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5 Things We Learned: Thursday at the U.S. Open

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Fog took the early lead in the first round of the 2026 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. With excitement ranging from Scottie Scheffler and his career grand slam pursuit, to a look at Shinnecock being Shinnecock (USGA definition of course setup), Old Lady Nature reminded us all that she has center-stage access whenever she pleases. This morning, she pleased. After the fog had lifted, the winds arrived. No gentle zephyrs were they; these gusts were backed by the strength of Aeolus and Vaya in combination. Drives into the void reached all of 235 yards on occasion. Shots played along a crosswindstarted ten yards to the side of the target. When all was done and said, over 50 golfers were stranded in round one, with up to seven holes remaining, including the leader. Those unfortunate afternooners will wake early and return to the course for a 6:35 restart. Despite the abbreviated line of stories, we woke at dawn on Friday and mustered up the patience to await the round’s conclusion, followed by the courage to select five things that we learned on Thursday at the U.S. Open.

First and Foremost

This fellow who won the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club, this Wyndham Clark, was not given a Get Out of Back Tees Free card prior to the start of his round. Clark came home in 32 shots, courtesy of two opening birdies and a third at the 18th. That’s correct-Clark began his day on the inward half. As he made the turn, the lad from Colorado dropped a shot at the lengthy second hole. Playing 251 yards, the wee second fortunately played downwind. Rebounding quickly, Clark posted birdies at three and four, and followed up with an exhillarating eagle at the par-five fifth. Clark has two holes remaining in his opening round, but they are daunting. Rory McIlroy came to the eighth on minus-three for the morning, made bogey at both, and signed for 69. Clark faced an early pair of challenges as he sought to successfully close his opening round, and he met them efficiently.

Second and Supreme

Keith Mitchell made four pars on each of his nines on Thursday. Beginning at the tenth hole, the smooth swinger known affectionately as Cashmere Keith paired his quartet of pars with four bogeys and a double. Nine holes in, and the lad from Chattanooga way had amassed 41 shots and stood plus-five on the day. Some might have checked Expedia for a late Friday flight, but not Mitchell. The final tally on the card that bears his signature reads 70 strokes. Mitchell mated his four pars on the front nine (his second half) with four birdies and an eagle. 29 paltry strokes, a dozen shots better than the first portion, gave Mitchell the most unlikely, uneven, unexpected round on day one at Shinnecock Hills. Does he have something equally exciting planned for an encore? We’ve popped the corn and are ready for KM Friday.

Third and thrilling

Imagine being an amateur golfer with an earned invitation to the country’s top golf event. Ryder Cown survived a playoff at Ballenisles in Florida, after tossing 138 on golf’s longest day. The Oklahoma State Cowboy from Edmond, Oklahoma, began his round on the second nine, and turned in 32 shots. On the way home, Cowan posted bogey at the second and fourth holes, but made a stellar birdie at the ninth to finish on 68, tied for the clubhouse lead (thanks to the weather delay.)

Cowan sees a lot of orange at the top of the leaderboard. First-round leader Wyndham Clark competed for four seasons in Stillwater, before finishing his university days in Eugene, Oregon. Tied with Cowan at deuce under par is Sam Stevens, a 2018 graduate of OSU. There’s no guarantee that the 1500 miles between Stillwater and Southamption will generate a winner decked out in orange, but for today, the Cowboy faithful in Oklahoma can be proud of their golfers.

Fourth and feisty

Four former U.S. Open champions, all still on the golf course as daylight rests, sit tied at minus-two. The 2016 (Johnson), 2019 (Woodland), 2021 (Rahm), and 2022 (Fitzpatrick) winners will make their way between the 5th and the 8th tees on Friday morning, to polish off what have been quite solid rounds thus far. The most balanced of the four has been Rahm, with two birdies against zero bogeys. The most mercurial has been Johnson, whose six birdies have been offset by four bogies. Fitzpatrick and Woodland sit somewhere in the middle, with five and four birdies, respectively. The jury is out on whether the strategy is to go down shooting for birdies, come what may, or the alternative, which is to minimize mistakes and pick your battle, err, birdie holes.

In the wee hours of Friday morning, Johnson added another pair of birdies and reached four-under par. Cheers to him for keeping with the Four theme of this segment of the day-one recap. Woodland reached minus-three by the end of round one, but made birdie on his first hole of the second round, to also reach four deep.

Fifth and final

So many storylines! Did we mention that? Rory had 69 on Thursday, despite the rocky finish. He was joined on the minus-one raft by Ludvig Aberg, Brian Harman, and wunderkind Ben James. James held the 36-hole lead last week in Toronto, before some sort of pressure turned his game to goo. Let’s see how the Virginia Cavalier holds up this week. Still on the course at minus one were Bryson DeChambeau and sweet swinging Spaniard Angel Hidalgo. Cashmere Keith Mitchell is joined at even par by Keegan Bradley, Tommy Fleetwood, and Tom Kim. The next 20 holes will determine quite a bit about the chances of a certain class of golfer. If Wyndham Clark finishes his round one with zero damage, then goes bonkers in round two, golfers may be forced to fire a flags and chase down the breakaway sprinter. For now, golfers will no doubt play it safe ans strategic on Frdiay, then check the leaders board after 36 to plan out the final two days.

Featured image c/o the USGA.

 

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

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From the GolfWRX Classifieds: Avoda combo-length heads, a Ping wedge and several sold heads

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Currently in the GolfWRX Classifieds, member AnOKgolfer has a multi-item head-only listing built around Avoda combo-length iron heads, a Ping S159 wedge and several items that have already sold.

The current title reflects a final price drop and shows the remaining highlighted pieces: Avoda Origin Combo Length 4-PW black heads, an Avoda W2 LW head and a Ping S159 58-degree E Grind wedge.

The thread is also a good example of how fast GolfWRX Classifieds listings can move, with multiple Ping, TaylorMade, Edel, and shaft items marked sold inside the same post.

  • Avoda Origin Combo Length iron heads, 4-PW, listed at $600.
  • Avoda Origin W2 LW head listed at $90, with the seller noting some rusting on the top and face.
  • Ping S159 58-degree E Grind wedge listed at $95.
  • Sold items in the post include Ping G440 LST and G440K heads, a TaylorMade R7 mini driver head, a TaylorMade Qi10 Tour 5-wood head, Edel wedge, Axiom shaft set and other gear.
  • The seller notes prices are shipped with goods and services in the lower 48, with Canada, Alaska and Hawaii at buyer expense.

Entire thread: Final Price drop!! Heads For Sale! Ping S159 58* Wedge, Avoda Combo Length 4-PW Black Heads, Avoda W2 LW Hea

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A PGA coach’s take: Why a stock shot shape can simplify course management

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In our forums, member rooski asked a question that many good players eventually face: should a player force a predictable shot shape, even if the swing naturally wants to live closer to neutral?

@rooski described himself as a player whose handicap can range from plus-1 to around 3 depending on practice. Launch-monitor numbers often show a neutral path and face, but the driver can produce either a 20-yard draw or a 20-yard fade. On tight courses, that creates a hard aiming problem.

As a PGA coach, I would not want a player to force a shot shape just for the sake of having one. But I do want a player to have a stock window, especially off the tee. The most valuable shot shape is the one that removes one side of the course often enough to simplify decisions.

  • @g_swell said to play what you brought that day, but also emphasized locking in a stock shape and varying trajectory more than trying to work the ball both ways.
  • @GoGoErky pointed out that a perfectly neutral swing can bring a two-way miss into play and said a predictable shot shape can be a better long-term goal.
  • @ShortGolfer brought the conversation back to dispersion, club selection and choosing landing areas that keep the ball in play.
  • @RayPlan asked the right diagnostic question: what is the player’s most common natural ball flight?
  • @vman added a strong practice idea: build a shot-shape intention, develop trajectories with that shape and test it on the course.

Entire thread: Should I force myself to play a certain shot shape?

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Top read of the week: Alistair’s Tour Report

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For the weekly flex slot, the strongest current GolfWRX equipment item is Alistair Cameron’s John Deere Tour Report, which touches several WRX-friendly gear stories at once: Rickie Fowler’s putter testing, custom Scotty Cameron builds and Project X Titan Green’s appropriately timed appearance at the John Deere Classic.

Fowler’s putter search continued after benching his GoLo 7 center-shaft putter at the Travelers Championship. At the John Deere, GolfWRX reported that he was considering a Phantom 12 single-bend setup, with work focused around start line and speed.

The same report also covered custom Scotty Cameron builds for players including J.T. Poston and Haotong Li, while Project X Titan Green joined the Titan Black and Titan Yellow profiles as the lowest-launching, lowest-spinning option in the family.

  • Rickie Fowler continued testing Scotty Cameron Phantom options and used a GRASP Smart Putting Gate during practice.
  • T. Poston’s custom Cameron build included a Phantom 9.2R head with custom face work, horizontal grooves, a welded plumber’s neck and two welded wings.
  • Haotong Li’s Cameron Phantom 3 build included a welded center shaft, Studio Carbon Steel insert, white alignment line and torched finish.
  • Project X Titan Green debuted as the lowest-launching, lowest-spinning member of the Titan wood-shaft family.
  • The report also noted other gear moves, including new TaylorMade Hi-Toe wedges, a PXG Secret Weapon v2 and Titleist GT driver additions.

Related GolfWRX Article: John Deere Tour Report: Fowler’s putter experiments continue + Hulk Green’s appropriate debut

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