logo
U.S. Open started with 15 amateurs. How many made the cut at Oakmont to play the weekend?

U.S. Open started with 15 amateurs. How many made the cut at Oakmont to play the weekend?

USA Today14-06-2025
U.S. Open started with 15 amateurs. How many made the cut at Oakmont to play the weekend?
When the 125th edition of the U.S. Golf Association's national championship started with 15 amateurs.
After 36 holes at Oakmont Country Club, quite simply a most brutal test, there is just one am left to play the weekend at the U.S. Open.
The 15 amateurs who qualified for the 125th U.S. Open
First, here's the complete list of the 15 ams who made the field. These guys all deserve credit because simply making this tournament is a huge deal.
Evan Beck
Trevor Gutschewski
Frankie Harris
Justin Hastings
Mason Howell
Ben James
Noah Kent
Jackson Koivun
Michael La Sasso
Bryan Lee
Zachary Pollo
Lance Simpson
Cameron Tankersley
Matt Vogt
Tyler Weaver
The lone amateur who made the cut at the 125th U.S. Open
And here is the lucky one who earned some weekend tee times:
Justin Hastings, 6 over (73-73)
By virtue of being the lone amateur to make the cut, Hastings has won low amateur honors in 2025.
Ben James and Jackson Koivun each finished at 8 over to miss the cut by a single shot.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80
Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80

NBC Sports

time14 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80

Kailer Stone has won back-to-back NCGA Junior Championships, including earlier this month at Lake Merced in San Francisco. The 17-year-old from Alameda, California, is hoping to return to the Bay Area next month for the U.S. Amateur at Olympic Club as the champion of another prestigious junior championship. Stone joined China's Qiyou Wu in shooting 5-under 66, the leading score in Monday's opening round of stroke play at the 77th U.S. Junior Amateur in Dallas. Stone, a Pepperdine commit, carded five birdies and no bogeys at Trinity Forest, which played over two shots tougher than its companion course, Brook Hollow. Mason Howell, the Georgia commit who qualified for the U.S. Open earlier this summer, had the best score at Brook Hollow, a 3-under 67, along with fellow Georgia native Trace Carter. Top-ranked junior Miles Russell shot 67 at Trinity Forest while defending U.S. Junior champion Trevor Gutschewski posted 68 at the former home of the PGA Tour's Byron Nelson event. The player Gutschewski beat in the final last July at Oakland Hills, Tennessee commit Tyler Watts, also shot 68 at Trinity Forest. Other notables currently inside the match-play cutline include reigning U.S. Amateur Four-Ball champion and Vanderbilt commit Tyler Mawhinney (68-TF), North Carolina sophomore and Ukraine's Misha Golod (69-TF), Auburn signee Logan Reilly (71-TF), Vanderbilt commit Luke Colton (71-TF), Clemson signee Jackson Byrd (71-TF), Vanderbilt signee Michael Riebe (71-BH), Oklahoma State signee Henry Guan (71-BH) and Daniil Sokolov (71-TF), who is the first player from Qatar to play in a USGA championship. Among those outside the cut line at the midway point of stroke-play qualifying are Cameron Kuchar (74-TF) and Charlie Woods (81-BH). Both of their dads, Matt and Tiger, were out watching their sons' rounds on Monday. Woods, who missed the cut in last year's U.S. Junior debut, carded birdies on Nos. 18 and 9, but he also had four double bogeys, including three on the back nine, his opening side. He is currently T-242 out of 264 players and nine shots out of what would be a 30-for-8 playoff to get into the Round of 64.

Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen pulls out of the US Open after elbow surgery
Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen pulls out of the US Open after elbow surgery

San Francisco Chronicle​

time17 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen pulls out of the US Open after elbow surgery

NEW YORK (AP) — Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen withdrew from the U.S. Open on Monday, two days after announcing she had arthroscopic surgery on her right elbow because of 'persistent pain.' The sixth-ranked Zheng was coming off a first-round loss at Wimbledon last month. 'Over the past months, I've been dealing with persistent pain in my right elbow during training and matches,' the right-handed 22-year-old from China said on social media Saturday. 'Despite trying various treatments to manage it, the discomfort never fully went away.' She was replaced in the field by France's Leolia Jeanjean. ___

Venus Williams wins a doubles match in Washington — her 1st tournament in more than a year
Venus Williams wins a doubles match in Washington — her 1st tournament in more than a year

Chicago Tribune

time17 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Venus Williams wins a doubles match in Washington — her 1st tournament in more than a year

WASHINGTON — Competing at a tournament for the first time in more than a year, and in doubles for the first time in nearly three, Venus Williams hit a big serve on her initial delivery at the DC Open on Monday and, curiously, it was wiped out by a foot-fault call. The 45-year-old Williams, owner of 21 Grand Slam titles in singles and doubles, smiled incredulously, as did the other three players involved in the match in front of a full crowd that eventually included NBA star Kevin Durant. And then Williams carried on, displaying her trademark power on some strokes and missing others while teaming with Hailey Baptiste for a 6-3, 6-1 victory against 2014 Wimbledon runner-up Eugenie Bouchard and Clervie Ngounoue. 'My personal goal is to have fun right now and enjoy the moment, not put too much pressure on myself,' Williams said Sunday as she prepared to return to action for the first time since the Miami Open in March 2024. 'Of course I love winning. I want to win. But more than anything, I just want to get the best out of myself. If I can do that, then I'll be fine.' She did both — winning, yes, and contributing plenty to the cause, but also having a good time, high-fiving or fist-bumping Baptiste after some of their best points, laughing after others and waving to an appreciative crowd that roared over and over for Williams. She and Baptiste hugged when it ended. It was full at 3,000-seat John Harris Court, where Durant showed up late in the first set, while across the way at the 7,500-capacity main stadium, only a few dozen spectators were scattered in the seats for an all-American singles match involving Reilly Opelka and Murphy Cassone. Asked to comment about the court assignments, tournament director Daniel Vallverdú said: 'The tournament works to balance full singles and doubles ATP and WTA schedules, while coordinating with broadcaster requests for court assignments.' When Williams, wearing a white visor as she so often did, was introduced before participating in doubles for the first time since the 2022 U.S. Open — when her partner was younger sister Serena — the stadium announcer mentioned that Venus has 'one of the best serves in the history of the game,' that she 'turned pro in the last century' and 'has won everything.' That includes seven major singles trophies — five at Wimbledon, two at the U.S. Open — and an additional 14 in doubles with Serena, plus four Olympic gold medals. 'She's one of the best athletes of all time. Her and her sister, they're not only great for the women's game, not only great for women's sports, but they are so iconic,' said Frances Tiafoe, a two-time U.S. Open semifinalist whose twin brother, Franklin, is a coach for Baptiste. 'People are going to go crazy to see her.' They sure did Monday, standing with phone cameras raised high when Williams first appeared at the court. There will be other opportunities to see her this week: In singles, Williams is set to face Peyton Stearns, a 23-year-old American currently ranked No. 35 who won NCAA singles and team championships at Texas. 'I was surprised to see her in the draw this week,' said Emma Navarro, a U.S. Open semifinalist a year ago and seeded No. 2 in Washington. 'She's obviously a legend of the game. I saw a video on Instagram of her hitting out here on the practice courts — that backhand, you can't miss. Good for her. She's sticking with it at her age.' Williams' long absence from tennis was unwanted: She spoke in an interview with NBC earlier this month about having a procedure to remove fibroids from her uterus. 'My health journey was very scary,' she said Sunday. 'This time a year ago I was preparing to go to surgery. There was no way for me to play tennis or play the U.S. Open — or those things weren't even on my mind. I was just trying to get healthy. … Things really change in a year.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store