Payouts, prize money for tournament at Oakmont Country Club
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J.J. Spaun wins at Oakmont, closes with pair of birdies
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The 125th U.S. Open is over and Oakmont, a record-breaking 10-time host of the championship, is nearly back to normal.
Bogey, bogey, bogey, par, bogey, bogey. It’s a helluva way to start the most important round of your life.
Through it all, looming large and nasty and insurmountable, there was the golf course. Oakmont Country Club hosted its record 10th U.S. Open. As ever, it did not disappoint. This is the place that, in 1962,
Sunday at Oakmont was chaotic, challenging, maddening and entertaining. It was all you could ask for in a U.S. Open.
The church pews — 13, long grassy tufts which act as islands within a seemingly endless pit of sand — were never part of the original design
The U.S. Open is not only returning during a year when golf saw its largest Masters audience since 2018 with nearly 20 million viewers, but it's also coming back to one of the most notoriously difficult courses in the nation: the Oakmont Country Club in western Pennsylvania.
Hundreds of men flooded Oakmont Country Club as the sun was peaking its head over the top of the property Tuesday morning. Not a single one was gearing up to play. Grounds crew, maintenance staff and championship officials were putting the finishing touches on practice round conditions,
Masters champion and four men with zero majors between them are in the top five heading into Sunday's final round.
Spaun learned from previous errors to make history at the 2025 U.S. Open, writes Bob Harig. Plus, notes on the low amateur and the PGA Tour's new CEO.