American shows remarkable resurgence, hits a 65-foot birdie on 72nd to win the US Open

Synopsis
J.J. Spaun, a 34-year-old underdog, conquered Oakmont's challenging course to win the 125th US Open. Despite a rocky start, Spaun's remarkable back-nine performance, highlighted by a stunning 65-foot birdie putt on the final hole, secured his maiden major title.
Halfway through Sunday, Spaun was licking his wounds. His card was a bleeding mess as the players retreated inside for the weather interruption. The Angeleno stumbled out of the gates, carding five bogeys in his first six holes for a front-nine 40, falling to 5-over. A 90-minute rain delay at 4:02 p.m. offered a reset, and Spaun seized it, posting a 3-under 32 on the back nine, including birdies on 12 (40 feet), 14 (20 feet), 17 (two-putt), and the astounding missile on the 18th. His final score of 1-under-par made him the only player under par for 72 holes. That was a testament to Oakmont’s brutality, as it is to the resilience of the Los Angeles resident.
The final round was a chaotic ballet of shifting fortunes. Sam Burns, the 54-hole leader at 4-under, held a one-shot edge over Spaun and Adam Scott, with Viktor Hovland at 1-under. By the 11th, Burns doubled, Scott bogeyed, and no player was under par, with a five-way tie at 1-over among Burns, Scott, Spaun, Tyrrell Hatton, and Carlos Ortiz. Robert MacIntyre, starting at 3-over, clawed back with a 60-foot eagle on the fourth and three birdies, setting the clubhouse lead at 1-over with a 68. Spaun, reinvigorated post-delay, surged with a 40-foot birdie on 12, taking the solo lead with a sensational drive to pin on 17. Burns faltered, carding a 78, his back nine marred by a double on 11 and a bogey on 12. Scott, playing stellar golf at 44, shot a 79, undone by a bogey-bogey finish. MacIntyre’s resolve shone, but Spaun’s closing birdie-birdie finish—only the fifth such ending in US Open history, alongside Ben Hogan’s 1953 Oakmont win—sealed a two-shot victory.
LIV Golf’s contingent made a strong showing, defying sceptics. Tyrrell Hatton, with an eagle on 12 and a birdie on 13, reached 1-over, tying for the lead late but stumbled with a bogey-bogey finish for a 72, ending the week in T4 at 3-over. Carlos Ortiz, a dark horse, shot a third-round 67 and birdied 11 for a defiant 73, briefly co-leading at 1-over before finishing T4 at 3-over. Jon Rahm, starting at 7-over, fired a joint-best 67, with three straight birdies to close, securing T7 at 4-over. Their performances underscored LIV’s depth, with Ortiz and Hatton in the thick of contention and Rahm’s late charge hinting at his enduring class. After struggling most week, including a dalliance with the missed cut, McIlroy regained his dignity with a stoic 67 in the final round, good enough for T19.
Scottie Scheffler, the world No 1, battled Oakmont’s ferocity to a T7 finish at 4-over, despite a first-round 73 that marked his worst Major opening. His 70-70 weekend rounds showed resilience, with birdies on 17 in both the third and final rounds, though a three-putt bogey on 11 and a double on the third hole cost him. The putter deserted Scheffler – several misses inside five feet, and many three putt misadventures left the world No 1 struggling on Oakmont’s undulating green complexes. His ability to salvage a top-10 finish despite his struggles were another testimony to his impeccable quality.
The rain-soaked fairways of Oakmont, ever the stern judge of golf’s mettle, bore witness to J.J. Spaun’s ascent from journeyman to legend. His back-nine 32, a defiant riposte to a front-nine collapse, was less a round than a revelation. Each birdie was a brushstroke on a canvas of adversity. As Robert MacIntyre watched, agape, from the clubhouse, Spaun’s 65-foot putt on the 18th—a putt that danced with destiny—found the cup, sealing a victory that echoed through the Allegheny Valley. In a championship where necessity met nerve, Spaun’s triumph was a singular act of will, proving that even Oakmont’s cruelest tests can yield to an unwavering, steely heart.
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