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Scott's 'old-man par golf' has him in hunt at US Open
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Sam Burns has the lead in the U.S. Open on a rain-soaked Oakmont course and faces his biggest test. The 28-year-old from Louisiana has never contended in 20 previous majors.
With three rounds of the U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club complete, Sam Burns holds a one shot lead and will look to close it out on Sunday and win his first major championship. Burns entered the weekend with the lead after finding ways to tame some of Oakmont's challenges, firing a 65 to move to -3 on the leaderboard.
UNT product Carlos Ortiz is in the top 5 while Dallas’ Scottie Scheffler sits eight shots back in a 10-way tie for 11th.
Wyndham Clark is a U.S. Open champion, but he certainly didn't behave like one — or even like a respectable golf pro — after he failed to make the cut at vaunte
With three rounds complete and only four players are under par, Sunday is primed for excitement. Who will win the 2025 U.S. Open?
Outside the majors, most PGA Tour tournaments use sudden‑death playoffs. Competitors replay a single designated hole (often the 18th), with the first player to win a hole outright earning the title. Formats may vary slightly by event, but sudden death remains the tour standard.
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GOLF.com on MSNThe U.S. Open leaderboard feels random. Oakmont does thatThe U.S. Open leaderboard might feel random, but it makes perfect sense. Oakmont Country Club thrives on weird results.
Defending U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau will not see the weekend at Oakmont, but several of his LIV Golf comrades will.
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 U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club has historically been one of the toughest tests in all of golf. Coming into the 2025 edition, only one player had ever made a hole-in-one during U.S. Open play at the course -- Scott Simpson on the 16th hole in 1983,