Woodland denies Koepka at US Open

Source:Agencies Published: 2019/6/17 17:48:39

Three-peat would have made history


Gary Woodland plays his tee shot on the 11th hole during the final round of the 2019 US Open Championship in Pebble Beach, California on Sunday. Photo: VCG

Gary Woodland won the 119th US Open on Sunday, capturing his first major title with a 13-under-par total to deny two-time defending champion Brook Koepka's bid for history at Pebble Beach.

Woodland punctuated the victory with a birdie bomb at 18, a final flourish in a display of back-nine fortitude that saw him convert a 54-hole lead for the first time in eight career attempts.

"Once that went in, it all kind of came out of me, it was special to finish it off here at Pebble Beach," said Woodland, who threw his arms in the air then pumped his fist.

He knew his 13-under total was one better than the 12-under posted by Tiger Woods in his US Open victory at Pebble in 2000. 

But 19 years ago, Woods was the only player under par, marching to victory by a massive 15 strokes while Woodland topped a leaderboard that featured 31 players under par.

Most dangerous was Koepka, trying to become just the second player - and the first in more than a century - to win the US Open three straight times.

He started the day four strokes off Woodland's lead and immediately applied pressure with four birdies in his first five holes.

But his three-under 68 left him three strokes shy on 10-under 274.

Koepka did grab a slice of US Open history, becoming the fourth player to ­complete four rounds in the 60s. Minutes later, Woodland became the fifth with a ­final scoreline of 68-65-69-69.

"I was proud of myself to stay in my moment and control myself and not get too worried about what he was doing," Woodland said.

England's Justin Rose, who started the day one shot behind Woodland, struggled to a three-over 74 to finish tied for third on seven-under with Americans Xander Schauffele and Chez Reavie and Spain's Jon Rahm.

Rory McIlroy is five shots behind, alone in sixth place.

Woods, a three-time US Open winner, had ended the third round 11 shots back of the leader but still gave himself a chance of winning a 16th major on Sunday.

Those slim hopes disappeared quickly when he bogeyed four of his opening five holes.

Woods hit back with six birdies, including one at the 18th, for a two-under round, his lowest final round at a US Open in a decade but still 11 back of winner.



Posted in: GOLF

blog comments powered by Disqus