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US Open final leaderboard: Wyndham Clark wins his first major golf championship

Wyndham Clark, who had just one PGA Tour win to his name entering the 2023 U.S. Open golf championship at Los Angeles Country Club, held off Rory McIlroy to earn his first major victory .

Clark finished at 10-under par, narrowly edging four-time major winner McIlroy by one shot. Scottie Scheffler finished at 7-under, Cameron Smith at 6-under, and Tommy Fleetwood, Min Woo Lee and Rickie Fowler tied for fifth at 5-under par.

The final round started with Clark and Fowler tied for the lead at 10-under, and McIlroy lurking at 9-under. Fowler, seeking his first major championship, made three bogeys over the first seven holes and never got on track.

Prior to Sunday, Clark's only other PGA Tour victory came in May at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Golf Course.

The winning moment for @Wyndham_Clark 🏆 pic.twitter.com/kJ7aNa50ri — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 19, 2023

CHAMPION: Clark captures his first golf major at US Open

US Open leaderboard

Wyndham Clark, -10

Rory McIlroy, -9

Scottie Scheffler, -7

Cameron Smith, -6

Tommy Fleetwood, -5

Rickie Fowler, -5

Min Woo Lee, -5

Tom Kim, -4

Harris English, -4

Austin Eckroat, -3

Dustin Johnson , -3

Jon Rahm, -3

Xander Schauffele, -3

Russell Henley, -2

Collin Morikawa, -2

Patrick Cantlay, -2

Brooks Koepka, -1

Matt Fitzpatrick, -1

Viktor Hovland, E

Jordan Smith, +1

Nick Hardy , +1

Denny McCarthy, +1

Keith Mitchell, +1

Shane Lowry, +1

Bryson DeChambeau, +1

Ryutaro Nagano, +1

Sahith Theegala, +2

Sergio Garcia , +2

Justin Suh, +2

Tyrrell Hatton, +2

Padraig Harrington, +2

Dylan Wu, +3

Patrick Rodgers, +3

Sam Burns, +3

Joaquin Niemann, +3

Cameron Young, +3

Tony Finau, +3

Hideki Matsuyama, +3

David Puig, +4

Gordon Sargent, +4

Eric Cole, +4

Si Woo Kim, +4

Hideki Matsuyama, +4

Sam Bennett, +5

Andrew Putnam, +5

Sam Stevens, +5

Billy Horschel, +5

Ryan Fox, +5

Brian Harman, +5

Mackenzie Hughes, +6

Sebastián Muñoz, +6

Charley Hoffman, +6

Kevin Streelman, +6

Gary Woodland, +6

Romain Langasque, +7

Abraham Ancer, +7

Patrick Reed, +8

Ryan Gerard, +8

Yuto Katsuragawa, +9

Adam Hadwin, +11

Jacob Solomon, +12

Adam Svensson, +12

Ben Carr, +13

Ryo Ishikawa, +14

Aldrich Potgieter, +15

Maxwell Moldovan, +17

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: US Open 2023 final leaderboard: Wyndham Clark edges Rory McIlroy

US Open live updates: Rickie Fowler leads entering weekend as cut is made

What will they do for an encore at the  123rd U.S. Open ?

Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele each got off to record-setting starts Thursday by shooting 8-under par 62s, the lowest rounds in the tournament's 123-year history.

Fowler maintained his lead entering the weekend by shooting a 2-under 68 on Friday. Schauffele is two strokes back after he shot an even-par 70. Wyndham Clark shot a 67 and trails Fowler by one shot.

Among the notable players to miss the cut was Phil Mickelson, who has had better birthdays .

USA TODAY Sports will bring you the latest news, updates, highlights and more throughout Friday's second round. Follow along.

ROUND 1 RECAP: Fowler, Schauffele fire record-setting 62s to share lead

Rickie Fowler finishes second round atop leaderboard, birdies half his holes

Fowler birded the par-4 17th hole and almost converted another birdie on the par-4 18th hole, bringing his total of birdies in the U.S. Open to 18 in the tournament. That means he’s birdied half of the holes so far. 

He’s 10-under for the sole lead. 

After shooting an opening round 8-under par 62, the lowest round in the tournament's 123-year history, he followed that up with a 68 in the second round. That ties the 36-hole U.S. Open scoring record. (Martin Kaymer also scored a 130 in 2014.)

Fowler is on the verge of making history, again. The record for the most birdies in a single U.S. Open is 22 by Brendan Steele in 2017 at Erin Hill. Fowler is only 4 birdies away from the record. 

The crowd greeted him with chants of "Rickie, Rickie" as he walked up the 18th.

"Yeah, the fans have been great here," Fowler said. “I feel like especially yesterday as the round went on, just kind of more and more energy with — as I continued to go more and more under par.

"I'm looking forward to the weekend. It's been a while since I've felt this good in a tournament, let alone a major.  It's going to be a challenge, but I'm definitely looking forward to it."

Cut made at US Open

These players missed the cut (+2) and will not be playing into the weekend at the Los Angeles Country Club.

  • Nico Echavarria, +3
  • Vincent Norrman, +3
  • Thriston Lawrence, +3
  • Phil Mickelson, +3
  • Adrian Meronk, +3
  • Mito Pereira, +3
  • Alex Noren, +3
  • Jordan Spieth, +3
  • Davis Thompson, +3
  • Taylor Moore, +3
  • Patrick Cover, +3
  • Paul Barjon, +3
  • Kyle Mueller, +3
  • Andy Svoboda, +3
  • Simon Forsström, +4
  • Adam Schenk, +4
  • Chris Kirk, +4
  • Nick Taylor, +4
  • J.J. Grey, +4
  • Thomas Pieters, +4
  • Tom Hoge, +4
  • Sepp Straka, +4
  • Justin Rose, +4
  • Corey Conners, +4
  • Max Homa, +4
  • Seamus Power, +4
  • Ross Fisher, +5
  • Taylor Pendrith, +5
  • Wilco Nienaber, +5
  • Emiliano Grillo, +5
  • Kurt Kitayama, +5
  • Austen Truslow, +5
  • Deon Germishuys, +5
  • Scott Stallings, +5
  • Lucas Herbert, +5
  • Roger Sloan, +5
  • Francesco Molinari, +5
  • J.T. Poston, +5
  • Adam Scott, +5
  • Stewart Cink, +5
  • Mac Meissner, +5
  • Barclay Brown (a), +5
  • Brent Grant, +6
  • Luke List, +6
  • Keegan Bradley, +6
  • Taylor Montgomery, +6
  • Preston Summerhays (a), +6
  • Sungjae Im, +6
  • Matt Kuchar, +6
  • Martin Kaymer, +6
  • Michael Thorbjornsen (a), +6
  • Jordan Gumberg, +6
  • Bastien Amat (a), +6
  • Alejandro Del Rey, +7
  • David Nyfjall, +7
  • Olin Browne Jr., +7
  • Corey Pereira, +7
  • Michael Kim,+7
  • Jens Dantorp, +7
  • Ryan Armour, +7
  • Gunn Charoenkul,+7
  • Jesse Schutte, +7
  • Nick Dunlap (a), +8
  • Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira (a),+8
  • Pablo Larrazabal,+8
  • K.H. Lee, +8
  • Paul Haley II, +9
  • Carlos Ortiz, +9
  • Karl Vilips (a),+9
  • Christian Cavaliere (a), +9
  • Omar Morales (a), +9
  • Wenyi Ding (a), +9
  • Michael Brennan (a), +9
  • Matthieu Pavon, +9
  • Jason Day, +9
  • Berry Henson, +10
  • Carson Young,+10
  • Aaron Wise, +10
  • Victor Perez, +11
  • Cam Davis, +11
  • Frankie Capan III, +11
  • Alex Schaake, +11
  • Hayden Buckley, +11
  • Matthew McClean (a), +11
  • Joel Dahmen, +12
  • Alexander Yang (a), +13
  • Isaac Simmons (a), +14
  • Justin Thomas, +14
  • David Horsey, +16
  • Brendan Valdes (a), +16
  • Hank Lebioda, +20

Brooks Koepka 'not a fan of' Los Angeles Country Club course

Brooks Koepka will probably not win a U.S. Open citizenship award for his comments Friday at Los Angeles Country Club. “I'm not a huge fan of this place,’’ he said after his round of 1-under 69 that left him at even heading into the weekend.

“I'm not a huge fan of blind tee shots, and then I think there's just some spots that no matter what you hit, the ball just ends up in the same spot,’’ he added. “I think it would be more fun to play on just like a regular round than it would be a U.S. Open. I mean, there's, what, two 8s yesterday.  That doesn't happen.’’

Of course he was referring to the 8-under 62 shot by Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele Thursday in the first round. Koepka said he prefers a course tough enough where the winner finishes near par – unlikely to be the case at the 123rd U.S. Open.

— Josh Peter

Rory McIlroy in the hunt

Talk of golf star Rory McIlroy ending the nine-year drought since he won his last major championship is heating up.

For good reason.

McIlroy, a four-time major winner, remains near the top of the leaderboard at the U.S. Open heading into the weekend after his round of 3-under 67 Friday dropped him to 8-under for the tournament at the Los Angeles Country Club.

“I started thinking about winning this thing when I came here on Monday,’’ said McIlroy, who won his last major at the 2014 PGA Championship. “I've already done that.

“No one wants to win another major – no one wants me to win another major more than I do. The desire is obviously there.’’

Rickie Fowler retakes lead

Rickie Fowler is back on top. He birdied the par-3, 15th hole for his seventh birdie of the second round. He’s the sole leader at 10-under for the tournament after 15 holes. 

Fowler has birdied 17 out of 33 holes in the U.S. Open.

Rickie Fowler in three-way tie for lead after back-to-back bogeys

There’s a tie atop the leaderboard. Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele, who ended the opening round as co-leaders Thursday after shooting 8-under par 62s, the lowest rounds in the tournament's 123-year history, are tied again. Fowler, Schauffele and Wyndham Clark are all 9-under for the tournament.

 Fowler reached 11-under on the front-nine of the second round on Friday, but shot back-to-back bogeys on the 10th and 11th hole to bring him to a three-way tie with Schauffele and Clark. 

Rickie Fowler hits third bogey, lead shrinks

Rickie Fowler’s lead is shrinking after he shot a bogey on the par-four 10th hole, his third bogey of the second round. He’s 10-under for the tournament and has a one stroke lead over Wyndham Clark and Xander Schauffele, who are both 9-under. 

Fowler has shot five birdies in the front-nine of the second round and nearly had another on the ninth hole, but the ball stopped just short of the target. He tapped it in for par.

Rickie Fowler has funny interaction with spectator after missing par putt

Fowler continues to lead the U.S. Open close to halfway through his second round, but he lost a stroke when he bogeyed the seventh hole — but that produced a humorous moment with someone in the crowd.

After Fowler came up short on a putt that would have saved par, a spectator loudly asked, "What are you doing?" Fowler looked in the direction of the question and hilariously shrugged before he tapped in his fourth shot.

He threw a brush-off wave in the direction of the fan as he retrieved his ball from the hole and moved on to his next hole sitting at 10-under.

Fowler opens second round with three consecutive birdies

Rickie Fowler is picking up where he left off. 

After shooting an 8-under 62 on Thursday, the lowest round in the tournament's 123-year history, the American started his second round with birdies on his first three holes to bring him to 11-under for the tournament. He’s now in the sole lead for the tournament, two strokes ahead of American Wyndham Clark, who is 9-under.

Fowler shot 10 birdies in his historic opening round, and now has 13 birdies in 21 holes played.

How many more will he have today?

McIlroy nearly aces hole, finishes with birdie

Close, but no cigar. 

Rory McIlroy nearly shot an ace on the par-3, 171-yard ninth hole. He teed off on his last hole of the second round and his ball rolled less than three feet from the pin. Although he didn’t get the desired eagle, McIlroy was able to tap the ball in for a birdie, his seventh of the round. He is 8-under for the tournament and is tied for third place with Xander Schauffele.

It’s the opposite end result for McIlroy, who finished his opening round with a bogey on Thursday. He last won the U.S. Open in 2011 and is in striking distance of the top. 

Spieth on the verge of missing the cut

Jordan Spieth is on the wrong side of the cut line. 

The three-time major winner finished with a 71 on Friday, shooting five bogeys and four birdies. His second round was slightly better than his 72 opening round, but it won’t be good enough to make it into the weekend. He currently sits at 3-over for the tournament, one stroke above the cut line at 2-over. 

Spieth won the U.S. Open in 2015. 

Could Mickelson miss the cut?

After an opening round 69 on Thursday, Phil Mickelson's fortunes took a turn for the worse in the second round when he carded a 4-over 74 to bring his two-day score to 3-over. The six-time major winner, who turned 53 Friday, is still seeking his first U.S. Open championship after finishing second or tied for second six times in his career. The USGA just announced a projected cut of 2-over, meaning Lefty will fall just outside the line. Following 36 holes, the low 60 players and ties will advance to the final two rounds this weekend.

Three-way tie for first; Dustin Johnson, Mcllroy remain four off the pace

Wyndham Clark bogeys No. 4 to fall back into a three-way tie with Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele through the second round at Los Angeles Country Club.

Tony Finau and Sam Bennett are closing in, currently at 5-under. Min Woo Lee has birdied three of his last four holes and is at 4-under with Harris English, Brian Harman, Rory McIlroy, who started his back nine with a birdie on the par 5 No. 1 and Dustin Johnson, despite his quadruple bogey earlier in the round.

The scores have maintained with the weather cloudy and the players not having to worry about the wind for now, but conditions are expected to change later in the afternoon.

Clark grabs lead with amazing birdie run

American Wyndham Clark got off to a strong start in his second round, taking the lead at 9-under with three birdies on his first seven holes, fueled by a spectacular shot at the 15th hole.

After just missing the green in two on the mammoth 605-yard par 5, Clark found himself with an extremely difficult uphill lie in thick rough with a bunker sitting between his ball and the flagstick.

He had several options, but the most daring route was the one he chose. Taking a full swing, Clark made solid contact as the ball soared high in the air, over the bunker, to within 10 feet of the hole.

After that, sinking the putt for birdie was a relative piece of cake.

He followed that up with another birdie two holes later to move to 9-under par, one shot ahead of first-round leaders Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele.

LACC lays down the hammer with club rules and regulations

While most country clubs have strict guidelines in terms of protocol and how they want their venue run, Los Angeles Country Club drew the ire of some fans with its rather unique set of rules .

Here are some of the doozies:

Audible calls and messages are only permitted inside closed vehicles in the parking lots, in the Phone Room, or in the phone booths in the Men's and Women's Locker Rooms. (Yes, phone booths.)

No photos or videos of the club on social media.

No athletic clothes or apparel with slogans.

Shorts of any kind, including skorts and culottes. Cargo pants, warm-up suits, leggings, jogging and gym attire are also banned.

No tipping allowed.

Also, don't even try to change your shoes in the parking lot.

Quadruple bogey plummets Dustin Johnson down leaderboard

Two-time major champion Dustin Johnson began his second round within striking distance of the leaders after shooting a brilliant 64 on Thursday. However, his bid for a third major got a little more difficult when he took an 8 on his scorecard on the 490-yard par-4 second hole.

After hitting into the left-side bunker off the tee, Johnson was unable to find the fairway on his second shot. From a gnarly lie in the rough, his third shot from 116 yards found the barranca in front of the green.

After a drop, Johnson flew the green with a wedge -- forcing him to chip back down the slope before two-putting for his quadruple bogey.

Views, atmosphere, pace of play: LACC a unique U.S. Open venue

The famed Los Angeles Country Club, which  ranks as the No. 2 private course  in California, is making its debut as a  U.S. Open  host, ending a 75-year drought for the U.S. Open in L.A. since Riviera hosted back in 1948. The ultra-exclusive club off Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills has been hesitant to open its doors to the outside world for years, let alone for major championships attended by tens of thousands.

But hosting an event of this magnitude comes at a cost. Here are some pros and cons of hosting the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club. — Adam Woodard, Golfweek

Friday's first highlight: Brent Grant from way downtown

Competing in his first U.S. Open, qualifier Brent Grant began play Friday at 2-over and lost a shot on his second hole of the day. But he made it up in spectacular fashion on hole No. 12, nailing a birdie putt from 61 feet.

Grant, 27, has one win as a professional: the 2022 Simmons Bank Open on the Korn Ferry Tour.

5 celebrity homes you can see at Los Angeles Country Club

When you’re going to play golf in Hollywood, the stars are going to come out, right?

The 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club sort of fits that bill. It’s not quite in Hollywood this year — it’s in Beverly Hills if we’re being exact. And while we might see celebs in the gallery this week, there are some homes around the course that belong to some very famous names .

And by homes, I mean MANSIONS. Here’s a guide to some of those palatial homes you might see all week. — Charles Curtis, For The Win

Big names battling to stay close to leaders' blistering pace

The leaderboard at the  123rd U.S. Open  at Los Angeles Country Club looks more as if it was the Bob Hope Desert Classic down the road in Palm Springs.

Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele set the pace with record-breaking 8-under 62s . The only other PGA Tour event with multiple 62s this season? The Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

“Seeing Rickie and Xander take it deep out there, it’s like, well, this isn’t your typical U.S. Open mindset of like I’m just playing for par,” said Harris English, who shot 67. “I mean, you got to make some birdies to keep in line with those guys.”

Here's how three decorated challengers managed to stay within striking distance while the world's top two players got off to sluggish starts. — Adam Schupak, Golfweek

Low scores commonplace up and down U.S. Open leaderboard

In addition to Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele setting a U.S. Open record by shooting 62s in Thursday's first round, the rest of the 2023 field helped rewrite part of the record book as well.

The composite first-round scoring average of 71.38 strokes was the lowest for an opening round in U.S. Open history, besting the 72.29 average in 1993 at Baltusrol. It was also the sixth-lowest in major championship history.

In addition, six players posted scores of 65 or better, the most in a single round in U.S. Open history. And for the first time ever, no player shot 80 or higher in the first round of a U.S. Open.

Before Thursday, six players shared the U.S. Open record of 63, the most recent being Tommy Fleetwood at Shinnecock Hills in 2018. Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf also shot matching 63s in the first round of the 1980 U.S. Open at Baltusrol.

Xander Schauffele may finally be ready to break through in major

Xander Schauffele is the only player with a top-20 finish in each of the last five majors (finished T-13 at the 2022 PGA Championship, followed by finishing T-14 at the U.S. Open at The Country Club, T-15 at The Open Championship at St. Andrews, T-10 at the 2023 Masters and T-18 at Oak Hill last month).

Like Fowler, Schauffele’s bidding for his first major title , but he knows there is much more work to be done. As reporters interviewed Schauffele’s caddie Austin Kaiser about his historic round, Schauffele stepped in and said to him, “Dude, it’s just Thursday, my man.”

But if either Schauffele or Fowler shoot 67 or lower on Friday, they will also own the 36-hole U.S. Open scoring mark too.

“I’m anticipating the sun to come out just as much as every West Coast person out here,” Schauffele said. “I’m thinking the course is going to firm up a little bit.” — Adam Schupak, Golfweek

Rickie Fowler's reboot works wonders with record US Open round

Rickie Fowler had less than 30 minutes on Thursday to enjoy sole possession of a  U.S. Open  record for lowest round when he  shot a 62  at the  Los Angeles Country Club .

Before the new ink could dry in the record books,  Xander Schauffele tied the record  with his own round of 62 on the par-70  during the first round of the tournament . But while the two golfers share the record, the moment belonged to Fowler .

His scintillating round marked another step back from a career descent, during which he lost his confidence, lost his way and almost lost his PGA Tour card. — Josh Peter

Rory McIlroy maintains silence after chip shot blunder

The questions keep piling up for Rory McIlroy .

Now at the top of the list: What happened when you whiffed on the chip shot in the rough just off the 18th green on Thursday?

Mum’s the word for McIlroy, the 34-year-old Northern Irishman with four major championships.

It’s unclear if or when answers are coming. McIlroy declined interview requests made through the United States Golf Association Thursday after his 5-under 65 in the first round. — Josh Peter

US Open second round tee times, pairings

All times are Eastern.

  • 9:45 a.m. — Ross Fisher, Nico Echavarria, Paul Haley II
  • 9:56 a.m. — Nick Dunlap, Nick Hardy, Sam Stevens
  • 10:07 a.m. — Taylor Pendrith, Aldrich Potgieter, Romain Langasque
  • 10:18 a.m. — Andrew Putnam, Victor Perez, Abraham Ancer
  • 10:29 a.m. — Phil Mickelson, Padraig Harrington, Keegan Bradley
  • 10:40 a.m. — Mito Pereira, Emiliano Grillo, Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira
  • 10:51 a.m. — Tom Kim, Sahith Theegala, Cameron Young
  • 11:02 a.m. — Sam Burns, Dustin Johnson, Keith Mitchell
  • 11:13 a.m. — Tony Finau, Jordan Spieth, Patrick Cantlay
  • 11:24 a.m. — Davis Thompson, Min Woo Lee, Justin Suh
  • 11:35 a.m. — Taylor Moore, Mackenzie Hughes, Ben Carr
  • 11:46 a.m. — Patrick Cover, David Nyfjall, Frankie Capan III
  • 11:57 a.m. — Austen Truslow, Christian Cavaliere, Alex Schaake
  • 3:15 p.m. — Berry Henson, Ryutaro Nagano, Hank Lebioda
  • 3:26 p.m. — Michael Kim, Jordan Smith, Wenyi Ding
  • 3:37 p.m. — Scott Stallings, Preston Summerhays, Lucas Herbert
  • 3:48 p.m. — Jens Dantorp, Patrick Rodgers, Ryan Armour
  • 3:59 p.m. — Thomas Pieters, Aaron Wise, Gordon Sargent
  • 4:10 p.m. — Bryson DeChambeau, Francesco Molinari, Tyrrell Hatton
  • 4:21 p.m. — Tom Hoge, Sergio Garcia, Sepp Straka
  • 4:32 p.m. — Justin Rose, Rickie Fowler, Jason Day
  • 4:43 p.m. — Patrick Reed, Matt Kuchar, Si Woo Kim
  • 4:54 p.m. — Xander Schauffele, Viktor Hovland, Jon Rahm
  • 5:05 p.m. — Martin Kaymer, Stewart Cink, Michael Thorbjornsen
  • 5:16 p.m. — David Horsey, Brendan Valdez, Paul Barjon
  • 5:27 p.m. — Jordan Gumberg, Kyle Mueller, Bastien Amat
  • 9:45 a.m. — Brent Grant, Vincent Norrman, Charley Hoffman
  • 9:56 a.m. — Simon Forsstrom, Carlos Ortiz, Maxwell Moldovan
  • 10:07 a.m. — Eric Cole, Thirston Lawrence, Adam Schenk
  • 10:18 a.m. — Luke List, Wilco Nienaber, Alejandro Del Rey
  • 10:29 a.m. — Adrian Meronk, Harris English, Joaquin Niemann
  • 10:40 a.m. — Alex Noren, Wyndham Clark, Austin Eckroat
  • 10:51 a.m. — Kurt Kitayama, Cam Davis, Russell Henley
  • 11:02 a.m. — Cameron Smith, Matt Fitzpatrick, Sam Bennett
  • 11:13 a.m. — Billy Horschel, Chris Kirk, Brian Harman
  • 11:24 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, Hideki Matsuyama, Rory McIlroy
  • 11:35 a.m. — Sebastian Munoz, Nick Taylor, Taylor Montgomery
  • 11:46 a.m. — Olin Browne Jr., David Puig, Karl Vilips
  • 11:57 a.m. — Corey Pereira, Isaac Simmons, J.J. Grey
  • 3:15 p.m. — Omar Morales, Deon Germishuys, Jacob Solomon
  • 3:26 p.m. — Ryan Gerard, Yuto Katsuragawa, Michael Brennan
  • 3:37 p.m. — Hayden Buckley, Adam Svensson, Pablo Larrazabal
  • 3:48 p.m. — Carson Young, Dylan Wu, Roger Sloan
  • 3:59 p.m. — Ryo Ishikawa, Kevin Streelman, Matthieu Pavon
  • 4:10 p.m. — Shane Lowry, Justin Thomas, Tommy Fleetwood
  • 4:21 p.m. — Sungjae Im, K.H. Lee, J.T. Poston
  • 4:32 p.m. — Gary Woodland, Adam Scott, Corey Conners
  • 4:43 p.m. — Collin Morikawa, Max Homa, Scottie Scheffler
  • 4:54 p.m. — Denny McCarthy, Joel Dahmen, Adam Hadwin
  • 5:05 p.m. — Matthew McClean, Seamus Power, Ryan Fox
  • 5:16 p.m. — Mac Meissner, Barclay Brown, Gunn Charoenkul
  • 5:27 p.m. — Alexander Yang, Jesse Schutte, Andy Svoboda

2023 US Open golf TV schedule

Coverage starts Friday at 9:40 a.m. ET on the Peacock streaming service. USA Network will continue at 1 p.m.-8 p.m., and then coverage will switch to NBC from 8 p.m.-11 p.m. 

How to watch the US Open 2023 via stream

Golfers can be followed on the live stream at  USOpen.com  and  Peacock . 

US Open broadcasters

  • Play by play:  Dan Hicks / Terry Gannon / Steve Sands 
  • Analysis:  Paul Azinger / Brad Faxon / Brandel Chamblee / Morgan Pressel / Paul McGinley / Nick Dougherty 
  • Tower:  Brad Faxon / Curt Byrum / Peter Jacobsen / Steve Sands / Jimmy Roberts 
  • On-Course:  John Wood / Notah Begay III / Smylie Kaufman / Arron Oberholser / Jim Gallagher Jr. 
  • Interviews:  Damon Hack 
  • Essays:  Jimmy Roberts 

What is the weather forecast for Los Angeles on Friday?

The forecast calls for temperatures in the low to mid-70s with partly cloudy skies, with the sun possibly breaking through later in the day and light winds.

L.A. Country Club layout

Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, site of the 2023 U.S. Open, was designed by George C. Thomas Jr. and opened in 1928. It was restored by the team of Gil Hanse, Jim Wagner and Geoff Shackelford in 2010.

Situated on a terrific piece of rolling ground and serving as an urban oasis off the busy Wilshire Boulevard, the North Course will play to 7,421 yards with a par of 70 for the U.S. Open. The course features three par 5s and five par 3s, with two of the downhill par 3s playing longer than 280 yards.

Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course ranks No. 2 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of top private clubs in each state , and it is No. 14 on Golfweek’s Best list of top classic courses built in the United States before 1960. — Jason Lusk

LOS ANGELES COUNTRY CLUB: Full course map, yardage book

Is Tiger Woods playing in the US Open?

No. In May, Tiger Woods withdrew from the U.S. Open as he recovers from ankle surgery. Woods will also miss next month's British Open, according to a report on Friday .

Past US Open winning scores

  • 2022: Matt Fitzpatrick: -6, 274 (The Country Club, Brookline, Mass.)
  • 2021: Jon Rahm: -6, 278 (Torry Pines Golf Course, La Jolla, Calif.)
  • 2020: Bryson DeChambeau: -6, 274 (Winged Foot Golf Club, Mamaroneck, N.Y.)
  • 2019: Gary Woodland: -13, 271 (Pebble Beach Golf Links, Pebble Beach, Calif.)
  • 2018: Brooks Koepka: +1, 281 (Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, Shinnecock Hills, N.Y.)
  • 2017: Brooks Koepka: -16, 272 (Erin Hills, Erin, Wis.)
  • 2016: Dustin Johnson: -4, 276 (Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa.)
  • 2015: Jordan Spieth: -5, 275 (Chambers Bay, University Place, Wash.)
  • 2014: Martin Kaymer: -9, 271 (Pinehurst Resort, Pinehurst, N.C.)
  • 2013: Justin Rose: +1, 281 (Merion Golf Club, Ardmore, Pa.)
  • 2012: Webb Simpson: +1, 281 (The Olympic Club, Daly City, Calif.)
  • 2011: Rory McIlroy: -16, 272 (Congressional Country Club, Bethesda, Md.)
  • 2010: Graeme McDowell: E, 284 (Pebble Beach Golf Links, Pebble Beach, Calif.)

US Open purse 2023

USGA CEO Mike Whan announced a $20 million purse for the 2023 U.S. Open.

US Open payouts 2023

The winner will earn $3.6 million.

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2021 U.S. Open live updates: Round 2 leaderboard, tee times, scores, TV coverage, news from Torrey Pines

pga tour us open results

The morning wave has finished at Torrey Pines South, with a shocking leader: Englishman Richard Bland. A lot more on him if you scroll below.

Others on top of the leaderboard right now at the end of their second round include Louis Oosthuizen, Bubba Watson, Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler, all in red numbers and within at most four shots of Bland (-5).

Bryson DeChambeau rallied at the end of his second round to get to even par, and Rory McIlroy scuffled on his way to a 1-over heading into the weekend. Jordan Spieth, sitting at 4 over after a 69 today, will have to sweat out the final pairings to see if he'll make the cut.

Justin Ray

Matthew Wolff and the chase for history

A year ago, he was the youngest 54-hole leader at the U.S. Open in 50 years. This time around, Matthew Wolff is looking to go one better.

In the thick of contention entering the weekend at Torrey Pines, Wolff has now been in 11th place or better after all six of his rounds played in this championship. After finishing runner-up last year, Wolff could join an incredible list of champions to win the U.S. Open the year after finishing second over the last century: Bobby Jones, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Dustin Johnson.

But to do it in his first two starts at the U.S. Open would be truly historic. The last player to finish second or better in each of his first two U.S. Open appearances? That would be Harry Vardon, who won it in 1900, didn’t return to play it again until 1913, and then finished tied for second place.

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Brendan Quinn

The ballad of Richard Bland — your U.S. Open leader — comes with a twist

The ballad of Richard Bland — your U.S. Open leader — comes with a twist

SAN DIEGO — Here was Richard Bland, standing upon the fifth tee box at Torrey Pines, perhaps the unlikeliest of all possible leaders at the U.S. Open. And there was Kate Nystrom, maybe 50 yards away, just as utterly confused as everyone else. Richard looked at Kate. Kate looked at Richard. He tucked in one side of a grin and flared his eyebrows, giving a sort of I-don’t-know-what’s-happening cock of the head. She held down a chuckle and shrugged.

To make sense of the absurdity currently occurring atop the leaderboard of the 121st U.S. Open, let’s start here.

pga tour us open results

More on Russell Henley, the current co-leader again

More on Russell Henley, the current co-leader again

Russell Henley just bogeyed No. 9 — watching a par putt that was nothing more than a few feet lip out — to fall back to 5 under and into a tie with Richard Bland on top of the leaderboard.

It was the only misstep today for Henley, who had just seized the solo lead on the previous hole with a birdie. The finish was his only bogey on the day, against two birdies.

Still, when taken over 36 holes, this is good golf. There is little to suggest this was coming from Henley, who played the Farmers Insurance Open once, in 2014, went 79-71 and missed the cut. He missed the cut two weeks ago at the Memorial, was T71 at the PGA and didn't make the Masters. He has a T9 at RBC Heritage and a T3 at the Honda Classic in this calendar year, but that's about it. The 32-year-old Georgian is getting it done right now though. Just not on No. 9 to take the solo lead with him to the weekend.

Russell Henley is the solo leader

Russell Henley just stroked his tee shot on No. 8 to just shy of seven feet from the hole and calmly sunk the birdie to move to 6 under. He's now your solo leader at the U.S. Open, with one hole left to play. We'll update with more after his round.

An update on the latest at Torrey Pines

  • Matthew Wolff isn't going away. He's 2 under for the day and 3 under for the tournament, tied for fourth with 16-18 to play. This remains, for my money, the best story of the U.S. Open.
  • Russell Henley isn't fading away, maintaining a share of the lead with Richard Bland at 5 under. Henley has two holes to play.
  • His round isn't over, but my prediction that Brooks Koepka was coming was premature, at best. He's actually 2 over for the day and back to even after bogeys on 14 and 15. That's five bogeys in his round.
  • The NBC commercial load remains large. Man, this has been a bummer.
  • Edoardo Molinari, after a top 10 start, is in danger of missing the cut.
  • Max Homa, a rising star on the Tour but who has yet to make a cut at a major, is at 5 over now after a double bogey on 13.

Where the cut line is

Right now the cut line has moved to 3 over, so here a few notable names in danger of not making the weekend:

  • Jordan Spieth
  • Cameron Smith
  • Matt Kuchar
  • Garrick Higgo
  • Sebastian Munoz
  • Billy Horschel
  • Abraham Ancer
  • Will Zalatoris
  • Webb Simpson
  • Justin Rose
  • Viktor Hovland

Hovland, in particular, is of note here. He withdrew after getting sand in his eye prior to his round, per the NBC broadcast. He attempted to start his round but after a double-bogey on No. 1 (moving him to 9 over), Hovland elected to WD. He was not exactly a favorite coming into the week, but the young Norwegian is on the short list of guys expected to soon win their first major.

Brooks Koepka could own this afternoon

Brooks Koepka birdied two of the first four holes and even after a bogey just now on five, he's at 3 under and showing signs of taking Richard Bland's thunder here, in my eyes.

The U.S. Open is supposed to be a nervy test, and it can break the more emotional players (looking at you, Jon Rahm). But Koepka is built for this. He is so even keel, and frankly looks more in his elements during big tournaments when the conditions are the toughest and the fields are strongest. He openly admits it's hard for him to concentrate and bring his best at, say, the Palmetto Championship (just last week, where he missed the cut).

The swing is so repeatable too, and he plays so in control. Any number under 70 is good today but would you be all that surprised if Koepka carded a 66 after yesterday's 69?

Richard Bland's place in history

After a sparkling second round 67, Richard Bland finds himself in a remarkably unfamiliar position at the 2021 U.S. Open. If his clubhouse lead lasts through the end of the day, the 48-year-old Englishman would be the oldest player ever to lead this Championship through 36 holes.

Bland is playing his just his fourth career major championship, having teed it up once in the 1990s (1998 Open Championship), 2000s (2009 U.S. Open), 2010s (2017 Open Championship) and 2020s (this week). And how’s this for symmetry? Bland is 115th in the Official World Golf Ranking this week. At Kiawah Island last month, what was Phil Mickelson’s world ranking? 115.

If Bland does hold on to the lead this evening, he’ll need to buck some serious history to get to the finish line. Seventeen previous times a player age 40 or older has led the U.S. Open through two rounds. Only two went on to win — Ben Hogan in 1953 and Payne Stewart in 1999.

How about Richard Bland?

How about Richard Bland?

Your U.S. Open leader just before lunch on Friday is ... Richard Bland?

The man known by only the most dedicated of coffee golf followers stateside is at 5 under through 14 holes at Torrey Pines, and a shot ahead of Russell Henley. He's doing it with some incredible approach shots and steel nerves to attack some of these small greens and difficult pin placements.

Bland came into this week's U.S. Open as a very cool story — the 48-year-old was the oldest first-time winner ever on the European Tour after winning the British Masters — and the inspiration for many a good (or very bad) dad joke. But the No. 115 player in the world, making just his fifth major start, is suddenly much more than just a note to the festivities here at Torrey Pines.

Also of note here — do you know who was the No. 115 player in the world going into last month's PGA Championship? Phil Mickelson. Not sayin'. Just sayin'.

Dan Santaromita

Richard Bland heads to clubhouse with the lead

Richard Bland's big round finished with a somewhat disappointing par on the par-5 ninth hole, but he still took the lead into the clubhouse. He shot a 4-under 67 on Friday to move to 5-under for the tournament. Bland had seven birdies and three bogeys on the day.

There's a long way to go to see if Bland's score will hold as the lead. First-round leader Russell Henley, 4-under, tees off in just over an hour. Francesco Molinari and Rafa Cabrera Bello, both of which are two shots back at 3-under, have also yet to tee off their second rounds. Louis Oosthuizen shared the lead with Henley, but is currently at 2-under with a 2-over second round through 12 holes.

John Hayes

Bryson's eagle is a big deal

Bryson DeChambeau, who started on the 10th, made the turn at 18 with an eagle 3 to get back to even par for the tournament. He followed that eagle with a birdie at the 1st and is officially now in red numbers. It's game on for the reigning champion, now only 3 strokes back from the leaders.

DeChambeau has gained 3.56 shots off-the-tee so far this week which unsurprisingly ranks firstst in the field. He has also gained 4.01 strokes on the field with his putter which ranks fourth. A deadly combination that has put the world No. 5 in position to compete for back-to-back titles.

Par is good

Only 13 of the 78 players in the morning wave are under par on the day. The South Course at Torrey Pines might not be the most exciting golf course but it's proving to be a tough test for the best players in the world. The combination of long holes, high rough, fast greens and tough pin placements are coming together to provide a proper U.S. Open.

Hideki Matsuyama is sliding down the leaderboard

Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama had a nightmare start to his second round with a bogey, double, bogey and double in his first four holes. This was after his belt broke walking down the first fairway. Two-under, where Matsuyama started the day, is currently T6. Now, at 3 over, he's fallen all the way down to T71.

Jordan Spieth is trying to make the cut

Jordan Spieth is trying to make the cut

Jordan Spieth, who has been playing arguably the most consistent golf on the PGA Tour throughout 2021, did not help himself on Thursday but he's making a run this morning.

Spieth just posted birdies on the fourth and fifth holes to get to 4 over for the tournament. There's obviously still a lot of golf to be played here today, but right now the cut line is looking to be around 2, maybe 3, over.

The first round for Spieth included just one birdie, five bogeys and a double bogey on his way to a 77. That was his worst round on the PGA Tour since a second-round 81 at last year's U.S. Open. He missed the cut at Winged Foot.

Friday is the time to get going if you want to win the U.S. Open

While the moniker ‘moving day’ typically applies to Saturday in golf, there’s a case to be made that the real day to get going at the U.S. Open is Friday.

Consider this: 24 of the last 25 U.S. Open champions have been in the top six on the leaderboard through 36 holes. Since 1980, more than 80 percent of winners have been in the top five through two rounds, the highest rate of the four men’s major championships.

Twenty-three of the last 25 players to win this Championship were at or within two strokes of the lead through two rounds. The lone exceptions in that span were Webb Simpson in 2012 (six back) and Brooks Koepka three years ago at Shinnecock (five back).

Louis Oosthuizen is in the clubhouse

For at least a moment — after going out and finishing his first round by playing 8 and 9, Oosthuizen will start his second round at 8:02 a.m. local time.

The news here is he parred both holes and is in at 4-under, retaining a share of the lead with Russell Henley.

Good notes here from Justin Ray:

  • This is the first time Louis Oosthuizen has led or co-led following the first round of a major championship.
  • Fifth time he's opened a major with 67 or lower; previous 4 times he finished T-7 or better.
  • Win probability: 18.2% at USOpen.com

Friday tee times

(all times ET)

9:45 a.m. – David Coupland, Taylor Pendrith, Wade Ormsby

9:56 a.m. – Tom Hoge, Bo Hoag, Joe Highsmith

10:07 a.m. – Erik van Rooyen, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Charl Schwartzel

10:18 a.m. – Garrick Higgo, Cole Hammer, Joaquin Niemann

10:29 a.m. – Lee Westwood, Stewart Cink, Paul Casey

10:40 a.m. – Will Zalatoris, Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth

10:51 a.m. – Marc Leishman, Jon Rahm, Patrick Reed

11:02 a.m. – Patrick Cantlay, Louis Oosthuizen, Sungjae Im

11:13 a.m. – Kevin Streelman, Branden Grace, Charley Hoffman

11:24 a.m. – Sebastian Munoz, Rikuya Hoshino, Brendon Todd

11:35 a.m. – Wyndham Clark, Matthias Schmid, Matthew Southgate

11:46 a.m. – Spencer Ralston, Dylan Wu, Justin Suh

11:57 a.m. – Luis Gagne, Kyle Westmoreland, Christopher Crawford

3:30 p.m. – Andy Pope, Brad Kennedy, Thomas Aiken

3:41 p.m. – Yosuke Asaji, Marcus Armitage, Jhonattan Vegas

3:52 p.m. – Cameron Young, Wilco Nienaber, Guido Migliozzi

4:03 p.m. – Brian Harman, Tommy Fleetwood, Matthew Wolff

4:14 p.m. – Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka

4:25 p.m. – Kevin Kisner, Billy Horschel, Matt Kuchar

4:36 p.m. – Max Homa, Xander Schauffele, Phil Mickelson

4:47 p.m. – Jason Kokrak, Cameron Champ, Corey Conners

4:58 p.m. – Paul Barjon, Sam Ryder, Ryo Ishikawa

5:09 p.m. – Dylan Frittelli, Martin Laird, K.H. Lee

5:20 p.m. – Rafa Cabrera Bello, Adrian Meronk, Sung Kang

5:31 p.m. – Akshay Bhatia, Andrew Kozan, Alvaro Ortiz

5:42 p.m. – James Hervol, Hayden Springer, Roy Cootes

9:45 a.m. – Zach Zaback, Steve Allan, Eric Cole

9:56 a.m. – Hayden Buckley, Taylor Montgomery, Jordan Smith

10:07 a.m. – Chez Reavie, Richard Bland, Troy Merritt

10:18 a.m. – Robert MacIntyre, Victor Perez, Matt Wallace

10:29 a.m. – Tyler Strafaci, Hideki Matsuyama, Bryson DeChambeau

10:40 a.m. – Adam Scott, Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson

10:51 a.m. – Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose

11:02 a.m. – Matt Jones, Brendan Steele, Cameron Smith

11:13 a.m. – Carlos Ortiz, Zach Johnson, Lanto Griffin

11:24 a.m. – Sam Burns, Chan Kim, Thomas Detry

11:35 a.m. – Ollie Osborne, Peter Malnati, Brian Stuard

11:46 a.m. – John Huh, Johannes Veerman, Zack Sucher

11:57 a.m. – Rick Lamb, Michael Johnson, Carson Schaake

3:30 p.m. – Sahith Theegala, Edoardo Molinari, Greyson Sigg

3:41 p.m. – Chris Baker, J.J. Spaun, Fabian Gomez

3:52 p.m. – Patrick Rodgers, Robby Shelton, Pierceson Coody

4:03 p.m. – Russell Henley, Mackenzie Hughes, Harris English

4:14 p.m. – Francesco Molinari, Henrik Stenson, Shane Lowry

4:25 p.m. – Matt Fitzpatrick, Tyrrell Hatton, Viktor Hovland

4:36 p.m. – Martin Kaymer, Webb Simpson, Gary Woodland

4:47 p.m. – Tony Finau, Abraham Ancer, Daniel Berger

4:58 p.m. – Si Woo Kim, Kevin Na, Bernd Wiesberger

5:09 p.m. – Jimmy Walker, Ian Poulter, Ryan Palmer

5:20 p.m. – J.T. Poston, Adam Hadwin, Joe Long

5:31 p.m. – Luis Fernando Barco, Dylan Meyer, Matthew Sharpstene

5:42 p.m. – Mario Carmona, Wilson Furr, Davis Shore

How to watch Friday's Round 2 of the U.S. Open

TV coverage

12:30-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); 6-9 p.m. ET (NBC)

Round 2 Coverage: 9:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ET; 10-11 p.m. ET (Peacock)

Featured Groups: All day (Peacock, USOpen.com, U.S. Open App)

Featured Holes (11, 12 and 13): All day (Peacock, USOpen.com, U.S. Open App)

Round 2 Golf Channel TV Coverage: 12:30-6 p.m. ET; 9-10 p.m. ET (Peacock)

pga tour us open results

Stephan Jaeger wins 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open for first PGA Tour victory

A jam-packed top of the leaderboard at the 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open saw 10 players within just two shots of the lead down the stretch, which set up for a thrilling final-round finish.

In the end, it was Stephan Jaeger who came out on top after a Sunday 3-under 67 to finish at 12 under, one shot clear of six players who finished T-2 at 11 under, including world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. For Jaeger, 34, the victory is the first of his PGA Tour career after 135 starts. He previously won six times on the Korn Ferry Tour.

The Tour will stay in the Longhorn State next week with the 2024 Valero Texas Open, April 4-7, at TPC San Antonio's Oaks Course.

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Stephan Jaeger wins 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open for first PGA Tour victory

Stephan Jaeger reacts to his chip shot from the fringe on the eighth green during the final round of the Texas Children's Houston Open golf tournament. (Photo: Thomas Shea-USA TODAY Sports)

U.S. Open

The Country Club

Brookline, Massachusetts • USA

Jun 16 - 19, 2022

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US Open, Golf Scores

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IMAGES

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    Recaps: The 2022 U.S. Open Championship at The Country Club of Brookline in The Country Club of Brookline has finished up and Matt Fitzpatrick is the winner. CBS Sports has news and recaps for the ...

  26. U.S. Open Championship Leaderboard

    Full leaderboard for the 2022 U.S. Open Championship, played at The Country Club of Brookline in The Country Club of Brookline. See where your favorite players finished, final scores, earnings ...