The US Open at Oakmont is a brutal test that takes a long time
20 Articles
20 Articles


Slow play normal for US Open, especially at Oakmont
OAKMONT, Pa. — There's a lot to think about at the U.S. Open. Particularly when it visits brawny Oakmont, where danger always seems to be one swing, one bounce, one "wait, where is that putt going to end up?" away.
At the US Open, golf’s toughest test starts with 2 (or 3) of its longest days — in some cases nearly 6 hours
OAKMONT, Pa. — Thriston Lawrence walked onto the 10th tee box at 2:20 p.m. to begin his second round at the U.S. Open with his name near the top of the front page of the leaderboard. Nearly six hours and 73 shots later, the South African’s name wasn’t so high. And his round still wasn’t quite over. Welcome to Oakmont, where one of golf’s toughest tests began with two — or three in the case of Lawrence and a handful of others still on the course …

The US Open at Oakmont is a brutal test that takes a long time
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