Golf: Scheffler, McIlroy look to tame Oakmont, DeChambeau seeks repeat US Open win
American golfer Scottie Scheffler.
Photo:
Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire
Scottie Scheffler, who has cemented himself as the pre-eminent force in golf, enters this week's US Open seeking the third leg of a career Grand Slam while Rory McIlroy hopes to reclaim his major magic and Bryson DeChambeau eyes a repeat title.
World number one Scheffler has three wins in his last four starts,
including last month's PGA Championship
, and is clear favourite at Oakmont Country Club where his driving proficiency, elite short game and patient approach could be the difference.
Oakmont, arguably the toughest course in the United States, is a quintessential US Open venue given its penalising rough, narrow fairways and nerve-testing greens that many expect will ultimately result in a winning score above par.
The physical and mental grind expected this week could open the door for three-times major champion Scheffler, who tends to be in contention wherever he tees it up given his unflappable temperament and exacting style that can wear down a field.
Northern Ireland's McIlroy completed the career Grand Slam of golf's four majors at the Masters in April but at the PGA Championship
he finished well out of contention while using a back-up driver
after his preferred one failed a conformity test.
Now the world number two, fresh off a missed cut at the Canadian Open, will get another crack at an event where he has endured his fair share of heartbreak in recent years.
At the 2024 US Open, where the Northern Irishman was seeking his first major triumph in a decade, McIlroy bogeyed three of his final four holes and finished runner-up for a second consecutive year.
Bryson DeChambeau of the United States celebrates making a par on the 18th green to win during the final round of the 124th U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort.
Photo:
AFP
DeChambeau, looking to become the event's first repeat winner since Brooks Koepka in 2018, has become a regular force at golf's biggest events and with five top-six finishes across the last six majors he should be in the mix this week.
The big-hitting DeChambeau, who this year briefly held the final-round lead at the Masters and finished runner-up at the PGA Championship, has become one of the game's biggest draws due partly to his eponymous YouTube channel.
The defending champion also won the US Open in 2020.
Among some of the other notables in the 156-player field at Oakmont are Spaniard Jon Rahm, British Open champion Xander Schauffele and Swede Ludvig Aberg.
New Zealand's
Ryan Fox is in good form
having won two PGA tournaments in the last month.
Fox has played the US Open six times, missing the cut three times with his best result a tie for 41st in 2018.
A stern test awaits at Oakmont which is hosting a US Open for a record 10th time and first since 2016.
Accuracy off the tee will be paramount given the penal rough lining Oakmont's narrow fairways that lead to greens that could be the fastest players compete on all year.
- Reuters
Hashtags

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

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
NBA Basketball: Pacers beat Oklahoma to take 2-1 finals lead
Tyrese Haliburton of the Indiana Pacers. Photo: AFP The bench played a big role in the Indiana Pacers 116-107 win over Oklahoma City Thunder to claim a 2-1 lead in the NBA Finals. Backup guards Bennedict Mathurin and TJ McConnell had a lot of impact. Thanks to 27 points from Mathurin and the kind of pyrotechnics the Pacers have grown to adore from reserve point guard McConnell, Indiana has the advantage in the best-of-seven series. Tyrese Haliburton provided heroics with 22 points, 11 assists and nine rebounds while Pascal Siakam added 21 points for the Pacers, who haven't lost back-to-back games since December. Jalen Williams led the Thunder with 26 points and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 24 points. Chet Holmgren compiled 20 points and 10 rebounds but shot 0-for-6 from 3-point range. Game 4 is scheduled for Saturday in Indianapolis. The Thunder trailed 110-102 with three minutes to go, but Alex Caruso tried to keep the Pacers from a premature celebration with a steal and breakaway into the open court. Two steps into the paint, Aaron Nesmith closed and forcefully brought both arms down on Caruso to prevent the shot attempt and take him to the floor. Following a review, no flagrant foul was called. Caruso made both free throws and Indiana's Myles Turner subsequently lost the ball out of bounds. However, Turner, who missed eight of his first 10 shots, came up with two blocks of Holmgren on the same possession to keep the lead at six. Indiana got another stop, and Siakam lit up the stadium for good with an easy basket that gave the Pacers a 112-104 lead with 69 seconds left. McConnell was seemingly everywhere, and he came up with massive defensive plays all game. He ripped off Caruso's bullet inbounds pass with two hands at point-blank range under the basket and pumped in a layup to tie the game at 95 early in the fourth quarter. Mathurin cashed a trey off a McConnell assist, putting the Pacers up 98-96. After sitting the first 4:56 in the fourth quarter, Haliburton returned to the floor, took a handoff at the top of the key, stopped, squared and splashed his fourth 3-pointer of the game for a 101-98 lead with 6:42 remaining. Indiana's Aaron Nembhard made a 12-foot jumper from the left elbow and the Pacers got it back after a missed 3-point attempt, taking a touchdown lead (107-100) on Obi Toppin's two-hand dunk off of a miss with 4:23 to go. Nesmith caught a skip pass on the right wing and drained a trey on Indiana's next possession for an eight-point lead. McConnell hit a running right-handed layup between two clutch buckets by Mathurin as the Pacers stayed close, down 93-91, with 10 minutes to play. Oklahoma City had surged ahead for its biggest lead of the second half - 89-84 - to end the third quarter. Williams hit a long 3-pointer came after and-1 baseline dunk by Holmgren, who moved through the swiping hands of McConnell to finish. Williams played a lot of the game with the ball in his hands as the Pacers worked to keep Gilgeous-Alexander in check. McConnell leads NBA reserves in assists per game in the playoffs (4.1). - Reuters


NZ Herald
7 hours ago
- NZ Herald
US Open expert picks: Who will win at Oakmont
NZME's golf experts preview the 125th US Open, which is taking place at the difficult Oakmont Country Club in suburban Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Who will win? Cameron McMillan: Scottie Scheffler is the overwhelming favourite. The way he's playing, it's hard to see someone other than him lifting the US Open trophy.

RNZ News
10 hours ago
- RNZ News
Only the best being encouraged to showcase cricket in Olympics' return at LA 2028
USA cricketers during the under-19 Women's World Cup, Malaysia, 2025. Photo: Hazrin Yeob Men Shah/Icon Sportswire / PHOTOSPORT Cricket will return to the Olympics after 128 years at the 2028 Games and the popular view is only the best teams should showcase the game in Los Angeles, even if it means leaving out hosts the United States. Both the men's and women's competitions will be a six-team contest in the 20-overs format when cricket is played in the Olympics for the first time since 1900. The International Cricket Council is yet to announce the qualification format but is likely to pick the top six teams in the official rankings at a cut-off date. The US rank 17th in the men's list and 24th in the women's, which makes their position untenable in the cricket competitions of their home Olympics. "I'd love an associate member to get in there but let's be realistic," Sumod Damodar, who represents associate members like the US in the ICC Chief Executives' Committee, told Reuters. "Should the US get an automatic place? I'll say let's put the best that we can on show. "We're coming back into the Olympics after 128 years. We need to make that impression so that people will say, 'Okay, we don't want them to go back and beg 'please include us' before every Olympics'. "Like track and field, we need to become a regular Olympic fixture. We need to show them that this product is worth it." With Brisbane hosting the 2032 Olympics and India bidding for the 2036 Games, Botswana cricket chief Damodar hoped cricket would feature in the next three Olympics and beyond. "We need to send the best six teams to showcase our game from the perspective of what it has in store for us, for the public, and the spectators in the future Olympic Games," he said. Damodar added the ICC should announce a cut-off date some time next year giving all members enough time to improve their rankings. USA Cricket did not reply to a Reuters email seeking its view but Sanjay Govil, who owns the Washington Freedom franchise in the Major League Cricket (MLC) in the US, also said only the best should represent cricket at Los Angeles. "It should be based on merit, because we also want to make sure that it's competitive, right?" Govil said. "I think we should have the six best teams because otherwise it would be unfair to leave out a team to accommodate USA." -Reuters