only 27 putts for the round with help from his stellar short game. 'Putted a lot better today. Obviously I hit it nice on the front side, which was the back side,' Day said. 'I got into a little bit of trouble kind of midway round. Just didn't, just started missing a few greens. 'Then kind of settled it a little bit with a birdie on 6 and 7 for me. So that was, it was a big day to come back and shoot 3-under to make the cut.' Day's change in fortunes with the flat stick came after some old school improvisation after the feel and look was off. 'I bent my putter. Yeah, no, I just manually bent it myself. Stood on it,' he said. 'That's kind of how I used to do it back in the day. 'It just hadn't been looking very good to me personally, kind of looks a little bit hooded, the grip's on a little bit closed too, so that's not a positive for me. 'But I bent it enough to make it look more open, which is good.' As for his chances across the weekend, Day is confident he can continue to make up ground after a disappointing opening round of 76. 'I feel like you're going to make bogeys out here and try and get the birdies when you can,' he said. '3-over right now, if I can just keep climbing the leaderboard, get into contention on Sunday that would be great.' In his first major since 2022, Marc Leishman advanced to the weekend despite shooting the worst round of the day among his countrymen with a 75. Leishman's first round 71 had him well-placed but then he held his nerve to make the cut across the back nine after reaching the turn in 40. Meanwhile, Cam Davis made the cut on the number with a second round 73. Davis bogeyed his second last hole to put himself under the pump, but calmly two-putted for par at the par 4 ninth, his final hole, to advance. 'A LITTLE TOO LATE': SMITH'S WORST RUN CONTINUES Cameron Smith will not play the weekend for the fourth straight major championship. The 2022 Open champion is officially in the worst stretch of his career in the majors after missing the cut by two shots at +8. Smith signed off on a second round 73 that included a back nine fight back in a last-ditch attempt to salvage his tournament. The LIV star made birdies at 11, 14, 15 and 17, but a front nine of 41, which included a three-putt triple bogey at the first, and bogeys at the 16th proved too costly. Smith hit 13 of 18 greens in regulation in the second round, but his much-lauded putting deserted him around the 36 holes, taking 63 putts which ranked him 138th out of a field of 156. 'We've all known about his driver struggles but it's that club in the bag that has kind of left him,' former Australian professional James Nitties said on commentary. 'We all know how good of a putter he is and he's doing it now (on the back nine), but it's a little too late.' Min Woo Lee also finished one shot worse at +9, but was much improved in his second round with a 72. The 26-year-old simply made life too difficult for himself after a first round 77 and missed the cut for the second straight major.

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
Anthony Albanese suggests NSW and Victoria should be considered to host major 2032 Olympic events, sparking stern rebuke from Qld officials
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has suggested consideration should be made for two 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games sports to be held outside of Queensland. The 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games plot has continued to thicken after the Labor leader said the tennis and rowing could potentially be held in New South Wales and Victoria and that the Sunshine State lacked the appropriate facilities to host the two sports. Appearing on the most recent episode of the Two Good Sports podcast uploaded on Friday, Mr Albanese said there was a 'bit of a debate going on' over the venue plan. 'I've been meeting with (2032 Organising Committee President) Andrew Liveris as well as with the Queensland Premier (David) Crisafulli about where it goes,' he told the podcast. 'For example, are we really going to do rowing in Rockhampton on the Fitzroy River when there are some pretty good facilities at Penrith (in Sydney's west)?' The PM, who has flown to Canada for the G7 summit, cast doubt on Queensland's ability to accommodate the two sports and questioned why taxpayer funds would be used to develop new facilities when there were existing amenities in Sydney and Melbourne. 'There's a debate over tennis and what's needed there in Brisbane as well," Mr Albanese told the Melbourne-based podcast. 'You have pretty good tennis facilities." However, the Crisafulli state government was quick to pounce on the unexpected comments, vowing that Brisbane would host all Olympic events. A Queensland government spokesperson told the Courier Mail on Friday that 'we are working with all levels of government to implement the 2032 Games Delivery Plan, which will see Rowing in Rockhampton and Tennis played at the upgraded Queensland Tennis Centre.' Mr Crisafulli previously stated that his government would guarantee 'Melbourne will not be taking the tennis from Brisbane'. Tennis Queensland CEO Cameron Pearson also weighed in on the stoush, and resoundingly backed his home state, saying 'the Premier confirmed in March that Olympic and Paralympic tennis will be played in Brisbane, and we've had productive discussions since'. Yet, despite vocal protest from high-ranking Queensland officials, the Prime Minister added 'it might be that you just can't do everything in one spot in the future' and that it was 'legitimate for there to be proper discussion'. Hosting the rowing in the notoriously crocodile "infested" waters of the Fitzroy River in Rockhampton has attracted ridicule and furore, with a recent hydrological study also concluding the river drops to almost zero flow in the winter months when the games are due to be held. A Brisbane 2032 spokesperson reiterated the venue master plan process was still ongoing and that many details were still yet to be determined. 'Delivering world-class fields of play that provide an optimal performance environment for athletes remains key for Brisbane 2032 and ensuring International Federations are involved in planning and delivery will help achieve this outcome,' a Brisbane 2032 statement read. In response to the row, an Albanese government spokesperson said there needed to be a 'common sense approach' in the planning of the games and that any changes to the scheduling would be decided in tandem with the Queensland government.