U.S. Open 2022 live updates: Final round underway as Will Zalatoris, Matt Fitzpatrick look to hold onto lead
If Sunday can match Saturday at The Country Club, we're in for a treat this Father's Day. By all accounts, the USGA has nailed the course setup all week. The result is a phenomenal leaderboard entering Sunday. Will Zalatoris (67) and Matt Fitzpatrick (68) each shot the rounds of the day on Saturday—and they were rewarded with the co-lead after 54 holes.
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Zalatoris and Fitzpatrick have played as well as anybody in the world over the past six months, and clearly their stellar play has been rewarded at The Country Club. It also seems like an odd coincidence that both are waiting for their first PGA Tour victory … they’ll have the chance to make history by making the 2022 U.S. Open their first tour title.
Of course, the stories go way beyond Zalatoris and Fitzpatrick. It looked like they’d be joined at the top by Jon Rahm, whose costly double-bogey 6 at the 18th hole Saturday leaves him one back of the lead. The Spaniard had birdied three of his previous four holes and carried a one-shot lead onto the 18th tee. But his approach out of the sand ended up costing him two shots. Everyone will expect Rahm to defend his title up until the very last holes today. That includes oddsmakers, who only make Zalatoris and Fitzpatrick a slight favorite over Rahm.
Scottie Scheffler had the most disappointing back nine—playing the stretch of Nos. 11-14 at five over par to fall back from the 6-under mark. Still, he’s at 2-under and just two back of the lead. So is Keegan Bradley, who quite honestly, could create the most raucous seen in Boston if he’s close to the lead down the stretch.
U.S. Open 2022 live updates:
3:05: After an unfortunate bogey on the tough par-4 3rd, Rory McIlroy gets his momentum right back on the 4th. He confidently drains his birdie putt to move back to 2-under for the tournament, two strokes back from the lead.
2:53 p.m.: Our final pairing is off and Matt Fitzpatrick puts one close on the first green, leaving himself a very makeable birdie putt to take a solo lead. Will Zalatoris misses the green by just a few yards, but he chops a nice little chip out of TCC's tangled rough to give himself a short par putt.
Alas, Fitzpatrick misses low and the two leaders start with steady pars. We should probably mention that Zalatoris' back-stroke was a bit terrifying to watch. He finds the bottom of the cup, but watch out for the Wake Forest alum's short range putting as the afternoon goes on.
2:44 p.m.: Scheffler is absolutely dangerous right now. He drains a birdie putt on the long par-3 second hole. Back-to-back birdies give him a share of the lead. Things are heating up very, very quickly.
2:35 p.m.: World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is off and he gets what looks like a pretty brutal break on the first fairway—his ball comes to rest in a crispy fresh divot. But what happens next shouldn't surprise us one bit. The divot is a minor speedbump for Scheffler. He sticks his approach tight and sinks the birdie putt. He's one back and folks, we're in for a fascinating afternoon.
2:24 p.m.: The moment we've all been waiting for has arrived: Rory McIlroy has teed off on this glorious overcast Sunday afternoon for his final round at The Country Club. And it's happening people. He rolls in a smooth 20-footer to start off with a birdie! Electric! He's got that pep in his step that sports fans around the world know all too well. If the Irishman fires off a 32 on this front nine, he could single handedly make this the greatest U.S. Open ever.
2:10 p.m.: The race for low amateur is on, but it's looking like the University of Texas' Travis Vick might have it in the bag. The Longhorn made a clutch birdie on the 625-yard par-5 14th to get to seven over par for the tournament. The flat stick has served Vick well as of late, as he sunk the putt that sealed Texas' NCAA team title last month. Lurking close behind Vick at nine over, however, is Sam Bennett, the No. 5 ranked amateur in the world and incoming fifth year senior at Texas A&M. Let the duel begin.
2:00 p.m.: Yesterday, Denny McCarthy started his third round sitting T-55. A Saturday 68 (tied for the second-lowest round of the day) vaulted the 29-year-old up the board and today he tees off tied for 11th, just five shots back. After a quick birdie at the first, McCarthy—one of the best putters on tour—looks to continue the climb on Sunday.
1:40 p.m.: We talked yesterday about how the driveable par-4 fifth would play longer into a stiff headwind off the left. Today, the wind has further shifted and it's playing directly into a steady breeze, with only the well-struck drives from the longer guys able to reach the green. Patrick Cantlay's drive was about a foot away from clearing the front bunker and possibly bounding onto the putting surface. Instead, it plugged in the face and his violent lash sent the ball a couple of feet out of the bunker before it caught the slope and rolled 20 yards back down the fairway. A forgettable pitch nearly rolled down the same slope. A three-putt later, it adds up to a dreadful double bogey for Cantlay, who was within 25 yards of the pin with his tee shot.
1:20 p.m.: The final pairing of Zalatoris and Fitzpatrick are off in about an hour-and-a-half (2:45 p.m. ET), a full hour earlier than yesterday. Why the change? For the fifth consecutive year, a two-hole aggregate playoff will be used in the event of a tie—as opposed to the former 18-hole Monday playoff. And, the USGA is likely counting on going extra time this evening; there has been a playoff in each of the three previous U.S. Opens at The Country Club. Remember that one back in 1913?
1:09 p.m.: Davis Riley lost to Scottie Scheffler in the final of the 2013 U.S. Junior Amateur. A year later, Riley lost to Will Zalatoris in the final of ... the U.S. Junior Amateur. Seeing Scheffler and Zalatoris above him on the leaderboard at another USGA championship, Riley opens with a birdie at the first to get to one over as he tries to track down the two guys who have kept him from hoisting a USGA trophy.
12:53 p.m.: Patrick Cantlay! The stoic 30-year-old opens his final round birdie-birdie to climb back to one over. The 2021 FedEx Cup champion and World No. 4 has been surprisingly unspectacular in majors so far in his career, recording just two top 10s.
12:35 p.m.: Justin Thomas started the final round of last month's PGA Championship seven shots back of the lead. He starts today seven shots back. However, with a seemingly more difficult course and over 20 players between him and the lead (versus just six at the PGA), it'll be a tall task to mount a similar comeback. A task made taller by a scrappy opening bogey for JT. He's now four over, eight shots back.
12:21 p.m.: Another U.S. Open, another stellar Sunday performance from ... Guido Migliozzi! A year after the Italian shot a final-round 68 at Torrey Pines to finish T-4 (and earn an exemption this week), he is sporting the round of the day at four under after sinking an eagle putt on the par-5 eighth. Currently sitting T-17, he'll look for a few more red numbers coming home to secure his spot next year in Los Angeles.
12:11 p.m.: In signing off from early coverage on USA, Justin Leonard predicts the winning score will be six under, citing a softer course due to overnight rains. If that proves true, it may be difficult for any of the guys teeing off within the next hour (JT, Spieth, DJ) to make up the necessary ground. That said, this is a U.S. Open Sunday, and while many of the names near the lead are proven winners, The Country Club may have something to say about Leonard's prediction.
11:51 a.m.: Travis Vick is a name more golf fans will get to know in the coming years. He's a rising senior at the University of Texas and led his Texas Longhorns to a national championship in 2022, hitting the title-clinching putt just a couple weeks ago. He also qualified for this year's U.S. Open and is playing with two-time U.S. Open champ Brooks Koepka this morning.
Though Vick has sought rulings from rules officials four times according to the TV broadcast, he's currently even par on his round, which is four better than Koepka ... who has two double bogeys and a bogey through five holes. Vick's iron play has been extremely impressive through the first five holes ... and he's getting on the radar of a lot of golf fans in the process.
11:35 a.m.: Grayson Murray has been a content machine this morning ... his poor equipment!
11:12 a.m.: We enjoy the fact golf has followed other sports in capturing footage of golfers arriving to the course during majors. It probably started with Tiger and the fascination around him—but these behind-the-scenes looks are an intriguing look we rarely get to see.
10:58 a.m.: The frustration of the U.S. Open ladies and gentlemen. Grayson Murray has had a good week at Brookline, but just made a triple bogey ... and then unleashed the fury on this putter toss:
10:35 a.m.: With 20 players having started their final rounds thus far, there's only one player under-par. And that's Haskins Award winner Chris Gotterup, who stuck his tee shot tight at the par-3 second hole. Other than him, The Country Club is winning over everyone else early on Sunday.
Here are all the pin positions for the final round. It doesn't look like too many easy locations ... particularly down the stretch...