Skip navigation

Defending U.S. Open champ fizzles on final day


< Prev | 1 | 2
  Golf on NBC
Image: Johnny Miller (left) and Dan Hicks

Next up: Del Webb Father-Son Challenge
Dec. 5-6: 4-6 p.m. ET, 3-6 p.m. ET
Golf on NBC | '09 schedule

Latest golf video
Woods achieves goal of winning
Nov. 15: Tiger Woods says he put together some good rounds to win in Australia.

Special feature
ADT Million Dollar Challenge
Play the game. Get the skills. Win big!
Slideshow
  What were they thinking?
Check out some of golf's wildest on-course outfits

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
Houston Rockets v Los Angeles Lakers, Game 5
  Phil and family
Take a look at photos of Phil Mickelson, his wife Amy and children.

more photos

Slideshow
Tiger Woods,  Elin Woods
  Tiger and family
Tiger Woods is blessed both on and off the golf course.

more photos

SUPREME FAN
Retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor traded her black robe for golf khakis.

“I’m just here to enjoy it,” she said. “It’s fabulous.”

O’Connor is a golf enthusiast and was recently appointed to the U.S. Golf Association’s President’s Council. The advisory committee met Saturday in nearby Latrobe, Pa., so she took the opportunity to make her first trip to the U.S. Open.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

She also played a round Saturday with Arnold Palmer.

Aside from the sheriff’s deputy at her side, there was little to tip anyone off that the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court was in the gallery. She sat just off the walkway onto the first tee, applauding enthusiastically when fellow Stanford alum Tiger Woods arrived. She also walked the course for a bit.

Asked if she’d like to be play Oakmont Country Club, O’Connor simply smiled.

“Wouldn’t want to,” she said. “It’s too hard.”

LOW MAN
With nothing to lose, Anthony Kim went low.

Kim shot a 3-under 67 Sunday, the second-lowest round of the week and one of only eight total under par. It raised him 37 spots on the leaderboard, into a tie for 20th.

“I’m almost in dead last, so just fire at some pins and hopefully it works out,” Kim said of his approach on Sunday. “I hit some quality golf shots and got a couple of putts to fall. It could have been a little better, but I’m not complaining.”

Kim said he missed five putts inside 10 feet.

ALL ALONE
Kevin Sutherland was in the first group Sunday and chose to play alone, the first time he could ever recall doing that. He had the option of playing with a non-competing marker — Oakmont head pro Bob Ford, in this case — but apparently was unaware who he was.

“I don’t know who it was going to be,” Sutherland said. “They said the local pro. I don’t know. I didn’t care either way.”

Ford has competed in the U.S. Open and PGA Championship, failing to qualify this year at sectionals. He is one of the most famous club pros in the country, working at Oakmont in the summer (where he has been since 1973) and Seminole in south Florida in the winter.

Sutherland finished his 75 with a 6-iron from 190 yards to 10 feet, which drew quite a roar.

“I think they were just happy to see someone do something on the green besides mowing it,” he said.

DRESS CODE
Lee Westwood could not have picked a better outfit for the final round at Oakmont: black pants and a bright yellow shirt, colors that define this sports-crazy area around Pittsburgh.

Not that he did it on purpose.

Westwood noticed throughout the round that fans were applauding his color coordination, only later learning that Pittsburgh is the only city in America where all major professional sports teams wear yellow and black.

“It was an accident,” he said. “I might not have done that. I’m a Yankees fan.”

BEAR WITH ME
Lions and Tiger and oh, my, that really was a bear. The U.S. Open draws golf fans from the animal kingdom as well as the United Kingdom.

A mother bear and her cub wandered onto No. 7 Sunday morning after play had started, but before any golfers had reached the hole. They roamed around for a few minutes, then jumped back over a fence and disappeared into the woods that line the right side of the par 4.

Bears are a common sight in western Pennsylvania — hunters kill about 1,000 every year — and a few usually rumble through Oakmont Country Club.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


< Prev | 1 | 2

Sponsored links