2019 U.S. Open
Tournament information
DatesJune 13–16, 2019
LocationPebble Beach, California
36°34′05″N 121°57′00″W / 36.568°N 121.950°W / 36.568; -121.950
Course(s)Pebble Beach Golf Links
Organized byUSGA
Tour(s)PGA Tour
European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Statistics
Par71
Length7,075 yards (6,469 m)
Field156, 79 after cut
Cut144 (+2)
Prize fund$12,500,000[1]
Winner's share$2,250,000
Champion
United States Gary Woodland
271 (−13)
Location Map
Pebble Beach is located in the United States
Pebble Beach
Pebble Beach
Location in the United States
Pebble Beach is located in California
Pebble Beach
Pebble Beach
Location in California

The 2019 United States Open Championship was the 119th U.S. Open, played from June 13–16 at Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, California. It was the seventh major and sixth U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, which last hosted U.S. Opens in 2000 and 2010, won by Tiger Woods and Graeme McDowell, respectively.[2]

Gary Woodland won his first major title by three strokes over world number one Brooks Koepka. Ranked 25th coming into the tournament, and having never finished in the top 20 in the U.S. Open previously, he was generally seen as a surprise victor. Koepka had won four of the last nine majors, and was attempting to become the first player to win three straight U.S. Opens since 1905.[3]

Woodland shot 68 in the first round, and 65 in the second, to lead by two strokes after 36 holes. He shot 69 in the third round, to have a single-stroke lead over Justin Rose going into the final day. After shooting a 69 in the final round, he converted a 54-hole lead into a victory for the first time in eight attempts in stroke-play events. His 72-hole winning score, a 13-under-par 271, was the lowest relative to par since 2011 and included a stretch of 34 holes without a bogey. Woodland led the field in scrambling, having begun the week ranked 169th in that category.[3]

The previous winner of the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, Graeme McDowell, finished tied for 16th with a 3-under-par 281. Tiger Woods was tied 58th after the first round, and began his final round by bogeying four of his first six holes, but rallied on the back nine to finish tied for 21st with a 2-under-par 282. Justin Rose entered the final round one shot back of Woodland but made three bogeys on his final seven holes to finish tied for 3rd. On his 49th birthday, six-time U.S. Open runner-up, Phil Mickelson finished with a 4-over-par 288, having won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am earlier in the year at Pebble Beach.[3]

79 players made the cut, including four amateurs. The leading amateur was Norwegian Viktor Hovland, who had qualified by winning the 2018 U.S. Amateur, which was also held at Pebble Beach. He finished tied for 12th at 4-under-par, to become first low amateur at the Masters and U.S. Open in the same season since Matt Kuchar in 1998.[3]

The U.S. Open traditionally has a winning score around par, but a joint record 31 players finished under par for the tournament. This was partly attributed by the media to the soft conditions resulting from a marine layer, and relatively low wind speeds for a links-style course.[4]

Venue

Course layout

Pebble Beach hosted the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February of the same year. The changes made to the course since that event include reducing par from 72 to 71, cutting the greens from .125" to .110", and growing the rough from 2" to between 3-5".[3]

HoleYardsPar  HoleYardsPar
13804104954
25164113904
34044122023
43314134454
51953145805
65235153974
71093164034
84284172083
95264185435
Out3,41235In3,66336
Source:Total7,07571

Previous course lengths for major championships

Prior to 2000, the 2nd hole was played as a par 5.
2019 yardages by round
RoundHole123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Par444435344354434544353671
1Yards3815024123341885181084335023,3784933872024475923994022185523,6927,070
2Yards3825163943341865291164325263,4154973891854525833994072105353,6577,072
3Yards376515410315184524984285253,3754993882094405893993952035443,6667,041
4Yards3865234073242045201024335333,4324923901984485823944092205393,6727,104
  • Scoring average: 72.352
    • by round: 72.685, 72.571, 72.430, 71.190
  • Most difficult holes in relation to par: 10, 8 and 9, 9, 9

Source:[5]

Field

About half the field consisted of players who are exempt from qualifying for the U.S. Open.[6] Each player is classified according to the first category in which he qualified, and other categories are shown in parentheses.

1. Winners of the U.S. Open Championship during the last ten years

Lucas Glover, Dustin Johnson (9,11,12,13,14), Martin Kaymer, Brooks Koepka (7,9,11,12,13,14), Graeme McDowell, Rory McIlroy (6,7,8,9,12,13,14), Justin Rose (11,12,13,14), Webb Simpson (8,11,12,13,14), Jordan Spieth (5,6,13,14)

2. Winners of the 2018 U.S. Amateur, U.S. Junior Amateur, and U.S. Mid-Amateur, and runner-up of the 2018 U.S. Amateur

Devon Bling (a), Viktor Hovland (a), Kevin O'Connell (a), Michael Thorbjornsen (a)

3. Winner of the 2018 Amateur Championship

Jovan Rebula (a)

4. Winner of the 2018 Mark H. McCormack Medal (men's World Amateur Golf Ranking)
5. Winners of the Masters Tournament during the last five years

Sergio García (13,14), Patrick Reed (11,12,13,14), Danny Willett, Tiger Woods (9,12,13,14)

6. Winners of The Open Championship during the last five years

Zach Johnson, Francesco Molinari (9,12,13,14), Henrik Stenson (11,13,14)

7. Winners of the PGA Championship during the last five years

Jason Day (12,13,14), Justin Thomas (12,13,14), Jimmy Walker

8. Winners of The Players Championship during the last three years

Kim Si-woo (13,14)

9. Winners of multiple PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation for the FedEx Cup, between the 2018 U.S. Open and the 2019 U.S. Open

Bryson DeChambeau (12,13,14), Matt Kuchar (13,14), Kevin Na (12,13,14), Xander Schauffele (11,12,13,14)

10. Winner of the 2018 U.S. Senior Open Championship

David Toms

11. The 10 lowest scorers and anyone tying for 10th place at the 2018 U.S. Open Championship

Daniel Berger, Tony Finau (12,13,14), Tommy Fleetwood (12,13,14), Tyrrell Hatton (13,14)

12. Players who qualified for the season-ending 2018 Tour Championship

Keegan Bradley (13,14), Patrick Cantlay (13,14), Paul Casey (13,14), Rickie Fowler (13,14), Billy Horschel (13,14), Patton Kizzire, Marc Leishman (13,14), Hideki Matsuyama (13,14), Phil Mickelson (13,14), Jon Rahm (13,14), Cameron Smith (13,14), Kyle Stanley (13,14), Bubba Watson (13,14), Aaron Wise, Gary Woodland (13,14)

13. The top 60 point leaders and ties as of May 20, 2019 in the Official World Golf Ranking

An Byeong-hun (14), Abraham Ancer, Kiradech Aphibarnrat (14), Lucas Bjerregaard (14), Rafa Cabrera-Bello (14), Matt Fitzpatrick (14), Jim Furyk (14), Branden Grace (14), Justin Harding (14), J. B. Holmes (14), Charles Howell III (14), Kevin Kisner (14), Li Haotong (14), Luke List, Shane Lowry (14), Keith Mitchell (14), Alex Norén (14), Thorbjørn Olesen (14), Louis Oosthuizen (14), Pan Cheng-tsung (14), Ian Poulter (14), Chez Reavie, Adam Scott (14), Brandt Snedeker (14), Matt Wallace (14)

14. The top 60 point leaders and ties as of June 10, 2019 in the Official World Golf Ranking

Emiliano Grillo, Scott Piercy, Andrew Putnam

15. Special exemptions given by the USGA

Ernie Els[8]

The remaining contestants earned their places through sectional qualifiers. Each site has n spots allocated amongst m players denoted (n/m).

(a) denotes amateur
(L) denotes player advanced through local qualifying

Alternates who gained entry:

  • Cody Gribble (Texas) – spot reallocated from England qualifier[9]
  • Chan Kim (Japan) – spot reallocated from England qualifier[9]
  • Joel Dahmen (Columbus) – claimed spot held for category 9 or 14
  • Harris English (Ontario) – claimed spot held for category 9 or 14
  • Bernd Wiesberger (England) – claimed spot held for category 9 or 14

Weather

  • Thursday: Partly cloudy, with a high of 67 °F/19 °C. Wind W 11 mph.
  • Friday: Mostly overcast, with a high of 61 °F/16 °C. Wind W 6-12 mph.
  • Saturday: Overcast, with a high of 59 °F/15 °C. WNW wind 5-10 mph, with gusts to 15 mph.
  • Sunday: Partly cloudy. High of 61 °F/16 °C. Wind W 7-14 mph.[3]

Round summaries

First round

Thursday, June 13, 2019

2013 champion Justin Rose birdied his final three holes to shoot 65 (−6), equaling the record for lowest round shot in a U.S. Open at Pebble Beach,[10] and taking a one-shot lead. Xander Schauffele eagled the 18th hole to join Rickie Fowler, Louis Oosthuizen and Aaron Wise in a tie for second.[11] Two-time defending champion Brooks Koepka birdied four of his first six holes before falling back to two-under and a tie for 16th. Seventeen eagles were made during the round, a new U.S. Open record.[12][13]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1England Justin Rose65−6
T2United States Rickie Fowler66−5
South Africa Louis Oosthuizen
United States Xander Schauffele
United States Aaron Wise
T6United States Nate Lashley67−4
United States Scott Piercy
T8Argentina Emiliano Grillo68−3
United States Chesson Hadley
Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy
Italy Francesco Molinari
United States Chez Reavie
Sweden Henrik Stenson
Austria Sepp Straka
United States Gary Woodland
Source:[14]

Second round

Friday, June 14, 2019

Gary Woodland holed a 50-foot birdie putt on the 9th hole, the last of his round, to post a bogey-free round of 65 (−6) and take a two-shot lead. His 36-hole score of nine-under ties Gil Morgan in 1992 for lowest in a U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. First-round leader Justin Rose was in second place after a round of 70 (−1). Louis Oosthuizen was tied for the lead but had just one par on his back-nine, making four birdies and four bogeys to finish three shots behind. Rory McIlroy got to within a shot of the lead before a bogey at the 13th and double bogey at the par-5 14th, falling into a tie for fourth place and four behind. Brooks Koepka became the first defending champion since 1988 to begin his title defense with two sub-70 rounds and was part of a group tied for sixth, five behind.[15][16]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1United States Gary Woodland68-65=133−9
2England Justin Rose65-70=135−7
3South Africa Louis Oosthuizen66-70=136−6
T4Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy68-69=137−5
United States Aaron Wise66-71=137
T6United States Chesson Hadley68-70=138−4
United States Brooks Koepka69-69=138
United States Matt Kuchar69-69=138
United States Chez Reavie68-70=138
England Matt Wallace70-68=138

Amateurs: Wu (−2), Eaton (E), Hovland (E), Thorbjornsen (+2), Tibbits (+3), Rebula (+4), Eckroat (+5), Yu (+5), Hagestad (+7), Hillier (+7), O'Connell (+8), Parziale (+9), Young (+9), Norton (+13), Bling (+20)

Source:[14]

Third round

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Gary Woodland, the 36-hole leader, was two-under par through 11 holes before finding trouble on the par-3 12th, hitting his tee shot into the rough. Still, off the green after his second shot, he made a 33-foot chip shot to save par. At the par-5 14th, his fourth shot almost rolled back down off the green but managed to stop just short. He then made a 42-foot putt to save par yet again. He parred the last four holes to shoot 69 (−2) and take a one-shot lead into the final round. Justin Rose got up-and-down from a greenside bunker for birdie at the par-5 18th to get to 10-under, a shot behind Woodland.[17]

Louis Oosthuizen birdied three holes in a row from the 15th to the 17th to get into a tie for third with Chez Reavie and two-time defending champion Brooks Koepka, four shots behind. Koepka didn't make a bogey in a round of 68 (−3).[18]

PlacePlayerScoreTo par
1United States Gary Woodland68-65-69=202−11
2England Justin Rose65-70-68=203−10
T3United States Brooks Koepka69-69-68=206−7
South Africa Louis Oosthuizen66-70-70=206
United States Chez Reavie68-70-68=206
6Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy68-69-70=207−6
T7United States Chesson Hadley68-70-70=208−5
United States Matt Kuchar69-69-70=208
T9Northern Ireland Graeme McDowell69-70-70=209−4
Spain Jon Rahm69-70-70=209
Sweden Henrik Stenson68-71-70=209
England Matt Wallace70-68-71=209
England Danny Willett71-71-67=209

Amateurs: Wu (−2), Hovland (E), Eaton (+2), Thorbjornsen (+15)

Source:[14]

Final round

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Summary

Gary Woodland, who came into the final round with a one-shot lead, birdied two of his first three holes and, despite a bogey at the 9th, still led by two making the turn. Brooks Koepka was four-under through five holes but failed to birdie the par-5 6th from a greenside bunker and missed a six-foot putt for birdie at the 7th to trail by two going to the back-nine. At the par-5 14th hole, Woodland went for the green from 264 yards out, his 3-wood just clearing the bunker in front of the green and settling on the hill to the left of the green where he was able to make birdie. Koepka, meanwhile, failed to birdie the same hole after driving into the rough and hitting his third shot onto the same hill.[19]

Still leading by two heading to the par-3 17th, Woodland's tee shot finished on the fringe, 90 feet away from the hole. Forced to chip because of the mound dividing the green, he got his second shot to within 3 feet to save par. Koepka's approach at the par-5 18th went over the green where he failed to get up-and-down for birdie, missing a 9-foot putt to finish at 10-under. Now needing only a bogey at the last to win, Woodland hit an iron off the tee and laid up with his second shot. His third found the green 30 feet to the right of the flag, and he made the putt to shoot a final-round 69 (−2) and finish three shots ahead of Koepka at 13-under.[20][21]

Justin Rose, one back at the start of the round, played his final 11 holes in 4-over and fell back to a tie for third place with Jon Rahm, Chez Reavie, and Xander Schauffele. Amateur Viktor Hovland finished at 4-under 280, breaking Jack Nicklaus's record for lowest score by an amateur in the U.S. Open; he finished tied for 12th, which was the best by an amateur since Jim Simons tied for 5th in 1971.[22]

Final leaderboard

Champion
Silver Cup winner (leading amateur)
(a) = amateur
(c) = past champion
PlacePlayerScoreTo parMoney ($)
1United States Gary Woodland68-65-69-69=271−132,250,000
2United States Brooks Koepka (c)69-69-68-68=274−101,350,000
T3Spain Jon Rahm69-70-70-68=277−7581,872
United States Chez Reavie68-70-68-71=277
England Justin Rose (c)65-70-68-74=277
United States Xander Schauffele66-73-71-67=277
T7South Africa Louis Oosthuizen66-70-70-72=278−6367,387
Australia Adam Scott70-69-71-68=278
T9United States Chesson Hadley68-70-70-71=279−5288,715
Northern Ireland Rory McIlroy (c)68-69-70-72=279
Sweden Henrik Stenson68-71-70-70=279
Source:[14]

Scorecard

Final round

Hole123456789101112131415161718
Par444435344443454435
United States Woodland−11−12−13−13−13−13−13−13−12−12−12−11−11−12−12−12−12−13
United States Koepka−8−8−9−10−11−11−11−10−10−10−11−10−10−10−10−10−10−10
Spain Rahm−5−4−4−5−6−6−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−6−6−6−7
United States Reavie−7−6−6−6−6−6−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7−7
England Rose−11−10−10−10−10−11−11−10−10−10−10−9−8−8−7−7−7−7
United States Schauffele−4−4−4−5−6−7−7−6−7−8−8−8−7−8−8−8−7−7
South Africa Oosthuizen−8−8−8−9−9−9−9−9−9−7−7−6−6−5−5−5−6−6
Australia Scott−3−3−4−4−4−6−6−6−7−8−8−9−7−8−8−7−6−6
United States Hadley−5−4−4−4−4−5−5−5−5−5−5−4−4−5−3−4−5−5
Northern Ireland McIlroy−6−4−4−5−4−5−6−5−5−5−6−5−6−6−6−4−4−5
Sweden Stenson−5−4−4−5−5−6−7−7−6−6−7−7−7−7−6−5−5−5

Cumulative tournament scores, relative to par

Eagle Birdie Bogey Double bogey

Media

This was the fifth U.S. Open televised by Fox and FS1. During Fox's primetime window in the first round, FS1 offered coverage hosted by Justin Kutcher following the group of Justin Rose, Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods, and the group of Viktor Hovland, 2018 champion Brooks Koepka, and Francesco Molinari. Due to commitments to baseball and the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, there were no plans for similar coverage on FS1 during the remainder of the tournament.[23]

References

  1. Gray, Will (May 28, 2019). "USGA increases purses for U.S. Open, U.S. Women's Open". Golf Channel.
  2. "U.S. Open History at Pebble Beach". Pebble Beach Golf Club. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "PGA Tour Media". PGA Tour Media. Archived from the original on November 11, 2019. Retrieved May 26, 2019.
  4. Beall, Joel (June 16, 2019). "U.S. Open 2019: The biggest story at Pebble Beach was what didn't happen". Golf Digest. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  5. "119th U.S. Open Championship – Course Statistics". USGA.
  6. "119th U.S. Open Championship – Entry Form" (PDF). USGA. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  7. Martin, Sean (December 14, 2018). "Thornberry decides to turn pro". PGA Tour.
  8. "Ernie Els gets another U.S. Open exemption". ESPN. Associated Press. April 25, 2019.
  9. 1 2 Gray, Will [@WillGrayGC] (June 3, 2019). "Per @USGA's Jeff Hall, today's England sectional field was weaker than expected. Received 14 spots based on strength instead of anticipated 16, meaning the first alternates from already-completed sectionals in Dallas (Cody Gribble) and Japan (Chan Kim) are heading to Pebble" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  10. "Justin Rose leads US Open after record six-under-par in opening round". Evening Standard. June 14, 2019. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  11. Murray, Scott (June 14, 2019). "US Open 2019: first round – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  12. Speros, Bill (June 13, 2019). "U.S. Open Round 1 Recap: Justin Rose steals lead with 65 at Pebble Beach". Golfweek. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  13. Lott, Thomas (June 13, 2019). "U.S. Open 2019: Justin Rose closes round with 3 straight birdies to take solo lead". Sporting News. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  14. 1 2 3 4 "U.S. Open: Leaderboard". ESPN. June 13, 2019.
  15. Murray, Ewan (June 14, 2019). "Gary Woodland moves into lead at US Open as sturdy Rory McIlroy looms". The Guardian. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  16. Powers, Christopher (June 14, 2019). "U.S. Open 2019 live blog: Gary Woodland drains long putt on final hole to post 65, leads by two". Golf Digest. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  17. Powers, Christopher (June 15, 2019). "2019 U.S. Open live blog: Gary Woodland leads by one over Justin Rose after action-packed Moving Day at Pebble Beach". Golf Digest. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  18. Culpepper, Chuck (June 15, 2019). "Gary Woodland leads U.S. Open by a stroke, with some hard-charging stars looming". Washington Post. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  19. Murray, Scott (June 16, 2019). "US Open 2019: final round - as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  20. Nesbitt, Andy (June 16, 2019). "Gary Woodland secured his U.S. Open win with a gutsy shot that left everyone in awe". USA Today. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  21. Berhow, Josh (June 16, 2019). "U.S. Open 2019: Gary Woodland holds off Brooks Koepka to win U.S. Open at Pebble Beach". Golf.com. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  22. Patterson, Chip (June 16, 2019). "2019 U.S. Open: Viktor Holand breaks Jack Nicklaus' 59-year-old amateur scoring record". CBS Sports. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  23. "SBJ Media: Primetime Plans For Pebble Beach". Sports Business Daily. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
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