Sam Burns leads US Open with 65 and 
		avoids calamity at Oakmont
			
			[June 14, 2025]  
			By DOUG FERGUSON 
		
			OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — The pounding rain arrived far too late to douse 
			so many of the meltdowns across Oakmont on Friday in a U.S. Open 
			that produced a brilliant round by Sam Burns and a litany of 
			collapses and tantrums typical in a major that prides itself on 
			being the toughest test. 
			 
			Only three players remained under par. 
			 
			Still to come are two more rounds on an Oakmont course that ruined 
			good scores with remarkable swiftness on a day when rounds took 
			nearly six hours to complete. 
			 
			“There’s no hole where you can get up there and just hit it and not 
			really pay attention to what you’re trying to do,” Burns said after 
			a 5-under 65, giving him a one-shot lead. "I think it requires a lot 
			of focus on every shot, and even when you’re in the rough and you’re 
			trying to get it back in the fairway, it’s just every shot is 
			difficult. 
			 
			“I think over time that’s just pretty taxing.” 
			 
			Scottie Scheffler battled just to salvage a 71 — the sixth straight 
			round over par in a U.S. Open for the No. 1 player — and then headed 
			to the range with arms flailing while venting frustration on why the 
			ball wasn't going where he wanted. He was seven shots behind and 
			felt he was still very much in the hunt for a second straight major. 
			 
			Rory McIlroy flung a club on No. 12 and smashed a tee marker on No. 
			17, made a birdie on his last hole and then declined to share 
			thoughts on his round or anything else for the sixth straight round 
			in a major. 
			 
			Shane Lowry was having such a tough time that he picked up his ball 
			on the 14th green without marking it, a one-shot penalty that turned 
			his 77 into a 78, not that it mattered. 
		
			  
		
			That was the mental side. The physical part of golf looked even 
			worse. 
			 
			Thriston Lawrence became the only player to reach 6-under par. He 
			promptly made six bogeys and a double bogey over his next nine 
			holes. He was still 1 over — four shots behind — and was ready to 
			hit a 4-foot par putt when the round was halted because of weather. 
			 
			The South African had to return Saturday morning. Have a nice night. 
			 
			“A bit frustrating in that sense, but those are the rules,” Lawrence 
			said. “It’s an important putt. Each shot means a lot in a 
			championship like this.” 
			 
			Thomas Detry can appreciate the suffering. He was challenging for 
			the lead until three double bogeys in a four-hole stretch. 
			 
			“If I can avoid making a double bogey on those next two days, I will 
			have achieved what I wanted to achieve,” Detry said. 
			 
			And then there was Phil Mickelson, in what likely is his 34th and 
			final U.S. Open. He was just outside the top 20 until two double 
			bogeys in his last four holes for a 74 to miss the cut. 
			 
			Burns played in the morning and missed all this chaos, posting a 
			3-under 137 that no one could match the rest of the day. He wound up 
			one shot ahead of J.J. Spaun, who fell out of a share of the lead 
			with a bogey on the 18th, his sixth in a round of 72. 
			 
			Burns and Viktor Hovland (68) each have 11 sub-par holes over 36 
			holes, the most in three U.S. Opens at Oakmont since it switched to 
			a par 70 in 2007. Hovland was two shots behind. 
			 
			Burns can only imagine where he would be if not for a shocker of a 
			finish Thursday, when he was one shot out of the lead and then 
			played his last four holes in 5-over par. 
			 
			“I played really well yesterday other than the finishing holes. So I 
			think today was just kind of getting mentally ready to come out and 
			try to put a good round together,” Burns said. 
			 
			[to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            Scottie Scheffler plays out of the Church Pews bunker on the third 
			hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at 
			Oakmont Country Club Friday, June 13, 2025, in Oakmont, Pa. (AP 
			Photo/Charlie Riedel) 
              
 
			 “It was unfortunate, but there was too much good to 
			focus on the little bit of bad.” 
			 
			Hovland twice holed 50-foot shots from off the green — a putter from 
			the collar on No. 10 when he started his round, and chipping in for 
			eagle on the reachable par-4 17th. He also chopped up the second 
			hole for a double bogey. But he was happy to be done. 
			 
			“Definitely tired, exhausted because you’re just focusing so much on 
			every single shot,” he said. “I’m very pleased with 2-under par, but 
			also I know that I was 4 under at some point. So it's like very 
			pleased, but also, ‘Man, that could have been a little bit lower.’ 
			But we’re in a really nice spot after two days, so I’m just kind of 
			happy.” 
			 
			Adam Scott, playing in his 96th consecutive major, had another 70 
			and joined Ben Griffin (71) at even-par 140. 
			 
			Scheffler was among those who had little room left for mistakes. He 
			opened with a birdie on No. 10, but then didn't find another fairway 
			until he came up just short of the green on the 17th, 50 feet away 
			for eagle. Four putts later, he had a bogey. 
			 
			It was a grind all way, battling his swing and the rough, making a 
			number of key par putts that kept the round from getting worse. 
			 
			“Today was, I think with the way I was hitting it, easily a day I 
			could have been going home,” Scheffler said. “And battled pretty 
			hard to stay in there. I’m 4 over. We’ll see what the lead is after 
			today, but around this golf course I don’t think by any means I’m 
			out of the tournament.” 
			 
			Neither is Brooks Koepka, who had a 74 but was only five behind. 
			 
			Jon Rahm went from red numbers to red in the face with a 75, leaving 
			him in the same spot as Scheffler. Rahm, who took 35 putts, was 
			asked if his score could illustrate how tough Oakmont was playing. 
			 
			“Honestly, too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any 
			perspective,” he said. “Very frustrated. Very few rounds of golf I 
			played in my life where I think I hit good putts and they didn’t 
			sniff the hole. So it’s frustrating.” 
			 
			That's not just Oakmont. That's most U.S. Opens. In that respect, 
			Hovland was a curious contender. He has been all over the place with 
			his swing, his expectations, his confidence. He won during the 
			Florida swing and is making progress. Perhaps no expectations helped 
			him. 
			
			
			  
			“For some reason I’ve just been in a really nice mental state this 
			week,” Hovland said. “Both my rounds have been very up and down. I 
			feel like a couple times if it would have happened at another 
			tournament, for example, I could have potentially lost my mind there 
			a little bit. But I felt like I kept things together very well.” 
			
			
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