Jon Rahm defends Rory McIlroy’s missed putt at 2024 U.S. Open: ‘They severely underplayed how difficult that putt was’

“You could see Rory aiming at least a cup left from three feet.”

If anyone knows about difficult putts to win the U.S. Open, it’s Jon Rahm.

The Spaniard birdied the 17th and 18th holes to win by one shot at Torrey Pines in 2021, and the final putt was a hard breaker on the closing par-5 to claim his first major title. Since then, he has added a Masters win to his resume and remains one of the best golfers in the world.

Last week, however, Rahm’s view was a bit different. An injury forced him to withdraw, leaving him on the couch watching coverage of the third men’s major championship of the year.

“I thought it was quite a show from the comfort of my home,” Rahm said Wednesday in his pre-tournament press conference ahead of LIV Golf Nashville. “It’s a very enjoyable tournament to watch. I haven’t gotten the chance to enjoy a major from start to finish like that and to get to see a lot of golf was really fun, and to see how everything unfolded.”

2024 U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy reacts on the 18th green during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

Fellow LIV golfer Bryson DeChambeau won his second major title and second U.S. Open with a clutch up-and-down on the final hole. McIlroy, who led by two with five holes to play, made bogeys on three of his final four holes, including on the 18th. Many people have said McIlroy choked in his best chance to win a major since 2014.

Rahm doesn’t see it that way. Although he watched much of the broadcast on mute, Rahm said he thought the announcers undersold the degree of difficulty of McIlroy’s par putt on the final hole.

“One of the things that absolutely burned me, and I think it was Smylie (Kaufman) who said it, he severely underplayed how difficult Rory’s putt on 18 was,” Rahm said. “When he said it’s a left-center putt, if you hit that putt left-center and miss the hole, you’re off the green because of how much slope there is. You could see Rory aiming at least a cup left from three feet. They severely underplayed how difficult that putt was. Severely.”

Rahm went on to say unless you’ve been on the golf course and you’re playing it or you’ve played it, it’s hard to truly explain how difficult the golf course can be, especially when there are only seconds to get an explanation in.

Coverage takes and coming to the defense of his Ryder Cup teammate in one answer? Rahm is a jack of all trades.

As far as his injury ahead of LIV Golf’s ninth event of the season?

“The main reason for the withdrawal the two events was the infection I had and just to be precautionary towards not making it worse and seeing what steps I can take to prevent that from happening in the future,” he said. “The wound is still there. I’m not going to show any graphic pictures, but it’s still there. It’s manageable now. I’m not going to really make it worse. A lot of things to follow up from what happened to make sure it heals properly and it doesn’t happen again.”

Can Scottie Scheffler get back to his signature-winning ways in Connecticut? The numbers say so

Scottie Scheffler has dominated the PGA Tour’s signature events this season.

Scottie Scheffler has dominated the PGA Tour’s signature events this season and he’s got one more to add to the burgeoning amount of FedEx Cup points and earnings the world’s No. 1-ranked golfer has racked up.

Scheffler leads the field for this week’s Travelers Championship, the eighth and final signature event of the 2024 season. He’s coming off his worst finish of the season with a tie for 41st at Pinehurst, Scheffler’s first finish outside the top 20 this season. It also snapped a streak of 11 top-10 finishes, which included his five victories.

Scheffler’s biggest triumphs this season have been The Masters and The Players Championship. But he’s also taken the Tour’s new Signature Series by storm:

Scheffler has finished among the top 10 in all six of his signature event starts this season (he missed only the Wells Fargo Championship for the birth of his son) and has been among the top five in four of them. He won three, The Memorial, the RBC Heritage and the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Scheffler has piled up more than half of his FedEx Cup points (54 percent of his total of 5,068) and more than half of his earnings (55 percent of his $24,096,858) in the signature events. He’s got huge leads in both categories.
He has shot over-par in only one of 23 rounds, has a scoring average of 68.0 and is a cumulative 88 under par.

2024 Memorial Tournament
Scottie Scheffler reacts with his caddie after winning the 2024 Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports

Scheffler has never won The Travelers but he’s posted good finishes in his last two starts, tying for fourth last year and for 13th in 2022.

At Pinehurst, Scheffler had trouble with the numerous factors in posting rounds of 71, 74, 71 and 72.

“The game of golf is a mental torture chamber at times, especially the U.S. Open,” the reigning Masters champion on Saturday after the third round. “Another frustrating day. Today was a day where I thought I played a lot better than my score.”

Surprisingly, Scheffler’s tee game was unusually erratic. He hit just 25 of his first 42 fairways, including only six on Thursday.

Asked if he might alter his approach to preparing for tough tests such as the U.S. Open, Scheffler suggested he could tweak his schedule in the future.

“I think going into the major championships, especially the ones we know are going to be really challenging, it may be in my best interest not to play the week before,” he said. “That’s stuff for me to figure out later in the year. That’s some of my thoughts sitting around watching the cut.”

Watch: What exactly was the genesis of Bryson DeChambeau’s ‘salty balls’ comment? His coach showed us

DeChambeau’s longtime coach Mike Schy explains the process and the method to the madness.

Bryson DeChambeau’s reputation as golf’s Mad Scientist is nothing new. He’s been going down rabbit holes for years between his single-length clubs and more recently his irons with bulge and roll. But the original story of DeChambeau being obsessed with his equipment is how he would check his golf balls in a bathtub in Epsom sale to make sure he was using a balanced one.

It was a practice that Ben Hogan did before him and DeChambeau picked up and copied. In the video here, DeChambeau’s longtime coach Mike Schy explains the process and the method to the madness.

On Saturday, one day before he won the U.S. Open in dramatic fashion, DeChambeau explained the back story behind his “salty balls.”

“I put my golf balls in Epsom salt. I’m lucky enough that Connor, my manager, does that now. I don’t have to do it. But essentially we float golf balls in a solution to make sure that the golf ball is not out of balance.

“There was a big thing back in the day where golf balls are out of balance, and it’s just because of the manufacturing process. There’s always going to be an error, especially when it’s a sphere and there’s dimples on the edges. You can’t perfectly get it in the center.

“So what I’m doing is finding pretty much the out-of-balanceness of it, how much out of balance it is. Heavy slide floats to the bottom, and then we mark the top with a dot to make sure it’s always rolling over itself.

“It kind of acts like mud. If there’s too much weight on one side, you can put it 90 degrees to where the mud is on the right-hand side or the mud is on the left-hand side. I’m using mud as a reference for the weight over there. It’ll fly differently and fly inconsistently.

“For most golf balls that we get, it’s not really that big of a deal. I just try to be as precise as possible, and it’s one more step that I do to make sure my golf ball flies as straight as it possibly can fly because I’m not that great at hitting it that straight.”

Rory McIlroy’s U.S. Open collapse calls to mind the legacy of one Great White Shark

Short misses leave Rory McIlroy dangling over career precipice.

When his final par putt of the U.S. Open made a cruel right turn on Sunday evening, a stroke propelled by a decade of fear and fate, Rory McIlroy doomed himself to a destiny that should burn far more than merely losing another major championship.

In the annals of golf history, there are two names that can now be linked together as the most talented players of their generation who underachieved in the sport’s most important events.

One is McIlroy. The other is Greg Norman.

If you don’t understand why that matters, rewind back two years when McIlroy won the Canadian Open while LIV Golf was making its initial push to secure the game’s best players with a bottomless pit of Saudi money.

Greg Norman 1996 Masters
Greg Norman of Australia collapses to the ground after narrowly missing a chip shot on the 15th green during the final round of the 1996 Masters, where he lost a huge lead and Nick Faldo claimed the title. (Stephen Munday/ALLSPORT)

McIlroy was the poster boy for PGA Tour loyalty. Norman was the face of LIV. The tension between them was not just about business but had clearly become personal.

“This is a day I’ll remember for a long, long time – 21st PGA Tour win, one more than someone else,” McIlroy said on CBS that afternoon. “That gave a little more extra incentive today and I’m happy to get it done.”

The “someone else,” of course, was Norman: Winner of 20 PGA Tour titles and two British Opens but whose legacy is inexorably linked to losing majors in brutal fashion, most notably the 1996 Masters when he blew a six-shot lead beginning the final round.

The nasty, behind-the-scenes business of golf brought them into conflict. The even nastier on-course bungles under the heat of major championship pressure have brought them into the same breath of history.

After Sunday’s collapse over the final four holes at Pinehurst No. 2 – including an inexcusably poor club choice on No. 15 and two missed putts inside of four feet to hand the trophy to Bryson DeChambeau – the notion that McIlroy may never win another major championship is now legitimate.

He’s just 35, has shown no signs of slippage in the nuts-and-bolts of his game, and contends at almost every major. By the numbers, he still has 40 chances or so to add to a tally that seemed limitless when he won his fourth at age 25.

But the scar tissue that has accumulated over the last decade is real. Sunday was the evidence playing out in real time for millions of golf fans to see.

Over the last several years, McIlroy has had so many chances and near-misses that his failure to close the deal was definitely a thing. But none of them seemed quite like classic choke jobs. Maybe a bad Thursday or Friday put him too far behind. Or the putter went cold on the weekend. Or someone else just went out and played the round of their life on Sunday.

None of that happened this time.

For most of the final round, McIlroy did everything he needed to do for a second U.S. Open trophy. He drove the ball almost perfectly. He started pouring in putts from distance. Walking off the 14th hole, he had a two-shot lead over DeChambeau, who was all over the place with his driver and trying to hang onto pars like a wet bar of soap.

Pinehurst is an unforgiving track with danger lurking around every corner. But at that point, it was finally up to McIlroy to end his 10-year major drought. He didn’t have to chase anyone, didn’t have to worry about getting nipped from behind by an improbable birdie streak.

All he had to do was not give it away. Instead, he did the following:

No. 15: Picked way too much club on the par-3, cooking it over the green to a terrible spot and making bogey.

No. 16: Landed his approach in a great spot about 27 feet away, but three-putting with a lip-out from 2 ½ feet.

No. 17: Scrambled for par from the left bunker after a poor shot into another par-3.

No. 18: Made one of his worst driver swings of the week, caught a terrible lie in the native grass, hacked out short of the green and chipped it past the hole for a difficult 3 foot, 9 inch putt but one he should have made anyway.

It is, without question, the biggest debacle of his career. It’s his 1996 Masters. It’s his magnum opus choke.

2024 U.S. Open
Rory McIlroy reacts after a missed putt on the eighteenth green during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

Over the last year, McIlroy’s stance on the PGA Tour getting into business with the Saudis has softened as his idealism ran headlong into reality. Now, he needs to get comfortable with the idea that unless he can figure out a way to break this major-less streak, he and Norman will come up in the same sentences far more often than he should be comfortable with.

They are both considered the best of their generation with a driver in their hands.

They are both so consistently good that they could win a lot and contend in any tournament on any kind of course.

They both have a big hole in their résumé at Augusta National.

And now, it’s undeniable: At a similar stage of their careers, they did not fulfill their potential when it mattered most.

Norman won a couple more tournaments after the 1996 Masters, but he was never the same force within the game after that collapse. By simple virtue of his physical talent and age, it seems unlikely McIlroy will suffer the same fate. It would be shocking if he didn’t truly contend at several more majors.

But the only conclusion you can draw from watching McIlroy take a machete to his chances Sunday is that the demons are real. And over the next several years, he will either go down the Norman path and be remembered as a guy who should have won a whole lot more or the Phil Mickelson path and knock off a couple legacy-boosting majors when he wasn’t expected to.

Mickelson, too, gave away more than his share of chances – especially at the U.S. Open, which he never won. But with the British Open he won at age 43 and the out-of-nowhere PGA Championship he pulled off in 2021, nobody puts Mickelson in the Norman category. With six majors, he is simply the second-best player of his era and one of the best ever.

But the interesting thing about Mickelson is that he didn’t win his first until he was 33, just slightly younger than McIlroy is now. McIlroy kind of did it in reverse, collecting the big wins when he was too young to even feel the pressure of time and responsibility to the game.

And now, when he reaches for that magic and needs it the most, it just doesn’t seem to be there.

Sunday should have been a day for McIlroy to get on the Mickelson trajectory, end the major drought and move the conversation toward how many he will rack up before it’s all said and done. Instead, he left Pinehurst just like Norman left Augusta 28 years ago with more questions than ever about when – or if – it’ll ever happen again.

Bryson DeChambeau crashed Johnson Wagner’s delightful segment that recreated the U.S. Open-clinching chip

This is so fun.

We all love Johnson Wagner’s recent Golf Channel segments in which he recreates shots he sees to show how difficult they are.

And this time, he decided to try Bryson DeChambeau’s pressure-filled bunker shot on No. 18 at Pinehurst that helped him clinch the 2024 U.S. Open … and then DeChambeau himself showed up. And it got a million times better.

DeChambeau had Wagner try the shot a second time and Wagner hit it within feet of the cup. They celebrated, Wagner held the Championship Trophy and it was just a delight all around.

Take a look below and see if you agree:

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=2306]

2024 U.S. Open prize money payouts for each player at Pinehurst No. 2

This is the biggest purse in the history of the major championships.

PINEHURST, N.C. — Bryson DeChambeau said he was going to celebrate winning the 124th U.S. Open with some chocolate milk. He can afford to buy a whole lot of it after winning $4.3 million, the richest winner’s prize in U.S. Open history.

The difference between first and second were a couple of short putts that Rory McIlroy missed on the 16th and 18th hole but it amounted to nearly $2 million — the payday differential between first and second.

In terms of payouts, Jackson Suber was the last man in the field after Jon Rahm withdrew with an injury and he made the cut. He struggled on the weekend and finished 73rd but still banked $39,113. Not bad for four days of getting to play golf at Pinehurst No. 2 when you’re a second-year Korn Ferry Tour member. And then there’s the amateurs, who went home with memories that will last a lifetime and experience that will help in future tournaments, but you wonder if Neal Shipley, who as low am was T-26 alongside Brooks Koepka, Tyrrell Hatton and Tom Kim, wouldn’t mind a check for $153,281, the amount the pros who finished T-26 took home. The way he’s played at the Masters and U.S. Open as an amateur bodes well for his accountant being kept busy in the future, but you never know.

Here’s a closer look at how much each player who made the cut in the 156-man field earned from a purse of $21.5 million.

U.S. Open prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Bryson DeChambeau -6 $4,300,000
2 Rory McIlroy -5 $2,322,000
T3 Patrick Cantlay -4 $1,229,051
T3 Tony Finau -4 $1,229,051
5 Matthieu Pavon -3 $843,765
6 Hideki Matsuyama -2 $748,154
T7 Russell Henley -1 $639,289
T7 Xander Schauffele -1 $639,289
T9 Sam Burns E $502,391
T9 Corey Conners E $502,391
T9 Davis Thompson E $502,391
T12 Sergio García 1 $409,279
T12 Ludvig Aberg 1 $409,279
T14 Collin Morikawa 2 $351,370
T14 Thomas Detry 2 $351,370
T16 Tommy Fleetwood 3 $299,218
T16 Akshay Bhatia 3 $299,218
T16 Taylor Pendrith 3 $299,218
T19 Aaron Rai 4 $255,759
T19 Shane Lowry 4 $255,759
T21 Max Greyserman 5 $203,607
T21 Stephan Jaeger 5 $203,607
T21 Min Woo Lee 5 $203,607
T21 Daniel Berger 5 $203,607
T21 Brian Harman 5 $203,607
T26 Brooks Koepka 6 $153,281
T26 Neal Shipley 6 $0
T26 Zac Blair 6 $153,281
T26 Tom Kim 6 $153,281
T26 Tyrrell Hatton 6 $153,281
T26 Chris Kirk 6 $153,281
T32 Cameron Smith 7 $110,894
T32 Sahith Theegala 7 $110,894
T32 S.W. Kim 7 $110,894
T32 Isaiah Salinda 7 $110,894
T32 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 7 $110,894
T32 J.T. Poston 7 $110,894
T32 Keegan Bradley 7 $110,894
T32 Adam Scott 7 $110,894
T32 Denny McCarthy 7 $110,894
T41 Tom McKibbin 8 $72,305
T41 Tim Widing 8 $72,305
T41 Emiliano Grillo 8 $72,305
T41 Harris English 8 $72,305
T41 Sscottie Scheffler 8 $72,305
T41 Jordan Spieth 8 $72,305
T41 Billy Horschel 8 $72,305
T41 Frankie Capan III 8 $72,305
T41 Luke Clanton 8 $0
T50 Justin Lower 9 $51,065
T50 Matt Kuchar 9 $51,065
T50 Nicolai Hojgaard 9 $51,065
T50 Mark Hubbard 9 $51,065
54 Nico Echavarria 10 $47,370
55 David Puig 11 $46,501
T56 S.H. Kim 12 $42,155
T56 Ryan Fox 12 $42,155
T56 Greyson Sigg 12 $42,155
T56 Adam Svensson 12 $42,155
T56 Wyndham Clark 12 $42,155
T56 Sepp Straka 12 $42,155
T56 Ben Kohles 12 $42,155
T56 Brian Campbell 12 $42,155
T64 Francesco Molinari 13 $41,286
T64 Matt Fitzpatrick 13 $41,286
T64 Martin Kaymer 13 $41,286
T67 Cameron Young 14 $41,068
T67 Brendon Todd 14 $41,068
69 Dean Burmester 15 $40,417
T70 Brandon Wu 16 $39,982
T70 Gunnar Broin 16 $0
72 Sam Bennett 17 $39,548
73 Jackson Suber 18 $39,113
74 Austin Eckroat 20 $38,678

 

For Rory McIlroy, the 2024 U.S. Open is the 2011 Masters all over again

Where does McIlroy go from here?

With five holes to go, it seemed as if the drought was going to end.

Rory McIlroy had birdied four of his last five holes riding a hot putter at the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2. With five holes to go, he had a two-shot lead on Bryson DeChambeau, who came into the final round with a three-shot lead.

That’s when it all went south.

McIlroy’s putter went cold. Bogeys started adding up. He went backward. DeChambeau stood tough.

DeChambeau won his second U.S. Open title Sunday, finishing at 6 under to beat McIlroy by one shot. On the final hole, DeChambeau hit his drive left, pitched out into trouble and had a 54-yard bunker shot for his third shot, needing to get up-and-down for the win. He blasted close to secure the title, a gritty performance on a day he didn’t have his best stuff, especially off the tee.

However, for as much as DeChambeau won the 2024 U.S. Open, McIlroy lost it. For him, it was the 2011 Masters all over again.

The then 21-year-old star started the day with a four-shot lead at Augusta National. At the turn, the lead was one. On the 11th tee following a triple bogey, he was in seventh. A bogey and a double on the ensuing holes, he was out of the tournament, eventually finishing 10 shots behind winner Charl Schwartzel.

At the time, a young McIlroy was inexperienced in the majors, and once the slide began, there was no stopping it. But that was 13 years ago.

Sunday at Pinehurst was supposed to be different. It wasn’t.

As DeChambeau rose to the occasion down the stretch, McIlroy wilted. He scrambled for par after a pulled tee shot on the par-4 14th. On the 15th, he made his third bogey in as many days when his approach bounced long and he had to just hack to get the ball on the green.

Then on the 16th, he missed his first putt all year from inside 3 feet, lipping out from 2 feet, 6 inches. He hit his approach on the par-5 17th into a bunker but got up and down (for only the third time in nine tries from the sand all week) for par.

On 18 his pulled tee shot landed in the native area, just short of a clump of wire grass. He tried to blast the ball through the shrubbery, but his approach didn’t reach the green. Still, he had a chance to get up and down.

After a solid chip, his par putt was 3 feet, 9 inches long. And he missed again. Three bogeys in his final four holes.

“Rory is one of the best to ever play,” DeChambeau said. “Being able to fight against a great like that is pretty special. For him to miss that putt, I’d never wish it on anybody. It just happened to play out that way. He’ll win multiple more major championships. There’s no doubt.

“I think that fire in him is going to continue to grow. I have nothing but respect for how he plays the game of golf because, to be honest, when he was climbing up the leaderboard, he was two ahead, I was like, ‘Uh-oh, uh-oh.’ But luckily things went my way today.”

It has been nearly 10 years since McIlroy won his fourth major, the 2014 PGA Championship at Valhalla. This was his best chance to win one since. But when his lead became two, the pressure ramped up and he melted.

It’s strange to see from McIlroy. He has been a constant presence at the majors, especially the U.S. Open, in recent years. But there’s a monkey he hasn’t been able to get off his back to win another major. That pressure showed most on the greens down the stretch.

He made more than 100 feet of putts in his first 13 holes Sunday. Then the putter went cold. If McIlroy makes just one of his par putts on 16 or 18, he gets into a playoff. If he makes both, he’s hoisting the trophy.

Instead, McIlroy goes home with likely the biggest pit in his stomach since 2011. He declined interview requests after his round Sunday. Cameras caught him leaving the property within 30 minutes of his bogey putt dropping on 18.

Rory McIlroy reacts on the eighteenth green during the final round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports

Where does McIlroy go from here?

In 2011, he responded in a big way. He won his first major, the 2011 U.S. Open, by eight shots, setting 11 records that week at Congressional. He went on to win the 2012 PGA and then consecutive majors at the 2014 Open Championship and 2014 PGA Championship.

The last major of 2024, the Open Championship, is at Royal Troon, where he finished T-5 in 2016. He also has a title to defend the week before at the Scottish Open.

The question grows larger every year: Can Rory McIlroy win another major?

“I’d love to have a lot more battles with him,” DeChambeau said. “It would be a lot of fun. But, yeah, Rory’s going to do it at some point.”

He recovered quickly after the loss in the 2011 Masters. Perhaps he can do so again. Only time will tell.

Bryson DeChambeau outduels Rory McIlroy to win 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2

What a finish!

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PINEHURST, N.C. — Bryson DeChambeau swept up a pile of sand in his hand and placed it in the U.S. Open trophy for safe keeping. A short time earlier, he’d punched his second shot at the 18th hole into a sandy lie in the North Carolina Sandhills, 55 yards from the hole location where one of his childhood idols, Payne Stewart, had rescued par in dramatic fashion to win the national championship 25 years earlier.

The long bunker shot is widely considered the hardest shot in golf. But not for DeChambeau, who thought back to all the times as a kid at Dragon Fly Golf Club in Madera, California, where he dropped the ball in the worst possible lies and lived for the challenge of getting the ball in the hole in the fewest shots possible. And then there was the voice of his caddie, Greg Bodine, reminding him that he’d seen him get up-and-down from worse spots.

“I’ve seen some crazy shots from you from 55 yards out of a bunker,” Bodine said.

“You’re right; I need a 55-degree, let’s do it,” DeChambeau said.

“You’ve done this before. You can do it again,” became his mantra and he thought of his dad, Jon, who had passed away in 2022 from diabetes, and how he always pushed him towards greatness, and how Stewart had served as a source of inspiration all those years ago, had been the reason he wore a Ben Hogan style newsboy cap and attended Southern Methodist University like Stewart whose image was embroidered on the 18th hole flag.

“I wanted to do it for them,” he said.

DeChambeau, 30, summoned a brilliant bunker shot that hit in the upslope of the green and fed toward the back-right hole location as if guided by satellite. His ball stopped 4 feet below the hole and the putt rolled straight and true.

“That bunker shot was the shot of my life,” DeChambeau said.

It closed out a final-round 1-over 71 at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club’s No. 2 Course and a one-stroke victory over Rory McIlroy, who missed two short putts and made bogey on three of the final four holes, enduring more major championship heartache in pursuit of his first major in nearly 10 years. He became the fifth player to finish second at the U.S. Open in back-to-back years.

“I don’t know how you get through this thing,” said NBC’s Brad Faxon, who doubles as McIlroy’s putting coach. “It’s really tough.”

On a sweltering afternoon with only a lazy breeze, DeChambeau began the day with a three-stroke lead but he didn’t make a birdie until the 10th hole and struggled off the tee after damaging the face of his driver on the practice tee and having to change heads before the round. He maintained a judicious balance between boldness and good sense, and kept scrambling for pars, including at No. 8 after shoving his drive wide right. He pumped his fist and yelled, “Yeah, let’s go,” as the gallery went wild.

NBC’s Jim “Bones” Mackay went so far as to call it, “One of the 10 best (par rescues) I’ve seen.”

McIlroy, who began three strokes behind, started making a dent into his deficit by canning a 20-foot birdie putt at the first. His charge began in earnest at the ninth with his first of four birdies in a five-hole stretch, which had the fans lustily chanting “Rory, Rory.” He led by two strokes at 8 under after his final birdie of the day at 13 and by one after a tidy up-and-down at 14. Even DeChambeau was beginning to worry if he was going to fall short as he had at the PGA Championship, where Xander Schauffele birdied the last to clip him by one.

“After (Rory) made birdie on 13, I knew I had to drive the green. I knew I had to make birdie on that hole,” DeChambeau said.

He did just that but then made his first and only three-putt of the tournament at 15 shortly after McIlroy had bogeyed the hole before him. McIlroy watched in disgust as his ball caught the cup, half circled it and spun out from 3 feet at 16. They were tied again at 6 under.

U.S. OPENLeaderboard

Pinehurst No. 2 stood tall all week and it proved a stern test to the end. Missing was the usual U.S. Open fortress of rough known to gobble balls hit marginally off line. Instead, native areas with wiregrass and scrub brush inflicted the proper amount of punishment and indecision. First McIlroy and then DeChambeau drove left at 18 into the native area. McIlroy punched out leaving a 30-yard pitch and hit a beauty to 4 feet. Watching things play out on the green in front of him, DeChambeau said, “After my tee shot, I was up there going, ‘Man, if he makes par, I don’t know how I’m going to beat him.’ I just really didn’t know. Then I heard the moans. Like a shot of adrenaline got in me. I said, OK, you can do this.”

McIlroy’s putter had betrayed him yet again, his knee-knocker rimming out the right side of the cup. He had gone 69 holes without missing a putt from inside five feet and then he missed two in the last three holes.

“That element of doubt came in. He started backing away, which he never does. He took a little more time over the putts, which he never does,” said Golf Channel’s Paul McGinley, an Irishman who has seen all the ups and occasional downs of McIlroy’s career. “That’s pressure and he succumbed to it.”

McIlroy declined interviews presumably too shattered to speak and departed quickly, gunning the engine from the parking lot. DeChambeau, who signed for a 72-hole total of 6-under 274, said he expects McIlroy, a four-time major winner, to win multiple major championships. “There’s no doubt,” he said. “I think that fire in him is going to continue to grow.”

For a time, there were concerns whether DeChambeau’s previous major title at the 2020 U.S. Open might be his lone triumph. He had bulked up and learned to hit prodigious drives but also had become injury prone. When he broke his hand in 2022, he said he was concerned his career might be over. He was an outsider, a golf nerd that the clicky top players didn’t connect with; but people who underestimate him usually regret it.

Joining LIV Golf with its team concept gave him three teammates in Charles Howell III, Anirban Lahiri and Paul Casey who have helped him grow as a person.

“I’ve realized that there’s a lot more to life than just golf,” DeChambeau said.

His longtime coach, Mike Schy, witnessed the team bond at LIV Golf Greenbrier event last year and went up to Howell and thanked him.

“You are so good for him,” Schy said.

That week, DeChambeau used a Krank driver in competition for the first time and posted rounds of 61 and 58 on the weekend to win the title. “I’m like, OK, Bryson’s here again. How do I turn this into major championship golf now?”

DeChambeau finished T-6 at the Masters and runner-up at the PGA Championship. Bodine has witnessed his transformation to being a golfer with the mental fortitude to close out another major title. DeChambeau chopped out his second shot at 18 from over a Magnolia tree root and under an overhanging branch to set up his heroics from the bunker.

“This is not breaking news, he has beat himself before,” he said. “That’s what I said to him on the 18th green, you just never gave up.”

Thanks to the shot of his life, he’s the U.S. Open champion again and a winner for the ninth time on the PGA Tour.

“That’s Payne, right there, baby,” DeChambeau exclaimed on the final green, grasping a commemorative pin with Stewart’s likeness on his cap and then pointing to the heavens.

DeChambeau’s celebration was just getting started and he confirmed he’d be drinking chocolate milk out of the trophy, just as he had done in 2020, only first he had to decant it of a prized memento as meaningful as the silver trophy itself.

“There’s some sand in here so we got to clean it out first, though,” he said with the smile of victory etched on his face.

Why Bryson DeChambeau won’t be on USA Olympic golf team regardless of 2024 U.S. Open finish

Should he be on the team?

Bryson DeChambeau is well on his way to a second major championship title. With 18 holes to go and a three-shot lead, there’s a good chance at the end of Sunday, DeChambeau will capture his second U.S. Open championship.

The win would be significant for DeChambeau. It would be his third top-six finish at a major this year. It would be another bullet point on an already stellar resume for the 30-year-old. It would also come with a big payday.

However, there is one thing DeChambeau won’t get for a win Sunday in the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2: a spot on the United States Olympic men’s golf team for the games coming in August in Paris.

DeChambeau was slated to be on the team in 2021, alongside eventual gold medalist Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas and Collin Morikawa, but he got COVID the week before and was unable to travel. This year, he also won’t be making the trek to Le Golf National in France.

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He has the Official World Golf Ranking to thank. Only 60 players make the field for the Olympic golf competition, with a max of four players per country if the four players are inside the top 15 in the OWGR.

The top 15 players on the OWGR are eligible for the Olympic Games, up to a maximum of four golfers from a single country.

After the top 15, the Olympic Golf Rankings consist of up to the top two eligible players per country, as long as that country does not already have at least two players in the top 15.

As it stands, Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Wyndham Clark and Collin Morikawa are the four highest Americans in OWGR. Monday, June 17 is the cutoff for the Olympic competition, meaning the U.S. Open was the last chance for someone to play their way into the field, like Spain’s David Puig did.

DeChambeau is 38th in the world, which is pretty incredible considering he has only nine counting events in the system. With LIV Golf not receiving OWGR points for its events, DeChambeau and others are limited to the majors or other events to earn ranking points.

Even with a win, DeChambeau wouldn’t become one of the four highest ranked Americans. In fact, Patrick Cantlay is ranked a spot behind Morikawa, and Cantlay is likely the only American who can play his way on the team Sunday.

Last year, many people thought DeChambeau was snubbed being left off the 2023 Ryder Cup team. With his recent form, especially in the biggest events, it’s hard to imagine DeChambeau not teeing it up again in the Olympics, but it’s won’t happen, even if he wins his second major title Sunday.

Business is booming for Avoda Golf, the fledging club maker of Bryson DeChambeau’s bulge and roll irons

“Everyone is asking when they can get their hands on the Bryson clubs.”

PINEHURST, N.C. – A TV showing the third round of the 124th U.S. Open positioned just outside his friend’s garage workshop kept Tom Bailey abreast of how Bryson DeChambeau was doing with the irons he made him.

“We’ve been running out watching them hit a shot running back in building golf clubs, running back out, watch them hit another shot,” Bailey said from his home in Northern California. “I’ve been involved in building every single set that we’ve had go out the door. It’s definitely been a different few months. It turns out building a set of golf clubs to play golf with actually means you don’t play any golf at all.”

What started as a hobby has quickly become a career for Bailey. All he wanted to do was build a better set of clubs for himself. Once he did that he figured he could sell 50 sets a year to fund his golf habit and Avoda Golf, a besoke golf club company with a Hebrew word meaning precision and Hebrew lettering on the clubs, was born. But the business model changed when Bryson DeChambeau hired him to build a prototype set of single-length irons made through 3-D printing to his exacting specifications with bulge and roll and inserted them in the bag for the Masters. He proceeded to shoot 65 in the opening round at Augusta National and the irons became one of the biggest stories of the week at the most-watched golf tournament of the year.

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“Definitely accelerated timelines a lot faster than we were expecting but what an opportunity for a new business,” he said. “We’re having to learn a lot and learn quick but we’re good learners.”

It’s a remarkable story given that the equipment business is dominated by behemoths such as Titleist, TaylorMade, Callaway and Ping, which began making clubs more than 50 years ago in garage, too. Cobra unceremoniously parted ways with DeChambeau, who found a Krank driver he swears by. He was steered to Bailey by his longtime coach Mike Schy, and the first batches of Avoda clubs were built at Schy’s Academy at Dragon Fly Golf Club, not far from where DeChambeau grew up in Madera, California. Bailey said he didn’t know until the Tuesday of the Masters that the clubs he made would be put in play.

“The prototypes only came in the week before the Masters,” he recalled. “At that point, we believed we were still in the prototyping phase. So we had no reason to even think that they will be in play for the Masters.”

Bailey’s phone began ringing off the hook from individuals and clubs that wanted to get their hands on his single-length irons.

“We sold all our stock very quickly and were lucky we had more inventory on the way. Sold all that very quickly again. So right now we’re on about eight to 12 week lead time on fulfillment,” he explained.

He figured he’s been assembling about 15 sets per day since the Masters.

“Everything’s been so nonstop that we haven’t really had that chance yet to sit, pause and go right, ‘What’s the next step?’” Bailey said. “All I wanted to do was build myself a set of golf clubs, and it got very carried away.”

The PGA Championship in May was a repeat of the Masters as DeChambeau finished second, one shot shy of a playoff. The Avoda name was getting some traction and the PGA pushed it up another level.

“I think a lot of people had been kind of sitting on the fence and not sure they wanted to commit yet. That definitely changed when Bryson was in contention. It reinforced that the irons were working again that week, and he almost got it.”

Bailey said he’s been surprised at the talk about the irons beings 3-D printed rather than the fact the clubs have curved faces.

“The 3-D printing was not our first option. It was just a method of rapid prototyping sets for Bryson,” Bailey said. “The plan all along was to create an actual mold for the head and create almost a better quality club. We realize that 3-D printing has its limitations on the materials you can use.”

Bailey said he has more stock arriving soon from Asia and he’s hired some additional staff to accommodate the demand. As part of the expansion of the business, he hopes to create a custom-fitting approach, which he said remains the best way to get someone set up with the best clubs.

“Everyone is asking when they can get their hands on the Bryson clubs,” Bailey said.

With DeChambeau holding a three-stroke lead going into the final round, Bailey is anticipating there will be no rest for the weary. That’s a great problem and one he never could’ve imagined when he set out to make a better set of clubs for himself. He predicted that he will be better prepared for the surge in demand if DeChambeau takes the title than he was at the Masters when DeChambeau opted to put the clubs in play on short notice. But is he really ready for the phone to be ringing and the website to blow up?

Ask me that question again in a few days,” he said, “and I’ll give you another answer.”