Top takeaways from Wyndham Clark’s sensational U.S. Open win

Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

The final round of the U.S. Open was completed Sunday evening at Los Angeles Country as Wyndham Clark won the U.S. Open trophy for the first time at 1-under par. He won the third major of the year by one shot over World No. 3 Rory McIlroy.  

It was a challenging three-hole stretch to end as the 16th, 17th, and 18th, all par fours, were ranked the sixth, third, and fourth hardest holes, respectively, on the day.  

Here are four takeaways from the final round of the 123rd U.S. Open.

Wyndham Clark & Rory McIlroy battle it out on the back nine

Throughout the final round on Sunday, the final two players battling it out for the U.S. Open trophy were Wyndham Clark and Rory McIlroy. McIlroy, who was playing one group in front of Clark, entered the day looking to win his first U.S. Open in 12 years and first major tournament in nine.

Despite Clark making bogey on the par-3 15th hole to get down to 11-under, McIlroy made par on the par-4 16 to remain two back.   

McIlroy had an opportunity to tie Clark on the 17th with a 31-foot birdie putt but missed it right and recorded par. Clark recorded his second consecutive bogey on the par-4 16th to make the gap even closer between him and McIlroy.

As a result, it would come down to the final hole. Clark had a one-shot lead at -10 after getting up and down for par on 17 with an opportunity to get his second win of the season after being victorious at the Well Fargo Championship, a designated event with the best PGA Tour players on hand.

Clark, who had hit every fairway and green on the 18th hole this week, hit the right side of the fairway on the 72nd hole today. His approach was on the green, setting up a two-putt to win the U.S. Open.   

Just under 60 feet separated Wyndham Clark and the U.S. Open trophy. He lagged it up to a couple feet to tap in to win his first major tournament of his career at 10-under par.  

With the win, Clark receives the trophy and 550 FedEx Cup points, which vaulted him up six spots to fourth in the standings only being Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, and Max Homa.

Scottie Scheffler and Rickie Fowler finish inside the top 5

Coming into the final round, Rickie Fowler was in the midst of contending for his first major championship while World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler was lurking three shots behind Fowler.

Playing close to home in Murrieta, Calif., Fowler was unable to pull off a magical finish as he recorded three bogeys in the first seven holes. Despite a birdie on the par-5 eighth, Fowler recorded three more bogeys on the par-3 11th, par-4 12th, and the par-4 16th. He did birdie the par-5 14th to get one back on the back nine heading into the final two holes.

In total, Fowler finished the day at 5-over with Tommy Fleetwood and Min Woo Lee.

On the other hand, Scottie Scheffler was hoping to come back and try to finish higher than his second place last year at the U.S. Open.  Whenever Scheffler recorded bogey, he would get that stroke back with a birdie. He bogeyed the par-3 seventh, followed by a birdie on the par-5 eighth. On the back, he bogeyed 11 and 12 and came back with birdies on 13 and 16.

Scheffler wound up shooting even par during the final round to finish solo third at -7 following his par on the 18th hole.  

This is Scheffler’s third consecutive top-10 U.S. Open finish after placing seventh in 2021 and second last year. In addition, this is his 13th top-10 finish this season and fifth consecutive top-5 finish.

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Tommy Fleetwood makes history, shoots best final round

Although Tommy Fleetwood entered the final round of the U.S. Open at 2-over par and tied for 38th, there was still a lot to play for, from prize money to FedEx Cup points. Fleetwood came into this tournament after losing in a playoff at the RBC Canadian Open. After recording a final round 67 last week, the Englishman came into today’s round looking to finish strong, which he did.

Fleetwood recorded a 5-under 30 on the front nine that was highlighted by a six-foot eagle putt on the drivable par-4 sixth. He went right at the pin and was able to knock in the putt to take two shots off the board and move to -3.

In addition to his circle on the sixth, Fleetwood also recorded birdies on the par-4 second, the par-5 eighth and the par-3 ninth.

Then on the back nine, Fleetwood was able to get his tee shot on the par-3 11th from 295 yards to three feet for a three-foot birdie putt. Three holes later, despite being on the left rough, Fleetwood was able to get on the green in two and made a 20-footer for his second eagle of the day.

Despite a bogey on the par-4 16th, Fleetwood recorded a 7-under 63 as he became the first player to record two final-round 63s, with the other coming at the 2018 U.S. Open when he was the runner-up at Shinnecock Hills.

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Gordon Sargent is the U.S. Open low amateur

Being the low amateur at any major is special because of how early in a career it comes. Gordon Sargent, a sophomore from Vanderbilt University, was looking to redeem himself after missing the cut at the Masters a couple months ago this week.

Sargent, who was one of four amateurs to make the cut, which is the most since 2015, was even par through the first 36 holes. However, he was challenged during the third round by a 5-over 75.

During the final round today, he was able to turn things around with no double bogeys on his scorecard and recorded five birdies in a seven-hole stretch from the drivable par-4 sixth to the par-4 12th, including three straight on six, seven and eight. He was third amongst the field in strokes gained: approach, taking off nearly three strokes.

Sargent, who qualified for the U.S. Open in final qualifying, capped off his first U.S. Open tied for 39th at 1-under par.

Final round U.S. Open leaderboard

PositionPlayerScoreToday
1Wyndham Clark-10E
 Rory McIlroy-9E
3Scottie Scheffler-7E
4Cameron Smith-6-3
T5Tommy Fleetwood-5-7
 Min Woo Lee-5-3
 Rickie Fowler-5+5
T8Tom Kim-4-1
 Harris English-4+2
T10Austin Eckroat-3-5
 Jon Rahm-3-5
 Xander Schauffele-3+2
 Dustin Johnson-3+2
T14Russell Henley-2-2
 Collin Morikawa-2-1
 Patrick Cantlay-2-1
T17Brooks Koepka-1-1
 Matt Fitzpatrick-1E
19Viktor HovlandE+2
T20Jordan Smith+1-4
 Nick Hardy+1-3
 Denny McCarthy+1E
 Keith Mitchell+1+1
 Shane Lowry+1+1
 Bryson DeChambeau+1+4
 Ryutaro Nagano+1+5
T27Sahith Theegala+2-1
 Sergio Garcia+2E
 Justin Suh+2+2
 Tyrrell Hatton+2+2
 Padraig Harrington+2+3
T32Dylan Wu+3+2
 Patrick Rodgers+3+2
 Sam Burns+3+3
 Joaquin Niemann+3+3
 Cameron Young+3+3
 Tony Finau+3+4
 Hideki Matsuyama+3+5
T39David Puig+4-3
 Gordon Sargent (a)+4-1
 Eric Cole+4+4
 Si Woo Kim+4+4
T43Sam Bennett+5+1
 Andrew Putnam+5+3
 Sam Stevens+5+3
 Billy Horschel+5+4
 Ryan Fox+5+4
 Brian Harman+5+5
T49Mackenzie Hughes+6+1
 Sebastian Munoz+6+2
 Charley Hoffman+6+3
 Kevin Streelman+6+4
 Gary Woodland+6+5
T54Romain Langasque+7+1
 Abraham Ancer+7+1
T56Patrick Reed+8-1
 Ryan Gerard+8+3
58Yuto Katsuragawa+9+4
59Adam Hadwin+11+5
T60Jacob Solomon+12+4
 Adam Svensson+12+4
62Ben Carr (a)+13+6
63Ryo Ishikawa+14+4
64Aldrich Potgieter (a)+15+9
65Maxwell Moldovan (a)+17+9
 The following players missed the cut at +2  
 Kyle MuellerCUTCUT
 Taylor MooreCUTCUT
 Paul BarjonCUTCUT
 Phil MickelsonCUTCUT
 Nico EchavarriaCUTCUT
 Davis ThompsonCUTCUT
 Patrick CoverCUTCUT
 Jordan SpiethCUTCUT
 Mito PereiraCUTCUT
 Adrian MeronkCUTCUT
 Andy SvobodaCUTCUT
 Alex NorenCUTCUT
 Vincent NorrmanCUTCUT
 Thriston LawrenceCUTCUT
 Justin RoseCUTCUT
 Tom HogeCUTCUT
 Sepp StrakaCUTCUT
 Thomas PietersCUTCUT
 Simon ForsstromCUTCUT
 Adam SchenkCUTCUT
 Chris KirkCUTCUT
 Nick TaylorCUTCUT
 J.J. GreyCUTCUT
 Seamus PowerCUTCUT
 Max HomaCUTCUT
 Corey ConnersCUTCUT
 Lucas HerbertCUTCUT
 Francesco MolinariCUTCUT
 Scott StallingsCUTCUT
 Ross FisherCUTCUT
 Emiliano GrilloCUTCUT
 Stewart CinkCUTCUT
 Austen TruslowCUTCUT
 Taylor PendrithCUTCUT
 Kurt KitayamaCUTCUT
 J.T. PostonCUTCUT
 Adam ScottCUTCUT
 Deon GermishuysCUTCUT
 Wilco NienaberCUTCUT
 Mac MeissnerCUTCUT
 Barclay Brown (a)CUTCUT
 Roger SloanCUTCUT
 Jordan GumbergCUTCUT
 Matt KucharCUTCUT
 Martin KaymerCUTCUT
 Michael Thorbjornsen (a)CUTCUT
 Keegan BradleyCUTCUT
 Preston Summerhays (a)CUTCUT
 Bastien Amat (a)CUTCUT
 Luke ListCUTCUT
 Brent GrantCUTCUT
 Sungjae ImCUTCUT
 Taylor MontgomeryCUTCUT
 Ryan ArmourCUTCUT
 David NyfjallCUTCUT
 Jens DantorpCUTCUT
 Michael KimCUTCUT
 Corey PereiraCUTCUT
 Alejandro del ReyCUTCUT
 Jesse SchutteCUTCUT
 Gunn CharoenkulCUTCUT
 Olin Browne Jr.CUTCUT
 Nick Dunlap (a)CUTCUT
 Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira (a)CUTCUT
 Pablo LarrazabalCUTCUT
 K.H. LeeCUTCUT
 Jason DayCUTCUT
 Wenyi Ding (a)CUTCUT
 Christian Cavaliere (a)CUTCUT
 Paul Haley IICUTCUT
 Matthieu PavonCUTCUT
 Michael Brennan (a)CUTCUT
 Omar Morales (a)CUTCUT
 Karl VilipsCUTCUT
 Carlos OrtizCUTCUT
 Aaron WiseCUTCUT
 Berry HensonCUTCUT
 Carson YoungCUTCUT
 Frankie Capan IIICUTCUT
 Victor PerezCUTCUT
 Alex SchaakeCUTCUT
 Cam DavisCUTCUT
 Hayden BuckleyCUTCUT
 Matthew McClean (a)CUTCUT
 Joel DahmenCUTCUT
 Alexander Yang (a)CUTCUT
 Justin ThomasCUTCUT
 Isaac Simmons (a)CUTCUT
 David HorseyCUTCUT
 Brendan VladesCUTCUT
 Hank LebiodaCUTCUT
[(a) is amateur]
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