Jon Rahm finally got his win. Two weeks after getting forced out of The Memorial with a six-shot lead after three rounds because of COVID tracing, Rahm won the 121st U.S. Open Championship at Torrey Pines Golf Course.
Rahm finished the tournament at 6-under par, just ahead of Louis Oosthuizen, who now has six second-place finishes in his career.
Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images
Professional golfers finally began looking like everyday, recreational golfers Sunday afternoon during the back nine at the U.S. Open Championship at Torrey Pines in San Diego. What looked like a packed field getting ready to make a surge for a major title turned into the best golfers in the world shanking shots and trying to save par and not slip out of contention.
Oosthuizen shot even par on the first nine, and then made a birdie on 10 to bring him to 6-under. However, a bogey on 11 brought him right back to 5-under, where he remained with a one-shot lead over Jon Rahm for several holes.
Rahm sank a curving, winding birdie on the 17th green to put him tied with Oosthiuzen at 5-under while the South African was drilling his second shot onto the 14th green. Oosthiuzen just missed birdie on a long putt and settled for a 2-foot par and tie for the lead.
Rahm hit a perfect tee shot onto the fairway at 18, but then knocked his second shot into a sand trap near the green. He birdied the par-5 hole to put him at 6-under and the tournament lead as he left the course.
Oosthuizen’s tee shot on 17 went wide left, and he needed a drop on the par-4 hole. He then sent his third shot onto the green, but he ended with a bogey. He needed to eagle the par-5 18th to force a playoff with Rahm. Oosthuizen’s third shot missed, giving Spain its first U.S. Open champion with Rahm.
Americans Harris English (-3) and Brooks Koepka (-2) finished their final round an hour ahead of the pack and went to the clubhouse to await their final standings as the last groups of golfers made their way through the course.
American Bryson DeChambeau was in a four-way tie for first place before he birdied the par-3 on hole 8. DeChambeau used a pitching wedge on the hole that was 175 yards away. His first shot landed within an inch of the hole, and a tap-in put him at 5-under—one shot in the lead.
Things took a turn on the back nine when DeChambeau made bogey on 11 and 12, then a double bogey on 13 to put him at 1-under par for the tournament, tied for seventh at the time. He triple-bogeyed the 17th hole to put him at 3-over par for the tournament.