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Bryson Dechambeau crashed by Oakmont in 2025 US OPEN
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Last year at US Open, Rory Mcilroy and Bryson Dechambeau dueluan on weekends in Pinehurst no. 2with Dechambeau coming to the top.
Has been a different story in This year US Open For two of the protagonists of golf. Instead of fighting each other in The famous Oakmont, Mcilroy and Dechambeau passed on Friday fighting the brutal designed by Henry Fowns in an attempt to play the weekend.
Mcilroy scored a four-top 74 of the opening round and then began his second round with two double bogeys in his first three holes to place him after eight balls. But the Masters Reigning Champion showed some stretch fights, which included tomahawking a club AND destroying a tee marker. (Oakmont has that effect.) Mcilroy Zogu 15 and 18 to slide inside the number and play the weekend.
Friday was different for Dechambeau, who was overthrown by Oakmont’s courtesy for a second round that saw him come home to 40 to lose seven of three.
Dechambeau was not the only big name to enter the Oakmont and to see its tour ended early.
Oakmont has earned the first two rounds. We have 36 holes to go.
13 players who lost the seventh cutting of 2025 US OPEN
Bryson dechambeau (73-77, 10 over)
The US Open defensive champion has been a match on the championship championships over the past two years, but the Crushers front did not have his game A at Oakmont this week.
Dechambeau founded a three-top 73 in Round 1 and made a turn on Friday at five for the championship. This is when the wheels are turned off. After starting in the nine back, Dechambeau reached nine treacherous fronts and let it all leave. He cheated no. 1, but he took the blow again with a bird in the second. Then, he deceived the third, doubled the fifth, the sixth and the seventh to slip to 10 over the same time and ended his title.
Ludwig åberg (72-76, 8 above)
Åberg was thrown out of the gates quickly on Thursday and hanged hard to post a 72, placing it in the mix after the first round. But a second round with six fraudsters and no birds meant that the new Swedish week ended early. Åberg has now lost two right cuts in diplomas and has only made a big cut in his career out of masters (2024 US Open).
Justin Thomas (76-76, 12 above)
The main major performances are becoming a common phenomenon for Thomas. In his last 13 diplomas, Thomas is one combined 72 over the same time and has lost seven cuts. He has only one top 10 in that space, which came to the PGA 2024 championship.
Thomas ‘experience’ Oakmont was punished from a double four putt tent from 22 feet to par-5 12 Friday.
Tommy Fleetwood (74-75, 9 over)
The Englishman passed 97 percent of the first two rounds inside the cut line. He reached the ninth PAR-4 hole on Friday, in his day’s final, a shot inside the foreseen line. This is when it hit the disaster. Fleetwood put it in the street bunker and had to throw out. His third one sat in green about 40 meters from Pin. He then three-putted for a double noise to end his tour.
Dustin Johnson (75-75, 10 over)
It was a different walk around Oakmont for the US Open 2016 champion this time.
Johnson has now lost six of his last eight cuts. He has only one top 10 top on his last 11 major. Search for old Johnson Dustin Continues for the 40-year-old.
Joaquin Niemann (75-75, 10 over)
Niemann scored his first 10 first in the PGA 2025 championship, but he was not a match for Oakmont.
The 26-year-old Chilean, who has won four times in Liv this season, struck only 12 of the 28 Fairways over two rounds and is still seeking to prove that he could be a legitimate threat to large championships.
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Phil Mickelson (74-74, 8 above)
In what can potentially be his latest Sh.BAMickelson scratched and slammed into Oakmont through two rounds. The 54-year-old was well inside the cut line in the middle of the second round, but double double at No. 15 and 17 placed it on the outside searching inside, and his bird of birds at No. 18 drained the edge, but did not fall.
Mickelson, whose exemption of US Open ends after this year, has now lost seven of its last nine cuts in diplomas.
Sepp Straka (78-73, 11 above)
The number 8 player in the world was packed in the face during the first round and was unable to quarrel a sub-parish round on Friday to make the cut.
Straka has lost cutting in each of the first three diplomas of the season and has not had a top 10 in a major since the 2023 open championship.
Shane Lowry (79-78, 17 over)
Lowry was the 54 -holes leader at the US Open 2016 in Oakmont, but he had a much harder time around the iconic course this week.
Lowry lost 4.41 strokes by placing in the first round on the way to a 79 that included a strong eagle. He opened the second round with three bogeys and one pair to end his championship. Lowry has gone T42-MC-MC in the first three diplomas this year.
Justin Rose (77-77, 14 over)
Rose Since his masters contestant continued in Oakmont. He lost 4.45 strokes in the greens in round 1 on the way to a seven-on 77. In the second round, his battles were out of tee while he opened with a nine 40 to pronounce the end of his tour.
The Englishman has lost two straight cuts after being lost close in the green jacket in Rory Mcilroy.
Cameron Smith, (75-73, 8 above)
The 2022 open champion continues to be a non-factor in large championships this season. Smith has now lost its last four big cuts and has not marked a Top-10 conclusion since the 2024 masters.
WynDham Clark (74-74, 8 above)
The fighting continues For the US 2023 open champion. Clark lost shots from Tee and approaching over two rounds to Oakmont. He reached his last hole on Friday on the line, but a clumsy noise sent him home early.
Clark has now lost four of its last seven big cuts and has not ended in the first 30 places of a major since its victory in 2023 in the Los Angeles Country Club.
Patrick Cantlay (76-72, 8 above)
Like Clark, Cantlay needed a money in his last hole to play the weekend. But he struck his intention in par-4 18 in the right bunker of the road. He shattered and flew his third in the approximate Greenside. His premature party turned out short, and Cantlay lost his second large cut championship.
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Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for Golf.com. Before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for the NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break 90 and will never lose the confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end (updated: he did it). Josh Schrock can be reached in Josho.schrock@golf.com.