U.S. Open future sites through 2051

Many of the country’s most venerable venues are on tap to host.

Pinehurst No. 2 is in the rear view mirror, but don’t worry. There are a few more U.S. Open’s already scheduled for the venue.

Up next: Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania. Oakmont has hosted nine times already (1927, 1935, 1953, 1962, 1973, 1983, 1994, 2007, 2016), and in 2025 the 125th U.S. Open will be the venue’s 10th.

The USGA has declared Oakmont is a second “anchor site” for future national championships. The course also was already awarded dates in 2034, 2042 and 2049.

This is a closer look at the upcoming roster of golf courses set to host the national championship.

Go to usopen.com for more information.

U.S. Women’s Open future sites through 2048

The USGA has 18 future U.S. Women’s Open locations scheduled.

The U.S. Women’s Open had another smashing success at Lancaster Country Club.

Now, the countdown is on for the USGA’s national championship in 2025.

The 80th USWO will be contested at Erin Hills in Erin, Wisconsin.

In all, the U.S. Golf Association has announced 18 future U.S. Women’s Open locations through 2048, although but there are several years with locations still to be announced.

Check out this list of future stops, which includes the first-ever trip to Riviera in the very near future.

For more info, go to usga.com.

How did Wyndham Clark celebrate his AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am win during a shelter-in-place edict? He did it in style

Social media was abuzz with the photo of Clark enjoying an ice cream sundae.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — With power and wifi out in much of the Monterey Peninsula, and trees downed and roads closed around Pebble Beach, Wyndham Clark still managed to have himself a celebration after being informed late Sunday that he final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am had been canceled due to dangerous conditions and he had been declared the champion of the 54-hole shortened signature event.

Social media was abuzz with the photo of Clark enjoying an ice cream sundae.

“He enjoyed his evening,” CBS’s Colt Knost said on his podcast “Subpar.”

After Clark got word that it was official that he had won for the third time on the PGA Tour, he called his caddie John Ellis, who came over to the house where Clark was staying near the course. Visalia pistachio magnate, Chuck Nichols, has hosted Clark in his home for the last four AT&Ts.

Nichols was having dinner at his neighbor’s house when Clark found out he had won. Clark knocked on the door and insisted they all go with him and his girlfriend to celebrate, as their guests, at Pebble Beach Resort’s famous Tap Room.

Off they all went in the rain and wind and dark, dodging felled trees and downed power lines while scofflawing the county’s shelter-in-place edict. Knost noted that Ellis got there first.

The Tap Room was jammed and raucous and included CBS’s Jim Nantz, Dottie Pepper and executive producer Sellers Shy.

“My table was right by the door,” Knost recounted. “I started clapping, the whole place went nuts, standing ovation for him. He signed a thousand autographs.”

Why did AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am get reduced to 54 holes? These dramatic images illustrate

Sustained winds of 35-40 miles per hour and gusts of more than 60 mph forced the hand of organizers.

The final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was canceled due to inclement weather and safety concerns. Rain fell Sunday morning and although it slowed a little later in the day, sustained winds of 35-40 miles per hour and gusts of more than 60 mph forced the hand of organizers. Wyndham Clark was given the trophy after his 54-hole effort.

Due to moderate rain, preferred lies were in effect during all three rounds of the tournament. All week long, the weather forecast called for high winds on Sunday that threatened to push the tournament to a Monday finish and so Clark approached Saturday’s third round as if it could be the final round and with a sense of now-or-never to make a move.

The signature event, which consisted of an 80-man field with no cut, guaranteed money and a $20 million purse, is the first 54-hole tournament on Tour since the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans; the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was also shortened to 54 holes in 2009.

Here’s a look at some images from our USA Today photo team (and others) from Sunday as the storms rolled through:

PGA Tour shortens AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am to 54 holes, Wyndham Clark named winner

It’s the third PGA Tour win, and second in the state of California, for Clark.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Having grown up in the Golden State down Highway 101 in San Jose, caddie John Ellis always dreamed of winning at famed Pebble Beach Golf Links, home of six U.S. Opens. He had his chances, playing in the PGA Tour’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am four times as a player and considers it to be his favorite golf course. Ever since he became a caddie for Wyndham Clark, he told him that if there’s one thing he achieved in his career — he didn’t care if Clark won a hundred times or just once —he just hoped one of them would be at Pebble.

“I always told him I’m going to make it happen,” Clark said on Sunday.

Clark, 30, probably never imagined winning at Pebble Beach in this fashion – shooting a course-record 12-under 60 on Saturday to erase a six-shot deficit and surge one-stroke ahead of Ludvig Aberg with a 54-hole total of 17-under 199. Then he had to wait almost all of Sunday for the final round to be canceled due to inclement weather and to be declared the champion.

“For us to pull it off and in the fashion that we did was pretty awesome,” Clark said.

Due to moderate rain, preferred lies were in effect during all three rounds of the tournament. All week long, the weather forecast called for high winds on Sunday that threatened to push the tournament to a Monday finish and so Clark approached Saturday’s third round as if it could be the final round and  with a sense of now-or-never to make a move.

Clark made two eagles on the front nine and shot 8-under 28 to climb to the top of the leaderboard. He needed oven mitts for his putter, holing a career-high 189 feet, 9 inches of putts. He missed a 26-foot eagle putt at 18 to shoot 59 but tapped in for the lowest round ever shot on the famed links. He walked off the 18th green with a sheepish grin on his face and a round of applause from fans who appreciate seeing history made at one of golf’s great cathedrals.

“I feel like I won the tournament with how much media I was doing, yet I had another round to play,” he mused. “That was a little unique and weird.”

Sleeping on the lead proved to be difficult too. It was warm in the house where Clark was staying and he woke up at about 2:00 a.m., poked his head out the door and determined the weather wasn’t too bad. It took him about 45 minutes to fall back to sleep. His 5:15 alarm, which he set to coincide with the Tour’s first scheduled update on the final round, woke him to news that the earliest play would begin would be at noon. He went back to sleep yet again, and when he finally rose he made some breakfast, watched a movie and played gin with friends. Around 9:30 a.m., the Tour announced that the final round was postponed until Monday.

As the day dragged on, he walked around the neighborhood where he was staying just to assess some of the damage until he realized that wasn’t the safest place to be with trees downed and the wind howling. He tried his best to get his mind ready for playing the final round but he conceded that it was hard to stay focused.

“Because there was that small ounce of thinking that hey, there’s a chance this might be called, my mind started wandering and it was so hard for me to not think about it, that there’s a chance that it could be canceled.”

The Tour pulled the plug on a Monday finish, sending an official statement at 6:17 p.m. PT. Clark had been playing ping-pong for more than an hour with Brian Kettler, his former high school English teacher who was visiting, when their match paused for a phone call with the news that due to dangerous weather conditions, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am had been reduced to 54 holes and the trophy and winner’s check for $3.6 million belonged to him. The decision to call it handed Clark his third win and first since the 2023 U.S. Open in June.

“We both kind of broke out in tears a little bit and hugged each other and embraced each other,” Clark said. “It kind of caught us off guard.”

The signature event, which consisted of an 80-man field with no cut, guaranteed money and a $20 million purse, is the first 54-hole tournament on Tour since the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans; the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was also shortened to 54 holes in 2009.

Clark shared the good news with Ellis.

“We were kind of crying and laughing and celebrating on the phone. Then he quickly rushed over to where I’m staying to see me and we’ve just been hugging and talking about all the great things and the shots and how amazing the last, you know, 36 hours have been,” he said.

Clark described it as a whirlwind and despite not getting the chance to earn the title over 72 holes, he still felt like a deserving winner.

“When I shook hands and waved to the crowd, it really felt like I’d just won the tournament, so I don’t feel like I got cheated at all,” he said.

As the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was in a delay, Ben Griffin pitched a closest-to-the-pin contest on the famous 7th hole

Griffin posted a selfie video outside in an attempt to show how hard it was blowing.

A few delays turned into a postponement to Monday of the final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Eventually, the PGA Tour called it after 54 holes, declaring Wyndham Clark the winner.

Inclement weather – specifically rain and high winds that were estimated up to 60 mph – wiped out play Sunday and was on track to keep on going into Monday.

Trevor Immelman of CBS Golf posted a video showing sunny skies but heavy winds near the 18th hole at Pebble Beach Golf Links, while Max Homa tweeted “It’s just a little wind.”

Ben Griffin posted a selfie video outside in an attempt to show how hard it was blowing.

He also offered up a suggestion, echoed later by Michael Kim, of what could be an epic display of golf craziness: a closest-to-the-pin contest on the famed 7th hole at Pebble.

There were reports of some damage around the course and clearly safety would be a major concern for such a venture.

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AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am final round postponed until Monday

On Sunday, the PGA Tour decided to rest.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — On Sunday, the PGA Tour decided to rest.

The final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am has been postponed to Monday due to inclement weather and safety concerns. Overnight rain continued to fall Sunday morning and although it is expected to dissipate later in the day, the high winds are forecast to remain throughout the day. Due to safety concerns caused by sustained winds of 35-40 miles per hour and gusts expected to be more than 60 mph in the afternoon, there will be no golf played on Sunday.

“Our regulations say we need to make every effort to play 72 holes, which includes playing on Monday,” PGA Tour chief referee Gary Young said after Saturday’s round.

That means Wyndham Clark, who shot a course-record 60 on Saturday at Pebble Beach Golf Links, will sleep on a one-stroke lead over Ludvig Aberg for a second night. Tee times are scheduled for 8 a.m.-10:25 a.m. PT (11 a.m. ET) off Nos. 1 and 10.

There is a scenario where the tournament could be shortened to 54 holes and Clark declared the winner of the $20 million signature event.

“We would not start play on Monday if we knew we couldn’t finish the round on Monday,” Young said. “So, the drop-dead time on that would mean we would have to start play on Monday by 10:15 a.m. at the latest in order to complete play.”

The Monday forecast is for more showers in the morning. The course already is waterlogged from a collection of on-and-off rain all week, leading to concern that balls may plug in the rough.

“We just want to make sure that on Monday, if we get to that point, that the golf course is such that we are conducting a good quality championship, the conditions are of professional standards,” Young said. “We want to make sure that the golf course is of the quality on Monday that we would not want golf balls disappearing into the fairways and losing golf balls.”

There also is a scenario where play could extend to Tuesday.

“Our regulation states that we can’t start play on Monday without knowing that we could finish play on Monday. If we did that and then for some reason weather rolled in on us that caused us to delay again, if more than half the field has finished play, then we would extend play into Tuesday,” he explained. “But we would need more than half of them to have completed their round on Monday.”

This marks the third Monday finish in the last year six year at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, which previously required a Monday finish in 2019 and last year. The AT&T was shortened to 54 holes in 2009; the last time a Tour event was shortened to 54 holes was at the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Fifty-nine of the 80 players in the AT&T field this week are schedule to play in the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale, which begins Thursday.

Weather update: Final round postponed until Monday. PGA Tour Chief Referee Gary Young is ‘hopeful’ that 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am will be 72 holes

“Our regulations say we need to make every effort to play 72 holes, which includes playing on Monday,” Young said.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Whether Wyndham Clark already is the winner of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am or he’ll have to play 18 more holes to earn it rests on the shoulders of Mother Nature.

The final round of the tournament is in doubt due to high winds and rain forecasted for Sunday.

UPDATE: The final round, originally scheduled to begin at 7:45 a.m. PT, has been postponed due to inclement weather conditions at Pebble Beach Golf Links. The final round is scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. PT. Full story here.

On Saturday, PGA Tour Chief Referee Gary Young said he’s “hopeful” that the tournament will be able to complete 72 holes, but there is a possibility that Clark, who shot a course-record 60 on Saturday to grab a one-stroke lead after 54 holes, could be declared the winner. One decision already has been made: out of an abundance of caution, no spectators will be allowed on property for the final round if it is played on Sunday. (If the final round is pushed to Monday, spectators would be admitted.)

“Our regulations say we need to make every effort to play 72 holes, which includes playing on Monday,” Young said. “We would not start play on Monday if we knew we couldn’t finish the round on Monday. So, the drop-dead time on that would mean we would have to start play on Monday by 10:15 a.m. at the latest in order to complete play.”

Young said that his staff would be on site at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Sunday at 5 a.m. local time, to assess the situation and message players at 5:15 to provide an update on the status of the tournament and let them know whether there’s going to be a delay to tee times. The final round was scheduled to start at 7:45 a.m.

Pebble Pro-Am: Monday tee times

“We have really high winds forecasted, it hasn’t come down at all. (Our weatherman) is talking about gusts of 60 (miles per hour) and even above that range, so sustained winds 35 to 40 miles per hour in the morning,” Young said, noting that between one and three inches of rain also is expected.

Asked the chances that 72 holes would be completed, Young said, “I’m hopeful right now. I mean, we have been playing a pretty soggy golf course. Obviously if we get upwards of two to three inches on the high side right now, then that makes that a little more doubtful.”

The forecast Monday is for showers in the morning too. The course already is waterlogged from a collection of on-and-off rain throughout the week.

“We just want to make sure that on Monday, if we get to that point, that the golf course is such that we are conducting a good quality championship, the conditions are of professional standards,” Young said. “We want to make sure that the golf course is of the quality on Monday that we would not want golf balls disappearing into the fairways and losing golf balls.”

The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am required a Monday finish last year; this would be the third Monday finish in the last year six year, the other being 2019. The AT&T was shortened to 54 holes in 2009; the last time a Tour event was shortened to 54 holes was at the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

There also is a scenario where play could extend to Tuesday.

“Our regulation states that we can’t start play on Monday without knowing that we could finish play on Monday. If we did that and then for some reason weather rolled in on us that caused us to delay again, if more than half the field has finished play, then we would extend play into Tuesday,” he explained. “But we would need more than half of them to have completed their round on Monday.”

2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Monday tee times, how to watch PGA Tour

It’s the second straight Monday finish at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Thanks to a historic course-record 60, 2023 U.S. Open winner Wyndham Clark holds the 54-hole lead at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

He’ll have to wait an extra day to try to fend off the field and claim the trophy.

Clark, who holed nearly 200 feet of putts Saturday, made two eagles, nine birdies and a bogey around Pebble Beach Golf Links.

But high winds and rain postponed the action Sunday, leading to a second straight unscheduled Monday finish on the Monterey Peninsula.

Ludvig Aberg is one shot back at 16 under after a third-round 5-under 67. Matthieu Pavon is alone in third at 15 under, while a large group consisting of Justin Thomas, Jason Day and Scottie Scheffler is tied for sixth at 13 under.

The 80-player field is competing for a $20 million purse and $3.6 million first-place prize.

Pebble Beach Golf Links ranks No. 10 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses in the U.S., and it is No. 1 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access layouts in each state. It is also No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best list of all public-access courses in the U.S.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Best celeb photos

Sunday’s final round was scheduled to start at 7:45 a.m. local time but Mother Nature had other ideas.

The golfers will go off split tees Monday starting at 8 a.m. local time.

1st tee

Tee time Players
11 a.m.
Jordan Spieth, Taylor Montgomery
11:11 a.m.
Tom Kim, Sam Ryder, Adam Hadwin
11:22 a.m.
Corey Conners, Ben An, Nicolai Hojgaard
11:33 a.m.
Seamus Power, Tommy Fleetwood, S.H. Kim
11:44 a.m.
Luke List, Alex Noren, Denny McCarthy
11:55 a.m.
J.T. Poston, Chris Kirk, Sepp Straka
12:04 a.m.
Erik van Rooyen, Cam Davis, Sahith Theegala
12:15 p.m.
Emiliano Grillo, Adam Scott, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
12:26 p.m.
Peter Malnati, Collin Morikawa, Beau Hossler
12:37 p.m.
Patrick Cantlay, Eric Cole, Si Woo Kim
12:48 p.m.
Sam Burns, Justin Rose, Keegan Bradley
12:59 p.m.
Tom Hoge, Justin Thomas, Scottie Scheffler
1:10 p.m.
Mark Hubbard, Thomas Detry, Jason Day
1:21 p.m.
Wyndham Clark, Ludvig Aberg, Matthieu Pavon

10th tee

Tee time Players
11 a.m.
Maverick McNealy, Webb Simpson, Matt Kuchar
11:11 a.m.
Kurt Kitayama, Taylor Moore, Adam Svensson
11:22 a.m.
Brandon Wu, Nick Hardy, Tony Finau
11:33 a.m.
Rickie Fowler, Adam Schenk, Keith Mitchell
11:44 a.m.
Brian Harman, Xander Schauffele, J.J. Spaun
11:55 a.m.
Kevin Yu, Ben Griffin, Viktor Hovland
12:04  a.m.
Brendon Todd, Russell Henley, Lee Hodges
12:15 p.m.
Matt Fitzpatrick, Lucas Glover, Greyson Murrary
12:26 p.m.
Max Homa, Rory McIlroy, Sungjae Im
12:37 p.m.
Cameron Young, Hideki Matsuyama, Mackenzie Hughes
12:48 p.m.
Stephan Jaeger, Nick Taylor, Alex Smalley
12:59 p.m.
Harris English, Hayden Buckley, Davis Riley
1:10 p.m.
Patrick Rodgers, Nick Dunlap

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Sunday, Feb. 4

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-3 p.m.

CBS: 3-6:30 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6:30 p.m

ESPN+: 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m.

Editor’s note: TV and streaming information will be updated at a later time.

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Wyndham Clark shoots 60, breaks Pebble Beach course record at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

No one has done what Wyndham Clark did Saturday.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Beset with putting woes since June, Wyndham Clark flew in early on Sunday and laid out nine different putters on the practice green at Pebble Beach Golf Links in hopes of finding some magic. Did he ever.

No player has ever had a better round of golf at Pebble Beach than Clark. The reigning U.S. Open champion made nearly everything he looked at and shot a course-record 12-under 60 at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Saturday to take the lead after the third round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“I think in the past I would have kind of coasted in and shot a nice 8, 9 under,” he said. “To keep the pedal down and to stay aggressive mentally was the most impressive thing to myself. And then obviously making all those putts was, you know, out of the ordinary, it was pretty awesome.”

Preferred lies were in effect, but nevertheless, on some of the bumpiest poa annua greens the PGA Tour plays all year, he made 189 feet, 9 inches of putts, the most made by a competitor in a round at Pebble since they started tracking the stat in 2003, and three strokes better than the next-best round by Jason Day. When John Ellis, Clark’s caddie was asked if that’s the best he’s seen his boss putt, he answered, “I’ve never seen a human putt better let alone my own guy.”

Clark, who had shot 67 at Pebble a day earlier, his previous round on the famed links on the Monterey Peninsula, canned a 40-foot eagle putt at the par-5 second hole to get the party started. He made his first of nine birdies on the day at the fourth hole and when he rolled in a 42-foot eagle at the par-5 sixth, he joked to Ellis, “just give me eagle putts, I’ll make them.”

He wedged inside three feet at the famous par-3 seventh, which played just 99 yards downhill in the third round. He tacked on birdies on Nos. eight and nine to tour the front in 8-under 28, one of just four players ever to sign for that total. He had already made 150 feet, 10 inches in putts, nearly 25 feet better than the next best putting performance on the front nine dating to 2003 (Charley Hoffman, 126 feet, 3 inches, in the second round in 2021), and only 6 feet less than his 18-hole personal best of 156 feet, 6 inches in the third round of the 2020 Shriners Children’s Open.

The nerves kicked in at 10 as did the #59Watch, but he kept making birdies at Nos. 10 and 11.

“It was legit,” said Matt Kuchar, who played in Clark’s threesome. “When he birdied 10, it was like, wow, this is for real and then he dribbled it in at 11 and it was like, Wow.”

“The hole looked huge,” Clark said.

It’s hard to believe but Clark has struggled with his putting since winning the U.S. Open in June. He had asked putting guru Phil Kenyon for help, but his lesson book already is filled with the likes of Max Homa, Scottie Scheffler and Matt Fitzpatrick. He recommended his colleague Mike Kanski, who flew in to meet with Clark for the first time on Sunday. The big change? He removed the alignment aid, shortened the putter a bit and switched from a conventional grip to putting cross-handed.

“A lot of big changes, but when you’re in a spot where I was mentally in putting you kind of needed a change, just something totally different so you couldn’t complain or have those same feels that I had in previous tournaments,” Clark explained.

Clark began working with mental coach Julie Elion last year and her advice this week was to eliminate any goals associated with putting.

“We’re putting too much emphasis on the putting. We were trying to have the best attitude we could possibly have, especially coming into greens like this where they are really bumpy, so slopey and it makes it really hard to make putts,” he said.

Clark’s round of 60 included one bogey, at the par-3 12th, where his tee shot caught the bunker fronting the green and he had a fried egg lie. He hacked it out but ended up with a precarious lie and if he stood in the greenside bunker to play his third shot right-handed, the ball would’ve been so far above his feet that he worried he would hit the hosel. So, he elected to play it left-handed, advancing the ball to the fringe 26 feet from the hole and then made the most unlikely of bogeys – “a round saver,” he said — as he poured in yet another putt.

“Of any of the putts today that I was not really trying to make was that one,” he added. “I really was just focused on my speed and just trying to get it down there, two-putt, get the double, go to the next hole and move on. For that to go in, it was like all right, man, I’m hot.”

Hot enough to make birdies at Nos. 13 and 14 to improve to 11-under for the day and two shots clear of the field. He caught a good break when he tugged his tee shot into the left rough at 16. He was granted a free drop from a burrowing animal hole. But left his 10-foot birdie putt short. He had another good look from 14 feet at No. 17 and was short again. Standing on the 18th tee, he said he thought to himself, “My gosh, it would have been really nice to have one of those last two because then I only have to birdie 18.”

Could he make a third eagle of the day at the par-5 18th?

“Once I hit the fairway on 18 I knew I was going to have a chance to hopefully try to shoot that special number,” he said of a 59.

From 230 yards, Clark drilled his second shot to 26 feet. He backed off the putt and went through his routine a second time.

“I thought I had maybe like a little sand on it,” he explained. “I was like, all right, I’m gonna make sure if I’m hitting this putt I’m completely committed.”

It was all for naught. He missed short on the right, tapping in for one final birdie to shatter the tournament record by two and the old men’s record of 61 held by Texas Tech golfer Hurly Long in the 2017 Carmel Cup, a men’s collegiate event. (Rose Zhang set the women’s course record in 2022 at the same tournament, shooting 63.) He had started the round six back and leapfrogged one stroke ahead of Ludvig Aberg (67). With high winds and rain in the forecast, there’s a chance that Clark will be declared the winner and the signature event shortened to 54 holes. Clark said he factored that into his approach on Moving Day.

“You’ve got to have that mentality that today’s the last day so try to go for broke,” he said.

With a sheepish grin, he waved to the spectators and gave a thumbs up as he walked off the green, knowing how close he was from joining an exclusive group to break the sub-60 club in Tour history. But Clark still was proud of his slice of Pebble Beach history, which was also the 54th 60 in PGA Tour history.

“I haven’t shot 59, but I would say even if I had shot 59 somewhere, I don’t think it would compare to shooting a score like this at one of the most historic golf courses in the world,” Clark said.

The words inscribed on his caddie’s cap read “Have A Day,” and that Clark most definitely did.

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