2024 US Open highlights: Bryson DeChambeau survives at Pinehurst to win second career major

For the second time in five years, Bryson DeChambeau is the winner of the U.S. Open.

DeChambeau battled back and forth throughout the afternoon with Rory McIlroy to win his second career major title, this one played at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina.

DeChambeau shot a 1-over par final round Sunday to finish the tournament at 6-under – one stroke better than McIlroy. This also marks the second major title won by an active LIV Golf member, joining Brooks Koepka's victory at the 2023 PGA Championship.

"I haven’t really let it sink in yet," DeChambeau said during the post-tournament interview with NBC, before he gestured to his support team. "Tonight I want all of you guys, somehow, to touch this trophy, because I want you to experience what this means and what you all mean to me."

McIlroy missed two putts within five feet in the final three holes, including a bogey on No. 18, offering DeChambeau an opening to take the title. DeChambeau, though, struggled to find fairways throughout the afternoon and was forced to make tough shots in scramble situations. None was more impressive than the work he did on the final hole, needing to punch a shot over a tree root and under an overhanging branch.

DeChambeau, 30, won the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot, which was played with limited spectators because of COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

"This will be the highlight of my life," DeChambeau said Sunday during the NBC interview. "I still can’t believe it."

This also becomes yet another devastating major finish for McIlroy, 35, whose last major title was at the 2014 PGA Championship, and who is stuck at four major championship victories.

Here's how the final round of the U.S. Open unfolded Sunday at Pinehurst:

2024 US Open leaderboard

Check out the full leaderboard here

Final hole proves tricky for both McIlroy and DeChambeau

Both Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau entered the final hole of the U.S. Open tied at 6-under par. And, as he did all day, it took an epic up-and-down for DeChambeau to save par and – eventually – win the tournament.

McIlroy’s tee shot sailed well left into the tall grass and his lie was complicated further as it sat behind a shrub. His second caught a lot of the grass, but it landed safely short of the green. He chipped onto the green to set up a very makeable putt within four feet, a putt that he didn’t hit with enough speed, causing it to rim out. He settled for bogey.

DeChambeau, meanwhile, hit an even worse tee shot, also well left of the fairway. His lie was in front of a root and under an overhanging branch. He punched the ball through and it rolled into a greenside bunker. His third shot was masterful, pinning the ball to within four feet. He sunk the putt to save par and win the tournament. McIlroy, whose putter had been his strength all day long, missed two putts within five feet in the final three holes.

U.S. Open playoff format

If two or more players are tied at the end of 72 holes, the U.S. Open will go to a playoff.

Until 2018, the winner was determined by an 18-hole playoff round the day after the tournament's scheduled conclusion. Since then, the USGA has opted for a two-hole aggregate playoff format. If two or more players remain tied after the two additional holes, the outcome would be decided by a sudden death playoff.

McIlroy, DeChambeau record bogeys after short misses

Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy have each hit several difficult shots Sunday. With the U.S. Open title on the line, they each missed some of their easiest.

Needing to sink a four-foot putt to save par on the par-3 No. 15, DeChambeau had his attempt roll around the cup, forcing his first three-putt of his U.S. Open, and his third bogey of the day. That momentarily moved him out of the co-lead with Rory McIlroy, who needed to sink a similarly short putt to convert par on No. 16.

McIlroy's was just two-and-a-half feet, but it rolled around the left side of the cup, leading to his bogey. Both players remained in a co-lead at 6-under.

McIlroy finds wire grass on par-3 15th

Once again, we are tied.

Rory McIlroy's line on his tee shot on the par-3 No. 15 was excellent; it was just hit with the wrong club. McIlroy's shot bounced on the green and then rolled off into a little valley, stopping just shy of wire grass. That complicated his second shot, and he was unable to save par on a 31-foot putt. Though it was just his second bogey of the day, McIlroy moved into a co-lead with Bryson DeChambeau, who converted par on No. 14 to stay at 7-under.

Bryson birdies No. 13, moves to within one

On the hole following his second bogey of the day, Bryson DeChambeau responded with a clean tee shot on No. 13, setting himself up for a makable eagle try that would've instantly erased the two-stroke lead Rory McIlroy had just built.

DeChambeau's putt, however, didn't have the pace it needed and came to a stop just short of the pin, though the read was pure. His birdie moved him to 7-under par, one stroke shy of McIlroy.

Rory surging late, takes two-stroke lead

All day long, Bryson DeChambeau has been rather aggressive off the tee and his mishit shots have forced him to scramble to stay in the lead. On the 12th, it finally caught up to him. DeChambeau was forced to lay up after he landed in the tall grass wide of the fairway. That set up a number of difficult shots that culminated with his second bogey of the day.

Not only did he drop out of the co-lead, but Rory McIlroy also continued the heater he is on, recording his fourth birdie in his past five holes. His birdie on No. 13 was his second in a row and moved him to 8-under par, and 4-under for the round.

And just like that, the co-lead is back on

If this is any indication for what we're in for the rest of the way, the golf will be good.

Rory McIlroy recorded his third birdie in his past four holes, the latest on the par-4 No. 12, to reclaim a co-lead with Bryson DeChambeau at 7-under par. And, as he has done all day Sunday, it was McIlroy's putter that was the highlight. He calmly and confidently drained a 22-foot birdie putt — two holes after he sunk a 27-footer for birdie on No. 10.

Both McIlroy and DeChambeau are three strokes ahead of the next closest player, Patrick Cantlay.

And just like that, the co-lead is gone

Bryson DeChambeau, per the NBC broadcast, heard from the gallery as he headed to the tee box at No. 10 about Rory McIlroy's consecutive birdies to move into a co-lead.

DeChambeau – who entered Sunday with a combined score of 5-under on the back-nine through the first three rounds (best in the field) – recorded his first birdie of his final round as soon as he made the turn.

Again, DeChambeau relied on precise shot-making with his short game to place a pitch shot to within five feet of the pin. He confidently flushed the putt to move to 7-under par and the solo lead.

McIlroy, meanwhile, left his approach shot on the par-4 11th well to the left of the pin, leaving him with a par save. He is in second place at 6-under, with Patrick Cantlay in third at 5-under.

McIlroy makes it consecutive birdies to claim co-lead

We have our first tie atop the leaderboard in the final round.

After making the turn, Rory McIlroy recorded his second consecutive birdie to move to 6-under par and a tie with Bryson DeChambeau. McIlroy's birdie came on the par-5 No. 10, on an excellent read on a curving, 27-foot putt. That followed McIlroy's birdie on the par-3 ninth, whose tee shot he landed within 15 feet.

Not to be outdone on No. 10, McIlroy's playing partner, Patrick Cantlay, sunk his own lengthy putt for birdie to move to 5-under par, and stay within one stroke of the lead.

Competition heating up as final group makes the turn

Perhaps Bryson DeChambeau is aware of the leaderboard and saw that Rory McIlroy birdied No. 9 to get to within one stroke. Perhaps he just knows what’s at stake.

Either way, DeChambeau – as he has much of his final round Sunday – had to piece together some remarkable shots to scramble. His tee shot at the eighth sailed well right of the fairway and into the tree line. His second was blasted through the pine straw, though it settled below a ridge on the back side of the green, a very difficult location.

DeChambeau’s third shot was well played and left him with a makeable, 12-foot putt to save par. DeChambeau was fired up and fist-pumped toward the crowd.

Still, even as he holds a one-stroke lead, DeChambeau did not record a single birdie on the front-nine.

Neal Shipley edges Luke Clanton for low amateur

Following up on a strong showing at Augusta, Neal Shipley claimed low amateur honors at the U.S. Open by two strokes over Luke Clanton.

Shipley battled Clanton head-to-head on Sunday, only the second time in the past 40 years that two amateurs have been paired in the same group for a final round of the U.S. Open.

With Shipley up by a shot going into the final hole, Clanton missed the fairway off the tee, but somehow managed to hit his approach shot to five feet. After Shipley converted a routine par to finish the tournament at 6-over, Clanton just missed his birdie putt to tie, then missed a comebacker and had to settle for bogey.

Shipley, who played collegiately at James Madison and as a postgraduate at Ohio State, was also the low amateur at the Masters – a feat accomplished by a select few in golf history, including Jack Nicklaus and Phil Mickelson.

Cantlay gets a birdie, within two of lead

Patrick Cantlay very nearly birdied the par-3 No. 6 as he tried to close the lead, but his putt attempt just missed. He would go on to capitalize on the next hole. Cantlay recorded his first birdie of the day, on the seventh, to move into 4-under par and a tie for second place with Rory McIlroy.

They are both chasing Bryson DeChambeau who uncorked an absolute bomb of a drive on No. 7 that cleared a bunker and traveled 341 yards. It left him just 88 yards to the pin, and an excellent chance to build his lead.

DeChambeau drops first stroke of the day

What appeared to be inevitable through the first three holes took place at No. 4.

Bryson DeChambeau recorded his first bogey of the day after a failed up-and-down attempt just rimmed out. DeChambeau had to scramble to set himself up with a very difficult par save. He read the putt quite well, and it appeared to be on line, except that it curved around the cup and sloped away.

The good news for DeChambeau was that Rory McIlroy, who was within striking distance, bogeyed the par-5 fifth to drop to 4-under par.

The bad news for DeChambeau is that his tough start continued on No. 5; his tee shot found thick rough to the right of the fairway and his second shot sailed into a greenside bunker off to the left.

Bryson pars first three through uneven start

Bryson DeChambeau came into the final round at Pinehurst with a three-stroke lead; it's currently down to two after Rory McIlroy (-5) birdied No. 1, but the more concerning thing is that DeChambeau's play to open the final round has been rather uneven.

DeChambeau has seen his driver on No. 2 find the brush on the right side of the fairway, his tee shot on No. 1 land in a divot on the fairway and his putt on No. 3 end up well short. Still, DeChambeau converted par on all three of those holes to stay at 7-under par on the tournament and in the lead.

McIlroy, after birdying his first, converted three straight pars to remain at 5-under.

Leaders tee off with US Open title on the line

Starting the day with a three-shot advantage, Bryson DeChambeau has begun his final round at Pinehurst.

The 2020 U.S. Open champion finds himself in uncharted territory as he has never in his career held the lead entering the final round of a major. He'll be paired with Matthieu Pavon, who's looking to become the first Frenchman to win a major since 1904.

The penultimate group has Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, the 2014 U.S. Open champion and the runner-up last year, matched with American Patrick Cantlay.

McIlroy immediately birdied the opening hole to cut DeChambeau's lead to two strokes.

How to watch Sunday's US Open final round

NBC Sports will televise the final round of the U.S. Open from Pinehurst. Here is Sunday's broadcast schedule:

  • 9 a.m.-noon: USA Network
  • Noon-7 p.m.: NBC/Peacock

Live streaming coverage of select featured groups is available on USOpen.com and on  Peacock .

Rory McIlroy not happy having 'eureka moment' revealed on TV

As Rory McIlroy played the 13th hole of the 124th U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club’s No. 2 Course on Saturday, NBC Sports analyst Brad Faxon shared an insight into McIlroy’s game this week that was telling.

Faxon told the story of McIlroy turning to Sean O’Flaherty, his agent, during a flight Sunday evening following the Memorial Tournament and boasting, "Sean, I just figured it out."

But when interviewer Kira Dixon, working on-site for Sky Golf this week, told McIlroy about what Faxon had shared on national TV and asked him to elaborate on what she called his "eureka moment," McIlroy was none too pleased.

"OK?" he said, eyebrows arching. "Umm, it may be true. I don’t know if I want to disclose it right now. I’m not sure why Fax is giving away sort of all my secrets."

Faxon and McIlroy have a unique relationship among players and announcers given that Faxon serves as his putting coach, too.

– Adam Schupak, Golfweek

Hole to watch on Sunday: No. 13

If there's some Sunday afternoon drama at this year's U.S. Open, a potential turning point could be on Pinehurst's short par-4 13th hole.

The USGA has moved the tees up for today's final round, so the hole measures just 316 yards from the tee markers to a very accessible pin placement.

With a slight breeze at their backs, golfers will be tempted to drive the green and give themselves a possible putt for eagle. Daniel Berger did just that, becoming Sunday's first to record an eagle when he hit his drive to within 12 feet of the hole and nailed the putt.

Can anyone go really low in US Open's final round?

Roughly half the field of 74 golfers to make the 36-hole cut have begun their final rounds, and Pinehurst isn't showing a whole lot of mercy. Only 21 players shot rounds under par 70 in Saturday's third round, led by Collin Morikawa's 66 and DeChambeau's 67.

So far on Sunday (as of 11:15 a.m. ET), only eight players are under par for their rounds. Seonghyeon Kim has the best round of the day so far -- a 2-under 68.

The lowest round of the week came on Thursday, when Patrick Cantlay and Rory McIlroy opened with 5-under 65s. Both of those players remain in striking distance, starting the day just three shots behind leader Bryson DeChambeau.

What's the greatest comeback in US Open history?

The greatest 54-hole deficit ever overcome to win a U.S. Open happened in 1960, when Arnold Palmer stormed from seven shots back to win at Cherry Hills Country Club outside Denver. Palmer birdied six of his first seven holes on his way to a 6-under 65 and a two-stroke victory over Jack Nicklaus.

Unless someone can somehow top Palmer, this year's U.S. Open champion will be one of the 11 golfers who begin today's final round at even par or better. In fact, in nine of the last 10 U.S. Opens, the winner has come from one of the top two spots entering the final round.

Sunday's weather forecast for Pinehurst

As it's been all week, the weather forecast for Sunday's final round of the U.S. Open will be for partly sunny skies with hot and humid conditions and a high temperature around 90. Winds will be out of the east at 7 mph, with gusts up to 11 mph.

US Open Sunday tee times for final round

Tee times for the final round of the U.S. Open:

All times Eastern

  • 7:30 a.m.: Seonghyeon Kim, Gunnar Broin (amateur)
  • 7:41 a.m.: Matthew Fitzpatrick, Jackson Suber
  • 7:52 a.m.: Brandon Wu, Austin Eckroat
  • 8:03 a.m.: Francesco Molinari, Ben Kohles
  • 8:14 a.m.: Dean Burmester, Ryan Fox
  • 8:25 a.m.: Sepp Straka, Martin Kaymer
  • 8:36 a.m.: Greyson Sigg, Cameron Young
  • 8:47 a.m.: Nico Echavarria, Brendon Todd
  • 8:58 a.m.: Justin Lower, Sam Bennett
  • 9:09 a.m.: Adam Scott, Brian Campbell
  • 9:25 a.m.: Matt Kuchar, Frankie Capan III
  • 9:36 a.m.: Adam Svensson, Harris English
  • 9:47 a.m.: Jordan Spieth, Si Woo Kim
  • 9:58 a.m.: Max Greyserman, Sahith Theegala
  • 10:09 a.m.: Daniel Berger, Keegan Bradley
  • 10:20 a.m.: Scottie Scheffler, Tom McKibbin
  • 10:31 a.m.: Brooks Koepka, Tim Widing
  • 10:42 a.m.: Nicolai Højgaard, Emiliano Grillo
  • 10:53 a.m.: Isaiah Salinda, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
  • 11:04 a.m.: Cameron Smith, Wyndham Clark
  • 11:15 a.m.: J.T. Poston, Tommy Fleetwood
  • 11:31 a.m.: Shane Lowry, Zac Blair
  • 11:42 a.m.: Billy Horschel, Chris Kirk
  • 11:53 a.m.: Denny McCarthy, Min Woo Lee
  • 12:04 p.m.: Neal Shipley (amateur), Luke Clanton (amateur)
  • 12:15 p.m.: Sam Burns, Stephan Jaeger
  • 12:26 p.m.: Brian Harman, Mark Hubbard
  • 12:37 p.m.: David Puig, Thomas Detry
  • 12:48 p.m.: Akshay Bhatia, Russell Henley
  • 12:59 p.m.: Davis Thompson, Xander Schauffele
  • 1:10 p.m.: Sergio Garcia, Taylor Pendrith
  • 1:26 p.m.: Aaron Rai, Tom Kim
  • 1:37 p.m.: Corey Conners, Collin Morikawa
  • 1:48 p.m.: Tony Finau, Tyrrell Hatton
  • 1:59 p.m.: Ludvig Åberg, Hideki Matsuyama
  • 2:10 p.m.: Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy
  • 2:21 p.m.: Matthieu Pavon, Bryson DeChambeau

Bryson DeChambeau on a major roll

While he hasn't won a major tournament yet this year, Bryson DeChambeau has arguably played better than anyone else has in the three majors to date. He finished tied for sixth in the Masters and runner-up in the PGA Championship before leading the field through 54 holes at the U.S. Open.

And he's been remarkably consistent in doing so. Saturday's round of 3-under 67 was DeChambeau's seventh consecutive round of 69 or lower in major championship play.  If he can do it again today, he will tie the all-time record.  Rickie Fowler (8 in row during 2014) and Greg Norman (8, 1993) currently share that record. 

2024 US Open purse

The U.S. Open had the largest purse of the four men’s major championships in 2023, and that amount has gone up in 2024 .

Mike Whan, the CEO of the United States Golf Association, announced Wednesday the purse for the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 will be $21.5 million, a $1.5 million increase from last year. In addition, the winner will take home $4.3 million, up from $4 million in 2023.

The winner of the first U.S. Open in 1895 took home $150.

In addition, every player will make at least $10,000, as players who miss the cut will pocket that amount.

At the Masters, the purse was $20 million with $3.6 going to the winner, Scottie Scheffler . The PGA Championship had a record purse of $18.5 million, with Xander Schauffele taking home $3.33 million .

– Cameron Jourdan, Golfweek

Spotlight on Pinehurst No. 2

The Donald Ross-designed Pinehurst No. 2 is no ordinary U.S. Open test, and many of the shots and decisions required will be entirely different than those typically employed by tour professionals. The layout is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 1 public-access course in North Carolina, the No. 3 resort course in the U.S. and the No. 18 Classic course in the U.S.

It’s not just the chipping –  or putting – onto No. 2’s notoriously domed greens. As we've seen this week, Open contestants have been forced to deal with acres of sandy scrub, where luck holds great influence on outcome. Additional wiregrass was planted in the sandscapes just off the fairways for this U.S. Open, adding even more intrigue as any ball bounds off the firm but ample fairways.

– Jason Lusk, Golfweek

Another 'frustrating day' for Scottie Scheffler

Moving day didn’t mean much for Scottie Scheffler, who stayed in nearly the same position after posting a 71. The Texan is in an uncharacteristic tie for 42nd at 6 over for the tournament.

"The game of golf is a mental torture chamber at times, especially the U.S. Open," the reigning Masters champion said. "Another frustrating day. Today was a day where I thought I played a lot better than my score."

Scheffler barely made it to the weekend and he hasn’t improved on his position since then, losing more than 5 strokes on the greens this week.

"I’m having a lot of trouble reading these greens. I had a lot of putts today where I felt like I hit it really good. I looked up and they were not going the way I thought they were going to go," he said.

– Tim Schmitt, Golfweek

Matthieu Pavon hoping to make his mark

Matthieu Pavon was even with leader Bryson DeChambeau after 10 holes and slipped a bit down the stretch, but still finds himself in a tie for second at 4 under with Rory McIlroy and Patrick Cantlay, and will be part of the final pairing.

So if he does win, what will Pavon want Americans to know about him?

"Nothing special. I just love golf. That’s the thing. I’m just so happy to compete here in America. It has been a remarkable journey for me. I just love so much competing here, and this is what I like people to know about me. I’m a pretty regular guy, and it’s just awesome to be here," he said. "It’s so much different. The golf courses here feels like − playing the signatures so far, it feels like we play majors every week.

"This golf course, there is nothing even close on the European Tour. Nothing which comes even close. This is really different. I’m not really used to hitting it in the rough and not being capable to go to the green."

Leader Bryson DeChambeau deals with hip issue

Coming to the 10th tee Saturday, Bryson DeChambeau was tied with Matthieu Pavon at 6 under, when his hip started to tighten. Per the rules, the 2020 U.S. Open champ called for physio help and after a session that was caught by overhead cameras, he came back to boom a pair of his best drives and subsequently took command of the tournament.

By day’s end, the session seemed a turning point as the SMU product stretched out to a three-stroke lead, and he’ll now enter Sunday with a second major title well within his grasp.

As for the magic session, DeChambeau said it was fairly routine, and even insisted some renovations to his home could have contributed to the tightness.

"It was tougher to get through on a couple shots. It’s okay. I’ve had it for a long time now. It’s just something that popped up," he said. "I’ve been playing a lot of good golf lately, and working on my house, trying to get my house finished, so I haven’t really had time to rest like I want to. The two weeks I had off after PGA, I was really grinding and focusing on some stuff there. I wasn’t really able to rest. I’ve just been pushing myself a little bit, pushing the horse a bit. Consequently, that’s going to happen.

"But I’ve got a great team around me to help fix some stuff up."

US Open Tour Packages

Travel packages are the most flexible way to experience US Open tennis. From our wide variety of ticketing options on Arthur Ashe, Louis Armstrong and Grandstand Stadiums, to our midtown Manhattan hotels with roundtrip transportation, you won’t have to stress about a thing.

Hotel accommodations

Reserved seats to designated sessions

Roundtrip transfers to the tennis venue

Welcome dinner with a special tennis guest

And much more!   Click to see all inclusions.

Arthur Ashe Stadium

Built in 1997 with the roof added in 2016, Arthur Ashe Stadium is the biggest tennis venue in the world. With seating categories in Courtside, Loge, Suite-level and Promenade combining for a capacity of 23,000, it brings more tennis fans together than any other permanent tennis venue in the world.

us open tour

Hotel Accommodations - 3 Nights Welcome Dinner 4 Sessions of Tennis Commemorative Gift Host Services

us open tour

Hotel Accommodations - 4 Nights Welcome Dinner 6 Sessions of Tennis Commemorative Gift Host Services

us open tour

Hotel Accommodations - 5 Nights Welcome Dinner 5 Sessions of Tennis Commemorative Gift Host Services

Roland Garros Partner Logo

  • Australian Open
  • Roland-Garros
  • BNP Paribas
  • Cincinnati Western & Southern Open
  • Italian Open
  • Monte-Carlo Masters
  • Topnotch Fantasy Tennis Camps
  • PBI World Tennis Camps
  • A Letter from the President
  • Topnotch Management
  • Meet the Team
  • Request a catalog
  • Tennis Pros - Join Our Ace Network
  • Wailea, Maui, Hawaii
  • US: (800) 289–3333
  • International: +1 (802) 347–1118
  • [email protected]

Thanks for signing up

We'll be in touch soon!

us open tour

  • {{ subitem.Label }}
  • {{ sublevel.Label }}

TOURNAMENT RESULTS

{{tournament.sponsortitle}}, player results, us open 2023: draws, dates, history & all you need to know.

The US Open will be held from 28 August  - 10 September at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.

The fourth and final Grand Slam of the season will see reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz and three-time winner Novak Djokovic lead the field at the US Open .

Here's what you need to know ahead of the tournament in New York: 

When is the US Open ?

The 2023 US Open will be held from 28 August – 10 September. The hard-court Grand Slam tournament, established in 1881, will take place at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, United States. The tournament director is Stacey Allaster.

Who is playing at the US Open ?

The US Open will feature stars including Alcaraz, 23-time major champion Djokovic, Stefanos Tsitsipas , Casper Ruud , Daniil Medvedev , Holger Rune and more..

When is the draw for the US Open ?

The US Open singles draw will be made Thursday, 24 August at 12 p.m. The doubles draw will be made Sunday, 27 August at 12 p.m.

What is the schedule for the US Open ?

*Qualifying: Tuesday, 22 August - Friday, 25 August at 11 a.m. *Main Draw: Monday, 28 August - Sunday, 10 September at 11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. *Doubles Final: Friday, 8 September, time TBD. *Singles Final: Sunday, 10 September at 4:00 p.m.

View On Official Website

What is the prize money and points for the US Open ?

SINGLES Winner: $3,000,000 / 2,000 points Finalist: $1,500,000 / 1,200 points Semi-finalist: $775,000 / 720 points Quarter-finalist: $455,000 / 360 points Fourth Round: $284,000 / 180 points Third Round: $191,000 / 90 points Second Round: $123,000 / 45 points First Round: $81,500 / 10 points

DOUBLES ($ per team) Winner: $700,000 / 2,000 points Finalist: $350,000 / 1,200 points Semi-finalist: $180,000 / 720 points Quarter-finalist: $100,000 / 360 points Third Round: $58,000 / 180 points Second Round: $36,800 / 90 points First Round: $22,000 / 0 points

How can I watch the US Open ?

US Open Broadcast Schedule

How can I follow the US Open ?

Social Hashtag: #USOpen Facebook: @usopentennis Twitter: @usopen Instagram: @usopen

Who won the last edition of the US Open in 2022?

Carlos Alcaraz won the 2022 US Open title with a 6-4, 2-6, 7-6(1), 6-3 victory against Casper Ruud in the championship match . Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury lifted the doubles trophy for the second straight year, defeating Wesley Koolhof and Neal Skupski 7-6(4), 7-5 in the final .

Who holds the US Open record for most titles, oldest champion, youngest champion and more?

Most Titles, Singles: Jimmy Connors , Roger Federer , Pete Sampras (5) Most Titles, Doubles: Bob Bryan , Mike Bryan , Daniel Nestor (5) Oldest Champion: Ken Rosewall , 35, in 1970 Youngest Champion: Pete Sampras , 19, in 1990 Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 1 Jimmy Connors in 1974, 1976, 1978, John McEnroe in 1981, 1984, Ivan Lendl in 1986-87, Pete Sampras in 1996, Roger Federer in 2004-07, Rafael Nadal in 2010, 2017, Novak Djokovic in 2011, 2015 Lowest-Ranked Champion: No. 20 Andre Agassi in 1994 Last Home Champion: Andy Roddick in 2003 Most Match Wins: Jimmy Connors (98)

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown

Read More News View All News

View related videos view all videos.

  • Most Recent

{{newsitem.title}}

  • {{player.ranking}} Rank {{opponent.ranking}}
  • {{player.Age ? player.Age : '-'}} Age {{opponent.Age ? opponent.Age : '-'}}
  • {{getWeightInLB.player}} Weight {{getWeightInLB.opponent}}
  • {{getHeightInFeetInch.player}} Height {{getHeightInFeetInch.opponent}}
  • {{getPlayHand.player}} Plays {{getPlayHand.opponent}}
  • {{player.ProYear ? player.ProYear : '-'}} Turned Pro {{opponent.ProYear ? opponent.ProYear : '-'}}
  • {{item.FirstName}} {{item.LastName}}

{{playerData.PlayerFirstName}} {{playerData.PlayerLastName}}

Download official atp wta live app, premier partner, platinum partners, gold partners.

us open tour

Official Ball, Racquet and Tennis Accessory

Official partners & suppliers.

us open tour

© Copyright 1994 - 2024 ATP Tour, Inc. All Rights Reserved. No part of this site may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any way or by any means (including photocopying, recording or storing it in any medium by electronic means), without the written permission of ATP Tour, Inc.. Terms & Conditions  | Privacy  | Modern Slavery Statement  |  Feedback | Cookies

Golf News Net

2024 US Open final results: Prize money payout, PGA Tour leaderboard and how much each golfer won

us open tour

The 2024 US Open final leaderboard is headed by winner Bryson DeChmbeau, who earns his second US Open title with a win at Pinehurst No. 2 in Village of Pinehurst, North Carolina.

DeChambeau won his second-career major with a one-shot victory over Rory McIlroy , making a 4-foot par putt to get up-and-down from a bunker 55 yards out to win the tournament on 6-under 274.

2024 Travelers Championship: Field | Rankings  | Betting Odds | One and Done | Past Results | Cheat Sheet | Recent Form | Finish Database

McIlroy had a two-shot lead with five holes to go but missed two putts inside of 4 feet in the final four holes to lose the tournament.

DeChambeau won the $4,300,000 winner's share of the $21,500,000 purse.

US Open recap notes

DeChambeau earned 100 Official World Golf Ranking points with the win in the 72-hole stroke-play championship, which helps his place in the world ranking.

DeChambeau would have earned 750 FedEx Cup points were he an eligible PGA Tour member, with the PGA Tour points offered at the Signature level for this event.

A total of 74 (of 156) players finished the tournament after a 36-hole cut was made in this event.

The 2024 PGA Tour schedule continues next week with the 2024 Travelers Championship .

2024 US Open final leaderboard, results Pavond prize money payouts

Click header to sort; rotate mobile screens for details

About the author

' src=

Ryan Ballengee

Ryan Ballengee is founder and editor of Golf News Net. He has been writing and broadcasting about golf for nearly 20 years. Ballengee lives in the Washington, D.C. area with his family. He is currently a +2.6 USGA handicap, and he has covered dozens of major championships and professional golf tournaments. He likes writing about golf and making it more accessible by answering the complex questions fans have about the pro game or who want to understand how to play golf better.

Ryan talks about golf on various social platforms:

X or Twitter: https://twitter.com/ryanballengee Facebook: https://facebook.com/ryanballengeegolf Instagram: https://instagram.com/ryanballengee YouTube: https://youtube.com/@ryanballengeegolf

Ballengee can be reached by email at ryan[at]thegolfnewsnet.com

Ryan occasionally links to merchants of his choosing, and GNN may earn a commission from sales generated by those links. See more in GNN's affiliate disclosure.

About WTA's Privacy and Cookie Policies

We use cookies to provide our services and for analytics and marketing. To find out more about our use of cookies and how you can disable them, please see our Privacy Policy. By continuing to browse our website, you agree to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more info.

WTA-Unlocked_Account-Dropdown

Who's Playing...

Latest news.

Brad Gilbert, Coco Gauff

The Gilbert playbook: How the veteran coach led Gauff to a US Open win

Gauff - 2023 US Open

Week in Review: Gauff's US Open win caps off a summer to remember

Gabriela Dabrowski Erin Routliffe US Open

Dabrowski & Routliffe capture US Open doubles title

Katherine Hui - 2023 US Open

Hui claims US Open junior title

Nicole Kidman US Open

From Obamas to Federer, celebs soak in Gauff's rousing US Open win

Aryna Sabalenka -_2023_US_Open_-_Day_13-DSC_3276

'I'm still positive and still motivated': Sabalenka eyes year-end No.1

Latest videos.

'Break Point': Relive Coco Gauff's winning moment at the US Open

'Break Point': Relive Coco Gauff's winning moment at the US Open

Zhu Lin, Osaka 2023

Zhu defeats wild card Uchijima in three sets to make Osaka quarters

Ons Jabeur, Monastir 2022

Monastir: Jabeur makes victorious homecoming

Screenshot 2020-09-12 at 22.33.41

2020 US Open presser: Osaka - ‘It was an incredible moment’

Screenshot 2020-09-12 at 22.04.34

2020 US Open presser: Azarenka - ‘I gave everything I could’

20200912_uso_a66i2821_s

2020 US Open highlights: Osaka overcomes Azarenka

Coco Gauff

The US Open is Gauff’s crowning moment, fulfilling her great promise

Gauff - 2023 US Open

Gauff secures first Grand Slam after outlasting Sabalenka at US Open

Danilina Heliovaara US Open 2023

Danilina & Heliovaara win US Open mixed doubles title

Erin Routliffe Gabriela Dabrowski -_2023_US_Open_-_Day_11-DSC_9565

Dabrowski & Routliffe, Siegemund & Zvonareva make doubles final in NYC

Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula

Gauff and Pegula capture World No.1 doubles ranking

Venus Williams, US Open 2023

'You can't beat the truth': Venus Williams recalls fight for equal pay

More videos.

GettyImages-1271972200

2020 US Open Doubles highlights: Siegemund, Zvonareva storm to title

osakaazarenka

US Open Final Preview: Naomi Osaka vs. Victoria Azarenka

2020 US Open Press Conference: Serena - ‘Maybe I wasn’t aggressive enough’

2020 US Open Press Conference: Serena - ‘Maybe I wasn’t aggressive enough’

GettyImages-1271576286

2020 US Open highlights: Serena surges past Pironkova into semifinals

Screenshot 2020-09-06 at 16.58.14

2020 US Open presser: Brady - ‘I’ve gotten a lot fitter’

GettyImages-1270977451

2020 US Open highlights: Brady blasts past Kerber

Title partner, global partners, follow wta on social.

Advertisement

Tiger mania ii in 2 years, the u.s. senior open could be must-see tv as tiger goes for history, share this article.

us open tour

The U.S. Senior Open is being held at a fantastic venue this week at Newport Country Club in Rhose Island, but two years from now it will take on an entirely different profile at the Scioto Country Club in Columbus, Ohio.

At the course that shaped Jack Nicklaus into an 18-time major winner, Tiger Woods will be eligible for the field for the first time, and he’s strongly hinted that he’d like to win the title and fancies the chance to break a tie of nine USGA national championships with Bobby Jones. Winning at Scioto would make Woods the first player to achieve a Grand Slam of sorts: the U.S. Senior Open, U.S. Junior (3), U.S. Amateur (3) and U.S. Open (3).

“He’d love to win that Grand Slam and get some of the other senior majors on his CV,” Padraig Harrington said. “I saw him at the course (during the PNC Championship) and we were just crossing paths and he laughed at me. I won’t say exactly what he said but the gist of it was he can’t wait to get out and beat me.”

Tiger Mania II could be ready to strike the PGA Tour Champions, and PGA Tour Champions President Miller Brady cannot wait. Two years ago, at the American Family Insurance Championship in Madison, Wisconsin, Brady waited out a rain delay in an equipment trailer with tournament host Steve Stricker when Stricker broached the topic of the eligibility age for the senior circuit. Stricker, the leading money winner last season, proposed it was time to revisit whether 50, the age restriction since the creation of the tour in 1980, still made sense as the start of golf’s ultimate mulligan.

“I said, ‘No, we just did this,’ ” recalled Brady of a study the tour conducted in 2021. “He goes, ‘I know, I know.’ I said, ‘Unless Tiger tells me he’d play right now. (If that’s the case), I’ll lower the age tomorrow.’ ”

If ever the age limit was going to be lowered, this seemed to be the time so Stricker whipped out his phone and promptly texted Tiger. Stricker’s message was succinct and to the point: If we lower the age would you play the Champions tour? Stricker remembers nervously staring at three bubbles as the 15-time major winner and 82-time PGA Tour champion, “The Needle,” “The Goat,” – take your pick – responded right away.

“No, I’m not ready,” Woods wrote. “I want to follow in the same footsteps as Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Bernhard Langer.”

In short, Tiger doesn’t want a head start before he becomes Champions tour-eligible on Dec. 30, 2025. He wants a level playing field. He wants to chase Langer’s 12 majors and 46 career titles, Nicklaus’s eight majors and Phil Mickelson winning his first two starts (and four of six).

“That’s him, right?” Stricker said. “Tiger’s going to try to erase those records. It gives him something to focus on and try to achieve. If that’s the case, maybe we will get him out more.”

The future of PGA Tour Champions likely hinges on how much Tiger chooses to play after he turns 50 on Dec. 30, 2025. There was a time 15-20 years ago where the idea of Tiger playing the senior tour was unfathomable. He has been hinting for several years now that he wants to play. What started as a joke seems like it could be reality. Asked at the 2021 Hero World Challenge if he looked forward to his upcoming 46 th birthday, he smiled and said, “Four more years until I get a cart.”

Left unsaid was the fact the Champions tour allows players to ride in golf carts at most of its events – the majors are an exception. That became all the more relevant after Woods was involved in a single-car crash in February 2022 and required multiple surgeries, including fusing his ankle after he had to withdraw from the 2023 Masters and missed the rest of the season.

During his pre-tournament press conference at that Masters, Woods was asked whether he would consider using a cart in PGA Tour events, something he’s repeatedly declined even though he’d likely be granted use of one via The Americans with Disability Act (ADA) for medical reasons. “I’ve got three more years, where I get the little buggy and be out there with Fred (Couples). But until then no buggy.”

In 2006, the Champions Tour Division Board of the PGA Tour voted to allow players the option to use golf carts during most events on the tour. The circuit’s five major championships and certain other events, including pro-ams, are excluded.

Walking 72 holes has been the biggest hindrance for Woods in his latest comeback and there’s a sense that if he takes one on the senior tour, he could be a force to be reckoned with all over again. “He’ll absolutely kill everybody,” Nicklaus said during the Masters in April in an interview with Golf Channel.

Geoff Ogilvy, who turned 47 on June 11, is counting the days until he too will be eligible. He expects Tiger to play and spark a resurgence in the Champions tour.

“Taking a cart changes everything for him. Interest both from fans and sponsors is going to be through the roof. I think there’s a good chance that Champions Tour ratings can top the PGA Tour when he decides to play. And what else is he going to?” Ogilvy said.

He could delve deeper into golf course architecture or assume a bigger role in the management of the PGA Tour. It’s hard to know what’s really going on in Tiger’s brain. But it could be 1990 all over again when Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevino hit the half-century club to join Arnold Palmer and Gary Player and make the senior circuit the biggest game in town. Whenever Nicklaus teed it up, TV ratings for the round bellies topped that of the flat bellies. PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, for one, may not be fond of the Champions tour cannibalizing all those eyeballs from the big tour.

Brady got a sneak-peek of what he can expect from Tigermania II in 2021 when Mickelson turned 50 and took the tour by storm. According to sources, ratings for Mickelson’s win at Furyk & Friends in 2021 eclipsed that of the PGA Tour’s Shriners Children’s Hospital Open the same week.

“Will our ratings go up? Absolutely,” Brady said. “Could I see NBC and Golf Channel wanting to put an event on the network? Yeah. Tiger would have to commit early enough for us to make that happen.”

Much can happen in the course of the next 18 months to influence Tiger’s decision to play, but Brady and his team already have begun preparing for various scenarios. In June 2023, he gathered his staff – “anyone who touches the product,” he said – and got the ball rolling.

“We gathered and started a whiteboard of what ifs, the craziest things, whatever it was, you know, come up with it. Because it’s not too early to just think through everything,” Brady said. “We’ve had conversations at the annual meetings with all of our tournaments about it. You know, you hear comments from time to time about how he can’t wait to have a golf cart. He has conversation with Steve Stricker or Ernie Els or some of these other guys. You know, they’ll come back and tell me they’ll say he’s looking forward to it, which is great. What does that mean? I have no illusions that he’s going to come out here and play 15 times. If he plays four times, that would be fantastic, if he plays 10 times that would be even better.”

Tiger likely will continue to focus on the men’s majors but could he ride around in a cart and endure less stress on his body while still getting the competitive juices flowing and knocking off some rust before the Masters, for example? It seems feasible.

“I don’t think anyone envisions him playing 20 events – he didn’t do that when he was healthy – but if he comes out and plays some events it will be a shot in the arm for us,” Jim Furyk said.

That would be an understatement. Furyk has a different view as an owner and operator of a Champions tour event, Furyk & Friends. He lived through Tiger Mania when Woods turned pro in the summer of 1996 and became a sensation.

“I don’t know if you remember how unprepared we were for the attention, the hoopla, the media, the security, the fans, you name it. If we can get ahead of that and gauge his intentions of what he would like to do it would help our tour massively to be ready and prepared,” Furyk said. “The difference of having him at a tournament versus not is months of preparation. As excited as I am about it, I also run an event and understand how that side of an event gets ready; it makes me cautious. I won’t say nervous because the opportunity is great.”

Brady echoed Furyk’s sentiment.

“If he commits on the Friday before a tournament, we’ve had this conversation with tournaments, they won’t be prepared for it: ticket sales, which turns into an issue with your security, your transportation shuttles, concessions, everything. That was part of that white board that we did,” Brady said.

He confirmed that he’s already had a conversation with Tiger’s agent, Mark Steinberg, to educate him on how things work on that tour.

“We had a great conversation about the Champions tour: how many events we have, the markets where we play, majors, some of the courses where we play early, a little bit about our cart policy,” Brady said. “I don’t see Tiger ever wanting to file for ADA otherwise he would have done that already.”

Stricker suggested the tour (and the other governing bodies) should consider amending its cart policy so that Tiger could ride at the majors, too.

“Let’s make sure he can play. You hate to make special rules but if we can get him out here with a cart, let’s do it, you know what I mean,” he said. “We should do everything we can.”

The addition of Els, Furyk, Harrington and Retief Goosen in the last five years have given the senior tour a boost, but TigerMania II could make the circuit the talk of the golf world again.

“I just want Tiger to come out here and play a little bit,” Brady said. “In an ideal situation, Tiger turns 50 and the Mitsubishi Electric (in January 2026) is his first start. Maybe you pair him with Fred Couples and they have a great time.”

Asked whether he’s made his pitch yet to Tiger to play in his own tournament, Furyk joked that it was too soon.

“He’s getting old,” Furyk said. “He might not even remember by the time he turns 50.”

Most Popular

Social media reacts to protestors storming the green at the 2024 travelers championship, meet the 60 players who qualified for the 2024 summer olympic women's golf competition in paris, 2024 travelers championship prize money payouts for each pga tour player, meet the 60 players who qualified for the 2024 summer olympic men's golf competition in paris, 2024 liv golf nashville prize money payouts for each player and team, ted scott, scottie scheffler's caddie, has likely made more money than 80 percent of pga tour players in 2024, watch: protesters dragged off after storming 18th green at 2024 travelers championship as final group finishes.

Golf

Full recap of days one and two at the U.S. Open

us open tour

U.S. Open 2024 — Round 2 leaderboard, tee times, scores, news

U.S. Open rookie Ludvig Åberg will enter the weekend leading the U.S. Open after a second-round 69 put him 5-under par through 36 holes.

Åberg, 24, hit 26-of-28 fairways through two rounds to set himself up well on Pinehurst No. 2’s difficult conditions. Åberg, a college star at Texas Tech, swept the big three collegiate awards as best player in the country a year ago. He played so well when he turned pro that Europe made him the first player ever picked for a Ryder Cup spot before even playing in a major. Then, in his major debut, he finished second at The Masters in April.

Right behind is a group at 4-under with Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Cantlay and Thomas Detry leading the way. DeChambeau will play in the final group with Åberg on Saturday.

World No. 3 Rory McIlroy also remains right in the mix. He entered Friday tied with Cantlay for the lead at 5-under but shot a 72 in the second round due to a tough day putting to drop to 3-under.

Scottie Scheffler, the world No. 1 and reigning Masters champion, shot a second-round 74 sitting at 5-over-par. His crucial par save out of a tough bunker on his final hole turned out to be enough to just barely make the cut.

Leaderboard:

  • -5: Åberg (69)
  • -4: DeChambeau (69), Detry (67), Cantlay (71)
  • -3: McIlroy (72), Finau (69), Pavon (70)

Watch: USA Network & Peacock, Sky Sports ( UK ), Fox Sports & Kayo ( Australia )

✉️ Get in touch: [email protected]

Subscribe to The Athletic using our latest offer

Find the best deals on tickets to the U.S. Open

Brody Miller

Ludvig Åberg holds 36-hole lead at U.S. Open after second-round 69

U.S. Open rookie Ludvig Åberg will enter the weekend leading the U.S. Open after a second-round 69 put him 5-under-par through 36 holes.

Åberg, 24, hit 26-of-28 fairways through two rounds to set himself up well on Pinehurst No. 2’s difficult conditions. Åberg, a college star at Texas Tech, swept the big three collegiate awards as the best player in the country a year ago. He played so well when he turned pro that Europe made him the first player ever picked for a Ryder Cup spot before even playing in a major. Then, in his major debut, he finished second at The Masters in April.

Read more about the second round of the U.S. Open here .

Ludvig Åberg holds 36-hole lead at U.S. Open after second-round 69; Scottie Scheffler makes cut

Ludvig Åberg holds 36-hole lead at U.S. Open after second-round 69; Scottie Scheffler makes cut

Advertisement

Gabby Herzig

Tiger Woods on if it could be his last U.S. Open after missing cut: ‘It may or may not be’

PINEHURST, N.C. — After finishing 7 over at the U.S. Open and missing the cut Friday, Tiger Woods said he does not know when it will be his last U.S. Open.

Woods has struggled to find form in his few PGA Tour starts this calendar year. He underwent ankle fusion surgery last April and continues to battle back issues that prevent him from adding more competitive opportunities to his schedule.

He was asked directly whether or not it could be his last U.S. Open.

“As far as my last Open Championship or U.S. Open Championship, I don’t know what that is. It may or may not be,” Woods said.

Headed into his final three holes at Pinehurst No. 2 at 6-over-par, Woods needed one birdie to drop to make the weekend in his first U.S. Open start since 2020. But the 15-time major champion couldn’t get it done, instead bogeying the 16th hole and finishing two shots outside the cut line with a second-round 73.

“I thought I played well enough to be up there in contention,” Woods said. “It just didn’t work out.”

Read more about Woods' U.S. Open here .

Tiger Woods on if it could be his last U.S. Open after missing cut: ‘It may or may not be’

History of Francesco Molinari's aces

Francesco Molinari has three aces on the PGA Tour:

At the 16th at TPC Scottsdale, which induced an avalanche of beers thrown onto the green.

At Bay Hill the week he went on to win.

And now at the U.S. Open on his last hole of round 2 to get inside the cut line.

Francesco. Molinari. Ace.

Francesco Molinari just hit one of the shots of the tournament at the U.S. Open.

At 7-over-par, Molinari converted a hole-in-one on his 18th hole (the par-3 9th).

Molinari improves to 5-over-par, which is inside the cut line.

There is no known instance in U.S. Open history of a player making an ace on his last hole to get inside the 36-hole cut number.

Lukas Weese

Tiger Woods shoots 73, misses cut

Tiger finishes at 7-over-par

(Photo: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)

Tiger Woods shot a second-round 73 Friday at the U.S. Open.

Finishing at 7-over-par, Woods will miss the cut.

Woods hasn't made a cut at a U.S. Open since 2019.

Sergio Garcia likely making cut at U.S. Open

Sergio Garcia will be the first European player in the modern era to make the cut at the U.S. Open 20-plus times.

Tiger bogeys No. 16, making cut unlikely

Tiger Woods has been battling all day as he tries to make the weekend at the U.S. Open.

But with a bogey at No. 16, he falls to 7-over-par for the tournament.

It's looking unlikely that the 15-time major champion will make the cut.

Scottie Scheffler and the U.S. Open that will not bend to his will

PINEHURST, N.C. — It started with a simple question on a poor drive: Dude, what are you doing?

It progressed to a club flip, a visceral tossing of his putter five feet into the air and above his head. Scheffler’s par putt on 15, his sixth hole of the day, inexplicably broke left at the very final moment, and Scheffler launched his Spider Tour X in the air and turned in disgust without even an attempt to catch it. He let it just thump to the ground.

Soon he was talking to himself again. His tee shot into the par 3 17th went straight into the left-side bunker. “Maybe the worst golf shot I’ve ever seen you hit,” Scheffler told himself.

And this is all before he missed a birdie attempt on the second hole. He covered his face in sincere shock, walked to his bag by the next tee and slammed his putter in his bag so hard the special edition U.S. Open TaylorMade bag fell to the ground. Scheffler had to pick it up and frustratedly slam it back down.

So by the time the disaster hole arrived at Pinehurst’s fifth hole, by the time Scheffler’s greatest U.S. Open nightmare really appeared in the form of a double bogey, Scheffler was no longer angry. He was resigned to the reality that this was not his day. He had four more holes to get through. Four more holes to process his feelings on the likelihood he will not win his third major this week in North Carolina. He could sign his scorecard and talk to reporters in oddly good spirits, joking about his poor day and the ways Pinehurt’s native areas got the better of him.

This is where you should stop and be reminded we saw a foreign sight Friday. We saw Scottie Scheffler — golf’s No. 1 player, a juggernaut winning five tournaments in eight weeks, a man who recently went 10 months between rounds over par — in danger of missing the cut after a Friday 74, putting him 5-over-par for the week. One might call it history.

Read more about Scheffler's round here .

Scottie Scheffler and the U.S. Open that will not bend to his will

Bryson DeChambeau joins the broadcast

DeChambeau 4-under-par

(Photo: Tracy Wilcox / PGA Tour via Getty)

Underneath an umbrella in the shade, Bryson DeChambeau joined Smylie Kaufman on the NBC broadcast.

DeChambeau, who creates his own content on various social media platforms, was very natural on the mic.

He and Kaufman dissected various shots on the course. DeChambeau predicted that Ludvig Åberg had a makeable birdie putt on No. 12.

A few moments later, Åberg drained the birdie to improve to 6-under-par.

DeChambeau sits at 4-under-par for the tournament after a second-round 69.

Cantlay bogeys 12

After a birdie on the 11th, Patrick Cantlay follows it up with a bogey on No. 12.

Cantlay led the field in strokes gained tee-to-green in round one.

He's currently 112th Friday in that statistic.

Woods and Koepka having it tough

T82: Woods (+6) +2 thru 12

Bad news here for Tiger Woods , who bogeys the par-4 12th and that drops him to 6-over for the championship. Woods in serious danger of missing the cut now.

The same danger is growing for Brooks Koepka too, as he suffers a three putts for a triple-bogey 7 at the third. He’s now 4-over through 12 and looking pretty angry.

As someone has already joked, it seems unlikely he’ll be taking any questions after this round — having spurned the idea of doing so last night too.

Cantlay back to share the lead

Cantlay back to share the lead

Getty Images

T1: Cantlay (-5) E thru 11

Patrick Cantlay is back at the top, joining Ludvig Aberg at 5-under and with a share of the lead.

That’s thanks to a birdie 3 at the 11th, taking his time over the 5ft putt and even adjusting the line, before rolling it home.

Still, the leading mark remains here it was at the start of today’s play.

Where you need to be after Round 2?

Each of the last 16 men's major winners have been within three of the lead after round two.

26 of the last 28 U.S. Open winners have been within three through 36 holes.

Hugh Kellenberger

Hot conditions + Ludvig Aberg in control: Notes from on the ground at Pinehurst

Hot conditions + Ludvig Aberg in control: Notes from on the ground at Pinehurst

A couple of notes from the grounds here at Pinehurst:

  • It is so hot. So hot.
  • If you’re watching the broadcast you’re going to see lots of people moving in the background. They’re going to air-conditioned club areas (if they have access) or leaving the property. This happens at most every golf tournament when the conditions are like this — the final couple of hours become a very intimate affair. It doesn’t help that most of the marquee names played this morning, so people got here early to watch them.
  • On the actual golf, saw Ludvig Aberg play with Dustin Johnson and Tony Finau. It’s remarkable how in control Aberg is for his first U.S. Open. He’s in a group with a two-time major champion that has a swagger to him, and Aberg is leading that group in swag. It’s really something.
  • We saw Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy go over the green on 5 from that waste area and be upset about it, but it seems like the right play. I just don’t know how you get a ball to stop on top of that green. Better to pick a spot over there you want to land, and then try to two-putt from it.

Cantlay double bogeys No. 8

Tiger Woods said before the tournament that players would be playing "ping pong" on the Pinehurst greens.

That's what happened to Patrick Cantlay, who double bogeyed No. 8 after taking three attempts to land his ball on the green.

Cantlay falls to 4-under-par and Åberg has a two-shot lead.

Leading/co-leading through 36 holes in U.S. Open debut

Ludvig Åberg is tied for the lead at Pinehurst No. 2.

The last player to lead or co-lead a U.S. Open through 36 holes in their debut was T.C. Chen in 1985.

Åberg, Cantlay tied for the lead

Åberg, Cantlay tied for the lead

Ludvig Åberg, playing in his first U.S. Open, is tied for the lead.

He birdied the par-5 5th to improve to 6-under-par for the tournament.

Patrick Cantlay birdied the sixth hole, moving into a share of the lead.

Balmy conditions at Pinehurst

It's so hot the beer line is almost empty and there's a 10-minute wait at the hydration station.

Pavon tied for the lead

A fast start for Frenchman Matthieu Pavon with back-to-back birdies to open his second round.

Pavon is tied for the lead at 5-under-par.

us open tour

2024 Italian Open field: DP World Tour players, rankings

T he 2024 Italian Open field is set with the passing of the typical Friday entry deadline. This week's DP World Tour field is set for this event, played at Adriatic Golf Club Cervia in Milano Marittima, Ravenna, Italy.

The Italian Open field is headlined by the likes of Danny Willett, Nacho Elvira, Laurie Canter and more.

This is set to be a 156-player field is played out over four days, with this event featuring a mixture of players from the DP World Tour in the return to continental Europe.

We do not have Monday qualifiers for this event, with this being a full-field tournament on the 2024 DP World Tour schedule .

The week-of alternate list has been determined, and the field will be updated off the list based on any player withdrawals. Nicolai Von Dellingshausen and Jannik De Bruyn are the first two alternates.

The field will be playing for a $2,500,000 purse, with none of the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking among the top contenders.

2024 Italian Open field

Top 50 players in 2024 italian open field.

There are no top-50 players in the field.

The post 2024 Italian Open field: DP World Tour players, rankings first appeared on Golf News Net .

Copyright, Golf News Net. All rights reserved.

Travelers Championship

Travelers Championship

TPC River Highlands

Cromwell, Connecticut • USA

Jun 20 - 23, 2024

Why is the Travelers Championship one of the PGA Tour’s most beloved stops? We checked it out.

Fans surrounded the 18th hole during Sunday's final round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Conn.

CROMWELL, Conn. — If being around smiling and contented people for extended periods of time sets you a bit on edge, then hopefully you avoided being anywhere near the TPC River Highlands golf course just south of Hartford and west of a lazy bend of the Connecticut River the past few days.

If you’re OK with it, then welcome to Happyville.

From the moment a charter jet whisked the best players on the PGA Tour from the US Open last Sunday to the Travelers Championship, players and then fans entered what has turned into an annual feel-good zone where you really have to try to find anything to complain about.

“They know that we’ll do anything for them,” said Andy Bessette, the Travelers executive vice president and chief administrative officer who serves as the unofficial goodwill ambassador of the tour stop that became a Signature Event for the first time this year.

Advertisement

Since the Hartford-based insurance company took over title sponsorship of the tournament in 2007, he has been on a mission “to prove that we can make this the best weekend in golf. And we did it over many, many years. Now we’re hitting our stride.”

It’s the only PGA Tour stop in New England, and the opportunity is not lost on fans.

From the moment they get out of their cars in the free parking lots and hear piped-in championship calls from CBS Sports’s Jim Nantz to the baskets of chapstick, sunscreen, and sunglasses just past security, there’s every conceivable shaded and unshaded option — golf-viewing, practice golf, food and beverage — awaiting them around the course.

On the players’ side, there’s more than the welcome arrival of a birdie-friendly course after a grueling US Open.

There’s pizza trucks, ice cream, and coffee for the players on the practice range, spa treatments and private lockers for players’ spouses, day care for their kids, and cars for their caddies.

“Not to put any other tournaments down, but I just think Travelers has always been a forward thinker when it comes to providing the players with the easiest week they can have, where they don’t have to think for themselves. Travelers kind of thinks for them,” said Webb Simpson.

Bessette attends four or five PGA tournaments a year, in part to keep connected and learn, but also to cultivate and maintain relationships with players.

Travelers extended an invitation to Simpson right after college in 2008, with Bessette telling him “don’t forget us when you make it big one day.”

Simpson won the US Open in 2012. The next week, despite other offers to cash in on his newfound fame, he was at the Travelers.

“I remember feeling like this is not something I need to do, it’s something I want to do,” said Simpson. “They made me feel welcome in 2008, so it was actually a joy of mine to come back as a major champion.”

Fans, and eventual champion Scottie Scheffler (left), had a bird's-eye view as Tom Kim putted on the 18th hole during Sunday's playoff.

Tommy Fleetwood’s eyes light up like a child’s when he brings up the pizza truck that serves fresh slices on the days leading up to the tournament.

He’s fond of the coffee and ice cream set up behind the practice range, too.

“It sounds like nothing, I guess, when I say that, like, ‘Why, why is that a thing?’” said the 13th-ranked player in the world. “There’s tiny, tiny things that make a difference, like having a beautiful coffee, having a barista, making multiple pizzas — it’s something that’s a little different but it’s just a nice little touch. Obviously, we pick up on these things, we do the same thing 30 weeks a year.”

The little things take the edge off what is an important stop on the Tour, even after a major such as the US Open.

“It’s a really nice vibe to come to straight after,” said Fleetwood. “I think if you asked people in a positive way does this feel like a Signature Event in terms of everything that they put on and the relaxed nature of how you get looked after, I think people will say, ‘You know what, maybe not.’”

Fans got an up-close view of Scottie Scheffler as he walked the course during the final round of the Travelers Championship.

With Signature Event status comes a field of 72 golfers, half the usual, all of whom make the cut.

That also meant half the cars in the tournament’s car deal had no drivers. So Nathan Grube, the tournament director, came up with the idea of the caddies getting their own.

“Everybody who comes on the property, we feel like they are a customer to us and how are we meeting the needs of our customer,” said Grube. “It’s personal for us.”

The caddies appreciate it.

“Travelers said, ‘Hey, let’s take it up another notch,’” said Ted Scott, caddie to Scottie Sheffler, the No. 1-ranked player. “It’s like, ‘All right, here’s your car.’ Like, ‘All right, this is different.’

“I’m getting spoiled. They’re making me not want to go to other tournaments. It’s not fair.”

Even under Thursday’s heat dome, many of the 150,000-200,000 fans expected to attend the four-day tournament — which was first known as the Insurance City Open, then as the Greater Hartford Open, and briefly as the Buick Championship — seemed to be adapting just fine.

There’s a new bleacher area behind a pro shop that overlooks the practice facility, along with a new video board detailing shot analytics. The course is easy to walk, and there are enough shaded banks along a hole to lean back and watch golfers hit precise approach shots and, like Rickie Fowler on No. 17, drain a 38-foot putt.

The crowds are attentive when the red-shirted volunteers raise their hands for silence, say encouraging words as golfers walk off the hole, and then resume socializing.

Lynne Buccheri from Berlin, Conn., has been coming to the tournament since she was 6.

Now 43, with three kids of her own, she is seeing it through their eyes.

“I have one kid who’s super into golf and wants to follow golfers through 18 holes and I have two that are a little younger — they want to play mini golf, climb the rock wall, do all the chipping and putting,” said Buccheri, who comes from a family of Red Sox, Yankees, Giants, and Patriots fans, as well as Notre Dame sports teams, the Double A Hartford Yard Goats, and Hartford soccer.

“We go to a lot of stuff,” said Buccheri. “But this is definitely the highlight every year.”

For her and the players.

“It’s spectacular, I think,” said Keegan Bradley, native New Englander and defending champion. “I’m so proud to have this be sort of my home event because I brag all the time about how great this tournament is.”

Michael Silverman can be reached at [email protected] .

Watch CBS News

Scottie Scheffler wins PGA Tour event after 6 climate protesters run onto 18th green and spray powder

Updated on: June 23, 2024 / 8:58 PM EDT / CBS/AP

Six people protesting climate change stormed the 18th green while the leaders were lining up their putts on the final hole of regulation at the PGA Tour's Travelers Championship on Sunday, delaying the finish for about five minutes.

The protesters sprayed white and red powder, leaving stains on the grass before Scottie Scheffler , Tom Kim and Akshay Bhatia finished their rounds. At least one member of the group was wearing a white T-shirt with the words "NO GOLF ON A DEAD PLANET" in black lettering on the front.

Scottie Scheffler won the championship in a playoff, waiting out a disruption for his sixth victory of the year. That's the most wins in one PGA Tour season since Tiger Woods had six in 2009. And Scheffler, the world's top-ranked player, still has two months to go.

Travelers Championship - Final Round

"I was scared for my life," Bhatia said about the protesters after finishing in a tie for fifth — four strokes behind Scheffler, who earned his sixth victory of the year. "I didn't even really know what was happening. ... But thankfully the cops were there and kept us safe, because that's, you know, that's just weird stuff."

After the protesters were tackled by police and taken off, Scheffler left a potential 26-foot clincher from the fringe on the right edge of the cup, then tapped in for par. Kim, who trailed by one stroke heading into the final hole, sank a 10-foot birdie putt to tie Scheffler and send the tournament to a sudden-death playoff.

Travelers Championship - Final Round

Kim said the protest took his mind off the pressure.

"It kind of slowed things down," he said. "It took the meaning of the putt away for a second. Because for the past 17 and a half holes all you're thinking about is golf, and suddenly when that happens your mind goes into a complete — like, you're almost not even playing golf anymore. I thought it was a dream for a second."

The crowd surrounding the 18th green heckled the protesters by yelling profanities and cheered the police who intervened.

The Cromwell Police Department Sunday evening confirmed six protesters, ranging from age 25 to 55, were arrested. All were charged with criminal mischief, criminal trespass and breach of peace. "The reason for their protesting will not be released, as the department does not want to give their cause any more attention than what has already been received," police said. 

Travelers Championship - Final Round

After the players putted out in regulation, workers with leaf blowers came out to clean off the remaining powder, and the hole location was moved for the playoff, which began on No. 18. Scheffler beat Kim with a par on the first playoff hole.

"They left a lot of marks on the greens, which is not right for us players — especially when two guys are trying to win a golf tournament," Kim said. "But I'm very grateful for the tour and the tour security for handling that really well and making us players feel a lot safer."

Scheffler's victory came a few weeks after prosecutors dropped criminal charges against him on May 29, less than two weeks after he was arrested outside the PGA Championship in Louisville, Kentucky.

Scheffler was initially charged with second-degree assault of a police officer, third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officers directing traffic when he was arrested outside Louisville's Valhalla Golf Club, which was hosting the tournament.

Jefferson County Attorney Mike O'Connell told a judge his office couldn't move forward with the charges against the world's top golfer based on the  evidence  and he moved to dismiss the case.

After the charges were dropped, Scheffler  said on social media  that he didn't hold any ill will toward the detective who arrested him.

  • Climate Change

More from CBS News

21-year-old woman killed in Arlington hit-and-run

Where's Myrtle Polk? Oak Cliff community rallies to find missing woman

Rangers win 4-0 against Royals in Scherzer's season debut

Dangerous heat arrives, prompting a heat advisory for most of North Texas

Plan Your Visit

Prohibited Items and Security

Prohibited Items and Security

We want your US Open experience to be enjoyable and memorable. Every guest plays an important role in making sure that the experience is fun for all. From bag sizes to security procedures to prohibited items - find out everything  you need to know before you go!

Transportation and Parking

Transportation and Parking

Get on track to the match! Find out the best route to take and where to park when visiting the US Open.

2024 US Open Fan Week

2024 US Open Fan Week

The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center grounds will once again be free and open to the public during Fan Week in 2024, featuring a variety of fun, tennis-centric events and activities for the whole family. While the US Open Qualifying Tournament anchors the week, each day has its own featured event that you won’t want to miss! 

Travel Packages

Travel Packages

Visiting from out of town? Find the best rates with our travel partners.

Health and Safety

Health and Safety

Our goal is to ensure that your 2024 US Open experience is both enjoyable and safe. Review the latest information related to guidelines and important information. 

See More of NYC

See More of NYC

The top contenders for sports, arts & culture, food, attractions and overall fun: the five boroughs. Explore what’s good in NYC at nyctourism.com

At the Open

At the Open

Along with the best tennis in the world, the US Open offers premium dining experiences, food and beverage options, entertainment and more! Learn more about what is going on around the grounds at the US Open! 

usga

United States Open: Future Sites

2024: pinehurst resort & c.c. (course no. 2) - village of pinehurst, n.c..

Payne Stewart Statue of Pinehurst No. 2 in Pinehurst, N.C. on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013.  (Copyright USGA/John Mummert)

June 13-16, 2024

Pinehurst Resort & Country Club is set to add another illustrious chapter to its championship history by hosting its fourth U.S. Open and 11th USGA championship. Founded by Boston soda fountain magnate James Walker Tufts in 1895, Pinehurst quickly evolved into one of the premier resort destinations in the country. Legendary architect Donald Ross created Course No. 2 in 1907 and constantly tinkered with the design until his death in 1948. The USGA began its long association with the resort in 1962 with the U.S. Amateur, and 37 years later a memorable U.S. Open was contested, with Payne Stewart holing an 18-foot par putt on the 72nd hole to edge Phil Mickelson by a stroke. In 2014, Pinehurst and the USGA made more history by staging the U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open in consecutive weeks on Course No. 2. It also was announced that Pinehurst will be an "anchor" host site for four additional U.S. Opens through the year 2047. Besides the 2024 championship, the resort will host in 2029, 2035, 2041 and 2047.

Tickets | Hospitality | Volunteer  |  USGA Experience Packages

2025: Oakmont Country Club - Oakmont, Pa.

us open tour

June 12-15, 2025

What better way to celebrate the 125th playing of the U.S. Open than by staging it at the venue that has hosted the most Opens? Oakmont will host the championship for a record 10th time in 2025, three times more than any other club. It will also be the club's 17th USGA championship, which ranks one behind fellow Pennsylvania venue Merion Golf Club for the most all time. Henry Clay (H.C.) Fownes designed Oakmont to challenge the best golfers in the world and that philosophy hasn’t changed since Oakmont member S. Davidson Herron defeated Bob Jones in the championship match of the 1919 U.S. Amateur. Oakmont continues to be one of the most challenging championship layouts, most recently on display in Dustin Johnson’s 2016 U.S. Open victory.

It was announced in August, 2021, that Oakmont would also host future U.S. Opens in 2034, 2042, and 2049, along with a number of other USGA championships, including the U.S. Women's Open in 2028 and 2038, the Walker Cup in 2033, and the U.S. Women's Amateur in 2046 .

Tickets |  Hospitality  | USGA Experience Packages  | Volunteers

2026: Shinnecock Hills Golf Club - Southampton, N.Y.

us open tour

June 18-21, 2026

The USGA appreciates the championship test provided by Shinnecock Hills so much that it awarded the Southampton, N.Y., venue the 2026 U.S. Open before it hosted the 2018 Open. Brooks Koepka, the 2018 champion, barring some unforeseen circumstance, will have the opportunity to win again at Shinnecock Hills, as winners receive a 10-year exemption from qualifying. The historic, links-style course that overlooks Great Peconic Bay is one of the world's most iconic venues. Shinnecock Hills hosted the 1896 U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur, as well as the 1900 U.S. Women’s Amateur before being redesigned by William Flynn in 1937. In 2013, the noted design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw enhanced the course for the 118th U.S. Open. Raymond Floyd (1986), Corey Pavin (1995) and Retief Goosen (2004) have also claimed U.S. Open titles at Shinnecock Hills.

Hospitality

2027: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, Calif.

us open tour

June 17-20, 2027

Few places on the planet can match the beauty of this picturesque Monterey Peninsula venue. Some have called Pebble Beach one of the greatest meetings of land and sea, which is one factor in the USGA’s longtime affinity for hosting championships on the course. Pebble Beach, which is the annual site of the PGA Tour’s AT&T National Pro-Am, has provided some of the game’s legendary moments, from Jack Nicklaus hitting the flagstick with his 1-iron tee shot on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open, to Tom Watson’s chip-in from greenside rough on that same iconic par-3 71st hole of the 1982 U.S. Open, to Tiger Woods’ record-setting 15-stroke victory in the 2000 U.S. Open. In 2017, the USGA announced that the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open will be contested there, the first Women’s Open at Pebble Beach, with Allisen Corpuz claiming the title. Tom Kite (1992), Graeme McDowell (2010) and Gary Woodland (2019) have also won U.S. Open titles at Pebble Beach. Viktor Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur at Pebble before embarking on what has been a successful professional career. The U.S. Open also will return to Pebble Beach in 2032, 2037 and 2044, with the U.S. Women's Open coming back in 2027.

2028: Winged Foot Golf Club - Mamaroneck, N.Y

us open tour

June 15-18, 2028

Eight years after hosting the first U.S. Open without fans due to COVID-19 health and safety protocols, the West Course will challenge the game's best players for a seventh time in its illustrious history. Winged Foot was the site of Bob Jones' playoff victory over Al Espinosa in 1929, the third of his four titles. In 1959, Billy Casper's mastery on the greens netted the Southern California native the first of two titles, and in 1974, Hale Irwin survived the "Massacre at Winged Foot" with a 72-hole total of 7-over-par 287 for the first of his three championships. Fuzzy Zoeller won a memorable playoff over Greg Norman in 1984, and in 2006 Geoff Ogilvy was the last man standing after several players, including Phil Mickelson suffered unfortunate heartbreak on the 72nd hole. Bryson DeChambeau, in 2020, overpowered the demanding West Course with a 6-under total of 274, joining the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Tiger Woods as players to have claimed both the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open titles.

2029: Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2) - Village of Pinehurst, N.C.

The par-3 17th hole will measure 207 yards for the championship. (USGA/John Mummert)

June 14-17, 2029

Pinehurst Resort & Country Club will add another illustrious chapter to its championship pedigree by hosting its fifth U.S. Open in 2029, and for the second time it will also conduct the U.S. Women's Open in consecutive weeks. In 2014, Pinehurst had the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open in the same year for the first time in USGA history. Martin Kaymer prevailed in the U.S. Open and Michelle Wie won a week later. Founded by Boston soda fountain magnate James Walker Tufts in 1895, Pinehurst quickly evolved into one of the premier resort destinations in the country. Legendary architect Donald Ross created Course No. 2 in 1907 and constantly tinkered with the design until his death in 1948. The USGA began its long association with the resort in 1962 with the U.S. Amateur, and 37 years later a memorable U.S. Open was contested, with Payne Stewart holing an 18-foot par putt on the 72nd hole to edge Phil Mickelson by a stroke. An "anchor site," Pinehurst No. 2 will also stage the U.S. Open again in 2035, 2041 and 2047.

2030: Merion Golf Club - Ardmore, Pa.

us open tour

June 13-16, 2030

The U.S. Open returns to historic Merion Golf Club, where the championship will commemorate the 100-year anniversary of Bob Jones completing the Grand Slam with his victory in the 1930 U.S. Amateur. Merion has been the site of five previous U.S. Open Championships, including Ben Hogan's remarkable playoff win in 1950 just 18 months from a near-fatal automobile accident. Hy Peskin's photo of Hogan hitting a 1-iron to the 72nd hole stands as one of the most iconic images in the history of the game. In 1971, Lee Trevino claimed the second of his two titles in a memorable playoff triumph over Jack Nicklaus. At the start of the 18-hole playoff, Trevino playfully tossed a rubber snake at Nicklaus, which drew a hearty chuckle from the Golden Bear. When the U.S. Open returned to the Ardmore, Pa., club in 1981, David Graham prevailed by hitting all 18 greens in regulation in the final round. And in 2013, Justin Rose carded a final-round 70 to claim a two-stroke win over Phil Mickelson and Jason Day. Besides Jones' U.S. Amateur win, Edoardo Molinari took the 2005 U.S. Amateur at Merion after barely sneaking into the match-play draw via a playoff. He became the first Italian to hoist the Havemeyer Trophy. No club has hosted more USGA championships than Merion (19).

2031: Riviera Country Club- Pacific Palisades, Calif.

The 18th hole of Riviera Country Club  in Pacific Palisades, Calif. on Thursday, April 21, 2016.  (Copyright USGA/JD Cuban)

June 12-15, 2031

The U.S. Open will make its return to The Riviera Country Club for the first time since Ben Hogan captured the first of his four titles in 1948. The classic George C. Thomas Jr. design earned the moniker "Hogan's Alley" because of the Texan's success at the venue. Hogan also won the Los Angeles Open three times at Riviera (1942, 1947 and 1948), which has been the longtime home of the PGA Tour event (now called Genesis Open). This will be the third major championship at Riviera following the 1983 and 1995 PGA Championships won by Hal Sutton and Steve Elkington, respectively. Doc Redman also won a memorable U.S. Amateur at Riviera in 2017, defeating Doug Ghim in 37 holes, and Hale Irwin captured the 1998 U.S. Senior Open there. Before the U.S. Open is contested in 2031, the U.S. Women's Open will be staged at Riviera in 2026, and it will be the venue for golf in the 1928 Summer Olympics.

2032: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, Calif.

us open tour

June 17-20, 2032

Few places on the planet can match the beauty of this picturesque Monterey Peninsula venue. Some have called Pebble Beach one of the greatest meetings of land and sea, which is one factor in the USGA’s longtime affinity for hosting championships on the course. Pebble Beach, which is the annual site of the PGA Tour’s AT&T National Pro-Am, has provided some of the game’s legendary moments, from Jack Nicklaus hitting the flagstick with his 1-iron tee shot on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open, to Tom Watson’s chip-in from greenside rough on that same iconic par-3 71st hole of the 1982 U.S. Open, to Tiger Woods’ record-setting 15-stroke victory in the 2000 U.S. Open. In 2023, the U.S. Women's Open was held at Pebble for the first time, with Allisen Corpuz claiming the title. Tom Kite (1992), Graeme McDowell (2010) and Gary Woodland (2019) have also won U.S. Open titles at Pebble Beach. Viktor Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur at Pebble before embarking on what has been a successful professional career. Named as an "anchor site," the U.S. Open is returning to Pebble Beach in 2037 and 2044.

2033: Oakmont Country Club - Oakmont, Pa.

The 4th Hole at Oakmont Country Club as seen on 7/20/20.  (Copyright USGA/Fred Vuich)

June 16-19, 2033

The U.S. Open will return to Oakmont for a record 11th time in 2033. It will also be the club's 20th USGA championship, which ranks one behind fellow Pennsylvania venue Merion Golf Club for the most all time. Henry Clay (H.C.) Fownes designed Oakmont to challenge the best golfers in the world and that philosophy hasn’t changed since Oakmont member S. Davidson Herron defeated Bob Jones in the championship match of the 1919 U.S. Amateur. Oakmont continues to be one of the most challenging championship layouts, most recently on display in Dustin Johnson’s 2016 U.S. Open victory.

Oakmont will also host future U.S. Opens in 2042, and 2049, along with the 2038 U.S. Women's Open and the U.S. Women's Amateur in 2046.

2034: Oakland Hills Country Club (South Course) - Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

us open tour

June 15-18, 2034

Historic Oakland Hills Country Club will play host to its seventh U.S. Open in 2034, and its first since Steve Jones edged Davis Love III and Tom Lehman by one stroke after getting into the field via final qualifying. Prior to the 1951 U.S. Open on the famed South Course, noted architect Robert Trent Jones Sr. did an extensive renovation of the original Donald Ross gem, lengthening and toughening the layout that it received its "Monster" moniker from 1951 champion Ben Hogan. After Hogan recorded the third of his four victories with a 7-over total of 287, the Texan said afterward, "I'm glad I brought this course -- this monster -- to its knees." Ten years later, Gene Littler's 1-over 281 was good enough to earn him a U.S. Open victory, and in 1985, Andy North collected the second of his two U.S. Open titles here. Three PGA Championships and a Ryder Cup, won by Europe, have also been contested at Oakland Hills.

2035: Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2) - Village of Pinehurst, N.C.

A look at the 199-yard, par-3 15th hole. (USGA/Fred Vuich)

June 14-17, 2035

Pinehurst Resort & Country Club will add another illustrious chapter to its championship pedigree by hosting its sixth U.S. Open in 2035. Founded by Boston soda fountain magnate James Walker Tufts in 1895, Pinehurst quickly evolved into one of the premier resort destinations in the country. Legendary architect Donald Ross created Course No. 2 in 1907 and constantly tinkered with the design until his death in 1948. The USGA began its long association with the resort in 1962 with the U.S. Amateur, and 37 years later a memorable U.S. Open was contested, with Payne Stewart holing an 18-foot par putt on the 72nd hole to edge Phil Mickelson by a stroke. In 2014 the USGA made history by conducting the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open on Course No. 2 in consecutive weeks. Martin Kaymer and Michelle Wie prevailed. 

An "anchor site," Pinehurst No. 2 will also stage the U.S. Open again in 2041 and 2047.

2036: Shinnecock Hills Golf Club - Southampton, N.Y.

A view of Shinnecock Hills Golf Course as photographed in 2002 in Southampton, N.Y. (Copyright USGA)

The USGA will once again return to one of its five founding clubs with the 2036 U.S. Open going to Shinnecock Hills. The club will make history by also hosting the U.S. Women's Open that year, joining Pinehurst No. 2 as the only venues to conduct the USGA's two biggest competitions in the same calendar year in consecutive weeks. Shinnecock Hills also will host the U.S. Open in 2026. Brooks Koepka claimed the 2018 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills, becoming the first player since Curtis Strange (1988-89) to successfully defend. The historic, links-style course that overlooks Great Peconic Bay is one of the world's most iconic venues. Shinnecock Hills hosted the 1896 U.S. Open and U.S. Amateur, as well as the 1900 U.S. Women’s Amateur before being redesigned by William Flynn in 1937. In 2013, the noted design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw enhanced the course for the 118th U.S. Open. Raymond Floyd (1986), Corey Pavin (1995) and Retief Goosen (2004) have also claimed U.S. Open titles at Shinnecock Hills.

2037: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, Calif

Some have called Pebble Beach one of the greatest meetings of land and sea, which is one factor in the USGA’s longtime affinity for hosting championships on this Monterey Peninsula venue. Pebble Beach, which is the annual site of the PGA Tour’s AT&T National Pro-Am, has provided some of the game’s legendary moments, from Jack Nicklaus hitting the flagstick with his 1-iron tee shot on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open, to Tom Watson’s chip-in from greenside rough on that same iconic par-3 71st hole of the 1982 U.S. Open, to Tiger Woods’ record-setting 15-stroke victory in the 2000 U.S. Open. In 2023, the U.S. Women's Open was held at Pebble for the first time, with Allisen Corpuz claiming the title. Tom Kite (1992), Graeme McDowell (2010) and Gary Woodland (2019) have also won U.S. Open titles at Pebble Beach. Viktor Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur at Pebble before embarking on what has been a successful professional career. Named as an "anchor site," the U.S. Open will return again to Pebble Beach in 2044.

2038: The Country Club - Brookline, Mass.

The 18th Hole of The Country Club in Brookline, Mass. as seen on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021.  (Copyright USGA/John Mummert)

June 16-19, 2039

The U.S. Open will return to The Country Club, one of the five founding clubs of the USGA, for a fifth time while celebrating the 125th anniversary of one of the greatest upsets in sports. In 1913, amateur Francis Ouimet, a former caddie at the club, took down English stalwarts Harry Vardon and Ted Ray in an 18-hole playoff to win the U.S. Open. Ouimet was guided that week by 10-year-old caddie Eddie Lowery. The next two U.S. Opens at the venue also went to playoffs, with Julius Boros (1963) and Curtis Strange (1988) emerging as champions. In 2022, Matt Fitzpatrick joined Jack Nicklaus as the only players to have won a U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open at the same venue when he held off Will Zalatoris and Scottie Scheffler in a memorable final round.

2039: The Los Angeles (Calif.) Country Club (North Course)

us open tour

When the USGA brought the 2017 Walker Cup Match to The Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, many in the outside world finally got a glimpse of this George C. Thomas gem. The biennial competition, which the USA won, 19-7, also served as a prelude to the club hosting its first U.S. Open, won by Wyndham Clark. The club, which resides on some of the country’s prime real estate, hosted the 1930 U.S. Women’s Amateur and 1954 U.S. Junior Amateur, but did not host many major outside competitions. The membership decided it was the right time to showcase this magnificent facility to the world after the North Course underwent an extensive renovation by Gil Hanse in 2010. It reached out to the USGA expressing interest in hosting the 2017 Walker Cup, which led to the club landing the 2023 U.S. Open.

2040: Merion Golf Club - Ardmore, Pa.

The 18th Hole as seen at Merion Golf Clubâ  s East Course in Ardmore, PA on Thursday, Aug. 5, 2021.  (Copyright USGA/Fred Vuich)

June 14-17, 2040

The U.S. Open returns to historic Merion Golf Club in 2040, where Bob Jones completed his memorable Grand Slam with his victory in the 1930 U.S. Amateur. Merion has been the site of six previous U.S. Open Championships, including Ben Hogan's remarkable playoff win in 1950 just 18 months from a near-fatal automobile accident. Hy Peskin's photo of Hogan hitting a 1-iron to the 72nd hole stands as one of the most iconic images in the history of the game. In 1971, Lee Trevino claimed the second of his two titles in a memorable playoff triumph over Jack Nicklaus. At the start of the 18-hole playoff, Trevino playfully tossed a rubber snake at Nicklaus, which drew a hearty chuckle from the Golden Bear. When the U.S. Open returned to the Ardmore, Pa., club in 1981, David Graham prevailed by hitting all 18 greens in regulation in the final round. And in 2013, Justin Rose carded a final-round 70 to claim a two-stroke win over Phil Mickelson and Jason Day. Besides Jones' U.S. Amateur win, Edoardo Molinari took the 2005 U.S. Amateur at Merion after barely sneaking into the match-play draw via a playoff. He became the first Italian to hoist the Havemeyer Trophy. No club has hosted more USGA championships than Merion (21).

2041: Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2) - Village of Pinehurst, N.C.

A view of the 184-yard, par-3 ninth hole. (USGA/Fred Vuich)

June 13-16, 2041

Pinehurst Resort & Country Club will add another illustrious chapter to its championship pedigree by hosting its seventh U.S. Open in 2041. Founded by Boston soda fountain magnate James Walker Tufts in 1895, Pinehurst quickly evolved into one of the premier resort destinations in the country. Legendary architect Donald Ross created Course No. 2 in 1907 and constantly tinkered with the design until his death in 1948. The USGA began its long association with the resort in 1962 with the U.S. Amateur, and 37 years later a memorable U.S. Open was contested, with Payne Stewart holing an 18-foot par putt on the 72nd hole to edge Phil Mickelson by a stroke. In 2014 the USGA made history by conducting the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open on Course No. 2 in consecutive weeks. Martin Kaymer and Michelle Wie prevailed. 

An "anchor site," Pinehurst No. 2 will also stage the U.S. Open again in 2047.

2042: Oakmont Country Club - Oakmont, Pa.

June 12-15, 2042.

The U.S. Open will return to Oakmont for a record 12th time in 2042. Henry Clay (H.C.) Fownes designed Oakmont to challenge the best golfers in the world and that philosophy hasn’t changed since Oakmont member S. Davidson Herron defeated Bob Jones in the championship match of the 1919 U.S. Amateur. Oakmont continues to be one of the most challenging championship layouts. Dustin Johnson won the U.S. Open here in 2016. It also was the site where Johnny Miller carded a final-round 63 to win the 1973 U.S. Open, which some consider one of the greatest rounds in major-championship history.  Oakmont will again host the U.S. Opens in 2049.

2044: Pebble Beach Golf Links - Pebble Beach, Calif.

Some have called Pebble Beach one of the greatest meetings of land and sea, which is one factor in the USGA’s longtime affinity for hosting championships on this Monterey Peninsula venue. Pebble Beach, which is the annual site of the PGA Tour’s AT&T National Pro-Am, has provided some of the game’s legendary moments, from Jack Nicklaus hitting the flagstick with his 1-iron tee shot on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open, to Tom Watson’s chip-in from greenside rough on that same iconic par-3 71st hole of the 1982 U.S. Open, to Tiger Woods’ record-setting 15-stroke victory in the 2000 U.S. Open. In 2023, the U.S. Women's Open was held at Pebble for the first time, with Allisen Corpuz claiming the title. Tom Kite (1992), Graeme McDowell (2010) and Gary Woodland (2019) have also won U.S. Open titles at Pebble Beach. Viktor Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur at Pebble before embarking on what has been a successful professional career.

2047: Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2) - Village of Pinehurst, N.C.

The 13th hole is a par 4 that will measure 381 yards for the U.S. Open. (USGA/John Mummert)

June 13-16, 2047

Pinehurst Resort & Country Club will add another illustrious chapter to its championship pedigree by hosting its eighth U.S. Open in 2045. Founded by Boston soda fountain magnate James Walker Tufts in 1895, Pinehurst quickly evolved into one of the premier resort destinations in the country. Legendary architect Donald Ross created Course No. 2 in 1907 and constantly tinkered with the design until his death in 1948. The USGA began its long association with the resort in 1962 with the U.S. Amateur, and 37 years later a memorable U.S. Open was contested, with Payne Stewart holing an 18-foot par putt on the 72nd hole to edge Phil Mickelson by a stroke. In 2014 the USGA made history by conducting the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open on Course No. 2 in consecutive weeks. Martin Kaymer and Michelle Wie prevailed. 

2049: Oakmont Country Club - Oakmont, Pa.

June 17-20, 2049.

The U.S. Open will return to Oakmont for a record 13th time in 2049. Henry Clay (H.C.) Fownes designed Oakmont to challenge the best golfers in the world and that philosophy hasn’t changed since Oakmont member S. Davidson Herron defeated Bob Jones in the championship match of the 1919 U.S. Amateur. Oakmont continues to be one of the most challenging championship layouts. Dustin Johnson won the U.S. Open here in 2016. It also was the site where Johnny Miller carded a final-round 63 to win the 1973 U.S. Open, which some consider one of the greatest rounds in major-championship history. 

2050: Merion Golf Club - Ardmore, Pa.

The 17th Hole as seen at Merion Golf Club’s East Course in Ardmore, PA on Saturday, July 24, 2021.  (Copyright USGA/Fred Vuich)

June 16-19, 2050

The U.S. Open returns to historic Merion Golf Club in 2050, where Bob Jones completed his memorable Grand Slam with his victory in the 1930 U.S. Amateur. Merion has been the site of seven previous U.S. Open Championships, including Ben Hogan's remarkable playoff win in 1950 just 18 months from a near-fatal automobile accident. Hy Peskin's photo of Hogan hitting a 1-iron to the 72nd hole stands as one of the most iconic images in the history of the game. In 1971, Lee Trevino claimed the second of his two titles in a memorable playoff triumph over Jack Nicklaus. At the start of the 18-hole playoff, Trevino playfully tossed a rubber snake at Nicklaus, which drew a hearty chuckle from the Golden Bear. When the U.S. Open returned to the Ardmore, Pa., club in 1981, David Graham prevailed by hitting all 18 greens in regulation in the final round. And in 2013, Justin Rose carded a final-round 70 to claim a two-stroke win over Phil Mickelson and Jason Day. Besides Jones' U.S. Amateur win, Edoardo Molinari took the 2005 U.S. Amateur at Merion after barely sneaking into the match-play draw via a playoff. He became the first Italian to hoist the Havemeyer Trophy. 

2051: Oakland Hills Country Club - Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

The ninth hole of Oakland Hills Country Club (South Course) in the Bloomfield Hills, Mich. on Sunday, July 9, 2023.  (Copyright USGA/Bill Hornstein)

Historic Oakland Hills Country Club will play host to its eighth U.S. Open in 2051. In 1996, Steve Jones edged Davis Love III and Tom Lehman by one stroke after getting into the field via final qualifying. Prior to the 1951 U.S. Open on the famed South Course, noted architect Robert Trent Jones Sr. did an extensive renovation of the original Donald Ross gem, lengthening and toughening the layout that it received its "Monster" moniker from 1951 champion Ben Hogan. After Hogan recorded the third of his four victories with a 7-over total of 287, the Texan said afterward, "I'm glad I brought this course -- this monster -- to its knees." Ten years later, Gene Littler's 1-over 281 was good enough to earn him a U.S. Open victory, and in 1985, Andy North collected the second of his two U.S. Open titles here. Three PGA Championships and a Ryder Cup, won by Europe, have also been contested at Oakland Hills.

  • Copy link Link Copied

USGA Partners

Ally

  • Privacy Policy
  • About Our Ads
  • Cookie Settings
  • Terms Of Use
  • Accessibility

GET ALL OF USGA

Continuous updates, streaming, tee times, scoring, and much more.

USGA 1

© 2023 United States Golf Association. All Rights Reserved.

COMMENTS

  1. 2024 U.S. Open Golf Championship

    Jun 12, 2024. May 20, 2022. May 19, 2022. Official home of the 124th U.S. Open championship at Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2). Full coverage for one of golf's four major championships, where the world's best golfers will compete June 13-16, 2024.

  2. 2024 U.S. Open: Scoring

    160. The leader board for the 124th U.S. Open Golf Championship. Keep track of the world's best players with our live leader board from the U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club (Course No. 2) from June 13-16, 2024.

  3. Official Travel Packages

    As the Official Hotel Sponsor of the US Open Tennis Championships, travel lovers have an advantage with us. Learn More. August 19 - September 8, 2024. Experience the ultimate US Open trip with our official travel packages from Steve Furgal's International Tennis Tours, Emirates Airline and Westin Hotels & Resorts.

  4. U.S. Open 2024 Golf Leaderboard

    PGA TOUR Live Leaderboard 2024 U.S. Open, Village of Pinehurst - Golf Scores and Results

  5. US Open highlights: Final leaderboard from Bryson DeChambeau's victory

    We have our first tie atop the leaderboard in the final round. After making the turn, Rory McIlroy recorded his second consecutive birdie to move to 6-under par and a tie with Bryson DeChambeau ...

  6. US Open

    Official tennis tournament profile of US Open on the ATP Tour. Featuring news, who played, past champions, prize money, and more.

  7. US Open 2024 Tour Packages

    US Open Tour Packages. Arthur Ashe Stadium. Built in 1997 with the roof added in 2016, Arthur Ashe Stadium is the biggest tennis venue in the world. With seating categories in Courtside, Loge, Suite-level and Promenade combining for a capacity of 23,000, it brings more tennis fans together than any other permanent tennis venue in the world. ...

  8. Official Site of the 2024 US Open Tennis Championships

    The official site of the 2023 US Open Tennis Championships. Follow the action with live scoring, live radio, news and highlights. Buy tickets and plan your visit.

  9. Plan Your Visit

    2024 US Open Fan Week. The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center grounds will once again be free and open to the public during Fan Week in 2024, featuring a variety of fun, tennis-centric events and activities for the whole family.

  10. 2024 U.S. Open Championship: Watch Live

    Viktor Hovland: 2024 U.S. Open Press Conference Jun 11, 2024. Tiger Woods: 2024 U.S. Open Press Conference Jun 11, 2024. Live streaming of the 2024 U.S. Open Golf Championship at Pinehurst No. 2 (NC), June 13-16. Watch some of the world's best players with Featured Groups coverage, highlights, and more!

  11. Travelers Championship 2024 Golf Leaderboard

    PGA TOUR Live Leaderboard 2024 Travelers Championship, Cromwell - Golf Scores and Results

  12. US Open 2023: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

    The 2023 US Open will be held from 28 August - 10 September. The hard-court Grand Slam tournament, established in 1881, will take place at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, United States. The tournament director is Stacey Allaster.

  13. US Open Tennis Championships

    The 2023 US Open saw Serbia's Novak Djokovic and USA's Coco Gauff claim the men's and women's singles titles. It was Djokovic's 24th Grand Slam title and Gauff's first Grand Slam title.

  14. 2024 US Open final results: Prize money payout, PGA Tour leaderboard

    The 2024 US Open final leaderboard is headed by winner Bryson DeChmbeau, who earns his second US Open title with a win at Pinehurst No. 2 in Village of Pinehurst, North Carolina.

  15. US Open: Bryson DeChambeau wins second major after Rory McIlroy's

    American Bryson DeChambeau won his second US Open title on Sunday, edging Rory McIlroy in a nerve-shredding finale at Pinehurst No. 2 in Pinehurst, North Carolina. LIV Golf star DeChambeau carded ...

  16. Buy Individual US Open Tickets

    Individual tickets to the 2024 US Open are on sale now! Purchase tickets by first selecting the date below: When would you like to go? Select a day or multiple days. Aug Aug 19-25 Mon Sun. AUG 26 MON. AUG 27 TUE. AUG 28 WED. AUG 29 THU. AUG 30 FRI. AUG 31 SAT. SEP 1 SUN. SEP 2 MON. SEP 3 TUE. SEP 4 WED. SEP 5 THU. SEP 6 FRI. SEP 7 SAT. SEP 8 SUN.

  17. Women's Tennis Association

    The US Open is Gauff's crowning moment, fulfilling her great promise. 2023 US Open • September 9, 2023. Gauff secures first Grand Slam after outlasting Sabalenka at US Open ... ATP Tour US Open Series Billie Jean King Cup International Tennis Hall of Fame Women's Sports Foundation World TeamTennis International Tennis Integrity Agency ...

  18. Tiger Mania II could strike PGA Tour Champions soon, chasing US Senior

    The future of PGA Tour Champions likely hinges on how much Tiger chooses to play after he turns 50 on Dec. 30, 2025. There was a time 15-20 years ago where the idea of Tiger playing the senior tour was unfathomable. He has been hinting for several years now that he wants to play. What started as a joke seems like it could be reality.

  19. Tiger Woods: PGA Tour creates special exemption for US golfer to play

    The PGA Tour announced on Tuesday it had created a special exemption for Tiger Woods alone, allowing for qualification to certain events on its schedule.. The 'Sponsor Exemption for Lifetime ...

  20. Buy Your 2024 US Open Tickets

    Individual tickets to the 2024 US Open are on sale now! 2024 Individual Tickets. Individual tickets to the 2024 US Open are now on sale to the general public! Buy Tickets. Luxury Suites and Hospitality. Our premium hospitality options offer prime views and unparalleled comfort to entertain clients or indulge with friends. Learn more about all ...

  21. Full recap of days one and two at the U.S. Open

    U.S. Open rookie Ludvig Åberg will enter the weekend leading the U.S. Open after a second-round 69 put him 5-under par through 36 holes. Åberg, 24, hit 26-of-28 fairways through two rounds to ...

  22. 2024 U.S. Open: Viewing Schedule

    See the full broadcast schedule for the 2024 U.S. Open Golf Championship at Pinehurst No. 2 (NC). Set your schedule around Featured Groups, radio telecast, and more! Pinehurst Resort & C.C. (Course No. 2) • Village of Pinehurst, N.C. • June 13-16, 2024

  23. 2024 Italian Open field: DP World Tour players, rankings

    The 2024 Italian Open field is set with the passing of the typical Friday entry deadline. This week's DP World Tour field is set for this event, played at Adriatic Golf Club Cervia in Milano ...

  24. 2024 ATP Tour

    The 2024 ATP Tour is the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2024 tennis season. The 2024 ATP Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments, supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF), the ATP Finals, the ATP Masters 1000, the United Cup (organized with the WTA), the ATP 500 series and the ATP 250 ...

  25. Travelers Championship 2024 Golf Leaderboard

    PGA TOUR Tournament Tee Times 2024 Travelers Championship, Cromwell - Golf Scores and Results

  26. Why is Travelers Championship one of PGA Tour's most beloved stops? We

    From the moment a charter jet whisked the best players on the PGA Tour from the US Open to the Travelers Championship, players and fans entered what has turned into an annual feel-good zone.

  27. Players

    GET ALL OF USGA Continuous updates, streaming, tee times, scoring, and much more!

  28. Scottie Scheffler wins PGA Tour event after 6 climate protesters run

    After the protesters were tackled by police and taken off, Scheffler left a potential 26-foot clincher from the fringe on the right edge of the cup, then tapped in for par. Kim, who trailed by one ...

  29. Plan Your Visit

    2024 US Open Fan Week. The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center grounds will once again be free and open to the public during Fan Week in 2024, featuring a variety of fun, tennis-centric events and activities for the whole family. While the US Open Qualifying Tournament anchors the week, each day has its own featured event that you won ...

  30. U.S. Open Future Sites

    Pebble Beach, which is the annual site of the PGA Tour's AT&T National Pro-Am, has provided some of the game's legendary moments, from Jack Nicklaus hitting the flagstick with his 1-iron tee shot on the 71st hole of the 1972 U.S. Open, to Tom Watson's chip-in from greenside rough on that same iconic par-3 71st hole of the 1982 U.S. Open ...