Rain subsides 3rd round's closing stretch
Digest more
Burns, Oakmont
Digest more
14hon MSN
A line of storms that rolled through Oakmont between the second and third rounds hardly seemed to make an impact at the U.S. Open
There’s no water at Oakmont, even when it pours. While the venerable and now nearly tree-less course carved out of the western Pennsylvania hills held up fine despite steady overnight rain ahead of Saturday’s third round,
Bryson DeChambeau missed the cut at the U.S. Open, became the first defending champion to miss the weekend at the national championship since Gary Woodland in 2020.
A line of storms that rolled through Oakmont between the second and third rounds hardly seemed to make an impact at the U.S. Open. There was no delay in play,
After another round of storms drenched Oakmont, the USGA announced Saturday morning that it was offering a refund to any ticketed fans who didn’t want to slog through the “very saturated” areas outside the ropes.
Jordan Spieth was among the early arrivals, playing the front nine on Saturday and 11 holes on Sunday in a light, but steady rain. Turns out the USGA had a policy that no one could start on No. 10. Spieth went down the first, back up the ninth and headed to No. 10.
Oakmont's fiendish layout provided a rain-softened preview Monday of what the world's top golfers will face when the 125th US Open starts Thursday.Thomas, a former world number one, says he would like to challenge for the top again,