U.S. Open: Behind Bryson DeChambeau’s power and bulk? Hours-long, sweat-filled speed-training sessions.

Members of Bryson DeChambeau’s team detail his exhausting quest to build strength and speed, and how it took his game to new heights.

Editor’s note: This is the second story in a three-part series.

Just before noon on a February Friday north of Los Angeles, Bryson DeChambeau signed off on his missed cut in the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club and immediately dialed some digits.

“I want to come down, I want to do some work,” he said into his iPhone.

DeChambeau hopped into his car, drove some 115 miles southward and about two hours later was at the Cobra Puma Golf headquarters in Carlsbad.

Meeting him there was Ben Schomin, director of Tour Operations for Cobra Puma Golf who has worked with DeChambeau his entire pro career.

“He was at the indoor hitting bay from 2 until 10,” Schomin said. “Delivered in some pizza for the night, and the next day we did the same thing all over again from 11 to about 9:30 Saturday night. And it was non-stop – tweaking things, moving weight around, testing different heads, theorizing about certain things.

“It got deep.”

DeChambeau knows no other way when pursuing a goal. He stretches his limits as far as he can and leaves himself, as nearly every member of Team DeChambeau will tell you, in a pile of sweat. Be it in the gym, during speed drills where he swings full bore until he can’t go anymore or on the putting green honing his stroke for hours on end, he puts his boundaries to a strenuous test.

“Stopping is not in his personality,” Schomin said. “In speed training sessions where he’s just swinging out of his shoes for an hour, he’s sweating profusely. One time, he said he was starting to get lightheaded, so he said, ‘If I pass out, you’re going to have to catch me.’ ‘Catch you? How am I supposed to catch you when you’re swinging a driver at 142 mph? What do you want me to do?’ So, there was a point where he literally had to get down on a knee because he was getting lightheaded. What he’s doing is different and it’s working.”

Since DeChambeau became Bison Bryson by adding 40 pounds to his already large mass last spring – with most of the poundage piling up during the 13-week quarantine the PGA Tour was forced to take because of the global pandemic – he’s turned golf on its head and won three PGA Tour titles, including the 2020 U.S. Open and the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational two weeks after he missed the cut in LA.

Much has been made about his ball speed, swing speed, single-length irons. But his work ethic involving both his body and mind deserves equal notice.

“His work ethic is not forced. It’s super natural to him. He wants to be out there working as long as he does,” said Chris Como, DeChambeau’s swing coach. “I don’t know how you stop someone with that energy. Now, there are times I’m in his ear, ‘You’re good, you’re good,’ and sometimes he’ll listen to me.

“But he’ll go, sometimes, ‘OK, one more ball.’ And we’ll go another hour.

“I really enjoy trying to figure something out, so to partner with someone as talented as he is and has the work ethic he does and we share the same amount of curiosity, willing to explore things to get better, allows me to channel my talents and go down rabbit holes with him.”

Still, DeChambeau had to take his work ethic up a notch or two or three when he befriended Kyle Berkshire, the long-drive king who can make DeChambeau feel small on the course. This guy’s stock yardages include 360 yards for his driver, 315 yards for his 3-iron, 240 yards for his 6-iron, 205 yards for his 8-iron, 165 yards for his pitching wedge.

There’s long and then there’s Berkshire long.

“Bryson’s probably the only person I ran into who is willing to push to where I would push my speed sessions,” Berkshire said. “He can typically hit 300 balls in one speed session, and he’d hit a number, let’s just say, 138 clubhead speed after 100 balls. After that I would tell him I want him to hit 144 and the next two hours would be filled with doing everything we can trying to get him riled up and get him into a good head space where he’s really pushing himself.

“Every single session ends with him in a puddle of sweat.”

Berkshire was the one who talked DeChambeau into taking himself to the edge, pushing himself to the brink of blacking out. And Berkshire said there’s a lot left in DeChambeau’s tank to tap into.

“I was a little scared to do it,” DeChambeau said. “First time I tried it I was very cautious with it. I was dead tired and he told me I was only 50 percent done. He kept pushing me. And when I nearly passed out, he said, ‘OK, you’re done.’

“But that was when I hit my max ball speed.”

Taking his body to the max comes with its aches and pains, which DeChambeau knows all too well. Just watching him violently swing or go all out in a workout can make you hurt.

“I hope we continue to see a healthy Bryson,” said Dottie Pepper, former LPGA Tour star and one of the game’s best on-course analysts. “It takes a lot of effort and he’s hitting so many balls so hard the ground eventually hits back.”

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DeChambeau has talked about how painfully sore he’s felt after brutal workouts and admitted he has to go easier on his body, thus he’s working on different ways to inherently have a faster motion without huge speed-training sessions.

“There was a point in time when I started this early on and I tried to get to 190 ball speed, I remember, there were times where I’m swinging literally out of my butt, and I was like, ‘Man, this is not good for my body. I can’t do this,’” he said. “I remember waking up of the next day, I’m like, dude, my hands, everything hurt. What am I doing? There were numerous times I felt like I had to backtrack for a bit.”

But as dangerous as what DeChambeau is doing looks to be, he’s confident all is safe.

That’s where conditioning coach Greg Roskopf comes in. The founder of Muscle Activation Techniques (MAT) based in Denver, who has consulted with various professional sports teams including the NFL’s Denver Broncos and the NBA’s Denver Nuggets and Utah Jazz, has worked with DeChambeau for four years to improve his mechanics and optimize his muscle function.

“The MAT process and methods look at the neuromuscular system specifically and how it is designed to relieve pain and improve mobility,” Roskopf said. “The foundational concepts behind MAT recognize that whenever you have stress, trauma or overuse to the muscles, the resultant inflammation alters the communication between the nervous system and the muscular system.

“It’s like having loose battery cables, with the brain as the battery, the nervous system as the cables and the muscles as the engine. The nervous system sends the information to the muscles, but the information does not get to the muscles as efficiently as it should. As a result, this altered communication impedes the ability for the muscles to contract efficiently. When muscles can’t contract efficiently, they can’t do their job to stabilize joints and protect the body from injury. And when the muscles can’t shorten effectively, the opposite muscles tighten up as a protective mechanism.

“We identify where the altered communication pathways are within the body and through a very specific hands-on stimulation technique, we ‘tighten the battery cables.’ This activation technique improves the communication between the nervous system and the muscle system. Through the improvement of the communication pathways, the muscles are able to contract more efficiently and then are better equipped to stabilize joints and protect the body from injury.

“The muscles actually get stronger on the spot.”

The goal of DeChambeau’s exercise program developed by Roskopf is to increase his strength throughout his body, movement by movement, muscle by muscle.

“All of this, working off the concept that when we put great amounts of force on the body, like Bryson does in his golf swing, we’re only as strong as our weakest link,” Roskopf said. “It is those weak links that eventually set us up for injury.

“But Bryson has not only gotten stronger but has actually been able to double his force output capabilities in all of the muscles in his body.”

Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee doesn’t think DeChambeau’s swing will lead to injury.

“Hardly. The people who injure themselves, like Brooks Koepka and Jason Day, are resisters with the lower body. And because they resist, they have to be explosive in transition,” Chamblee said. “Bryson doesn’t generate power like that. He turns his hips fully and releases fully. He’s not likely to hurt himself.

“Bryson didn’t metaphorically reach higher, he literally reached higher. He got his hands farther up, he extended his right leg, and he drew down in transition. He let his hands fall down close to his shoulder, thereby creating more moment of inertia. Like a skater when they draw their arms in, they spin faster. If they leave their arms out, they will spin slower. Bryson incorporated nearly every power principle you can imagine. He was willing take the risk and he’s reaping the rewards through science and hard work.”

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Check the yardage book: Torrey Pines South Course for the U.S. Open

Take a detailed look at each hole for this year’s U.S. Open at Torrey Pines South, courtesy of Puttview.

The South Course at Torrey Pines in La Jolla, California, is the site of this week’s U.S. Open, bringing back memories of Tiger Woods’ dramatic 2008 major victory over Rocco Mediate. The course is also the annual home of the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open.

The South originally was designed by the father/son duo of William P. Bell and William F. Bell, and the layout opened in 1957. Previously, the site near San Diego had been a World War II U.S. Army installation named Camp Callan, and it also served as an auto racetrack after that war before being converted into a golf course.

With one of the best cliffside settings imaginable for golf, the South has been renovated several times. The teams of Billy Casper-David Rainville and Stephen Halsey-Jack Daray Jr. worked on it, and in recent decades Rees Jones made many changes – most lately in 2019 to several holes. The layout can be stretched to 7,802 yards off the back tees.

The South ranks No. 7 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It also is tied for No. 40 on the Top 100 Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for the whole U.S., and it ranks No. 107 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for layouts opened before 1960 in the U.S.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players will face this week. Check out each hole below.

‘He found a better way’: Bryson DeChambeau flipped the script (in more ways than one) to win the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot

Bryson DeChambeau simply found a better way when it came to winning at Winged Foot last fall. Can he do the same at Torrey Pines?

Editor’s note: This is the first story in a three-part series.

Throughout his 27 years, Bryson DeChambeau has discovered answers to problems confronting him by racking his brain and body, whether devouring a textbook, during strenuous workouts or laborious experimentation.

Simple old observation didn’t hurt, either.

But with the clock ticking ahead of the start of the 2020 U.S. Open at merciless Winged Foot Golf Club in New York, he found a solution in the dark.

DeChambeau was lost as he sent one ball after another after another into the Tuesday night sky the week of the U.S. Open. While he couldn’t see the golf balls land, he had his feel and determination and kept at it until something, anything, felt superior.

“He was struggling and was clearly frustrated. He was 36 hours from teeing off in the first round,” said Ben Schomin, director of Tour Operations for Cobra Puma Golf who has worked with DeChambeau on all things equipment for the golfer’s entire pro career. “I know it’s a cliché that you can’t judge a book by its cover, but if you were reading the first few chapters earlier in the week, you would have been hoping this guy would make the cut.”

DeChambeau, however, turned the page.

“It was tough, it was grueling, it was disappointing,” he said of that Tuesday night. “There were a lot of emotions ahead of this big event you’ve worked so hard to get ready for and you feel like you have a great chance. And I just had to get the driver right. Wednesday, I got to a point where I was somewhat comfortable and then Thursday, I teed it up and felt really comfortable.”

The Tale of DeChambeau at Winged Foot got a late rewrite and took hold the first round as the transformed monster with driver in his hands started to demolish the rugged layout full of tight fairways, hefty rough and unyielding greens.

PGA: U.S. Open - Final Round
Bryson DeChambeau chips up onto the eighth green during the final round of the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club. (Photo by Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports)

With a 1-under-par 69, he was within touch of the leaders. A 68 in Round 2 put him one shot out of the lead. A third-round 70 set him back two shots and set him back to the range.

“The lasting memory for me from Winged Foot will be the practice session on Saturday night. I was struggling and not doing well and going to the range I had to figure this out,” DeChambeau said. “Worked a couple hours and finally got something I got comfortable with. I was the only one on the range and I wasn’t going to leave until I got comfortable.

“Next morning I felt comfortable. I wasn’t hitting it great but by the sixth hole I knew exactly what I needed to do, but I wouldn’t have been able to get to the sixth hole and figure out what I needed to figure out if it wasn’t for the practice session the night before. That was a testament to the resolve, dedication and perseverance that I have, and my team has, to win.”

Win he did, indeed, as DeChambeau proved his blueprint to go full bore and hit the ball as far as he could, a pre-tournament strategy that was met with doubts and a few laughs, was the proper plan.

His late-night range session Saturday night led to a final-round 67 – he was the only player to break par that Sunday – and it capped a week where he outmuscled bruising Winged Foot and toppled Matthew Wolff by six shots.

DeChambeau reckoned correctly that his speed and strength would save him in the thick rough. His stellar touch on and around the greens made a difference, too.

Despite hitting just 23 of 56 fairways, DeChambeau was the lone player in the red at 6-under 274. With his first major triumph, DeChambeau joined Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods as the only players to win a U.S. Amateur, the NCAA individual title and a U.S. Open.

Bryson DeChambeau
Bryson DeChambeau looks over his putt on the first green with his caddie Tim Tucker during the final round of the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club. (Photo by Danielle Parhizkaran-USA TODAY Sports)

The Golden Bear was impressed. The 18-time major winner basically was Bryson before Bryson and could get the better of any rough during his heyday. Nicklaus understood DeChambeau’s reasoning – you’re going to miss a fair share of fairways anyway, so get the ball down as far as you can to have shorter irons in your hand for approaches.

“He figured out that he would be better off with a wedge out of the rough. And he was. He won the U.S. Open with that. That was his philosophy,” Nicklaus said. “Bryson’s a cerebral guy, as you know. Nobody else is going to think about that, to change their whole body to play at a U.S. Open. But he did. And you got to give him credit. You give credit where credit’s due and he did a great job with it and he performed well, he won the tournament, and well done.

“I pretty much did that naturally. I had tree trunks for legs and so it allowed me to really just drive through any rough. There were a lot of golf courses I didn’t worry about much about the rough. I thought what he did was fantastic.”

As did Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee.

“I thought it was brilliant,” he said. “He drove it longer and straighter than anybody in the event by quite a distance, even though his driving distance showed he finished sixth. If you measure every single drive he hit where he hit driver, he was considerably longer than everyone else.

“And then if you measure the dispersion of his shots, he was straighter than everybody else. And then he hit his irons beautifully and putted beautifully.

It was cool to see. Golf had always been taught anecdotally and Bryson was the first person to come along that really did use science to plot out a path to another level of the game.”

Or as on-course commentator and former LPGA star Dottie Pepper said: “He found a better way. He found a way to take what he knew and made it work.”

Especially out of the rough. While Rory McIlroy, who finished eighth that week, was stunned earlier in the year with the hulked-up DeChambeau’s length when the game returned after a 13-week quarantine due to COVID-19, the work he saw his peer do out of the nasty, dense high grass was just as impressive.

“The one thing that people don’t appreciate is how good Bryson is out of the rough,” McIlroy said. “Not only because of how upright he is, but because his short irons are longer than standard. So he can get a little more speed through the rough than other guys.”

That was part of the calculations that led to Team DeChambeau’s plan. Let the big dog eat, if you will, and then, with the ball closer to the green, rely on your other talents.

“It was very rewarding to trust in the process of our game plan even knowing that it may have been considered somewhat unconventional,” said Chris Como, DeChambeau’s coach. “We went in there and had a game plan and trusted it. The results of the win were icing on the cake, the cherry on the top of a sundae.”

DeChambeau never wavered from the plan despite the repeated warnings in the golf biosphere that the rough would eventually wreck his scorecard.

“The swing speed is massive; it just gets the club through the rough better,” Como said. “And the strength and the mass help because he’s able to get his muscles though it. And he also had the strategy of, as the greens get faster, you’re more inclined to stop the ball through trajectory, through the angle of descent than you are through spin.

“So to be able to kind of hit these higher lofted clubs and just throw the ball up as high as he could and basically aim to the middle of the green more or less when you’re coming out of the rough worked.”

This week, DeChambeau, the world No. 4 who counts eight PGA Tour titles and another on the European Tour on his record, defends his U.S. Open victory at Torrey Pines in San Diego. There will be those who will point to DeChambeau’s limited history at Torrey Pines and say he can’t win. And others, despite his success at Winged Foot, will continue to insist his power strategy won’t work on a U.S. Open setup.

Bring on the doubters, said DeChambeau, who missed the cut in the Famers Insurance Open in 2017 and 2018; in his two rounds on the South Course, he shot 78 in 2017 and 76 in 2018. But he finished second in the Junior World on the South Course in 2011.

Farmers Insurance Open - Round One
Bryson Dechambeau plays his shot from the 18th tee during the first round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines South on January 26, 2017, in San Diego. (Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

While he said he has yet to develop his strategy to attack Torrey Pines, he very well might incorporate the same blueprint he followed at Winged Foot.

“I’m totally fine with people saying Torrey Pines doesn’t fit me,” he said. “I’m quite comfortable with the golf course but I’ve never had the speed I do now going into the South Course. Length was a problem. In 2017 and 2018, I wasn’t hitting it as straight and certainly not as long as I can hit it now.

“And I didn’t have as good a putting game. With my length, with my control out of the rough, with my putting game, I feel I have a great opportunity this year.”

His biggest challenge might be the Poa annua greens, which will get bumpy.

“You have to figure out how to roll the ball well. I’ve always struggled on it but since going to the Sik putter and arm locking and figuring out how to launch the ball more correctly, I’ve become way better on Poa,” DeChambeau said. “Not my favorite, but I have had success on Poa before.”

He very well may again.

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Xander Schauffele shows how brutal the 2021 U.S. Open rough will be at Torrey Pines

Welp.

The Masters is obviously the tradition unlike any other in golf.

But videos showing how tough the rough is at a U.S. Open course is the other tradition unlike any other. We see it every year — at Winged Foot, at Erin Hills, at Oakmont … you get the idea. The U.S. Open is meant to be a brutal challenge, and this year will be no different, I imagine.

So in 2021, Torrey Pines is the host and with a week to go until the first round of the Open begins, Xander Schuffele is there to show how his wedge gets completely stuck in the tall stuff behind No. 18.

Welp. Good luck next week, golfers.

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Tiger Woods rejects an NBC Sports invite to be part of U.S. Open at Torrey Pines broadcast

The 15-time major champion was approached to join the broadcast.

We won’t see Tiger Woods next week in San Diego at Torrey Pines for the 121st U.S. Open, but it wasn’t for a lack of effort.

The 15-time major champion is still recovering from a February car crash that required emergency surgery, meaning his chances of competing at the site of his epic 2008 U.S. Open victory were slim to none.

But what about the broadcast?

On an NBC Sports media conference call featuring Dan Hicks, Paul Azinger, Jim “Bones” Mackay and Tommy Roy ahead of next week’s major championship, the third of the men’s season, it was asked whether or not anybody had reached out to Woods or his team to see if he would be interested in being a part of the coverage.

“Yeah, in fact, that’s exactly the line that I was thinking and we were all thinking is how good that would be, who better, if he couldn’t be there to play it, to voice it and have him a part of the show. But we were rebuffed,” explained Hicks. “He didn’t want to do it, and I totally understand his situation. There is a lot going on in his world right now and there’s also a part of Tiger that doesn’t want to become this, I don’t want to, for lack of a better word, a sideshow at an event where we should be concentrating on what’s happening.”

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Hicks continued: “Also, I really believe that if you said yes to something, it would just be a non-stop parade of asks, and he would have to just, you know, start telling everybody no. So, yeah, it would have been fantastic to have Tiger a part of it in that sense, but I understand that what’s going on in his world that he wanted to kind of keep it low key and stay out of the limelight for this one and just hopefully he’ll enjoy it at home watching it on TV and be inspired when we talk about what he did 13 years ago and that’s the best we can hope for.”

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U.S. Open: Cole Hammer gets the call after Mikko Korhonen’s withdrawal

Cole Hammer, the 21-year-old Texas junior, earned his spot when Mikko Korhonen withdrew on Wednesday.

May was a marathon for Cole Hammer, and June is picking up steam now too. The 21-year-old junior at the University of Texas earned his spot in the U.S. Open on Wednesday a day after the completion of Final Qualifying.

Hammer left his qualifier in Columbus, Ohio, on Tuesday morning as the first alternate, but earned a spot when Mikko Korhonen, who was one of 10 players who earned an exemption in the three-event U.S. Open 2021 European Tour Qualifying Series, withdrew.

Hammer opened a 36-hole day on Monday at Brookside Golf & Country Club with a 73. After clawing back with a 65 at The Lakes Golf & Country Club, he was part of a 5-for-4 playoff the following morning that determined the final spots from that site. Hammer lost out to Texas teammate Pierceson Coody, Peter Malnati, Tom Hoge and Jhonattan Vegas and instead earned alternate status.

U.S. Open Final Qualifying: Final results

Although he struggled a bit in the NCAA Tournament, his coach at Texas, John Fields, said Hammer has found a happy place heading into a crucial stretch that includes this week’s Palmetto Championship at Congaree — a replacement event for the RBC Canadian Open — the U.S. Open and then the British Open. Hammer tees off in the first round at Congaree at 1:16 p.m. on Thursday.

“Cole made some really good decisions in the fall,” Fields said. “He was really struggling with his golf swing. He went back and worked with Bruce Davidson, and went back to his home base at River Oaks, and started working through things.

“He was in a bit of a slump for almost 18 months, but I really think he has righted the ship. He had a few putting issues — and he’s a really good putter — but he’s hitting the golf ball as well as he ever has.“

Hammer’s trip to Torrey Pines next week will mark his third U.S. Open start, including his first at age 15 in 2015 at Chambers Bay. In the time between, Hammer has been a member of two winning U.S. Walker Cup Teams (2019, 2021).

Last month at the Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, Hammer holed the clinching putt and earned three and a half points for the Americans after playing all four sessions.

Fields, of course, has seen plenty of great players come through in his 24 years at the helm. Many of those use their prowess on the greens as the path to success. Jordan Spieth, one of the best putters on the PGA Tour, is a prime example.

And in Hammer, Fields sees similar talent.

“I think the great putters, guys like Jordan and Scottie Scheffler and Cole, they sometimes put a lot of pressure on themselves to make everything,” Fields said. “But they figure it out. Cole is not unlike Jordan and Scheffler in that regard.”

Last month at the Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, Hammer holed the clinching putt and earned three and a half points for the Americans after playing all four sessions.

The world No. 17 ranked amateur was coming off individual medalist honors at the Big 12 Championship the week before, and after the Walker Cup immediately went on to play the AT&T Byron Nelson, NCAA Regionals and then the NCAA Championship.

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Phil Mickelson accepts special exemption to U.S. Open at Torrey Pines

Phil Mickelson will get another crack at the career Grand Slam in his hometown of San Diego.

Phil Mickelson will get another crack at completing the career Grand Slam.

The member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, who turns 51 next month, has accepted a special exemption from the United States Golf Association to play in the 121st U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course in his hometown of San Diego.

With a U.S. Open title, Mickelson would join Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods as the only players to complete the career Grand Slam.

The winner of 44 PGA Tour titles, including five major championships, was unsure if he would accept a special exemption. To be fully exempt, Mickelson would have needed to be in the top 60 in the official world ranking by either May 24 or June 7. He likely would have needed top-3 finishes in both the PGA Championship and Memorial to get into the top 60.

He is ranked 116th.

“If I had not made it through qualifying, it would have been difficult not to be a part of the U.S. Open on a course I spent so much time playing as a kid,” Mickelson said.

“Winning the U.S. Open has been a lifelong and elusive dream, and I’ve come close so many times,” he added via a release. “You can’t win if you don’t play. I’m honored and appreciative of the USGA for the opportunity and look forward to playing in my hometown on a golf course I grew up on.”

Mickelson was scheduled to play in sectional qualifying on June 7 – the day after the Memorial – at Brookside Golf and Country Club and The Lakes Golf and Country Club in Columbus, Ohio.

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Mickelson is the sixth player since 2010 to receive a special exemption into the U.S. Open. The list includes Tom Watson (2010), Vijay Singh (2010), Retief Goosen (2016), Jim Furyk (2018), and Ernie Els (twice, in 2018 and 2019). Hale Irwin is the lone player to win the U.S. Open playing on a special exemption, doing so in a 19-hole playoff over Mike Donald in 1990 at Medinah (Ill.) Country Club to claim his third U.S. Open title.

“Phil Mickelson’s incredible USGA playing record and overall career achievements are among the most noteworthy in the game’s history,” said USGA CEO Mike Davis in a release. “We are thrilled to welcome him to this year’s U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.”

The winner of the Masters in 2004, 2006 and 2010, the PGA Championship in 2005 and the Open Championship in 2013, has been runner-up a record six times in the U.S. Open. He finished second to Payne Stewart in 1999, to Tiger Woods in 2002, to Retief Goosen in 2004, to Geoff Ogilvy in 2006, to Lucas Glover in 2009, and to Justin Rose in 2013.

His most notable defeat came in 2006 at Winged Foot when he took a 1-shot lead to the 72nd hole and made double-bogey 6 to miss a playoff by one.

He has four other top-10s in the U.S. Open. He has played in 31, his first coming as an amateur in 1990.

Mickelson won the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in 1993, 2000 and 2001. In the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines, Mickelson, world No. 2 at the time, was grouped with No. 1 Tiger Woods and No. 3 Adam Scott in the first two rounds. While Woods won his third U.S. Open in a playoff against Rocco Mediate, Mickelson, who decided to forgo his driver that week for a 3-wood bent to 11.5 degrees, shot rounds of 71-75-76-68 to finish in a tie for 18th.

USGA reveals 11 final qualifying sites for 2021 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines

The USGA already announced its list of 109 local qualifying sites, and now the list of 11 final qualifying sites have also been revealed.

U.S. Open dreams are about to get real when online player registration opens on Feb. 24. The U.S. Golf Association already announced its list of 109 local qualifying sites earlier this month, and now the list of 11 final qualifying sites – which includes two international sites in Asia and Canada – have also been revealed.

The U.S. Open will be played at Torrey Pines Golf Course’s South Course in San Diego, California, on June 17-20, 2021,

Final qualifying is a one-day, 36-hole event. The first of nine U.S.-based final qualifiers kicks off on Monday, May 24, in Texas, while eight are scheduled on Monday, June 7: two in Ohio and one each in California, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New York and Washington. Japan (May 24) and Canada (June 7) will also host final qualifiers.

No qualifying took place for the 2020 U.S. Open because of COVID and the pandemic will have a minor impact on qualifying this year. England will not host a final qualifying site this year because of the virus, but an exemption category will be added in which players can earn entry based on the three-event U.S. Open 2021 European Tour Qualifying Series (Betfred British Masters, Made in HimmerLand presented by FREJA and Porsche European Open). The top 10 aggregate point earners from those events, who were otherwise not exempt, will earn spots in the U.S. Open field

Related: USGA reveals 109 local qualifying sites

To be eligible to qualify for the U.S. Open, a player must have a Handicap Index not exceeding 1.4, or be a professional. In 2019, the USGA accepted 9,125 entries for the championship at Pebble Beach, the eighth consecutive year that entries topped 9,000. A record 10,127 entries were received for the 2014 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2, in the Village of Pinehurst, North Carolina.

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2021 U.S. Open Final Qualifying Sites (11)

International (2)

Monday, May 24

Asia – The Royal Golf Club, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan

Monday, June 7

Canada – RattleSnake Point Golf Club (CopperHead Course), Milton, Ontario

United States (9)

Monday, May 24

Dallas Athletic Club (Blue and Gold Courses), Dallas, Texas

Monday, June 7

Rolling Hills Country Club, Rolling Hills Estates, Calif.

The Bear’s Club, Jupiter, Fla.

Piedmont Driving Club, Atlanta, Ga.

Woodmont Country Club (North Course), Rockville, Md.

Century Country Club & Old Oaks Country Club, Purchase, N.Y.

Brookside Golf & Country Club & The Lakes Golf & Country Club, Columbus, Ohio

Springfield (Ohio) Country Club

Meadow Springs Country Club, Richland, Wash.

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