The Sun (Malaysia)

US Open tees off

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INJURIES, graduation­s, a newborn and a new course have all been part of the 117th US Open buildup but today the spotlight will be back on the leaderboar­d and the year’s second major.

With the last six majors producing six first-time winners and fitness concerns hanging over some of golf’s biggest names, there is an air of uncertaint­y whistling through the knee high fescue at this year’s US Open.

Adding to the unpredicta­bility is the venue Erin Hills, a sprawling links style layout nestled in the bucolic Wisconsin countrysid­e, that will be making its major debut.

At a monstrous 7,741 yards Erin Hills will be the first par 72 US Open since 1992 at Pebble Beach.

“We are excited about this site,” said Mike Davis, executive director of the United States Golf Associatio­n.

“When we looked at Erin Hills we looked at what the test of golf would be. We think it is a good test. A different kind of test.”

Reigning US Open champion Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson kept the golf world guessing whether they would or would not be in Erin Hills this week.

Johnson ended that speculatio­n on Tuesday when he arrived in time for a practise round after partner Paulina Gretzky had given birth to their second child.

Mickelson, however, who needs a US Open victory to complete a career grand slam, was going to take it down to the wire, hoping enough rain and bad weather will delay today’s start to allow him to attend his daughter’s graduation and fly from San Diego to Erin in time. Major winners world No. 1 Johnson, Northern Irishman No. 2 Rory McIlroy and Australian No. 3 Jason Day all are big hitters and come to a layout that should favour them. But there are questions over their form. “I mean the golf course I really like it,” said Johnson, who is trying to become the first repeat champion since Curtis Strange in 1989. “It’s a typical US Open venue where the fact is that you have to hit the fairways. You can’t really play from the rough.” Johnson, who missed the US Masters after hurting his back, failed to make the halfway cut at the Memorial tournament last week while McIlroy has not played in nearly a month, since reporting back problems at the Players Championsh­ip.

Day, who pulled out of the WGC Dell Match Play to be with mother while she battled cancer, has slowly found some form following a tie for 60th at the Players with a runnerup finish at the Byron Nelson.

American young guns world No. 5 Jordan Spieth, the 2015 US Open winner, and No. 9 Rickie Fowler, zeroing in on a maiden major, will spearhead the American charge along with Johnson.

Masters champion Sergio Garcia of Spain and runner-up Justin Rose of England drive the ball just about as well as anyone, as does Australian Adam Scott, while South Africans Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen are always a threat. – Reuters

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