The US Open wrapped up, as it always does, on Father’s Day. Golf’s newest champion would be the first to tell people -- he’s always been a mama’s boy.
Wyndham Clark’s victory Sunday will be remembered for how a
29-year-old newcomer to the big time held off some of the biggest names in the
game to stamp a poignant exclamation mark on a U.S. Open that had been, to that
point, kind of hard to love.
Clark’s mother, Lise, died of breast cancer in 2013 — a
family tragedy that sent him spiraling. The win brought with it a chance to
share memories, and a chance to reflect on the long road between then and now.
“I didn’t show any emotion off the course, but when I was on
the golf course I couldn’t have been angrier,” Clark said of his state of mind
when he first learned of his mom’s diagnosis. “I was breaking clubs when I
didn’t even hit that bad of a shot. I was walking off golf courses.”
The road back led him to leave college at Oklahoma State for
a fresh start at Oregon. It involved a relatively quick rise for an aspiring
pro golfer, but one pushed off course by typical slumps and close calls that
led to more than one crisis in confidence.
“I’ve had many times where I’ve gone home and was yelling in
my car and punching things and just so mad that I’m like, ‘Why can’t I do what
my peers are doing?’” Clark said.
Through it all, he kept in mind what his mother used to tell
him about his golf game: Play big.
“She called me ‘Winner’ when I was little, so she would just
say, ‘I love you, Winner,’” Clark said.
Becoming a winner Sunday meant holding off the first- and
third-ranked players in the world: Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler. All
three leaders shot even-par 70 in the final round. Clark’s 70 was good enough
to beat McIlroy by one and Scheffler by three.
“I guess you’re just hoping for the other guy to slip up or
make a mistake or give you a glimmer of hope,” McIlroy said. “Wyndham was
pretty much rock-solid all day.”
Clark stayed cool when trouble beckoned as it always does at
what’s known as golf’s most exacting test, even when it isn’t. He saved bogey
after whiffing his third shot from the heavy greenside rough on the par-5
eighth. He made an up-and-down par save on No. 9 from a knee-high lie in the
rough.
He hit big shots under pressure, nailing a 228-yard fairway
metal to 20 feet to set up birdie for a three-shot lead over McIlroy on the
par-5 14th. Then, with his lead down to one, he hit the green from 200 yards on
No. 18 and two-putted from 60 feet to seal the deal.
“An up-and-coming star,” his caddie and one-time assistant
coach at Oregon, John Ellis, called him. “If he wasn’t one before, he is one
now. First time he has actually competed in a major for a chance to win and he
shows he can handle the heat.”
Clark handled Los Angeles Country Club, a first-time host
that he got an early look at thanks to a friend who is a member and who invited
Clark over for a round about a week before the show came to town.
Not everyone loved this place.
The U.S. Open’s first return to Los Angeles in 75 years got
roundly criticized for its small galleries, its wide-but-crooked fairways, its
blind tee shots and an overall feeling that it did not live up to the U.S.
Open’s exacting standards.
There were two record rounds of 62 (Rickie Fowler and Xander
Schauffele) on opening day and a 63 that felt ho-hum (Tommy Fleetwood) on
Sunday.
There were two record-tying nine-hole scores of 29 (Tom Kim
on Saturday, Austin Eckroat on Sunday).
Fowler, who shared the third-round lead with Clark, needed
only 62 holes to tie a U.S. Open record with 22 birdies, but did nothing over
the final 10 holes to get back into the hunt.
The four-day scoring average was 71.76, which broke the
record for a tournament that dates to 1895.
Even Clark was less than pleased after Saturday’s third round,
which ended in near darkness — a scheduling call that placed the weekend action
on prime time TV on the East Coast.
The Denver native said playing in the dark reminded him of
when he was a kid and he would practice in the twilight at Cherry Hills Country
Club — the course where Arnold Palmer put the U.S. Open in the American
conscience with his stirring comeback in 1960.
Cherry Hills and Denver have another champion to celebrate.
Clark’s win came six days after the Nuggets wrapped up the NBA title.
But the action was in LA on Sunday. With the sun setting on
the year’s third major, Clark had nothing to gripe about. He was near the 18th
green holding the trophy and taking pictures — with his caddie, Ellis, and also
his sister, his girlfriend and dozens more friends and family who have been
along for this ride.
All in all, a perfect way to celebrate Father’s Day.
Well, almost perfect.
“All I really wish is that my mom could be here and I could
just hug her and we could celebrate together,” Clark said “But I know she’s
proud of me.” -AP