Sunday, December 22, 2024

‘Carnage coming’ in Tiger’s 20-year US Open first

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It’s been 19 years since Tiger Woods finished second in the 2005 US Open at Pinehurst No.2. It was the last time he was at the course.

It’s not the same course as it was back then, and it’s not the same Tiger Woods, either.

Woods has never gone this long without seeing a major championship course he had played before. He arrived a week ago to get reacquainted with a course that has gone through an extensive restoration.

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While the US Open returned to Pinehurst No.2 in 2014, Woods wasn’t there. He’d just undergone the first of five back surgeries.

Tiger Woods during a practice round at Pinehurst ahead of this weekend’s US Open. Getty

Pinehurst was already a difficult course, even for the world’s best. That hasn’t changed.

But what has is almost literally everything else. More on that later.

“This golf course is going to test every single aspect of your game, especially mentally,” Woods said this week.

“Just the mental discipline that it takes to play this particular golf course. It’s going to take a lot.”

Pinehurst No.2 is already hard enough, but a forecast for high temperatures and no rain threaten lightning fast greens that could destroy a wayward putt.

Woods is playing in his first US Open since 2020 at Winged Foot, where he missed the cut.

He has practiced. He has chipped and putted. Woods just doesn’t play very much, courtesy of a 48-year-old body wracked by injuries — five back surgeries, four knee surgeries, and those were before his February 2021 car crash in Los Angeles that shattered his right leg and ankle.

This will be only his 10th tournament since that accident, and it’s the first time since 2020 that he has played three straight majors. It’s a matter of needing more repetition, and more competition, but not having a body that allows for that.

What to expect this week?

“I feel like I have the strength to be able to do it,” he said. “It’s just a matter of doing it.”

Woods played a practice round on Wednesday morning (AEST) with Max Homa and Aussie Min Woo Lee.

His 15-year-old son Charlie was along for the ride. More than just a spectator, Woods said Charlie knows his game as well as anyone and can serve as an extra set of eyes.

“I trust him with my swing and my game. He’s seen it more than anybody else in the world. He’s seen me hit more golf balls than anyone,” Woods said.

“He gave me a couple little side bits today, which was great, because I get so entrenched in hitting certain putts to certain pins, I tend to forget some of the things I’m working on.”

The course is renowned for its incredibly difficult greens, referred to as turtleback because many are domed in the middle and slope towards the edges.

When the course was restored ahead of the 2014 US Open, rough was replaced by native sandy areas and hundreds of native plants, the most treacherous being wire brush that dots the landscape.

 Tiger Woods of the United States, his son, Charlie Woods, Min Woo Lee of Australia and Max Homa of the United States walk off the second tee during a practice round prior to the U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort on June 11, 2024 in Pinehurst, North Carolina. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

Tiger Woods played a practice round with Min Woo Lee and Max Homa. Getty

A more subtle change for this year is the greens going from bent grass to a strain of Bermuda grass, which could make the turtleback surfaces even tougher in severe heat expected on the weekend.

“Nothing can simulate what we have here this particular week, the amount of little shots and the knobs and runoffs, and either using wedges or long irons or woods around the greens or even putter,” Woods said.

“There’s so many different shots that you really can’t simulate unless you get on the property. That’s one of the reasons I came up here last Tuesday, to be able to try and do that. Quite a bit of work. The golf course has firmed up and gotten faster since then.”

The US Open is also the final event before the men’s rankings are taken for qualification for the Paris Olympics.

A general view of Pinehurst No.2, which will host the US Open this week.

A general view of Pinehurst No.2, which will host the US Open this week.  Getty

Where is the US Open being played?

The 2024 US Open is being held at the Pinehurst No.2 course, the most famous of the 10 courses at the Pinehurst Golf Resort in the US State of North Carolina.

This is the fourth time Pinehurst No.2 has held the US Open, having previously done so in 1999, 2005 and 2014. It is scheduled to do so again in 2029, 2035, 2041, and 2047.

Phil Mickelson and Matt Kuchar are the only players in the field who competed at Pinehurst in 1999, 2005 and 2014.

Who is the defending US Open champion?

Wyndham Clark won his first major when he closed with an even-par 70 and held off Rory McIlroy to win by one shot at Los Angeles Country Club last year. Scottie Scheffler finished third.

Wyndham Clark of the United States reacts to his winning putt at the US Open.

Wyndham Clark of the United States reacts to his winning putt at the US Open. Getty

What’s the prize money?

The entire US Open prize pool is $24 million US (AU$36.34m), of which the winner will receive about $3.9m (AU$5.9m).

Players only win prize money if they make the cut.

How to watch the US Open in Australia

The US Open will be live on Fox Sports.

Round One: Thursday 8:30pm–10am (Friday)

Round Two: Friday 8:30pm–10am (Saturday)

Round Three: Sunday 12am–10am

Final Round: Sunday 11pm–9am (Monday)

Cameron Smith of Australia chips onto the 14th green during a practice round prior to the U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort on June 11, 2024 in Pinehurst, North Carolina. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Cameron Smith is one of six Aussies in action. Getty

How many Australians are playing in the US Open?

There are six Aussies in action. They are Cam Davis, Jason Day, Min Woo Lee, Adam Scott, Jason Scrivener and Cameron Smith.

None have ever win the US Open, although Jason Day has finished runner-up on two occasions in 2011 and 2013.

What are the US Open tee times?

These are the full field of tee times for the first two rounds. Everyone plays in the same group the first two days, before the cut is made at the end of the second round.

At the US Open, the cut line is the top-60 golfers, plus ties. That is to say if there is a 10-way tie for 60th place at the end of the second round, then all 10 will play the weekend.

For the third and fourth rounds, the group sizes are reduced to two, and tee times are seeded. Players at the bottom of the leaderboard tee off first, and the leaders last.

Australians are in bold.

All times AEST

R1 1st tee, R2 10th tee

R1 10th tee, R2 1st tee

First round Thurs 8.45pm
(Second round Sat 2.30am)

Michael McGowan
Carter Jenkins
Logan McAllister

Rico Hoey
Tom McKibbin
Matteo Manassero

Thurs 8.56pm
(Sat 2.41am)

Frederik Kjettrup
Chris Petefish
Parker Bell (a)

Dean Burmester
Rikuya Hoshino
Seamus Power

Thurs 9.07pm
(Sat 2.52am)

Omar Morales (a)
Max Greyserman
Casey Jarvis

S.H. Kim
Justin Lower
Tim Widing

Thurs 9.18pm
(Sat 3.03am)

Corey Conners
Stephan Jaeger
Emiliano Grillo

Lucas Glover
Sam Burns
Cameron Smith

Thurs 9.29pm
(Sat 3.14am)

Ryo Ishikawa
Francesco Molinari
Sergio Garcia

Will Zalatoris
Matt Fitzpatrick
Tiger Woods

Thurs 9.40pm
(Sat 3.25am)

Justin Thomas
Collin Morikawa
Brooks Koepka

Patrick Cantlay
Matt Kuchar
Russell Henley

Thurs 9.51pm
(Sat 3.36am)

Rickie Fowler
Adam Hadwin
Phil Mickelson

Tony Finau
Ludvig Åberg
Dustin Johnson

Thurs 10.02pm
(Sat 3.47am)

Min Woo Lee
Sahith Theegala
Nicolai Højgaard

Justin Rose
Gary Woodland
Webb Simpson

Thurs 10.13pm
(Sat 3.58am)

Si Woo Kim
Matthieu Pavon
Sungjae Im

Daniel Berger
Ryan Fox
David Puig

Thurs 10.24pm
(Sat 4.09am)

Nico Echavarria
Robert Rock
Neal Shipley (a)

Byeong Hun An
Sam Bennett
Edoardo Molinari

Thurs 10.35pm
(Sat 4.20am)

Takumi Kanaya
Stewart Hagestad (a)
Mac Meissner

Austin Eckroat
Adrian Meronk
Cam Davis

Thurs 10.46pm
(Sat 4.31am)

Isaiah Salinda
Bryan Kim (a)
Jim Herman

Aaron Rai
Davis Thompson
Zac Blair

Thurs 10.57pm
(Sat 4.42am)

Carson Schaake
Charlie Reiter
Colin Prater (a)

Willie Mack III
Richard Mansell
Ashton McCulloch (a)

Fri 2.30am
(Fri 8.45pm)

Jason Scrivener
Brandon Robinson Thompson
Brendan Valdes (a)

Greyson Sigg
Grant Forrest
Wells Williams (a)

Fri 2.41am
(Fri 8.56pm)

Santiago De la Fuente (a)
Sam Bairstow
Eugenio Chacarra

Chesson Hadley
Mark Hubbard
Adam Svensson

Fri 2.52am
(Fri 9.07pm) 

Kurt Kitayama
Taylor Moore
Christiaan Bezuidenhout

Beau Hossler
Victor Perez
Adam Schenk

Fri 3.03am
(Fri 9.18pm)

Jason Day
Harris English
Tom Kim

Robert MacIntyre
Nick Taylor
Mackenzie Hughes

Fri 3.14am
(Fri 9.29pm)

Rory McIlroy
Xander Schauffele
Scottie Scheffler

Tyrrell Hatton
Tommy Fleetwood
Tom Hoge

Fri 3.25am
(Fri 9.40pm)

Brian Harman
Nick Dunlap
Wyndham Clark

Bryson DeChambeau
Viktor Hovland
Max Homa

Fri 3.36am
(Fri 9.51pm)

Hideki Matsuyama
Jackson Suber
Jordan Spieth

Sepp Straka
Peter Malnati
J.T. Poston

Fri 3.47am
(Fri 10.02pm)

Shane Lowry
Keegan Bradley
Martin Kaymer

Gordon Sargent (a)
Jake Knapp
Cameron Young

Fri 3.58am
(Fri 10.13pm)

Akshay Bhatia
Eric Cole
Erik van Rooyen

Chris Kirk
Billy Horschel
Adam Scott

Fri 4.09am
(Fri 10.24pm)

Brendon Todd
Taylor Pendrith
Alex Noren

Ben Kohles
Denny McCarthy
Benjamin James (a)

Fri 4.20am
(Fri 10.35pm)

Thomas Detry
Brian Campbell
Jackson Buchanan (a)

Frankie Capan III
Andrew Svoboda
Luke Clanton (a)

Fri 4.31am
(Fri 10.46pm)

Taisei Shimuzu
Gunnar Broin (a)
Maxwell Moldovan

Harry Higgs
Hiroshi Tai (a)
Brandon Wu

Fri 4.42am
(Fri 10.57pm)

Sung Kang
Riki Kawamoto
John Chin

Joey Vrzich
Chris Naegel
Otto Black

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