Brooks Koepka became a first-time major championship winner at the 2017 U.S. Open, playing on a golf course that had its major-championship coming out, too. That was Erin Hills in Wisconsin, a long golf course with wide, firm fairways whose qualities played into the hands of long-bombing drivers…such as Koepka.

Quick Bits

Winner: Brooks Koepka, 272Dates: June 15-18, 2017Golf course: Erin HillsU.S. Open number: This was the 117th time the championship was played.

Scoring Records Challenged, Fall at 2017 US Open

The scoring was good at Erin Hills in its U.S. Open debut. Played as a par-72, Erin Hills gave up just the fifth round of 63 in U.S. Open history to Justin Thomas in the third round. At 9-under, that was the best score in relation to par in tournament history.

And the winner, Koepka, tied the tournament’s 72-hole record for strokes under par at 16-under.

Prior to the 2017 U.S. Open, only two golfers had ever finished double-digits under par in a U.S. Open (Tiger Woods in 2000 and Rory McIlroy in 2011). But Koepka was one of seven golfers to do it at Erin Hills.

Brooks Koepka’s Path to US Open Champ

Koepka began his professional golf career playing on the European Challenge Tour and posted four victories. That performance moved him up to the European Tour, and he first won there in 2014.

That same season, Koepka posted a couple early season showings strong enough to earn enough money for PGA Tour membership the remainder of 2014. And in early 2015, he posted his first PGA Tour victory.

It was an unusual path for an American golfer, but it sure worked out well for Koepka.

And at the 2017 U.S. Open? Koepka opened with a 67, two off the first-round lead held by Rickie Fowler.

Koepka moved into a four-way tie for the lead at the midway point with a second-round 70.

In Round 3, Brian Harman moved him to the top of the leaderboard at 12-under. Koepka shot 68 to finish the third round at 11-under, in a three-way tie for second.

Harman was Koepka’s main competition for much of the final round, but Harman eventually stumbled just a bit late and finished at 12-under 276, tied for second place.

Koepka, meanwhile, just kept booming drives and, on the back nine in particular, making putts. He shot 67 in the final round to finish at 272.

2017 US Open Scores

Results from the 2017 U.S. Open golf tournament played at Erin Hills golf course in Erin, Wisconsin (a-amateur):

Brooks Koepka 67-70-68-67–272 $2,160,000

Hideki Matsuyama 74-65-71-66–276 $1,050,012

Brian Harman 67-70-67-72–276 $1,050,012

Tommy Fleetwood 67-70-68-72–277 $563,642

Xander Schauffele 66-73-70-69–278 $420,334

Bill Haas 72-68-69-69–278 $420,334

Rickie Fowler 65-73-68-72–278 $420,334

Charley Hoffman 70-70-68-71–279 $336,106

Trey Mullinax 71-72-69-68–280 $279,524

Brandt Snedeker 70-69-70-71–280 $279,524

Justin Thomas 73-69-63-75–280 $279,524

J.B. Holmes 69-69-72-71–281 $235,757

Brendan Steele 71-69-69-73–282 $203,557

Patrick Reed 68-75-65-74–282 $203,557

Si Woo Kim 69-70-68-75–282 $203,557

Matt Kuchar 74-71-70-68–283 $156,809

Steve Stricker 73-72-69-69–283 $156,809

Chez Reavie 75-65-72-71–283 $156,809

Eddie Pepperell 72-71-69-71–283 $156,809

Bernd Wiesberger 69-72-69-73–283 $156,809

David Lingmerth 73-69-71-71–284 $124,951

Sergio Garcia 70-71-71-72–284 $124,951

Kevin Chappell 74-70-70-71–285 $105,506

Jim Furyk 70-74-69-72–285 $105,506

Louis Oosthuizen 74-70-68-73–285 $105,506

Paul Casey 66-71-75-74–286 $93,094

a-Scottie Scheffler 69-74-71-73–287 $0

Zach Johnson 71-74-68-74–287 $83,331

Jamie Lovemark 69-69-74-75–287 $83,331

Marc Leishman 68-72-72-75–287 $83,331

Russell Henley 71-70-67-79–287 $83,331

Kevin Na 68-76-73-71–288 $72,420

Martin Laird 72-71-72-73–288 $72,420

a-Cameron Champ 70-69-73-76–288 $0

Jordan Spieth 73-71-76-69–289 $58,637

Jordan Niebrugge 73-72-73-71–289 $58,637

Martin Kaymer 72-69-75-73–289 $58,637

Brandon Stone 70-74-72-73–289 $58,637

Webb Simpson 74-71-71-73–289 $58,637

Michael Putnam 73-70-71-75–289 $58,637

Matthew Fitzpatrick 70-73-70-76–289 $58,637

Rafael Cabrera Bello 72-73-71-74–290 $44,975

Andrew Johnston 69-73-73-75–290 $44,975

Jonathan Randolph 71-71-73-75–290 $44,975

Jack Maguire 70-73-71-76–290 $44,975

Stewart Cink 74-70-76-71–291 $35,484

Shane Lowry 71-74-73-73–291 $35,484

Satoshi Kodaira 73-69-73-76–291 $35,484

Harris English 71-69-75-76–291 $35,484

Gary Woodland 72-73-73-74–292 $28,895

Whee Kim 73-70-72-77–292 $28,895

Branden Grace 72-72-71-77–292 $28,895

Jason Kokrak 75-70-74-75–294 $26,659

Ryan Brehm 71-74-72-77–294 $26,659

Ernie Els 70-72-79-74–295 $25,631

William McGirt 70-71-79-75–295 $25,631

Lee Westwood 69-75-75-76–295 $25,631

Kevin Kisner 74-70-76-76–296 $25,026

Thomas Aiken 71-71-75-79–296 $25,026

Keegan Bradley 72-73-75-77–297 $24,301

Yusaku Miyazato 72-70-76-79–297 $24,301

Stephan Jaeger 71-73-74-79–297 $24,301

Adam Hadwin 68-74-75-80–297 $24,301

Kevin Dougherty 71-72-80-75–298 $23,696

Daniel Summerhays 73-72-74-81–300 $23,454

Talor Gooch 74-71-76-80–301 $23,213

Tyler Light 73-72-78-80–303 $22,971

Haotong Li 74-70-82-84–310 $22,722

Featured Video

European Tour KLM Open

Open de Espana (Spanish Open) Golf Tournament

US Open Scoring Records: Golfers Going Low

2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller

2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont

Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores

1974 U.S. Open: ‘The Massacre at Winged Foot’

1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch

2010 US Open

2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black

Meet Erin Hills Golf Course

Lowest Round in a Men’s Golf Major: The All-Time Bests

1973 US Open: 63 Reasons Johnny Miller Won

1996 U.S. Open: Jones Goes from Injured List to Winners List

All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds

1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse

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Brooks Koepka became a first-time major championship winner at the 2017 U.S. Open, playing on a golf course that had its major-championship coming out, too. That was Erin Hills in Wisconsin, a long golf course with wide, firm fairways whose qualities played into the hands of long-bombing drivers…such as Koepka.

Quick Bits

Winner: Brooks Koepka, 272Dates: June 15-18, 2017Golf course: Erin HillsU.S. Open number: This was the 117th time the championship was played.

Scoring Records Challenged, Fall at 2017 US Open

The scoring was good at Erin Hills in its U.S. Open debut. Played as a par-72, Erin Hills gave up just the fifth round of 63 in U.S. Open history to Justin Thomas in the third round. At 9-under, that was the best score in relation to par in tournament history.

And the winner, Koepka, tied the tournament’s 72-hole record for strokes under par at 16-under.

Prior to the 2017 U.S. Open, only two golfers had ever finished double-digits under par in a U.S. Open (Tiger Woods in 2000 and Rory McIlroy in 2011). But Koepka was one of seven golfers to do it at Erin Hills.

Brooks Koepka’s Path to US Open Champ

Koepka began his professional golf career playing on the European Challenge Tour and posted four victories. That performance moved him up to the European Tour, and he first won there in 2014.

That same season, Koepka posted a couple early season showings strong enough to earn enough money for PGA Tour membership the remainder of 2014. And in early 2015, he posted his first PGA Tour victory.

It was an unusual path for an American golfer, but it sure worked out well for Koepka.

And at the 2017 U.S. Open? Koepka opened with a 67, two off the first-round lead held by Rickie Fowler.

Koepka moved into a four-way tie for the lead at the midway point with a second-round 70.

In Round 3, Brian Harman moved him to the top of the leaderboard at 12-under. Koepka shot 68 to finish the third round at 11-under, in a three-way tie for second.

Harman was Koepka’s main competition for much of the final round, but Harman eventually stumbled just a bit late and finished at 12-under 276, tied for second place.

Koepka, meanwhile, just kept booming drives and, on the back nine in particular, making putts. He shot 67 in the final round to finish at 272.

2017 US Open Scores

Results from the 2017 U.S. Open golf tournament played at Erin Hills golf course in Erin, Wisconsin (a-amateur):

Brooks Koepka 67-70-68-67–272 $2,160,000

Hideki Matsuyama 74-65-71-66–276 $1,050,012

Brian Harman 67-70-67-72–276 $1,050,012

Tommy Fleetwood 67-70-68-72–277 $563,642

Xander Schauffele 66-73-70-69–278 $420,334

Bill Haas 72-68-69-69–278 $420,334

Rickie Fowler 65-73-68-72–278 $420,334

Charley Hoffman 70-70-68-71–279 $336,106

Trey Mullinax 71-72-69-68–280 $279,524

Brandt Snedeker 70-69-70-71–280 $279,524

Justin Thomas 73-69-63-75–280 $279,524

J.B. Holmes 69-69-72-71–281 $235,757

Brendan Steele 71-69-69-73–282 $203,557

Patrick Reed 68-75-65-74–282 $203,557

Si Woo Kim 69-70-68-75–282 $203,557

Matt Kuchar 74-71-70-68–283 $156,809

Steve Stricker 73-72-69-69–283 $156,809

Chez Reavie 75-65-72-71–283 $156,809

Eddie Pepperell 72-71-69-71–283 $156,809

Bernd Wiesberger 69-72-69-73–283 $156,809

David Lingmerth 73-69-71-71–284 $124,951

Sergio Garcia 70-71-71-72–284 $124,951

Kevin Chappell 74-70-70-71–285 $105,506

Jim Furyk 70-74-69-72–285 $105,506

Louis Oosthuizen 74-70-68-73–285 $105,506

Paul Casey 66-71-75-74–286 $93,094

a-Scottie Scheffler 69-74-71-73–287 $0

Zach Johnson 71-74-68-74–287 $83,331

Jamie Lovemark 69-69-74-75–287 $83,331

Marc Leishman 68-72-72-75–287 $83,331

Russell Henley 71-70-67-79–287 $83,331

Kevin Na 68-76-73-71–288 $72,420

Martin Laird 72-71-72-73–288 $72,420

a-Cameron Champ 70-69-73-76–288 $0

Jordan Spieth 73-71-76-69–289 $58,637

Jordan Niebrugge 73-72-73-71–289 $58,637

Martin Kaymer 72-69-75-73–289 $58,637

Brandon Stone 70-74-72-73–289 $58,637

Webb Simpson 74-71-71-73–289 $58,637

Michael Putnam 73-70-71-75–289 $58,637

Matthew Fitzpatrick 70-73-70-76–289 $58,637

Rafael Cabrera Bello 72-73-71-74–290 $44,975

Andrew Johnston 69-73-73-75–290 $44,975

Jonathan Randolph 71-71-73-75–290 $44,975

Jack Maguire 70-73-71-76–290 $44,975

Stewart Cink 74-70-76-71–291 $35,484

Shane Lowry 71-74-73-73–291 $35,484

Satoshi Kodaira 73-69-73-76–291 $35,484

Harris English 71-69-75-76–291 $35,484

Gary Woodland 72-73-73-74–292 $28,895

Whee Kim 73-70-72-77–292 $28,895

Branden Grace 72-72-71-77–292 $28,895

Jason Kokrak 75-70-74-75–294 $26,659

Ryan Brehm 71-74-72-77–294 $26,659

Ernie Els 70-72-79-74–295 $25,631

William McGirt 70-71-79-75–295 $25,631

Lee Westwood 69-75-75-76–295 $25,631

Kevin Kisner 74-70-76-76–296 $25,026

Thomas Aiken 71-71-75-79–296 $25,026

Keegan Bradley 72-73-75-77–297 $24,301

Yusaku Miyazato 72-70-76-79–297 $24,301

Stephan Jaeger 71-73-74-79–297 $24,301

Adam Hadwin 68-74-75-80–297 $24,301

Kevin Dougherty 71-72-80-75–298 $23,696

Daniel Summerhays 73-72-74-81–300 $23,454

Talor Gooch 74-71-76-80–301 $23,213

Tyler Light 73-72-78-80–303 $22,971

Haotong Li 74-70-82-84–310 $22,722

Featured Video

European Tour KLM Open

Open de Espana (Spanish Open) Golf Tournament

US Open Scoring Records: Golfers Going Low

2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller

2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont

Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores

1974 U.S. Open: ‘The Massacre at Winged Foot’

1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch

2010 US Open

2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black

Meet Erin Hills Golf Course

Lowest Round in a Men’s Golf Major: The All-Time Bests

1973 US Open: 63 Reasons Johnny Miller Won

1996 U.S. Open: Jones Goes from Injured List to Winners List

All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds

1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies

Brooks Koepka became a first-time major championship winner at the 2017 U.S. Open, playing on a golf course that had its major-championship coming out, too. That was Erin Hills in Wisconsin, a long golf course with wide, firm fairways whose qualities played into the hands of long-bombing drivers…such as Koepka.

Quick Bits

Winner: Brooks Koepka, 272Dates: June 15-18, 2017Golf course: Erin HillsU.S. Open number: This was the 117th time the championship was played.

Scoring Records Challenged, Fall at 2017 US Open

The scoring was good at Erin Hills in its U.S. Open debut. Played as a par-72, Erin Hills gave up just the fifth round of 63 in U.S. Open history to Justin Thomas in the third round. At 9-under, that was the best score in relation to par in tournament history.

And the winner, Koepka, tied the tournament’s 72-hole record for strokes under par at 16-under.

Prior to the 2017 U.S. Open, only two golfers had ever finished double-digits under par in a U.S. Open (Tiger Woods in 2000 and Rory McIlroy in 2011). But Koepka was one of seven golfers to do it at Erin Hills.

Brooks Koepka’s Path to US Open Champ

Koepka began his professional golf career playing on the European Challenge Tour and posted four victories. That performance moved him up to the European Tour, and he first won there in 2014.

That same season, Koepka posted a couple early season showings strong enough to earn enough money for PGA Tour membership the remainder of 2014. And in early 2015, he posted his first PGA Tour victory.

It was an unusual path for an American golfer, but it sure worked out well for Koepka.

And at the 2017 U.S. Open? Koepka opened with a 67, two off the first-round lead held by Rickie Fowler.

Koepka moved into a four-way tie for the lead at the midway point with a second-round 70.

In Round 3, Brian Harman moved him to the top of the leaderboard at 12-under. Koepka shot 68 to finish the third round at 11-under, in a three-way tie for second.

Harman was Koepka’s main competition for much of the final round, but Harman eventually stumbled just a bit late and finished at 12-under 276, tied for second place.

Koepka, meanwhile, just kept booming drives and, on the back nine in particular, making putts. He shot 67 in the final round to finish at 272.

2017 US Open Scores

Results from the 2017 U.S. Open golf tournament played at Erin Hills golf course in Erin, Wisconsin (a-amateur):

Brooks Koepka 67-70-68-67–272 $2,160,000

Hideki Matsuyama 74-65-71-66–276 $1,050,012

Brian Harman 67-70-67-72–276 $1,050,012

Tommy Fleetwood 67-70-68-72–277 $563,642

Xander Schauffele 66-73-70-69–278 $420,334

Bill Haas 72-68-69-69–278 $420,334

Rickie Fowler 65-73-68-72–278 $420,334

Charley Hoffman 70-70-68-71–279 $336,106

Trey Mullinax 71-72-69-68–280 $279,524

Brandt Snedeker 70-69-70-71–280 $279,524

Justin Thomas 73-69-63-75–280 $279,524

J.B. Holmes 69-69-72-71–281 $235,757

Brendan Steele 71-69-69-73–282 $203,557

Patrick Reed 68-75-65-74–282 $203,557

Si Woo Kim 69-70-68-75–282 $203,557

Matt Kuchar 74-71-70-68–283 $156,809

Steve Stricker 73-72-69-69–283 $156,809

Chez Reavie 75-65-72-71–283 $156,809

Eddie Pepperell 72-71-69-71–283 $156,809

Bernd Wiesberger 69-72-69-73–283 $156,809

David Lingmerth 73-69-71-71–284 $124,951

Sergio Garcia 70-71-71-72–284 $124,951

Kevin Chappell 74-70-70-71–285 $105,506

Jim Furyk 70-74-69-72–285 $105,506

Louis Oosthuizen 74-70-68-73–285 $105,506

Paul Casey 66-71-75-74–286 $93,094

a-Scottie Scheffler 69-74-71-73–287 $0

Zach Johnson 71-74-68-74–287 $83,331

Jamie Lovemark 69-69-74-75–287 $83,331

Marc Leishman 68-72-72-75–287 $83,331

Russell Henley 71-70-67-79–287 $83,331

Kevin Na 68-76-73-71–288 $72,420

Martin Laird 72-71-72-73–288 $72,420

a-Cameron Champ 70-69-73-76–288 $0

Jordan Spieth 73-71-76-69–289 $58,637

Jordan Niebrugge 73-72-73-71–289 $58,637

Martin Kaymer 72-69-75-73–289 $58,637

Brandon Stone 70-74-72-73–289 $58,637

Webb Simpson 74-71-71-73–289 $58,637

Michael Putnam 73-70-71-75–289 $58,637

Matthew Fitzpatrick 70-73-70-76–289 $58,637

Rafael Cabrera Bello 72-73-71-74–290 $44,975

Andrew Johnston 69-73-73-75–290 $44,975

Jonathan Randolph 71-71-73-75–290 $44,975

Jack Maguire 70-73-71-76–290 $44,975

Stewart Cink 74-70-76-71–291 $35,484

Shane Lowry 71-74-73-73–291 $35,484

Satoshi Kodaira 73-69-73-76–291 $35,484

Harris English 71-69-75-76–291 $35,484

Gary Woodland 72-73-73-74–292 $28,895

Whee Kim 73-70-72-77–292 $28,895

Branden Grace 72-72-71-77–292 $28,895

Jason Kokrak 75-70-74-75–294 $26,659

Ryan Brehm 71-74-72-77–294 $26,659

Ernie Els 70-72-79-74–295 $25,631

William McGirt 70-71-79-75–295 $25,631

Lee Westwood 69-75-75-76–295 $25,631

Kevin Kisner 74-70-76-76–296 $25,026

Thomas Aiken 71-71-75-79–296 $25,026

Keegan Bradley 72-73-75-77–297 $24,301

Yusaku Miyazato 72-70-76-79–297 $24,301

Stephan Jaeger 71-73-74-79–297 $24,301

Adam Hadwin 68-74-75-80–297 $24,301

Kevin Dougherty 71-72-80-75–298 $23,696

Daniel Summerhays 73-72-74-81–300 $23,454

Talor Gooch 74-71-76-80–301 $23,213

Tyler Light 73-72-78-80–303 $22,971

Haotong Li 74-70-82-84–310 $22,722

Brooks Koepka became a first-time major championship winner at the 2017 U.S. Open, playing on a golf course that had its major-championship coming out, too. That was Erin Hills in Wisconsin, a long golf course with wide, firm fairways whose qualities played into the hands of long-bombing drivers…such as Koepka.

Quick Bits

  • Winner: Brooks Koepka, 272Dates: June 15-18, 2017Golf course: Erin HillsU.S. Open number: This was the 117th time the championship was played.

Scoring Records Challenged, Fall at 2017 US Open

The scoring was good at Erin Hills in its U.S. Open debut. Played as a par-72, Erin Hills gave up just the fifth round of 63 in U.S. Open history to Justin Thomas in the third round. At 9-under, that was the best score in relation to par in tournament history.

And the winner, Koepka, tied the tournament’s 72-hole record for strokes under par at 16-under.

Prior to the 2017 U.S. Open, only two golfers had ever finished double-digits under par in a U.S. Open (Tiger Woods in 2000 and Rory McIlroy in 2011). But Koepka was one of seven golfers to do it at Erin Hills.

Brooks Koepka’s Path to US Open Champ

Koepka began his professional golf career playing on the European Challenge Tour and posted four victories. That performance moved him up to the European Tour, and he first won there in 2014.

That same season, Koepka posted a couple early season showings strong enough to earn enough money for PGA Tour membership the remainder of 2014. And in early 2015, he posted his first PGA Tour victory.

It was an unusual path for an American golfer, but it sure worked out well for Koepka.

And at the 2017 U.S. Open? Koepka opened with a 67, two off the first-round lead held by Rickie Fowler.

Koepka moved into a four-way tie for the lead at the midway point with a second-round 70.

In Round 3, Brian Harman moved him to the top of the leaderboard at 12-under. Koepka shot 68 to finish the third round at 11-under, in a three-way tie for second.

Harman was Koepka’s main competition for much of the final round, but Harman eventually stumbled just a bit late and finished at 12-under 276, tied for second place.

Koepka, meanwhile, just kept booming drives and, on the back nine in particular, making putts. He shot 67 in the final round to finish at 272.

2017 US Open Scores

Results from the 2017 U.S. Open golf tournament played at Erin Hills golf course in Erin, Wisconsin (a-amateur):

Brooks Koepka 67-70-68-67–272 $2,160,000

Hideki Matsuyama 74-65-71-66–276 $1,050,012

Brian Harman 67-70-67-72–276 $1,050,012

Tommy Fleetwood 67-70-68-72–277 $563,642

Xander Schauffele 66-73-70-69–278 $420,334

Bill Haas 72-68-69-69–278 $420,334

Rickie Fowler 65-73-68-72–278 $420,334

Charley Hoffman 70-70-68-71–279 $336,106

Trey Mullinax 71-72-69-68–280 $279,524

Brandt Snedeker 70-69-70-71–280 $279,524

Justin Thomas 73-69-63-75–280 $279,524

J.B. Holmes 69-69-72-71–281 $235,757

Brendan Steele 71-69-69-73–282 $203,557

Patrick Reed 68-75-65-74–282 $203,557

Si Woo Kim 69-70-68-75–282 $203,557

Matt Kuchar 74-71-70-68–283 $156,809

Steve Stricker 73-72-69-69–283 $156,809

Chez Reavie 75-65-72-71–283 $156,809

Eddie Pepperell 72-71-69-71–283 $156,809

Bernd Wiesberger 69-72-69-73–283 $156,809

David Lingmerth 73-69-71-71–284 $124,951

Sergio Garcia 70-71-71-72–284 $124,951

Kevin Chappell 74-70-70-71–285 $105,506

Jim Furyk 70-74-69-72–285 $105,506

Louis Oosthuizen 74-70-68-73–285 $105,506

Paul Casey 66-71-75-74–286 $93,094

a-Scottie Scheffler 69-74-71-73–287 $0

Zach Johnson 71-74-68-74–287 $83,331

Jamie Lovemark 69-69-74-75–287 $83,331

Marc Leishman 68-72-72-75–287 $83,331

Russell Henley 71-70-67-79–287 $83,331

Kevin Na 68-76-73-71–288 $72,420

Martin Laird 72-71-72-73–288 $72,420

a-Cameron Champ 70-69-73-76–288 $0

Jordan Spieth 73-71-76-69–289 $58,637

Jordan Niebrugge 73-72-73-71–289 $58,637

Martin Kaymer 72-69-75-73–289 $58,637

Brandon Stone 70-74-72-73–289 $58,637

Webb Simpson 74-71-71-73–289 $58,637

Michael Putnam 73-70-71-75–289 $58,637

Matthew Fitzpatrick 70-73-70-76–289 $58,637

Rafael Cabrera Bello 72-73-71-74–290 $44,975

Andrew Johnston 69-73-73-75–290 $44,975

Jonathan Randolph 71-71-73-75–290 $44,975

Jack Maguire 70-73-71-76–290 $44,975

Stewart Cink 74-70-76-71–291 $35,484

Shane Lowry 71-74-73-73–291 $35,484

Satoshi Kodaira 73-69-73-76–291 $35,484

Harris English 71-69-75-76–291 $35,484

Gary Woodland 72-73-73-74–292 $28,895

Whee Kim 73-70-72-77–292 $28,895

Branden Grace 72-72-71-77–292 $28,895

Jason Kokrak 75-70-74-75–294 $26,659

Ryan Brehm 71-74-72-77–294 $26,659

Ernie Els 70-72-79-74–295 $25,631

William McGirt 70-71-79-75–295 $25,631

Lee Westwood 69-75-75-76–295 $25,631

Kevin Kisner 74-70-76-76–296 $25,026

Thomas Aiken 71-71-75-79–296 $25,026

Keegan Bradley 72-73-75-77–297 $24,301

Yusaku Miyazato 72-70-76-79–297 $24,301

Stephan Jaeger 71-73-74-79–297 $24,301

Adam Hadwin 68-74-75-80–297 $24,301

Kevin Dougherty 71-72-80-75–298 $23,696

Daniel Summerhays 73-72-74-81–300 $23,454

Talor Gooch 74-71-76-80–301 $23,213

Tyler Light 73-72-78-80–303 $22,971

Haotong Li 74-70-82-84–310 $22,722

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  • European Tour KLM Open

  • Open de Espana (Spanish Open) Golf Tournament

  • US Open Scoring Records: Golfers Going Low

  • 2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller

  • 2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont

  • Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores

  • 1974 U.S. Open: ‘The Massacre at Winged Foot’

  • 1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch

  • 2010 US Open

  • 2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black

  • Meet Erin Hills Golf Course

  • Lowest Round in a Men’s Golf Major: The All-Time Bests

  • 1973 US Open: 63 Reasons Johnny Miller Won

  • 1996 U.S. Open: Jones Goes from Injured List to Winners List

  • All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds

  • 1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse

European Tour KLM Open

European Tour KLM Open

Open de Espana (Spanish Open) Golf Tournament

Open de Espana (Spanish Open) Golf Tournament

US Open Scoring Records: Golfers Going Low

US Open Scoring Records: Golfers Going Low

2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller

2008 US Open: Tiger Woods Wins a Thriller

2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont

2007 US Open: Cabrera Survives Oakmont

Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores

Tiger Woods’ US Open Wins, Records and Yearly Scores

1974 U.S. Open: ‘The Massacre at Winged Foot’

1974 U.S. Open: ‘The Massacre at Winged Foot’

1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch

1995 U.S. Open: Pavin Comes Through in the Clutch

2010 US Open

2010 US Open

2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black

2009 US Open: Surviving the Slog at Bethpage Black

Meet Erin Hills Golf Course

Meet Erin Hills Golf Course

Lowest Round in a Men’s Golf Major: The All-Time Bests

Lowest Round in a Men’s Golf Major: The All-Time Bests

1973 US Open: 63 Reasons Johnny Miller Won

1973 US Open: 63 Reasons Johnny Miller Won

1996 U.S. Open: Jones Goes from Injured List to Winners List

1996 U.S. Open: Jones Goes from Injured List to Winners List

All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds

All-Time Best 18-Hole Scores on PGA Tour: All the Sub-60 Rounds

1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse

1966 US Open: A Famous Charge, an Infamous Collapse

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