US Open, final
Digest more
J.J. Spaun delivered a finish to remember on his way to winning the 2025 US Open. The 34-year-old holed a 64-foot putt on the 18th hole at Oakmont Country Club to win the season's third major with a one-under score.
As he stood on the ninth tee box in the pouring rain, it looked for all the world like J.J. Spaun had just played his way out of contention for the 125th US Open championship.
The US Open continued Friday at Oakmont. The leaderboard took shape as the cut line loomed. Here are updates and scores.
Follow live coverage of the final round at Oakmont with Sam Burns leading Adam Scott and the rest of the U.S. Open field
Scott and J.J. Spaun, the 18-hole leader, are tied at three-under. Viktor Hovland is the only other player under par after 54 holes. Full leaderboard can be found here on PGATour.com. Here's a look at the players who have the best odds to win this year's tournament following Saturday's third round:
The US Open Thursday at Oakmont was unforgettable with JJ Spaun showing the way. Here are highlights and scores from the first round.
...JJ Spaun try ing to hack it out of the left rough at the fifth to Carlos Ortiz duffing it from the rough into the bunker at the sixth. Perfect illustration of ‘Oakmont’ (it’s quite hard...). Adam Scott is back to one-under after a bogey at the par-four fourth. He avoided the Church Pews, but found the rough on the other side of the fairway. From there he is always up against it and he walks off the green with a five. That’s a second in a row for the Norwegian and he’s back to one-over...not the start he wanted. His putt at the par-four third was a nervy one. ...Robert MacIntyre drained a huge eagle putt at the par-five fourth. He’s back to three-over, probably too far back, but (and I reckon this won’t be the first time I type this (apols in advance)) you never know... It comes at the second and, low and behold, courtesy of a three-putt. His first putt from 62-feet is up the slope and short, leaving him with an 11-footer. He cannot sink that, so he’s back to three-under, the lead back to one. Adam Scott, his playing partner, has a good look at birdie but walks off with a par to stay at two-under. This, at the moment, is a staring contest between the top four/five... It’s come at the first. He had 192 in and his approach found the left rough. From there he’s shortsided and walks off the green with a five. He’s back to two-under. Sam Burns pars and, at four-under, has a two-shot lead. JJ Spaun, meanwhile, at the second, also bogeys, thanks to that earlier bit of huge misfortune...he’s back to one-over.
If scores hold after the second round of the U.S. Open on Friday—and obviously they won't—the cut line is projected to claim anybody shooting worse than three over par.