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U.S. Open qualifying: A closer look

The appeal of U.S. Open sectional qualifying comes from its combination of simplicity and high stakes. Approximately half of the spots in the season’s second major are determined by the game’s most straightforward metric: score. No algoritihms or advanced analytics are used to determine who will earn a tee time at Erin Hills via Monday’s 10 qualifying tournaments, which are being conducted across the United States. Shooting the lowest score is all that matters. It’s that simple. It doesn’t matter if the person signing the scorecard is a major champion, an NCAA champion or a club champion. World Golf Hall of Famers are competing Monday alongside working men. Players who you may have seen at your home club last week are now competing for the chance to tee it up alongside Dustin Johnson and company on one of the world’s largest stages. We’ve compiled a list of notable participants below. These are names you already know, and others that you soon may hear more about. There’s also links to live scoring so that you can follow along as the drama unfolds. PGATOUR.COM also has staffers at four sites who will provide live updates. June 5 Brookside Golf & CC/The Lakes Golf & CC  Columbus, Ohio 120 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Keegan Bradley, whose three PGA TOUR victories include the 2011 PGA Championship — Patrick Cantlay, the former No. 1 amateur who was runner-up at this year’s Valspar Championship. He was runner-up in the 2011 U.S. Amateur at Erin Hills. — K.J. Choi, whose eight PGA TOUR wins include the 2011 PLAYERS Championship. — Stewart Cink, whose six PGA TOUR titles include the 2009 Open Championship. — Luke Donald, the former World No. 1 who has won five times on the PGA TOUR. — Mackenzie Hughes, winner of The RSM Classic and No. 19 in the FedExCup. — Smylie Kaufman, winner of last season’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. — Kelly Kraft, winner of the 2011 U.S. Amateur at Erin Hills. He was runner-up at this year’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. — Danny Lee, winner of the 2015 Greenbrier Classic and a member of that year’s International Team at the Presidents Cup. He collected back-to-back top-10s at the AT&T Byron Nelson (T5) and DEAN & DELUCA Invitational (6th). — Luke List, No. 35 in the FedExCup. — Geoff Ogilvy, the 2006 U.S. Open champion and a captain’s assistant for this year’s International Team for the Presidents Cup. — Rod Pampling, winner of this season’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. — Andrew Putnam, who currently leads the Web.com Tour money list. — Ollie Schniederjans, the PGA TOUR rookie who is No. 44 in the FedExCup. — Scottie Scheffler, a Texas All-American who finished T3 at this year’s NCAA Championship. He qualified for last year’s U.S. Open, shooting 69 in the first round before missing the cut. — Cameron Smith, who won this year’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans with Jonas Blixt. Smith finished fourth in the 2015 U.S. Open. Germantown CC/Ridgeway CC Memphis, Tennessee 108 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Sam Burns, who won the 2017 Jack Nicklaus Award as the top player in college golf. Burns qualified for last year’s U.S. Open (MC) at the Memphis site. — Harris English, whose two PGA TOUR victories include the 2013 FedEx St. Jude Classic near Memphis. — Retief Goosen, a two-time U.S. Open winner (2001, ’04). — Cody Gribble, winner of this season’s Sanderson Farms Championship. — Andrew Landry, who ranks third on the Web.com Tour money list. He played in the final group of last year’s U.S. Open before finishing 15th. — Steve Stricker, a 12-time PGA TOUR winner and captain of this year’s U.S. Presidents Cup team. The Wisconsin native is trying to qualify for the first U.S. Open in his home state. — Hudson Swafford, winner of the 2017 CareerBuilder Challenge. — Braden Thornberry, winner of the 2017 NCAA individual championship. Hawks Ridge GC Ball Ground, Ga. 36 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Zecheng Dou, who won four times on PGA TOUR China last year and was the tour’s Player of the Year. He is 34th on the Web.com Tour money list. — Stephan Jaeger, who fired 58 last year on the Web.com Tour. He recently won the BMW Charity Pro-Am and ranks seventh on the Web.com Tour money list. — Dru Love, the son of two-time PLAYERS champion Davis Love III. Dru’s father is playing the sectional qualifier in Columbus, Ohio. — Jimmy Stanger, a first-team All-American at the University of Virginia. Lakewood CC Dallas, Texas 58 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Woody Austin, who has won four times on the PGA TOUR and is a three-time winner on PGA TOUR Champions. — Steven Bowditch, a two-time PGA TOUR winner and member of the 2015 International Team at the Presidents Cup. — Noah Goodwin, the 2016 AJGA Player of the Year. — Hunter Mahan, a six-time PGA TOUR winner. — Ryan Palmer, a three-time PGA TOUR winner who ranks 107th in this season’s FedExCup. — Will Zalatoris, a first-team All-American at Wake Forest who also won the 2014 U.S. Junior. He’s No. 10 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Springfield CC Springfield, Ohio 77 for TBD Tee times/results — Tony Finau, the 2016 Puerto Rico Open champion. He qualified for the 2015 U.S. Open at this site, then tied for 14th at Chambers Bay. — James Hahn, a two-time TOUR winner who recently finished third at the AT&T Byron Nelson.  — Kevin Hall, the former Ohio State golfer who received the Charlie Sifford Exemption to compete in this year’s Genesis Open. Hall, who has been deaf since age 2, missed the cut at Riviera. — Dylan Meyer, an Illinois junior who was one of three finalists for the Ben Hogan Award, which is given to the top player in college and amateur golf. He is the world’s fourth-ranked amateur. — Brian Stuard, winner of the 2016 Zurich Classic of New Orleans. Woodmont CC Rockville, Md. 50 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Jason Gore, who owns one PGA TOUR title and seven victories on the Web.com Tour. He played in the final group of the 2005 U.S. Open. He ranks 15th on the Web.com Tour money list. — Billy Hurley III, winner of the 2016 Quicken Loans National at nearby Congressional Country Club. — Dan McCarthy, who won four times on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada last year and currently ranks 55th on the Web.com Tour money list. — Kyle Thompson, who ranks fifth on the Web.com Tour money list. Canoe Brook CC Summit, N.J. 80 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Rich Berberian, winner of the 2016 PGA Professional National Championship. — Daniel Chopra, whose two PGA TOUR victories include the 2008 Tournament of Champions. — Mike Dunham, a former NHL goaltender and 2002 Olympics silver medalist. He is currently the New York Islanders’ goaltending coach. — Jim Herman, winner of the 2016 Shell Houston Open who was a club professional in New Jersey before making the PGA TOUR. — Nathan Smith, a four-time winner of the U.S. Mid-Amateur. — Richy Werenski, a PGA TOUR rookie who ranks 144th in the FedExCup. Jupiter Hills Club Tequesta, Fla. 49 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Robert Allenby, a four-time PGA TOUR winner and six-time Presidents Cup participant for the International Team. — Sam Horsfield, who has turned pro after two years at the University of Florida. Horsfield, who has been mentored by Ian Poulter, won four times at Florida and was a first-team All-American in 2016. — Jack Maguire, who ranks 46th on the Web.com Tour money list. — Joaquin Niemann, the No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. He is an incoming freshman at the University of South Florida. — Alejandro Tosti, a University of Florida golfer who won this year’s SEC individual championship. — Andy Zhang, who is the youngest person to ever qualify for the U.S. Open. He was 14 years old when he qualified for the 2012 U.S. Open. He now plays for the University of Florida. Big Canyon CC/Newport Beach CC Newport Beach, Calif. 103 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Charlie Beljan, winner of the 2012 Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic. — Sean Crocker, the world’s ninth-ranked amateur. Crocker, a USC junior, was born in Zimbabwe and has been mentored by Nick Price, the International Team captain for the Presidents Cup. — Stewart Hagestad, the 2016 U.S. Mid-Amateur champion and low amateur at this year’s Masters (T36). — Max Homa, a PGA TOUR player who won the 2013 NCAA Championship. — Beau Hossler, who first gained fame when he contended at the 2012 U.S. Open at the age of 16. Hossler is in his first full season of professional golf. — Collin Morikawa, a first-team All-American this season for Cal. Morikawa finished runner-up at the 2016 Air Capital Classic on the Web.com Tour, losing a playoff to Ollie Schniederjans. — Scott McCarron, who owns three titles apiece on the PGA TOUR and PGA TOUR Champions. He ranks second in this season’s Charles Schwab Cup. — John Oda, a first-team All-American at UNLV who is coming off a T8 finish at the NCAA Championship. — Norman Xiong, who won this year’s Phil Mickelson Award as the top freshman in college golf. Xiong plays for Oregon. Tacoma Country & GC Lakewood, Wash. 70 for TBD Tee times/scoring — Tadd Fujikawa, who qualified for the 2006 U.S. Open at the age of 15. — Lee McCoy, who finished fourth as an amateur at the 2016 Valspar Championship. He is competing on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada. — Jordan Niebrugge, a Wisconsin native who’s trying to return home for the U.S. Open. Niebrugge finished sixth at the 2015 Open Championship. — Robby Shelton, who finished T3 at the 2015 Barbasol Championship while still an amateur. The former Alabama All-American recently was medalist at Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada Q-School. — Aaron Wise, who ranks 27th on the Web.com Tour money list. Wise won the 2016 NCAA individual championship for Oregon and led the Ducks to the team title. May 29 Walton Heath Golf Club Surrey, England 111 for 15 Popular PGA TOUR rookie Andrew Johnston qualified for the U.S. Open in exciting fashion, making three eagles during his two rounds at Walton Heath Golf Club. He made a hole-in-one during his morning round on the New Course, then had two eagles in the afternoon. Johnston is 188th in the FedExCup. Haotong Li, a former winner on PGA TOUR China and winner of the 2016 China Open, finished second, one shot behind Aaron Rai. 1. Aaron Rai, 66-64 (-14) 2. Haotong Li, 67-64 (-13) T3. Alexander Levy, 63-69 (-12) T3. Richie Ramsay, 66-66 (-12) T5. Oliver Bekker, 67-66 (-11) T5. Joel Stalter, 68-65 (-11) T5. Bradley Dredge, 62-71 (-11) T5. Eddie Pepperell, 67-66 (-11) T9. Brandon Stone, 68-66 (-10) T9. George Coetzee, 64-70 (-10) T9. Andrew Johnston, 68-66 (-10) T12. Paul Dunne, 67-68 (-9) T12. Matt Wallace, 67-68 (-9) T12. Thomas Aiken, 68-67 (-9) T12. Wade Ormsby, 66-69 (-9) 1st alt.: Gregory Bourdy, 71-64 (-9) 2nd alt.: Callum Shinkwin, 65-70 (-9) Notable MCs: MC. Nicolas Colsaerts, 69-67 (-8) MC. Mikko Ilonen, 71-65 (-8) MC. Padraig Harrington, 77-68 (+1) May 22 Ono Golf Club Ono City, Japan 36 for 4 Four-time Japan Tour winner Satoshi Kodaira posted a four-shot victory at the U.S. Open qualifier in Japan. Kodaira, 27, will be making his U.S. Open debut. The other three berths to Erin Hills were decided in a 6-for-3 playoff that lasted eight holes. Yusaku Miyazato, the older brother of nine-time LPGA winner Ai Miyazato, ended the playoff by making an 18-foot birdie putt for the final spot. Yusaku, who finished 23rd in last year’s U.S. Open at Oakmont, has won twice on the Japan Tour this year. Chan Kim earned a spot in The Open Championship six days after qualifying for the U.S. Open. He won the Gateway to the Open – Mizuno Open on May 28 to qualify for The Open Championship. It was the first Japan Tour win for the 27-year-old Arizona State alumnus. Among those who failed to qualify were Trevor Sluman, the nephew of 1988 PGA Championship winner Jeff Sluman, and PGA TOUR member Hiroshi Iwata. 1. Satoshi Kodaira, 64-69 (-11) T2. Yusaku Miyazato, 66-71 (-7) T2. Chan Kim, 69-68 (-7) T2. Shugo Imahira, 68-69 (-7) 1st alt.: Sungjae Im, 68-69 (-7) 2nd alt.: Shintaro Kobayashi, 70-67 (-7) Notable MCs:  MC. Hiroshi Iwata, 68-70–138 (-6) MC. Trevor Sluman, 71-76–147 (+5) MC. Anthony Paolucci, 74-78–152 (+8)

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How burnout helped Ben Griffin rediscover his competitive edgeHow burnout helped Ben Griffin rediscover his competitive edge

Ben Griffin remembers the scene like it was yesterday. It’s the 2011 North Carolina high school 4A state golf championship. Griffin, a 4-foot-11 freshman, is pitted against senior Andrew Decker in a playoff at Pinehurst No. 6. On the second extra hole, the par-4 18th, Griffin’s approach finds a greenside bunker; he catches the bunker shot thin and the ball sails over the green. With Decker facing a 15-footer for par, Griffin holes his par chip. Decker misses, and suddenly the freshman is a state champion. “I had never played in front of cameras or anything, and there are all these news stations filming, 200 people watching,” Griffin said. “All the high school teams are watching, all the parents … I picked the line, hit the line, it bounced straight and went right in the middle. It was nuts. “I had watched so many films of Tiger and all these people that were so calm and collected in those moments, whereas I knew I was shaking. I was shaking and I just hit it, and I tried to have this fierce look because I’m 14 years old, 4-foot-11, new kid on the block … I was the 4A state champion, having not gone through puberty. My voice was super high. It was crazy.” Griffin remembers the scene because he has loved the game since childhood in North Carolina. His passion, inherited from his dad Cowan and grandpa Douglas, propelled him to a college career at North Carolina, where he was twice an honorable mention All-American, and a 2018 win on PGA TOUR Canada in his first summer as a pro. In his first full Korn Ferry Tour season, in 2022, he earned a PGA TOUR card. In his fourth TOUR start as a member, he led on the back nine at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship before finishing T3. The rookie is set to conclude a successful fall at The RSM Classic in his adopted hometown of Sea Island, Georgia, this week. To look at him, you’d never know Griffin almost gave up professional golf for good. Fighting burnout James Oh has spent his career in golf, first as a player on the PGA TOUR and Korn Ferry Tour, and now as a swing coach across tours in men’s and women’s golf. He says there are two main reasons he’ll get a call from a pupil – “it’s one of two things; you’re either getting married or you’re getting fired.” This was neither. It was spring 2021, and Griffin was calling to say he was walking away. A feel player who never had a consistent swing coach as a kid, Griffin synced with Oh’s ethos as one of the game’s least technical instructors. Along the way, though, Griffin had fallen into one of professional golf’s inherent traps: an abundance of free time. He’d tinker for the sake of tinkering. “He was videotaping his swing, changing equipment, all the things he never did,” said his trainer, Randy Myers. “He became that guy that he didn’t want to ever become.” Griffin trusted his work with Oh, which he describes as a series of small tweaks rather than massive overhauls – “16 things I’ve probably got to do a bit differently for me to be the No. 1 player in the world” – and felt his game improving. But he was in status no-man’s land, having lost his Korn Ferry Tour status after 2019 and missed at Q-School before the pandemic hiatus. What’s more, the combination of financial stress and mental uncertainty didn’t improve matters – “getting beat down by trying to do Monday qualifier after Monday qualifier,” Myers said. The unbridled joy of that high school freshman had dwindled away to almost nothing. “I was so burnt out at golf,” Griffin said. “I didn’t have the love for the game.” In that respect, he was like 77% of respondents in a recent Deloitte survey who said they’ve experienced burnout at their current job. The question was what to do next. Opting for a clean break, Griffin took the required coursework, passed accreditation tests at the state and national level, and became a licensed mortgage loan officer at CIMG Residential Mortgage in his native Chapel Hill, North Carolina. “If you’re going to get away from it, get away from it,” Oh said. “That’s the only thing as a player that’s going to drive you back, and if you don’t have the motivation to come back, you shouldn’t do it. You shouldn’t have someone else tell you that you should do it. You’ve got to want to do it. And I knew that with how good of a player he was, he just needed to really get away from it to … want to come back.” Anxious to start with CIMG, Griffin admits he “barely passed” his accreditation tests. Colleague Karen Lorbacher, a loan coordinator, showed him the ropes. “She taught me everything that I learned,” he said. By the beginning of June, Griffin was up to speed and joining realtors at networking events, trying to generate business. A normal day was 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m., but it could stretch to a 14-hour day (7 a.m. – 9 p.m.) if things got busy. In his mind, he was a mortgage loan officer, not a professional golfer. Coming back to golf Griffin’s grandpa Douglas, whose motto was “Hit them long and straight,” passed away that July. One day shortly after his grandfather’s death, Griffin felt compelled to pull into a golf course on the way to work. He wondered if it was a sign. Meanwhile, Mike Swann and Jesse Ahearn, members at Highland Springs CC in Springfield, Missouri – longtime host venue of the Korn Ferry Tour’s Price Cutter Charity Championship presented by Dr Pepper – insisted on flying him out for the event’s Monday qualifier. Griffin got time off and carded 65 to advance into the field, and although he missed the cut, he stuck around Sunday as Dylan Wu, a friend from PGA TOUR Canada, won to secure his first PGA TOUR card. As all of that was happening, trainer Myers revealed that Doug Sieg, a mutual friend and the managing partner of investment firm Lord, Abbett & Co. LLC, wanted to sponsor Griffin. Sieg had been interested in a potential sponsorship earlier in the summer, but Griffin was committed to his new job as a loan officer. The knowledge that he was headed to a Korn Ferry Tour qualifier changed things. Things were falling into place for him to be a golfer again. “Doug said, ‘I’m not going to do this with anyone else but Ben,’” Myers said. “The reason, ‘It doesn’t need to be someone on TOUR; all I need is someone who is good with my clients and in clinics, and Ben’s the perfect guy.’ It was just, ‘I love this kid, regardless of what he wants to do, how far he’s going. I think we can help him out.’” With his new sponsorship, and hungry to play again, Griffin was positioned to make another run at his original career choice. It was bittersweet to inform his team at CIMG that he was leaving, but he couldn’t let the opportunity pass him by. He advanced through First Stage and Second Stage of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School last fall, carrying his bag at both events, before authoring a third-round 64 at Final Stage in Georgia en route to securing guaranteed starts with a stroke to spare. He called both Myers and Sieg during a rain delay from a drab motel outside Savannah, with Sieg gently chiding him that better accommodations were in his future. As he built back his confidence throughout the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour season, he paid more attention to nutrition and sought out rental houses to allow for cooking and meal-prep. He adopted a vegan diet and limited his drinking, although he could be forgiven a libation at the Korn Ferry Tour graduation ceremony in Omaha in August. “Everything helps together,” Griffin said. “Having a team supporting me has given me a clear mind. Eating healthy is going to make me feel better when I’m out there. Not drinking alcohol is going to keep my mind clear and not foggy. There are so many things off the golf course that affect your golf game more than you even think.” Lessons learned The day after this interview, Griffin carded a 59 in a casual round at Sea Island Golf Club’s Plantation Course. He holed out from 155 yards to do so. He finished fourth at the TOUR’s 2021-22 Regular Season-ending Wyndham Championship (competing on a sponsor exemption) and experienced a weekend in the spotlight in Bermuda. With his three runner-up finishes on the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour, Griffin put together one of professional golf’s most complete seasons without a victory. “Having people who could help him out and get him going again and find that love for the game again … I think for him, seeing the other side of it, even for the short period of time that he was doing it, gave him that motivation to go out there and get it done,” said fellow North Carolina native Ben Kohles, who lived at Sea Island during Griffin’s first stint as a pro, when the two practiced together frequently. “Stepping away from it at times can really give you the determination to get back out there and figure it out, and that’s what we’re all out here trying to do.” Griffin’s break, however brief, was vitally important. “He had to take it,” said Myers. “He probably wouldn’t be here if he hadn’t. He would’ve quit but never come back. I think he quit when he was still good, which is a good thing, but it’s also one of those things where it drives you back to the game.” Griffin concurs. “I had never had significant time away from the game like that,” he said. “Having that reset, it’s so valuable, way more valuable than I had ever imagined. Regardless of what you do in life, it’s important to step back and take a breath. People always say, ‘Get your mind off it. Breathe.’ Golf is what I needed to be playing all along.”

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Featured Groups: The Open ChampionshipFeatured Groups: The Open Championship

SOUTHPORT, England – Tee times have been released for the 146th playing of The Open Championship. Royal Birkdale is hosting the event for the 10th time. The last Open winner at Royal Birkdale was Padraig Harrington in 2008, as he became the first European player in more than 100 years to successfully defend the Open title. Here’s a look at some of the featured groups in this week’s field (FedExCup rankings are in parentheses): RELATED: Tee times | Course | Past results | Field | Past winners Jordan Spieth (4), Si Woo Kim (31), Henrik Stenson (99) – Stenson, who has missed the cut in the first two majors this season, doesn’t exactly exude confidence about defending his title. After finishing T-26 at the Scottish Open on Sunday, he told reporters, “Not feeling that you’re playing anywhere near 100 percent, you can’t really put that pressure that you’re going to be up there and contend.â€� Kim, winner of THE PLAYERS Championship, and Spieth, who won in spectacular fashion in his last start at the Travelers Championship, should be in better frames of mind. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 4:47 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 9:48 a.m. ET on Friday. Sergio Garcia (19), Jason Day (56), Zach Johnson (87) – In his first 20 starts at The Open, Garcia has finished inside the top 10 half the time. Given his current form – two wins, including the Masters, and 18 consecutive made cuts – he’ll be a big favorite this week. He’ll also be trying to complete a Spanish hat trick, as Jon Rahm won the Irish Open two weeks ago and Rafa Cabrera Bello won the Scottish Open on Sunday. Day has missed the cut in his last two starts and is still seeking his first win since the 2015 PLAYERS. Johnson’s T5 at the John Deere Classic on Sunday is just his third top-5 finish since winning the Open in 2015. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 8:04 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 3:03 a.m. ET on Friday. Hideki Matsuyama (2), Brooks Koepka (8), Tommy Fleetwood (N/A) – In his 17 major starts since 2013, Matsuyama already has six top-10 finishes, and his T2 at the U.S. Open last month – with a 66 on Sunday the low round of the day — was his best result. Of course, Koepka was the winner at Erin Hills, and is making his first start since then. The former European Tour member last played The Open in 2015, when he finished T-10. Fleetwood, a native of Southport, will be the local favorite and probably knows the course as well as anybody in the field. He said it’s a “massive privilegeâ€� to play so close to home. Like Koepka and Matsuyama, he comes off a strong showing at Erin Hills. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 5:09 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 10:10 a.m. ET on Friday. Rickie Fowler (6), Paul Casey (26), Adam Scott (71) – The last seven majors have been won by first-time major winners. Don’t be surprised if Fowler or Casey makes it No. 8. Fowler tied for second the last time The Open was held in England, in 2014 at Royal Liverpool. Casey, making his 15th start in The Open, tied for seventh the last time Birkdale was the host. Scott’s run of four consecutive top-10 finishes in this event ended last year when he tied for 43rd at Royal Troon. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 8:26 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 3:25 a.m. ET on Friday. Dustin Johnson (1), Charl Schwartzel (46), Rory McIlroy (75) – Johnson, the winner of three consecutive events earlier this year, has yet to regain his form since suffering the accident on the stairs that prevented him from playing the Masters. He’s missed the cut in his last two starts. McIlroy also has struggled for results, having missed the cut in three of his last four starts. Schwartzel tied for third at the Masters. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 9:48 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 4:47 a.m. ET on Friday. Justin Thomas (3), Justin Rose (22), Louis Oosthuizen (40) – Thomas, the three-time winner this season, has missed his last two cuts after his disappointing final round at Erin Hills. Even so, a T-9 at the U.S. Open and a T-22 at the Masters should be a confidence boost going into this week. Rose has five top-5 finishes this year, while Oosthuizen’s best result is a tie for second at THE PLAYERS. Tee times: Rd. 1 – 4:58 a.m. ET on Thursday; Rd. 2 – 9:59 a.m. ET on Friday. MORE NOTES Bryson DeChambeau, in the field this week thanks to Sunday’s breakthrough win at the John Deere Classic, is grouped with Jason Dufner and Branden Grace … Phil Mickelson, the 2013 Open champ, is with Francesco Molinari and Marc Leishman … Think there will be some smack talk in this group? Patrick Reed is with Lee Westwood and Jon Rahm. … Padraig Harrington, the winner at Royal Birkdale in 2008, is with Pat Perez and Thomas Pieters.

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