J.J. Spaun, US Open and Official World Golf Ranking
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Bryson DeChambeau missed the cut at the U.S. Open, became the first defending champion to miss the weekend at the national championship since Gary Woodland in 2020.
As the US Open enters the weekend, all eyes are on the unforgiving Oakmont course, a track known for testing the mettle of the world’s best, including Bryson DeChambeau. With heavy rain, knuckling lies, and brutal rough dominating headlines, Sam Burns surprisingly emerged as the leader, carding a round-of-the-day 65 to sit at 3-under on Friday.
The two-time major winner almost committed a massive rules gaffe Thursday as the 2025 U.S. Open got underway at Oakmont Country Club, when his shot out of the bunker on the par-5 fourth hole landed on a crosswalk and he opted to take free relief.
After struggles on an unforgiving course during Round 1 of the US Open, Bryson DeChambeau admitted that he wasn't at his best on Thursday.
It only feels right that the reigning titleholder at the golf championship that anyone can win is the player who aspires to be the sport’s foremost everyman, Bryson DeChambeau.
Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau will try to repeat as champion as World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Masters winner Rory McIlroy headline a strong field of golfers. Will one of those three bring home a victory?
Bryson DeChambeau was on the wrong end of a brutal dig from one of the US Open’s greatest icons on Saturday. DeChambeau, who was defending his major title at Oakmont this week, failed to
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OAKMONT, Pa. — Look, say what you will about Bryson DeChambeau, the man makes professional golf more interesting just by his existence. He pinballs his way through tournaments, often ending up on top of the leaderboard but always, always giving us something to discuss. He’s the finest content creator in the game, intentionally or not.