logo
Tyrrell Hatton says Oakmont course ‘unfair' after US Open loss

Tyrrell Hatton says Oakmont course ‘unfair' after US Open loss

Rhyl Journal16-06-2025
The Englishman was in a five-way tie for the lead at the penultimate hole, which, as a short par four, represented a good chance to make birdie.
But he put his tee shot into the thick rough to the right, and then hit his second shot 25 feet into some more rough on a steep incline, eventually making a bogey five.
He then bogeyed the 18th after losing his composure in trademark style to finish tied for fourth on three over, three shots behind winner JJ Spaun.
The difficulty of the punishing Pennsylvanian course has been a talking point all week, with Hatton saying thick rough around steep bunkers has been unnecessary.
And he took his frustration out on a reporter, who asked why he thought his tee shot at 17 was unlucky.
'Why do you think it was bad luck? What kind of question is that?' he snapped back.
'Like, that's ridiculous. If you're going to miss that green, you have to miss it right in the bunker. I did my bit. I feel like I was extremely unlucky to finish where it did.
'I feel I've missed it in the right spot and got punished, which ultimately I don't think ends up being fair.
Big trouble for two contenders.
Burns with a double bogey on 15. Hatton with a bogey on 17. pic.twitter.com/rRnx1BlyXv
— U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 15, 2025
'The finish at the end hurts a lot. What happened on 17 is going to hurt a lot for a long time.
'It was the first time I've been in contention in a major, and that was exciting, and unfortunately, I feel like through a bit of bad luck, I had momentum taken away from me and ultimately ended up not being my day.
'It's hard when you feel like the tournament then just escapes from you right at the end.
'Certainly for me, being the first time in contention at a major, to have that happen right at the end as opposed to like early in the week when you don't end up knowing if that's going to cost anything down the line, I'd say at the end of the tournament, that it makes it hurt a lot more.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jadon Sancho behaviour in Man Utd training and towards team-mates comes to light
Jadon Sancho behaviour in Man Utd training and towards team-mates comes to light

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Jadon Sancho behaviour in Man Utd training and towards team-mates comes to light

Jadon Sancho has endured a tough time since joining Manchester United, with a former first-team coaching now shedding light on the winger's behaviour behind the scenes at Carrington Benni McCarthy has shed light on Jadon Sancho 's struggles at Manchester United, suggesting that his introverted nature was misinterpreted as having a bad attitude. Sancho was signed from Borussia Dortmund in 2021 for £73million after a lengthy transfer saga. However, he failed to replicate his form from Germany at Old Trafford, scoring a mere 12 goals during his hugely underwhelming stint with the club. ‌ He later fell out with then-Red Devils manager Erik ten Hag in September 2023 over his commitment levels in training and refused to apologise for publicly criticising the Dutchman's comments on social media. That led to him being frozen out from the first-team squad. ‌ It also resulted in the 25-year-old being loaned out twice in succession, first to Dortmund and then to Chelsea last season. Although he didn't make a significant impact at Stamford Bridge, he did score in the Europa Conference League final victory. At the end of the 2024/25 season, Chelsea opted to pay United a £5m fee rather than fulfilling their obligation-to-buy clause and signing the winger permanently for £25m. Current United head coach Ruben Amorim has shown no signs of wanting to bring the Englishman back into the fold, indicating that Sancho is likely to leave this summer as a failed signing. Now, McCarthy, who served as a first-team coach under Ten Hag for two years from the summer of 2022 to 2024, has come out in support of Sancho's character. The South African, currently managing Kenya's national team, says he wasn't the most sociable team-mate at United and would often head straight home after training, which may have been misconstrued from the outside. McCarthy told 'I couldn't fault Jadon in training. He brings unbelievable quality, ability and skills. He can make you stop in awe and ask yourself just how he can do things. He brought unmatched quality. ‌ 'I think what didn't help Jadon was that he's a very closed-off person. He keeps to himself, and from the outside it looked like he wasn't trying to make friends with his team-mates. He might not have joked around but really he was just quiet, and I don't think you should judge players on who he gets on with or not. 'Based on his ability and craft, I never saw any problems in his relationships. He was quiet-natured, and so when training is done, he doesn't stay to talk, he heads home. He's very private. I think a bit of an introvert, which isn't the opinion he gets branded with in the press." However, he went on to comment on Sancho's main struggles with consistency, adding: 'I think that when it came to Erik, he wanted to see Jadon at his best everyday. Monday to Friday, no days off. I think that's what the manager would expect from his players, and so it's up to the players to give it to him. If you can't do that, you're going to have problems, and I think the differences and problems then surfaced. ‌ 'For me, I don't have a bad thing to say about Jadon. I loved him, he was unbelievable, sometimes he was unplayable. I don't want to rush to judgement on players if they're reserved.' Sancho might be on the verge of a permanent exit from Manchester this summer. Juventus have been linked with the Englishman and reports suggest they could be ready to meet United's valuation of around £25m. ‌ But the Turin-based club are not willing to do the same for Sancho's hefty wage demands, which reportedly exceed £300,000 per week as talks continue with his representatives. A swap deal could be on the cards too It's claimed that the Italians have offered Douglas Luiz, Tim Weah and Dusan Vlahovic to sweeten a deal for Sancho. United reportedly have not yet responded to that proposal and could prefer straight cash amid attempts to boost Amorim's budget.

‘It's kind of shocking': Why so many top tennis stars are losing early at Wimbledon
‘It's kind of shocking': Why so many top tennis stars are losing early at Wimbledon

NBC News

time18 hours ago

  • NBC News

‘It's kind of shocking': Why so many top tennis stars are losing early at Wimbledon

No one in women's tennis was better than Coco Gauff in early June. Standing on a clay court in Paris, Gauff lifted a silver trophy after winning the French Open, the second major championship of the 21-year-old's career and the first time an American had won it since Serena Williams in 2015. Just three weeks later, chasing her second major title of the season, Gauff didn't even make it out of her opening match on the grass courts of Wimbledon, however. It was a stunning result — one made all the more surprising because it wasn't an outlier. In all, 23 seeded players combined between men and women were beaten during Wimbledon's first round, the most since the current seeding format began in 2001. In addition to Gauff, who entered with the second-highest seeding, the women's singles draw saw third-seeded Jessica Pegula lose. Their losses marked the first time since 1968, a turning point in the sport's history when professionals began competing alongside amateurs at major tournaments, that two of the top three women's seeds had been knocked out during the first round of a Grand Slam tournament. 'This is why tennis is the best reality show on earth,' said former U.S. Open champion Andy Roddick on his podcast Tuesday. 'There's no script.' Thirteen seeded men's players lost in the first round, tying a record at Grand Slams, the sport's four most prestigious tournaments. Carlos Alcaraz, the 22-year-old Spanish superstar who entered Wimbledon as a two-time defending champion but needed the full five sets to survive his opening match, recited that statistic a day later after advancing out of the second round. 'It's kind of shocking,' Alcaraz said. "Everything can happen in tennis, even in the first round." Like Alcaraz, another past champion, seven-time winner Novak Djokovic, remains alive in the men's singles bracket. But their competition has been thinned out. Among those to lose in the first round included third-seeded Alexander Zverev, seventh-seeded Lorenzo Musetti, and ninth-seeded Daniil Medvedev, a former No. 1-ranked player and U.S. Open champion. Asked about the string of upsets, Zverev didn't see a throughline that connected his match with the losses of Musetti, Medvedev and others. "I don't think tennis is the problem right now for me," Zverev said after losing to an opponent who had been just 8-17 this season. "It's something else that I have to find within me at the moment." Yet Roddick, who described the scale of the upsets as "carnage," and Gauff both left the opening rounds with theories for why Wimbledon's draw had become so riddled with upsets that centered on style and timing. "I would say the quick turnaround," Gauff said after her first-round exit. "I think most of the seeds are going deeper in Roland Garros, and then you spend a long clay season and then you have to come and adjust to grass.' In the annual tennis calendar, the number of tournaments played on grass are outliers. That leaves relatively little time to get comfortable for playing on the surface, where the ball bounces lower and moves slower, before Wimbledon arrives. Yet how to best prepare for Wimbledon opens up another wrinkle for players who must decide whether to play the week before in other tune-up tournaments on grass but risk fatigue or whether to rest up. Just 12 days after winning on the clay court at Roland Garros in Paris, Gauff played on grass in Germany, and lost. After her defeat, she questioned whether she would play the same tournament again because of the quick turnaround. "It's a tricky thing and it seems like Carlos and Novak are the ones to figure it out and even (Alcaraz) had a tough first-round match," Gauff said. "I really just think it's that this turnaround, I think, this Slam out of all of them is ... the most prone to have upsets just because of how quick the turnaround is from clay." Though Gauff's playing style is not particularly suited for success on grass, Roddick said on his podcast, Pegula's loss was "most shocking" because it is. Pegula's quick exit at Wimbledon came only three days after she had won another grass-court tournament in Germany that was seen as a warmup for Wimbledon. "This is what happens when you actually play tournaments outside of the monosurface where it's all kind of the same," Roddick said. "… You allow different styles in. ...This is what we get. We don't get a six-week lead-in where we're getting a data set from (tournaments in) Monte Carlo through Geneva that matter in predictions and knowing what's going on. "I would say there are fewer people that know what they're doing on grass, like really really know what they're doing, than on any other surface."

Rangers sign 23 y/o with 'huge potential' amid 'shock' over Ibrox move - and Norway star could follow
Rangers sign 23 y/o with 'huge potential' amid 'shock' over Ibrox move - and Norway star could follow

Scotsman

time19 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Rangers sign 23 y/o with 'huge potential' amid 'shock' over Ibrox move - and Norway star could follow

Defender arrives from League One in England Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Rangers have made it two new signings in one day after confirming the arrival of Emmanuel Fernandez on a permanent transfer from Peterborough United. The Ibrox side announced the capture of midfielder Joe Rothwell from Bournemouth earlier on Wednesday with the 30-year-old reuniting with head coach Russell Martin following a previous spell together at Southampton. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Rothwell will be joined at Rangers by centre-back Fernandez, who has signed a four-year deal after spending the past four years with the English League One outfit. New Rangers signing Emmanuel Fernandez in action for Peterborough United last season. (Photo by) | Getty Images The 23-year-old, who has also had spells with Gillingham and Ramsgate, admitted that the interest from the Glasgow giants came as a shock. "I am honoured, it is a huge club with a great fanbase and I think I can kickstart my career and have a good journey here," the Englishman said. 'I was shocked when I heard about Rangers because it is such a big club but it was the place I wanted to be. 'I haven't played at this level, there will be a lot of life changes for me, but it is something I want to be part of and I can't wait to get started.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The arrivals of Rothwell and Fernandez bring the total number of new signings at Ibrox this summer to four with Lyall Cameron recruited from Dundee and Max Aarons joining on loan from Bournemouth. Rangers head coach Martin added: 'Emmanuel is a young defender with a huge amount of potential, and I am excited to welcome him to the club. 'He has a strong physical presence, is a commanding defender and I believe in this environment we can help him develop and provide him with the opportunities to take his game to the next level. 'I'm looking forward to welcoming him into the group and getting to work.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad

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