The
2015 United States Open Championship was the 115th
U.S. Open, played June 18–21, 2015 at
Chambers Bay in
University Place, Washington, southwest of
Tacoma on the shore of
Puget Sound.
Jordan Spieth won his first U.S. Open and consecutive major titles, one stroke ahead of runners-up
Dustin Johnson and
Louis Oosthuizen. This was the first U.S. Open televised by
Fox Sports 1 and
Fox Sports, which was the beginning of a 12-year contract with the
United States Golf Association.
Spieth, age 21, became the youngest U.S. Open champion in 92 years, since
Bobby Jones in 1923. Also the reigning
Masters champion, Spieth is the youngest to win the Masters and U.S. Open in the same year, passing
Tiger Woods, who won both in
2002 at age 26.
Others to win the first two majors of the year were
Craig Wood (
1941),
Ben Hogan (
1951,
1953),
Arnold Palmer (
1960), and
Jack Nicklaus (
1972).
This was the first U.S. Open played in the
Pacific Northwest and the third major played in the state of
Washington, which hosted the
PGA Championship in
1944 and
1998.
First round
Thursday, June 18, 2015
The first
hole was set as a par-4 at
501 yards (458 m) and the
18th hole as par-5 at 617 yards (564 m), with the course at 7,497 yards (6,855 m). The scoring average for the field was 72.72 (+2.72) and 25 players had under-par rounds.
Second round
Friday, June 19, 2015
The 1st hole was set as a 593-yard par-5 and the 18th hole as 514-yard par-4, with the total yardage at 7,695. The scoring average for the field was 73.48 (+3.48) and 18 players had under-par rounds.
J. B. Holmes and Louis Oosthuizen had the low rounds of the day, 66 (−4).
Third round
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Louis Oosthuizen again had the low round of the day, 66 (−4), moving him into a tie for 5th place.
Despite suffering from vertigo
Jason Day scored 68 (−2), the second lowest round of the day.
The 1st hole was set as a 499-yard par-4 and the 18th hole as 577-yard par-5, with the total yardage at 7,637. The scoring average for the field was 73.13 (+3.13) and only 6 players had under-par rounds.
Final round
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Four players began the final round tied for the lead for the first time at the U.S. Open since
1973. In the final pairing with Jason Day at 3 pm
PDT, Dustin Johnson recorded two birdies on the front nine to take sole possession of the lead, then lost it with bogeys on three out of four holes to begin the back nine. In the penultimate pairing, Jordan Spieth and
Branden Grace both birdied the par-4 12th to tie, but
Grace fell from contention on the
16th after his drive went out of bounds and he made double bogey. Spieth holed a 25-foot (8 m) birdie putt at the 16th to open up a three-stroke lead, but then three-putted for double bogey on the par-3 17th to fall into a tie with Louis Oosthuizen.
Oosthuizen began the round three shots off the lead and quickly dropped further behind with three consecutive bogeys on the front-nine.
Beginning at the 12th, however, Oosthuizen birdied six out of his last seven holes to tie Spieth. At the par-5 18th, Spieth hit the green in two and proceeded to two-putt for birdie.
Johnson recovered from his bogey streak with a birdie at the 17th, then also found the 18th green in two. Faced with a 12-foot (3.7 m) eagle putt to win the championship, Johnson's attempt rolled three feet (
0.9 m) past the hole, then missed his birdie putt to tie. Expecting a Monday playoff, Spieth suddenly gained a one-stroke victory for his second consecutive major title.
With the win, Spieth became the sixth to win both
The Masters and U.S. Open in the same year and the first since Tiger Woods in 2002. He also became the first to win two majors before the age of 22 since
Gene Sarazen in 1922, and the youngest U.S. Open champion since Bobby Jones in 1923. After opening with a round of 77 (+7), Oosthuizen shot 199 over his last three rounds, tying the U.S. Open record for lowest 54-hole score. His score of 29 on the back-nine also tied a tournament record.
The first hole was set as a par-4 at 443 yards (
405 m) and the 18th hole as a par-5 at 601 yards (550 m), with the total at 7,384 yards (6,752 m). The scoring average for the field was 71.29 (+1.29) and 22 players had under-par rounds.
Adam Scott had the low round of the championship, a 6-under-par 64 to tie for fourth.
- published: 13 Sep 2015
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