OB Sports Golf & Leisure

SUMMER 2016

Golf sports and leisure

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OB SPORTS GOLF & LEISURE x SUMMER 2016 x obsports.com l TOUR REPORT 10 MAKING HISTORY great U.S. Opens that have stood the test of time BY joe passoV T he U.S. Open – the national championship of the United States – has witnessed more than 100 years of pulse-quickening drama. Combine the most severe course set-up conditions in golf, with the emotion of competing for such a prized title, and it's easy to see why lasting memories, both good and bad, resonate with such intensity. The men have been at it since 1895, while the U.S. Women's Open dates to 1946. In 1980, the USGA began testing male players who had reached 55 years of age with its inaugural U.S. Senior Open, a figure lowered to age 50 the very next year. So many fist- pumps, so many momentum swings, so much heartbreak. With Dustin Johnson's recent breakthrough at Oakmont, and the women and seniors coming this summer, we thought this would be a great time to take a look at history's 10 greatest U.S. Opens. THE TOP 3 2008 U.S. OPEN WINNER: Tiger Woods There may have been more important, his- torically significant U.S. Opens. None, how- ever, was more thrilling than this one. Fresh off a surgical procedure to his left knee after the 2008 Masters, Woods had taken a two-month break from competitive golf when he arrived at Torrey Pines in suburban San Diego. Fans could see Woods clutching his left leg and wincing in pain, yet they were mesmerized by his Saturday performance that featured two ea- gles and a chip-in birdie in a six-hole stretch. Little did we know – because Woods didn't tell us until the tournament ended – that he was actually competing with a torn anterior cruci- ate ligament in his left knee and that further, he had suffered a double stress fracture of his left tibia two weeks before the U.S. Open. Woods came to the final hole needing a difficult 12- foot putt to tie Rocco Mediate and earn an 18- hole playoff. Down went the putt, up went Tiger's fist. The playoff was anything but anti- climactic. From three down with eight to play, Mediate pulled ahead by one after 17 holes. Time for another Tiger roar. Smashed drive, soaring 4-iron, two-putt birdie. Sudden death. A Mediate bogey ended things on the 91st hole. Tiger had his third U.S. Open crown. In a life- time of Tiger Woods highlights, this was per- haps the Tiger Woodsiest. fi COURTESY USGA

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