Contact Form

 

Tiger Woods score: Round 1 recap, highlights from U.S. Open


No. 18: Rocky Round 1 Ends With a Par Putt

A nice chip shot on 18 came close to going in. But, alas, Woods needed to take out his putter one last time, tapping in for a 78 with his 30th putt of what became a very long day.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

The putter let him down, most notably on the first and the 13th hole, but also at various points throughout. He could not deliver on makable birdie looks available because of how well he was striking the ball early on. He hit six of seven fairways on the front nine but only three of seven on the back as his round fell apart.

On the bright side, his score is the same as Jordan Spieth’s, and he outplayed Rory McIlroy (+10). But there is little consolation for Woods after his first round in the U.S. Open since 2015.

No. 17: Same Story, Different Hole

A 40-foot birdie putt for Woods on the par-3 17th missed by a few feet, and he heads to the final hole hoping to get off this treacherous course without more damage done. His pal, Justin Thomas, isn’t having much fun out here either. He’s now three-over on the back.

No. 16: Sand Save Sets Up Birdie Try

On the 620-yard par-5 16th, Woods delivered a nice drive and then made a nice sand save after his second shot to set himself up with an uphill birdie look from a little over 10 feet.

He wanted it. He needed it. He missed it.

He’s plus-eight as he goes to the final two holes.

No. 15: Tiger Saves Par But Needs More

Tiger Woods saves par on the 15th after recovering from another imperfect tee shot that went into the first cut of the rough. With three holes left, he is desperate for something to spark for him. He remains at eight-over.

No. 14: Back-to-Back Double Bogeys for Woods

It has gone from bad to worse for Tiger.

On the 14th, a horrendous tee shot landed him way deep in the fescue. He then yanked a shot into the gallery short and way left of the green, deep in more fescue. He couldn’t reach the green from there, so he had to hack out and salvage what he could. Unfortunately, he missed a 10-foot bogey putt to settle for his second consecutive double.

His demeanor, rightly, has taken a 180-degree turn south.

No. 13: ... And There Goes the Momentum

It was a very unlucky 13th for Tiger Woods.

A brutal four-putt — including three putts from within six feet — has dropped Woods into a tie for 82nd at six-over par and killed any momentum he had gathered after recovering from a triple bogey to start his round.

Newsletter Sign Up Continue reading the main story Please verify you're not a robot by clicking the box. Invalid email address. Please re-enter. You must select a newsletter to subscribe to. Sign Up You will receive emails containing news content , updates and promotions from The New York Times. You may opt-out at any time. You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times's products and services. Thank you for subscribing. An error has occurred. Please try again later. View all New York Times newsletters.

Woods was looking at a six-foot putt for par and spent a lot of time analyzing how to navigate it. His putt wound up skating past the hole by a few feet. But when he missed that comebacker, he gripped the putter face in his right hand and looked like he was close to snapping the club across his knee. That’s just a killer for Tiger, who had worked so hard to get himself back to within striking distance.

No. 12: Tiger Waiting for the Perfect Putt

After a nice drive and a short approach, Tiger burned the edge with a putt from off the green to finish with a par at the 12th. He continues to look great off the tee (7 of 9 fairways hit) but is waiting for a clutch putt to finally fall.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

No. 11: Back to Bogey

They call it a par-3 that plays like a par-5. And while Dustin Johnson drained his lengthy putt for his fourth birdie of the day, taking him to three-under par, Tiger Woods couldn’t make a sand save after his tee shot fell short. So he drops his first stroke since the second hole, now at four-over par.

No. 10: It Wasn’t His Fault

On the 10th, Tiger Woods missed the fairway and then came up short with his approach, which left him with a 30-yard pitch shot onto a tough elevated green. He left himself with some work to save par. As he approached the putt, it appeared the ball slightly moved, causing a shudder through the crowd. But an official came over and deemed it was not a penalty. Tiger sank the putt to save the par.

Front-Nine Recap: Tiger’s Still in Contention

Tiger Woods has made the turn in a tie for 35th at +3, but he steadied himself nicely after a nightmarish opening hole.

Woods looked unprepared for the treacherous greens and gusty winds at Shinnecock Hills. On the first, he needed five shots to get on the green — including an embarrassing putt from the fringe that rolled back to his feet — and finished with a triple-bogey 7 to begin his first U.S. Open appearance since 2015. He then bogeyed No. 2 to fall into a deep hole.

But, unlike Rory McIlroy and some others out here, he managed to steady himself quickly before the wheels completely fell off. In fact, Woods swung exceptionally well, hitting all but one fairway on the front. He birdied the par-5 fifth and missed some other birdie efforts, but all in all he has done well to keep himself in contention halfway through Round 1.

No. 9: Solid Turnaround Before the Turn

After another par on the tricky ninth hole, Tiger will make the turn holding steady at three-over.

He has got to be pleased with that turnaround after the triple-bogey, bogey start. He hit all but one fairway on the front nine. If he starts making some of those midrange putts, he’ll be in business. He also just looks serene out there, laughing and joking with his buddy, Justin Thomas, who is also playing well.

No. 8: Not Ideal, But Not So Bad

Who needs a putter?

Dustin Johnson holes out from the bunker on eight to move back into a tie for the lead at two-under par. It certainly made up for a disappointing wedge approach from only about 100 yards after an absolutely monstrous drive downwind.

Woods had another birdie look but missed the putt left. He is really swinging nicely now, but the putter remains less than reliable. Still only five strokes behind the leader.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

No. 7: Saved by the Rough

Another really good birdie look for Tiger on the par-3 seventh after his tee shot went a little short of the hole and trickled down toward the left bunker. A slim cut of rough that wasn’t there in 2004 saved it from sinking into the trap, and Woods took advantage. He came inches from making the birdie and tapped in for par to remain at three-over.

No. 6: A Helping Hand from Tiger

Tiger had a 19-foot birdie try on the difficult sixth hole but it fell just short. So he finishes with a par and will look ahead to another brutal hole: the par-3 seventh and its famously slick green.

Tiger found other ways to contribute on the sixth hole, though. After Dustin Johnson’s tee shot went into the fescue, it took about 20 people to dig around in the tall grass to find it. Among those who lent a hand: Tiger Woods.

No. 5: Tiger Nails First Birdie

The world No. 1 is stealing the show at Shinnecock.

Back-to-back birdies by Dustin Johnson (-2) has him trailing Russell Henley by one stroke after taking advantage of the par-5 fifth hole, which has been arguably the easiest hole on the course today. Johnson is really rolling the ball well, and that is always going to be the key for him considering how incredibly well he drives the ball.

His groupmate, Tiger Woods, also birdied to get back to three over par for his round. But Woods definitely looks like his game has settled down after a rocky first two holes.

No. 4: Tiger Holds Par

After his tee shot left him with an awkward, sidehill lie for his second shot, Woods manages to get up and down nicely again from behind the green. This was easily his nicest chip shot of the day, off a very tight lie around the green. He holds on for a par.

Meanwhile, after getting up and down for par on each of the first three holes, Dustin Johnson is now in the red with a birdie on the fourth.

No. 3: Woods Bounces Back With a Beautiful Drive

Tiger answers with a par on the third hole after a beautiful drive and a nice second shot that went just off the back of the green. But, this time, he managed to get up and down without incident. He’ll move on to the fourth hole, which has played as one of the easiest of the day.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

No. 2: Tiger’s Par Putt Rolls Away

Things did not get much better for Woods at the second hole.

On this mammoth par-3, he tried to cut a low 2-iron underneath the wind and onto the green, but it trickled off the back. But he could not get up and down, missing a short par putt for a bogey 4.

At least it’s a slight improvement from Hole 1.

No. 1: Tiger Starts With a Triple-Bogey

Welcome back to the U.S. Open, Tiger!

In his first appearance in the Open since 2015, Woods got a taste of what most of the field has already experienced: This course is tough.

After a nice opening drive, Tiger flew the green with his second shot, then came up short with a chip shot that he was clearly trying to play safe. And that backside of the green is awfully slick. For his fourth shot, he tried to putt it up to the surface but didn’t make it. The ball trickled slowly, slowly, back down to his feet.

He put a little more oomph into his next putt, which left him with about eight feet for double bogey. But he missed that putt as well. So it’s a triple-bogey 7 to start the round for Tiger Woods. He’s now got a 255-yard par 3 into the wind to look forward to!

Tiger Time

Tiger Woods has teed off at the first hole, starting his 20th U.S. Open appearance. He’s won three times. The last time the Open was at Shinnecock, in 2004, Tiger finished tied for 17th at +10.

Today he’s grouped with Justin Thomas and Dustin Johnson, the world No. 1.

A Tale of Two Scotts

Ian Poulter is in the clubhouse with a 69, and he’s in good company: He and Scott Piercy are the only players to shoot under par so far through Round 1 on Thursday.

Meanwhile, fellow Englishman Scott Gregory did not have such a great round. The 2016 British Amateur champ did not manage a single birdie on his way to carding a 92, or 22-over par. It’s the first round over 90 at a U.S. Open since Felix Casas shot 92 at Bethpage in 2002.

Photo

Not-So-Super Group

Phil Mickelson. Jordan Spieth. Rory McIlroy. It sounded like a great group to follow in the first round ... but it hasn’t turned out that way. To be fair, no one is playing all that well today with the wind, but take a look at these scores through 16 holes:

• McIlroy +9

• Mickelson +6

• Spieth +8

Ouch.

Ugly Misses for a Spiraling Rory McIlroy

Rory McIlroy came into the U.S. Open this week feeling so good about his game that he was happy to have an early tee time on Thursday. But things have spiraled out of control quickly for the 2011 U.S. Open champion.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

Starting on the back nine, back-to-back double bogeys on the 13th and 14th put him in a deep hole and things continued to only get worse. Another 6 on the par-4 first hole followed by a bogey on the second saw his score at 10-over par after just 11 holes. Yikes.

McIlroy has hit only 21.3 percent of greens in regulation, and some of his misses have been ugly. After hitting into a fairway bunker on the 16th, he failed to clear the lip of the trap and the ball bounced straight up in the air.

Birdies on the fifth and sixth have mitigated some of the carnage on his scorecard, but he is still looking at a score approaching the 80s.

Wind is Wreaking Havoc Early; Worse Coming

Most players at Shinnecock should know that the wind is always a factor. Not sure they expected Round 1 to go like this, though.

The wind has been blowing steadily at 15 to 20 mph throughout the morning and gusts are expected to reach 30 mph in the afternoon. This has made things challenging not just for driving and approaching, but tricky for putting as well.

On the par-4 14th, Scott Stallings reached the green in three and then needed six putts to finish the hole. The second hole, a 255-yard par 3 that is playing into the wind, has also been nightmarish for a lot of groups.

Looking for Birdie

Jason Day has bogeyed eight of the 14 holes he’s played so far today, and he shot each of the other six at par. It’s been a rough round for most players who teed off this morning. Only two — Scott Piercy and Ian Poulter — are under par.


Tiger Woods' return to the U.S. Open was a little less successful than he might have hoped.

Tiger was tied for 103rd after finishing his day 8 over par. To be fair, only four players were under par by the time Tiger had finished, but blustery conditions on the already-difficult course made for a rough outing.

MORE: What's next for on Tiger's 2018 PGA schedule?

The #USOpen return of @TigerWoods got off to a rocky start. One in which he never fully recovered. pic.twitter.com/GeKMgqxmFK — U.S. Open (USGA) (@usopengolf) June 14, 2018

Tiger started the day with a triple bogey on Hole 1, followed by another bogey on Hole 2 before managing a birdie on Hole 7 and finishing the front nine only 3 over. That would be the last highlight he had in Round 1, as he suffered a bogey and two double bogeys in the back nine — a performance that demands a complete 180 if he wants to make the weekend cut.

Recapping Tiger's first round at the U.S. Open:

Tiger Woods' score: Round 1

U.S. Open

VIDEO STREAM: Watch the U.S. Open on fuboTV (7-day free trial)

Hole (Par) Tiger's score (Overall) Place 1 (4) 7 (3-over) T-46 2 (4) 5 (4-over) T-60 3 (4) 4 (4-over) T-70 4 (4) 4 (4-over) T-75 5 (5) 4 (3-over) T-67 6 (4) 4 (3-over) T-58 7 (3) 3 (3-over) T-51 8 (4) 4 (3-over) T-48 9 (4) 4 (3-over) T-42 10 (4) 4 (3-over) T-40 11 (3) 4 (4-over) T-50 12 (4) 4 (4-over) T-45 13 (4) 6 (6-over) T-81 14 (4) 6 (8-over) T-112 15 (4) 4 (8-over) T-110 16 (5) 5 (8-over) T-106 17 (3) 3 (8-over) T-108 18 (4) 4 (8-over) T-103

HOLE 18: Par 4, 485 yards

First putt: PAR

Third shot:A good chip shot lands him 2 feet from par.

Approach: Tiger's short of the green but at least manages to clear the hill in front of the fairway. He'll have a decent shot at par.

Tee shot: Tiger gets a good whack at it off the tee but it goes too far right and lands in the rough.

HOLE 17: Par 3, 175 yards

Second putt: PAR

First putt:Tiger's lag putt finishes about a foot from par.

Tee shot: Tiger lands on the green about 40 feet from the mark and avoids the right-side slope on his upcoming birdie putt attempt.

HOLE 16: Par 5, 616 yards

Second putt: PAR

First putt:Tiger can only smile and shake his head. He misses the 10-foot par just right.

Third shot: Great shot out of the bunker lands TIger about 10 feet from birdie.

Approach: He's in the right-side bunker, but that's not the worst place to be on the par-5. An up-and-down gets hiim a birdie.

Tee shot: Tiger booms it straight down the middle. Great stuff, especially considering this is a par-5 hole.

HOLE 15: Par 4, 409 yards

First putt: PAR

Third shot:Good chip shot gets Tiger within an inch of par.

Second shot: He's short of the green and will need an up-and-down for par.

Tee shot: Tiger's left of the fairway but within working distance (122 yards) of the green.

HOLE 14: Par 4, 519 yards

Sixth shot: DOUBLE BOGEY

Fifth shot: It lips out to the left. He'll have a foot for double bogey.

Fourth shot: Tiger's on the green now with about 8 feet for bogey. Really, really needs this one.

Third shot: Good news: Tiger's on the fairway. Bad news: He'd have to hole out for par.

Second shot: From worse to terrible. He shanks it way left into the gallery. A bogey seems ... highly plausible.

Tee shot: From bad to worse. Tiger doesn't like the shot as soon as he made contact. It goes right, landing in the fescue on the steep grade.

HOLE 13: Par 4, 374 yards

Fourth putt: DOUBLE BOGEY

Third putt:It lips out. Four-putt double bogey upcoming and that's just a killer.

Second putt: That was right of the mark the whole time. It scoots

First putt: Another long putt that had no chance. He has a 5-foot par attempt coming up.

Approach: Tiger gets on the green, but it lands dead on the far side. He'll have a long look at birdie, and will likely need to settle for par.

Tee shot: Tiger finds the fairway again, no problem. Onward.

HOLE 12: Par 4, 469 yards

Second putt: PAR

First putt:Wow, Tiger's 30-foot putt for birdie fell an inch short of the mark. That's rough, but a great attempt regardless.

Approach: Tiger had a decent look at that but the ball is just short of the green, on the fringe, on the slope. Let's see how he handles this.

Tee shot: A beautiful tee shot goes long and lands on the right side of the fairway. Could make that bogey back here just based off that shot.

HOLE 11: Par 3, 159 yards

Second putt: BOGEY

First putt:That putt had no chance. Stopped a couple feet short of the mark and Tiger is back up to 4-over at least.

Second shot: He's out of the bunker and onto the green but has a lengthy putt (18 feet) to salvage par. Don't know if he'll sink it from this distance.

Tee shot: Tiger's shot lands in the greenside bunker where he'll have to work to save par.

HOLE 10: Par 4, 415 yards

Fourth shot: After pausing to seek a ruling on whether the wind moved the ball (it's still very windy) Tiger manages to get it to trickle in for par. Tricky. PAR

Third shot:A fantastic chip shot up the steep grade lands about a foot from the pin. Incredible shot there that will save him par.

Second shot: Tiger didn't like that from the outset. The ball is well short of the green to the left, and he'll need an up-and-down to salvage par.

Tee shot: Not an ideal start on the always-tough Hole 10. His ball goes just right of the fairway, into the rough on a slope.

Halftime stats: 6/7 fairways, 4/9 GIR, 14 putts. Currently 5 shots off the lead. — Tiger Tracker (@GCTigerTracker) June 14, 2018

HOLE 9: Par 4, 485 yards

Second putt: And he makes it to finish 3-over par through the front nine. PAR

First putt: A good effort on the long birdie attempt breaks just a bit too early and trickles a foot past the mark. He'll have a decent look for par.

Approach: Tiger's on the green but overshot the pin a bit with a heavy wind at his back. He'll have a birdie attempt fromn 20-plus feet.

Tee shot: Another boomer lands on the fairway.

HOLE 8: Par 4, 439 yards

Second putt: PAR

First putt: Tiger misses it just left of the mark and will settle for the tap-in par.

Approach: Tiger uses the iron from 110 yards out and lands about 15 feet from pay dirt.

Tee shot: Tiger booms it off the tee and gets it to roll a good distance as well along the fairway. He's played well ever since that disastrous start.

HOLE 7: Par 3, 189 yards

FIrst putt: PAR

Approach: Tiger hits a bump and run that lands about a foot from the hole. He should walk it in for par.

Tee shot: Tiger's tee lands on the green and trickles off to the fringe.

HOLE 6: Par 4, 491 yards

Second putt: PAR

First putt: Tiger's putt cuts just a bit too early, falling a half a foot left of the mark. He'll walk it in for par.

Approach: Tiger uses the iron to land on the green about 18 feet from birdie. That'd be massive after his start today.

Tee shot: Another booming tee shot from Tiger.

HOLE 5: Par 5, 589 yards

First putt: And he sinks it, a much-needed birdie as he makes his way through the rest of the course. BIRDIE

Third shot: A nice chip shot lands Tiger about 5 feet from birdie. Needs to make that on the easiest hole of the course.

Second shot: Tiger's approach with the iron falls just short of the green from 259 yards out. He'll have a shot at an up-and-down birdie here.

Tee shot: Tiger hits the fairway. He moves forward.

HOLE 4: Par 4, 475 yards

Fourth shot: PAR

Third shot: Good approach to the pin, and Tiger has par from about a foot out. Making chicken salad with a couple bad breaks here on the fourth.

Approach: Tiger lands on the green but put too much on it. It traverses it in its entirety and rolls down the hill into the rough.

Tee shot: Tiger's tee lands just inside the cut on the fairway but rolls down the slope into the right rough.

HOLE 3: Par 4, 500 yards

Second putt: He makes it, and that feels like a win after Holes 2 and 3. PAR

First putt: Tiger's on the green now within a couple feet of the hole. He should walk it in from here for par.

Approach: Tiger hits the left of the green, it rolls downhill just into the fringe — but still very much in birdie distance. Could be an opportunity to get one back.

Tee shot: Couldn't ask for a better tee shoot. He booms it 300 yards and it catches a slope and rolls another 50 along the right side of the fairway. He'll have a fantastic look at the green from here.

HOLE 2: Par 3, 252 yards

Third putt: BOGEY

Second putt: And he misses a sure make for par. Another bogey upcoming from tap-in distance.

First putt: Tiger gets a good putt, and the ball stops about a yard from pay dirt for par.

Tee shot: Tiger hits the green, but the ball catches the slope and it rolls off. Need an up-and-down, lest he starts the day 4-over.

HOLE 1: Par 4, 399 yards

Seventh shot: TRIPLE BOGEY

Sixth shot: He misses it. Triple bogey upcoming.

Fifth shot: Tiger nearly does just that, but the ball rolls by an inch right of the mark. He'll need to make a 6-footer for bogey.

Fourth shot: Tiger pulls out the putter but fails to hit the green — again. Not good.

Third shot: That's a big error by Tiger. Gets it on the green but doesn't give it enough — the ball rolls down the hill again and he's looking at a bogey unless he can hole out.

Approach: Tiger gets a good look at the green but overshoots it. The ball trails down the hill and he'll need an up-and-down for par here.

Tee shot: And Tiger starts off by hammering the ball down the center of the fairway with the iron. Off we go.

U.S. Open live updates: Round 1

Live U.S. Open updates


SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Among the top 10 players in the Official World Golf Ranking in the U.S. Open field, just one posted a round under par on Thursday at Shinnecock Hills. If you went with the chalk pick, you'd be right.

On a brutal day on Long Island, Dustin Johnson stood strong, carding a one-under 69 on a course he had not seen before Monday. He's tied for the lead with Ian Poulter, Scott Piercy and Russell Henley, the only four men in the 156-player field to break par.

"I'm very pleased with the round," Johnson said. "Anything under par on this golf course is very good, especially in the conditions we have today. I felt like, you know, from start to finish, it was very difficult."

RELATED: Traditionalists, you got your wish. The U.S. Open is a brute once more

Playing alongside Tiger Woods and Justin Thomas, Johnson was the only one of the trio to provide any highlights, none better than his hole-out for birdie from a green side bunker at the par-4 eighth. That shot came two holes after Johnson caught a huge break at the par-4 sixth, where former PGA champ turned TV commentator Rich Beem accidentally stepped on his ball in the thick rough and DJ was given a helpful drop.

"Well, there was [a volunteer] standing there, they watched it bounce in there, and he kind of just stood on the hill and waited for all of us to come up," he said. "You would think he would go and at least mark kind of the spot where it was.

"Probably should have never even had to come to that. But, yeah, it was—obviously, it was nice for him to find my ball. Even though I did get to drop it. I still played the same kind of shot that I would have played if he wouldn't have stepped on it."

After turning in two-under 33, Johnson made birdie at the par-3 11th to get to three under. Bogeys at the 12th and 14th brought him back to the pack, but with more wind in the forecast in the coming days, it's still a great place to be as the rest of the field has to play catch up.

"Tomorrow is still going to be another difficult day," Johnson said. "Every day out here is going to be difficult. It's going to take the same kind of focus, and I'll have to shoot the same kind of quality golf shots if I want to shoot another good score."

Poulter, who went off in the morning wave, looked as though he may defy the odds and post a low number, turning in two-under 33 with birdies at the par-4 third and the treacherous par-3 seventh. Even after making his first bogey of the round at the 10th, the Englishman rebounded, making another birdie at a difficult par 3, the 157-yard 11th that played far longer than 157 yards with the buffeting winds. It was a par-3 performance he knows he'll have trouble matching any of the next three days.

"To post that number today, very pleased, and I played very well, hit some great shots," Poulter said. "Seven, 11 were obviously highlights of the day. I think, to play those two par 3s in four shots was a big help to, obviously, posting 1 under par."

At the 13th, Poulter hit a wayward drive that found the thick left rough, a spot that brought a big number into play, especially after he hacked it out and left it in a fairway bunker just 100 yards away. From there he played a deft 50-yard shot that came spinning off the green and back into a green side bunker, where he displayed the resolve we've come to know from Poulter and got up-and-down for bogey. He closed with five straight pars, including another impressive sand save at the par-3 17th.

"Scrambling when you are out of position on this golf course is also key, and I did that well," Poulter said. "I limited the mistakes."

RELATED: Why Ian Poulter's solid round was unexpected, even to him

Henley was one of the very few to reach three under on Thursday, recovering from a bogey at the par-3 second with an eagle at the fifth (his first ever in seven U.S. Open appearances) and birdies at the seventh and eighth holes. Shinnecock's back nine gave him a bit more trouble, as he made double bogey at the par-4 10th and bogeyed the last to come in at two-over 37. While he's never had a top 10 in a major, the three-time tour winner knows he can play with anybody.

"I feel good. I also know I've got a lot of golf to play," Henley said. "But I do feel good about my game. I've beaten all these guys before. I've won out here on tour. Haven't won a major yet. But I believe in my game, and I just try to stay patient."

Piercy, who walked off the course during Wednesday's practice round frustrated with his game, hit 11 of 14 fairways and just nine of 18 greens, but still managed three birdies against two bogeys to grab a share of the lead.

RELATED: Scott Piercy can thank Instagram for his impressive first round at Shinnecock

The lone man at even par is Jason Dufner, who has just one top 10 in 17 major championship starts since his victory at the 2013 PGA Championship. His position on the leader board through one round is proof that Shinnecock fits no particular player, as Dufner ranks outside the top 50 in every strokes-gained category on the PGA Tour this season.

Seven players are at one over, including Justin Rose and Henrik Stenson, who are each in search of a second major championship.

WATCH: GOLF DIGEST VIDEOS


The U.S. Open is underway at Shinnecock Hills!

Opening-round play is here Thursday in New York. We will be tracking the action. Follow along below…

How to follow the action:

All times Eastern and represent Thursday

TELEVISION: FS1 (9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.); Fox (4:30-7:30 p.m.)

FS1 (9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.); Fox (4:30-7:30 p.m.) ONLINE STREAMING: USOpen.com, Featured Group 1 (7:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.); USOpen.com, Featured Group 2 (8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.); Featured Holes Nos. 7, 9 and 11 (8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.)

USOpen.com, Featured Group 1 (7:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.); USOpen.com, Featured Group 2 (8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.); Featured Holes Nos. 7, 9 and 11 (8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.) ON GOLFWEEK: Tour Tracker | All coverage

• • •

U.S. Open Tracker

UPDATE No. 26 (7:30 p.m. ET): The first round will end with four co-leaders at 1 under. Here is the top of the leaderboard…

UPDATE No. 25 (6:10 p.m. ET): Russell Henley had a great chance to post a new lead number in the clubhouse. A closing bogey, though, pushes him back to 1-under 69.

Still, nobody has bettered 1-under 69 today, so he is tied for the clubhouse lead.

UPDATE No. 24 (5:50 p.m. ET): Tiger Woods is falling apart. He four-putts for double to fall to 6 over. And he’s going to make bogey at best at No. 14. This is going the wrong way fast.

UPDATE No. 23 (5:21 p.m. ET): Dustin Johnson bogeys No. 12 to fall to 2 under and he’s now co-leading with Russell Henley (through 15).

UPDATE No. 22 (5 p.m. ET): DJ sneaks in a 20-footer for birdie at the par-3 11th and that moves him to 3 under and one in front.

UPDATE No. 21 (4:50 p.m. ET): A look at the top of the leaderboard.

DJ is still in front (sharing the lead).

UPDATE No. 20 (4 p.m. ET): DJ is feeling it! He holes a greenside bunker shot for birdie at the par-4 eighth!

That moves him back to 2 under and into a tie for the lead with Jason Dufner.

UPDATE No. 19 (3:40 p.m. ET): Dustin Johnson is among those on top.

He actually held the solo lead at 2 under after a Russell Henley double bogey dropped him to 1 under. But DJ bogeyed the sixth to fall to 1 under. But he’s in a seven-way tie for the lead still.

UPDATE No. 18 (3 p.m. ET): Russell Henley is the new solo leader at 3 under.

He birdies No. 8 to move in front. It’s still tough this afternoon and the wind is still there, but it seems like things have eased up just the slightest this afternoon.

UPDATE No. 17 (2:55 p.m. ET): Brian Gay and Russell Henley are both 2 under and tied for the lead now. Gay is through nine and Henley is through seven.

There are now nine players under par, but remember that only two are in the clubhouse.

UPDATE No. 16 (2:27 p.m. ET): Peter Uihlein is your new solo leader!

He birdies Nos. 4 and 5 to move to 2 under. Five players are T-2 at 1 under, with three of those early in their rounds also.

UPDATE No. 15 (2:15 p.m. ET): Not even Tiger Woods is immune to perils of Shinnecock Hills. The 14-time major champion began his round with a disastrous triple-bogey seven on No. 1. He then bogeyed No. 2 to fall four over after two holes.

UPDATE No. 14 (1:33 p.m. ET): Well, the Mickelson-Spieth-McIlroy group has to be relieved their day is over.

Lefty shoots 7-over 77 and actually has the BEST round. Spieth comes in with 78 and McIlroy fires an 80. That’s a 25-over total for that trio. Brutal.

UPDATE No. 13 (1:15 p.m. ET): Ian Poulter is in with 1-under 69. That means we’ve got two sub-par rounds from the morning wave. That’s probably all we are getting for red numbers from the morning.

A nice 1-under 69 for Ian Poulter to tie for the early clubhouse lead. And he can hardly contain his excitement. #USOpen pic.twitter.com/8pAyXGmjTN — U.S. Open (USGA) (@usopengolf) June 14, 2018

As for the big names, here’s a rundown…

Patrick Reed: 3-over 73 (T-37)

Rickie Fowler: 3-over 73 (T-37)

Brooks Koepka: 5-over 75 (T-54)

Bubba Watson: 7-over 77 (T-74)

Phil Mickelson: 7 over through 17 (T-74)

Jordan Spieth: 8 over through 17 (T-80)

Jason Day: 9-over 79 (T-87)

Rory McIlroy: 9 over through 17 (T-87)

Yikes.

UPDATE No. 12 (12:30 p.m. ET): We have a 92 on the board from Scott Gregory. Yep, it’s carnage out here…

https://twitter.com/golfweek/status/1007299023148146688

UPDATE No. 11 (12 p.m. ET): We have a sub-par round!!! No, we’re serious.

Scott Piercy, who was an alternate before getting into the field earlier this week, is in with a 1-under 69 and oh man, what anybody would take for that number today. He’s tied for the lead and one of just two players under par (Ian Poulter, through 14, is at 1 under as well). Piercy is the clubhouse leader by two.

Scott Piercy was an alternate. Scott Piercy is the first player to post a red number in Round 1. #USOpen pic.twitter.com/bGUq5FBzeP — U.S. Open (USGA) (@usopengolf) June 14, 2018

UPDATE No. 10 (11:25 a.m. ET): Rory starts his back nine double bogey-bogey. He is now 10 over through 11. He’s second-to-last.

Jordan Spieth is 6 over through 11. Phil Mickelson, at 5 over, is remarkably the best of the group!

Leaders are still 2 under, but only four are under par now.

UPDATE No. 9 (10:50 a.m. ET): Here are some updates…

The lead is still 2 under, with Ian Poulter, Matt Kuchar and Calum Hill (of course) tied at the top. Four more at 1 under. Scott Piercy (1 under through 15) is the only player under par through more than nine holes.

As for big names: Aside from Kuch, Justin Rose and Patrick Reed are doing the best at Even par. Brooke Koepka is 2 over through 11 and Rickie Fowler is 2 over through eight.

Jordan Spieth and Phil Mickelson both open (on the back) in 4-over 39. Bubba Watson is 5 over through 11 and Jason Day is 6 over through the same. Rory McIlroy goes out in 7-over 42 on the back.

Here’s Rory’s U.S. Open in a nutshell thus far…

UPDATE No. 8 (10:10 a.m. ET): We now have a four-way tie for the lead at 2 under.

Ian Poulter, Matt Kuchar, Charley Hoffman and Russell Knox are all co-leaders. Six players are under par total.

UPDATE No. 7 (9:40 a.m. ET): This is really starting to get dim for Spieth and Rory.

McIlroy is now 6 over through five, and Spieth is 5 over through five. Unreal. Charley Hoffman has taken over the solo lead by getting out to 2 under through four holes.

UPDATE No. 6 (9:20 a.m. ET): Phil Mickelson is 3 over through four … and the leader in his group.

That’s because Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth are both 4 over. That would be a combined 11 over from that trio. Wow.

The lead is 1 under, held by several players including Justin Rose and Brooks Koepka.

UPDATE No. 5 (9:03 a.m. ET): Here’s a rundown where the big names stand so far. Wind is up today, so the scores are brutal so far.

Patrick Reed: 1 under through 4 (T-2)

Brooks Koepka: 1 under through 4 (T-2)

Rickie Fowler: Even through 3 (T-10)

Rory McIlroy: 2 over through 3 (T-38)

Phil Mickelson: 2 over through 3 (T-38)

Jason Day: 3 over through 4 (T-53)

Jordan Spieth: 4 over through 3 (T-60)

UPDATE No. 4 (8:55 a.m. ET): More examples of carnage…

Jason Day is already 3 over through four.

It's been that kind of start for many of the stars this morning. #USOpenhttps://t.co/6NZAT4UPhS pic.twitter.com/ObgSDrl02d — U.S. Open (USGA) (@usopengolf) June 14, 2018

UPDATE No. 3 (8:45 a.m. ET): We’ve got some morning updates, and some are gruesome…

Aaron Baddeley leads at 2 under (through four) and Patrick Reed starts birdie-birdie-bogey on the back to tie the lead and then fall one back. Defending champion Brooks Koepka is also 1 under through three (on the front). Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy both are 1 over through two on the back.

The bad… Jordan Spieth starts bogey-triple and is already 4 over. Yikes! Matthew Southgate has 93 yards from the fairway for his second at his opening par-4 10th and makes TRIPLE BOGEY! Yeesh! Scott Stallings has yet to make a par and has a 9 on his card! Stallings starts bogey-bogey-birdie-bogey-quintuple bogey-bogey-birdie and is 7 over. Wow!

UPDATE No. 2 (7 a.m. ET): A reminder that these are the conditions that will face the players today at Shinnecock…

The wind is really whipping at Shinnecock this morning. 15-20 mph from the West/Southwest with gusts to 30. It’s gonna be a wild opening round at the #USOpen. pic.twitter.com/Ukx8a4Os8N — David Dusek (@Golfweek_Dusek) June 14, 2018

UPDATE No. 1 (6:45 a.m. ET): The U.S. Open is now underway!

The 118th #USOpen Championship gets underway with Harold Varner III hitting the first tee shot at Shinnecock Hills. https://t.co/WkMkpEAzvt — U.S. Open (USGA) (@usopengolf) June 14, 2018

A Twitter List by GolfweekCasey https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

Total comment

Author

fw

0   comments

Cancel Reply