USGA Announces Details of 123rd U.S. Open Championship | Sports Destination Management

USGA Announces Details of 123rd U.S. Open Championship

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Jun 12, 2023

The United States Golf Association (USGA) today announced that three additional players have earned full exemptions into the 123rd U.S. Open Championship, to be contested June 15-18 at The Los Angeles (Calif.) Country Club’s North Course, bringing the number of fully exempt players to 89. Additionally, three alternates from final qualifying were added to complete the 156-player field.

Emiliano Grillo earned an exemption based on the current Official World Golf Ranking®/OWGR.® Grillo, of Argentina, who is No. 43 in the OWGR, is playing in his fifth U.S. Open. The 30-year-old recorded his second PGA Tour victory with a playoff win in the Charles Schwab Challenge on May 28. He has five top-10 finishes in 2022-23. Grillo, a winner on three professional tours, has made the 36-hole cut twice in a U.S. Open, including a tie for 54th in 2016 at Oakmont (Pa.) Country Club.

 

Pablo Larrazabal, who is No. 52 in the OWGR, is making his second U.S. Open start. The 40-year-old from Spain is one of two players with multiple victories on the DP World Tour this season. In April, he won the Korea Championship and posted his second win one month later in the KLM Open. Larrazabal has nine career wins in Europe, including the 2014 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship when he held off Rory McIIroy and Phil Mickelson by one stroke.

 

Adam Schenk, who is No. 54 in the OWGR, is competing in his second U.S. Open. He advanced through the Columbus, Ohio, final qualifier last year and tied for 24th at The Country Club, in Brookline, Mass. Schenk, 31, of Vincennes, Ind., has finished second twice on the PGA Tour this season. He was runner-up to Taylor Moore in the Valspar Championship and lost to Grillo in a playoff at the Charles Schwab Challenge.

 

The USGA held six spots in the field for those players who could potentially qualify by moving into the top 60 of the OWGR, as of June 12. Since Grillo, Larrazabal and Schenk were the only players to earn an exemption, three alternates from final qualifying were added to the field. They are amateur Bastien Amat, Michael Kim and amateur Maxwell Moldovan.

 

Amat, 21, of France, will compete in his first U.S. Open after working his way through both stages of qualifying. He was the first alternate from the Lakewood, Wash., final site after carding a 65 in his afternoon round of the 36-hole qualifier. Amat, who recently completed his junior year at the University of New Mexico, was the medalist with 69 on his college course in the Albuquerque, N.M., local qualifier. Amat, who earned All-Mountain West Conference honors for the second straight season, registered five top-10 finishes and won the Wolf Pack Classic.

 

Michael Kim, 29, of the Republic of Korea, was the first alternate from the Dallas, Texas, final qualifier. He is competing in his second U.S. Open, but has not played since 2013 when he tied for 17th and was low amateur at Merion Golf Club. Kim, who won the PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic in 2018, was a member of the winning 2013 USA Walker Cup Team and received the Jack Nicklaus Award as Division I’s top player while competing at the University of California-Berkeley. He was raised in San Diego, Calif., and attended Torrey Pines High School.

 

Maxwell Moldovan is playing in the U.S. Open for the second consecutive year. The 21-year-old from Uniontown, Ohio, was the first alternate from the Springfield, Ohio qualifier. Moldovan, an All-America and All-Big Ten Conference selection at Ohio State University, won three tournaments – the Nexus Collegiate, Southern Invitational and Robert Kepler Invitational – as a junior in 2022-23. He has competed in six USGA championships, including four U.S. Amateurs.

 

Romain Langasque, of France, and Simon Forsstrom, of Sweden, gained full exemptions on May 22 as the top two finishers from the 2023 DP World Tour U.S. Open Qualifying Series. The category featured the top two aggregate points earners, who were not otherwise exempt, from the DS Automobiles Italian Open, Soudal Open, KLM Open and Porsche European Open between May 4 and June 4.

 

The U.S. Open returns to Los Angeles for the first time since 1948, when Ben Hogan won the first of his four U.S. Opens with a 72-hole score of 276 (8 under par), two strokes better than Jimmy Demaret, at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades.

 

There were 109 U.S. Open local qualifying sites that led to 13 final qualifiers, including international sites in Japan, England and Canada. Final qualifying in the United States took place at 10 sites, in the states of California, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio (Columbus & Springfield), Texas and Washington. The USGA accepted 10,187 entries by the deadline of April 12, the highest total in championship history.

 

The list of the 89 golfers who are fully exempt into the 2023 U.S. Open (as of Monday, June 12):

 

Abraham Ancer

22

 

Thriston Lawrence

15

Sam Bennett

4

 

K.H. Lee

11, 22

Keegan Bradley

2, 22

 

Min Woo Lee

16

Hayden Buckley

13

 

Shane Lowry

8, 10, 22

Sam Burns

11, 22

 

Hideki Matsuyama

2, 6, 11, 22

Patrick Cantlay

11, 22

 

Denny McCarthy

2

a-Ben Carr

2

 

a-Matthew McClean

5

Wyndham Clark

22

 

Rory McIlroy

2, 11, 12, 22

Corey Conners

11, 22

 

Adrian Meronk

22

Joel Dahmen

2

 

Phil Mickelson

7

Cameron Davis

22

 

Keith Mitchell

22

Jason Day

22

 

Francesco Molinari

8

Bryson DeChambeau

1

 

Taylor Montgomery

13

a-Weny Ding

5

 

Taylor Moore

22

Harris English

22

 

Collin Morikawa

2, 7, 8, 11, 22

Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira

21

 

Joaquin Niemann

11, 22

Tony Finau

11, 12, 22

 

Alex Noren

22

Matt Fitzpatrick

1, 2, 11, 22

 

Guillermo Mito Pereira

22

Tommy Fleetwood

22

 

Victor Perez

22

Simon Forsstrom

17

 

Thomas Pieters

22

Ryan Fox

22

 

J.T. Poston

11

Rickie Fowler

22

 

a-Aldrich Potgieter

18

Emiliano Grillo

23

 

Seamus Power

22

Adam Hadwin

2

 

Andrew Putnam

13

Brian Harman

11, 22

 

Jon Rahm

1, 6, 11, 12, 22

Padraig Harrington

3

 

Patrick Reed

22

Tyrrell Hatton 

22

 

Justin Rose

1, 22

Russell Henley

22

 

Xander Schauffele

11, 12, 22

Lucas Herbert

22

 

Scottie Scheffler

2, 6, 9, 11, 12, 22

Tom Hoge

11, 22

 

Adam Schenk

23

Max Homa

11, 12, 22

 

Adam Scott

11, 22

Billy Horschel

11, 22

 

Cameron Smith

8, 9, 11, 22

Viktor Hovland

11, 22

 

Jordan Smith

15

Mackenzie Hughes

13

 

Jordan Spieth

1, 11, 22

Sungjae Im

11, 22

 

Scott Stallings

11

Dustin Johnson

1, 6

 

Sepp Straka

11, 22

Martin Kaymer

1

 

Justin Suh

14

Si Woo Kim

22

 

Adam Svensson

22

Tom (Joohyung) Kim

12, 22

 

Nick Taylor

13

Chris Kirk

22

 

Sahith Theegala

11, 22

Kurt Kitayama

22

 

Justin Thomas

7, 9, 11, 22

Brooks Koepka

1, 7, 22

 

Aaron Wise

11, 22

Matt Kuchar

22

 

Gary Woodland

1, 2

Romain Langasque

17

 

Cameron Young

11, 22

Pablo Larrazabal

23

 

 

 

 

Bold – U.S. Open champion      a – amateur

 

Key to Player Exemptions

  1. Winners of the U.S. Open Championship the last 10 years (2013-22)
  2. From the 2022 U.S. Open Championship, the 10 lowest scorers and anyone tying for 10th place
  3. Winner of the 2022 U.S. Senior Open Championship
  4. Winner of the 2022 U.S. Amateur Championship
  5. Winners of the 2022 U.S. Junior Amateur & U.S. Mid-Amateur Championships and the 2022 U.S. Amateur Championship runner-up (must be an amateur)
  6. Winners of the Masters Tournament (2019-23)
  7. Winners of the PGA Championship (2018-23)
  8. Winners of The Open Championship, conducted by The R&A (2018-22)
  9. Winners of The Players Championship (2021-23)
  10. Winner of the 2022 European Tour BMW PGA Championship
  11. Those players who qualified and were eligible for the season-ending 2022 Tour Championship
  12. Multiple winners of PGA Tour events that award a full-point allocation (June 2022-June 2023)
  13. The top five players in 2022-23 FedExCup standings as of May 22, 2023, who are not otherwise exempt
  14. The points leader from the 2022 Korn Ferry Tour season using combined points earned on the Official Korn Ferry Tour Regular Season Points Standings and points earned in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals
  15. The top two players from the 2022 DP World Tour Final Points List, who are not otherwise exempt as of May 22, 2023
  16. The top player on the 2023 Race to Dubai Rankings as of May 22, 2023, who is not otherwise exempt
  17. The top two finishers from the 2023 DP World Tour U.S. Open Qualifying Series, who are not otherwise exempt
  18. Winner of the 2022 Amateur Championship, conducted by The R&A (must be an amateur)
  19. Winner of the 2022 Mark H. McCormack Medal (top-ranked in WAGR & must be an amateur)
  20. Winner of the 2023 NCAA Division I Men’s Golf Championship (must be an amateur)
  21. Winner of the 2023 Latin America Amateur Championship (must be an amateur)
  22. Top 60 point leaders and ties from the Official World Golf Ranking as of May 22, 2023
  23. Top 60 point leaders and ties from the Official World Golf Ranking as of June 12, 2023
  24. Special exemptions selected by the USGA

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