Wyndham Clark seizes on changing
nature of Shinnecock to lead US Open
[June 19, 2026]
By DOUG FERGUSON
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) — Whatever dread Wyndham Clark felt when he
saw the tee times and the forecast for the U.S. Open gave way to
hope Thursday, and he still hadn't even arrived at Shinnecock Hills.
Morning fog led to a two-hour delay, and Clark had a feeling his
late afternoon start would be an advantage as the wind began to
subside with the setting sun. Good golf was still required, and
Clark displayed every bit of that before he was stopped only by
darkness.
By then, the former U.S. Open champion rode a birdie-birdie-eagle
stretch to 6-under par through 16 holes and a four-shot lead.
“Everything was kind of clicking,” said Clark, who came into the
U.S. Open playing as well as anyone. “We were definitely fortunate
with the wind laying down. Overall a good round.”
The USGA set up a different golf course at Shinnecock Hills —
slower, more receptive greens and reasonable pin positions — to keep
it playable in strong wind. But when the wind subsided late in the
day, Clark looked like he was playing in a different U.S. Open.
No one ever has gone lower than 66 in an opening round at Shinnecock
Hills. Clark can go two shots lower if he can finish with two pars
when he and 49 other players return Friday morning.
He led by four over seven players, one of them Oklahoma junior Ryder
Cowan, another one the surprisingly resurgent Dustin Johnson. Four
of them were former U.S. Open champions.

Rory McIlroy thought he had made a fine effort with a 69 in gusts
that topped 30 mph in the middle of the day, when the scoring
average was well above 74. The afternoon started tough until the
wind kept subsiding, and players began taking aim at flags. The
afternoon wave was playing at least a stroke easier than the early
starters who faced relentless wind.
Shinnecock was still a brute of a test, but the red numbers on the
white scoreboard was an unfamiliar site for this course. When play
was suspended by darkness, 17 players were under par.
Cowan birdied his last hole for a 68 to join former Sooner Max
McGreevy and former Oklahoma State player Sam Stevens of those who
finished the round. Stevens was the only one of that trio who faced
the harsh wind of the morning wave.
Johnson, in his final year of being exempt from the U.S. Open he won
at Oakmont in 2016, ran off four straight birdies and was tied with
Clark after 13 holes. But Johnson failed to get up-and-down for
birdie on the easy par-5 fifth, where Clark made eagle. And then
Johnson three-putted from short range for double bogey on the sixth
to fall four shots behind.
Scottie Scheffler, who needs the U.S. Open to complete the career
Grand Slam, battled all day and relied heavily on his short game to
salvage a 72. It was his 10th consecutive U.S. Open round without
breaking par, but at the time it left him only four shots out of the
lead.
Clark, who won the U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club three years
ago, changed the look of the leaderboard with his late flourish. He
was to return Friday morning to complete the round, then head out
for the second round in wind expected to be not as strong as the
full blast from Thursday.
“I would say when I got my tee times on Tuesday, I was like, ‘Oh,
could be a tough draw,’” Clark said. “That two-hour fog delay was
very helpful, and it was really nice it laid down. So it definitely
helped those last six, seven holes we played.”
[to top of second column] |

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits from the fairway on the 14th
hole during the first round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at
Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., Thursday, June 18,
2026.(AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

His golf wasn't too shabby, either. Clark started
on No. 10 and opened with two quick birdies. He went out in 32 to
get his name atop the leaderboard. And after missing an 8-foot
birdie putt on No. 1 and failing to save par from a bunker on the
long par-3 second, he took off.
He hit wedge to 5 feet on No. 3 for birdie, made a 20-foot birdie
putt on the next and then from 207 yards with some wind at his back,
he hit his second on the par-5 fifth to 3 feet for eagle.
When Johnson faltered, Clark had plenty of
breathing room — and a quick turnaround.
The wind was so strong and the conditions so severe that it took
Scheffler's group nearly three hours to complete nine holes. There
was a question the round could have finished even without the fog
delay.
Johnson was joined by three other U.S. Open champions — Matt
Fitzpatrick (2022), Gary Woodland (2019) and Jon Rahm (2021) — at 2
under, with all still having holes to play.
Rahm, who had a chance in the final hour at the PGA Championship,
was bogey-free and reached 2 under by making a 60-foot birdie putt
on the par-3 17th hole.
Stevens overcame a double bogey to start his round — a hole that
took him over two hours to play because of the fog — and strung
together six birdies for his 68.
“The greens haven’t been too firm, the fairways haven’t been too
firm, so I’ve really felt like it’s pretty scorable,” said Stevens,
who had only his second sub-70 round in his fourth U.S. Open.
“Obviously, it’s difficult, but overall it’s an awesome place. I
think the setup is great right now.”
For half of the opening round, the USGA appeared to have the ideal
test. Coming off two Opens at Shinnecock when the course got out of
control, it slowed greens to 10 1/2 on the Stimpmeter — rare for any
major, much less the U.S. Open — and keep plenty of water on the
putting surfaces.

It was all due to the wind, which did not disappoint. The sustained
wind approached 25 mph, and gusts were even stronger. And if that
wasn’t enough, it shifted directions in the middle of the day.
“It was tough around here without wind, and then it was blowing
pretty hard — really hard,” Keegan Bradley said after a 70. “The
USGA did a great job setting the course up because if the greens
were any faster or firmer, we might not be playing right now.”
But they played, it became more ideal with each passing hour late in
the afternoon.
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