U.S. Open Round 4 updates: Wyndham Clark goes wire-to-wire to win 126th U.S. Open
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Wyndham Clark goes wire-to-wire to win U.S. Open
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. -- The final round of the 2026 U.S. Open is underway, and one question hangs over the proceedings: Will Wyndham Clark flinch?
Clark held a six-stroke lead after 54 holes and has looked the part. As Shinnecock Hills tormented the contenders on Saturday, Clark floated above the carnage with impressive up-and-downs on repeat. Then, with an opportunity to take full control of the tournament, he stuffed his second shot into the par-5 16th and holed the putt for eagle. Clark's only nervy blip came at the 18th when he missed a short par putt to cut the lead from seven to six. Will that be a preview of heightened nerves?
Clark, the 2023 U.S. Open winner, could join illustrious company with a victory. The club of multi-time U.S. Open winners is elite. Jack Nicklaus. Tiger Woods. Ben Hogan. Sam Snead. Brooks Koepka.
Scottie Scheffler will try to keep Clark from joining that list. Scheffler is chasing his own history, needing just the U.S. Open to complete the Grand Slam. Scheffler is paired alongside in the final group.
Could anyone else make a push for the championship? Tommy Fleetwood shot 63 in the final round of the 2018 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills to nearly clip Koepka. Is that score out there on Sunday?
Follow along here for updates all day. Our on-site reporters, will be adding on-the-ground insight to keep you informed throughout the final round.
6:48 p.m.: Wyndham Clark converts the lengthy two-putt par to secure the 126th U.S. Open by one shot over Sam Burns. It's Clark's second U.S. Open title, and he did it in wire-to-wire fashion on one of the most difficult venues in the world despite a final-round 73.

Wyndham Clark goes wire-to-wire to win U.S. Open
The win is Clark's second of the season and fifth of his career.
6:34 p.m.: The drama survives, as Clark's lag leaves him 5 feet for par on the par-3 17th, and he is unable to convert for par. The bogey drops him back to 4-under with one hole remaining.
Meanwhile, Tom Kim's bid ends at 18 as his beautiful approach comes up some 6 feet from the hole, but does not go down to give the eagle necessary to match Burns. Nevertheless, it's an impressive and unexpected result for Kim, who notches his first top five in official TOUR competition since the 2023 Travelers Championship, where he lost in a playoff to Scottie Scheffler.
-- Jimmy Reinman
6:27 p.m.: Clark steps up the par-5 16th and pulls his tee shot wayward left. There will be no putt for eagle this time around like there was on Saturday for Clark, who's ball finds the thick stuff.
It takes a muscled lash to get the ball free, and it caroms down the fairway to perfect layup range. The effort is rewarded, as Clark's wedge finds the back of the green some 30 feet from the hole.
Clark's putt, as many of his have been this week, was perfect. It's another unlikely birdie from the rough that takes him to 5-under, two clear of Burns' mark with two to play.
-- Jimmy Reinman
6:11 p.m.: On the final hole, Sam Burns gets a perfect read from right behind Keith Mitchell's birdie try, but follows in Mitchell's path too perfectly. Both putts come up next to the lip of the 72nd hole of the week, and Burns posts the first under-par clubhouse score at 3-under.
For Mitchell, it's a bittersweet miss. While his putt could have placed him inside the top three, the par gives him his fourth-straight round of even-par 70, the first player in U.S. Open history to accomplish such a novelty. It's a tremendous week and finish for Mitchell after opening with 41 in his first nine of the championship.
Wyndham Clark holds a one-shot lead with three to play.
-- Jimmy Reinman
5:35 p.m.: Sam Burns is not going down without a fight. One of the best putters on TOUR bounced back from a rare short miss on No. 15, pouring in an 18-footer for birdie on No. 16 that elicited a fist pump. Burns is now back to 3-under for the week with just two holes to go, and after Wyndham Clark was unable to save par on No. 13, the lead is once again back down to a single shot. The drama is palpable out here at Shinnecock Hills.
5:15 p.m.: After a wild start to the afternoon, Wyndham Clark has found some breathing room. A deftly-played wedge on No. 10 set up his first birdie of the day, bringing him back to 5-under, and he has made it through Nos. 11 and 12 with a pair of easy pars. Meanwhile, Sam Burns just missed a short par putt on No. 15 to drop back to 2-under. It means that Clark takes a three-shot lead with him to the 13th tee, with Scheffler among a trio of players four shots back - but in need of a quick move to have any chance of closing the gap.
-- Will Gray
4:45 p.m.: Wyndham Clark has the lead as he makes the turn, but barely. A scrappy par save on No. 9 kept him at 4-under as he made the turn, and the six-shot lead with which he started the day has winnowed down to a single shot over Sam Burns. After three straight rounds of par or better at Shinnecock Hills, Clark didn't make a birdie on the front nine - and didn't come particularly close outside of a midrange attempt on No. 3. With Keith Mitchell alone in third place at 1-under, there are now only three players under par for the week.
-- Will Gray
4:20 p.m.: Is J.T. Poston going to win the U.S. Open? That's a hypothetical that felt outlandish a few hours ago. Wyndham Clark just dropped another shot. He's down to 4-under after seven holes. Sam Burns dropped one, too. He's at 3-under through 11. Poston sits at 1-under overall with four holes to play. The way things are going, if Poston can grab one more birdie and get to 2-under, it feels like he might have a chance.
-- Paul Hodowanic
3:55 p.m.: Oh boy, things have escalated quickly. Wyndham Clark is 2-over through five holes and Sam Burns is 4-under through eight. Suddenly, Clark sits just one shot ahead of Burns. This is how quickly things can flip. The next hour is pivotal to the proceedings. Scottie Scheffler is stuck in neutral at 1-under. J.T. Poston is 1-under and through 13 holes, looking to post a low number that the leaders need to focus on. Keith Mitchell (1-under) and Tommy Fleetwood (even-par) are hanging around.
-- Paul Hodowanic
2:00 p.m.: It's been a quiet start to the final round. The course is gettable, but nobody anywhere near contention has made a massive move. Will that come from one of the final groups? Ludvig Ã…berg just shot 4-under 66. Could one of the players at 1-under fire the same and get to 5-under? Would that be enough to unseat Clark? As is always the case, the first few holes will tell us a lot. Clark is no stranger to pressure, but playing alongside Scheffler is a difficult place to be, no matter the size of the lead.
-- Paul Hodowanic
1:00 p.m.: If you were hoping for a crazy Tommy Fleetwood-type round from Rory McIlroy today, you aren't going to get it. McIlroy nearly drove the first green and still didn't manage to hit the green with his second shot. He made bogeys at the second and third holes, too. This won't be McIlroy's major. A thought that popped in my head: Was this McIlroy's last chance to win at one of the cathedrals of golf? He has said that it is important to him. He will be in his mid-40s the next time we are back here at Shinnecock.
-- Paul Hodowanic
11:00 a.m.: Let's set up the historic nature of Clark's lead for a second.
Thirty-nine players have had a 5+ shot lead entering the final round of a major championship. Thirty-three went on to win. The last such player to fail at converting such a lead was Jean Van de Velde at the 1999 Open Championship at Carnoustie -- he had a five-shot lead entering the final round and ended up losing in a 3-way playoff.
In each of the last 27 U.S. Opens, the eventual winner was either leading or within four strokes of the lead at the end of the third round. Of course, Clark is the only player within four of the lead.
There have been eight true wire-to-wire winners of the U.S. Open (outright lead at the end of all four rounds). Clark could be the ninth.
This is all heady territory and points to this afternoon going one direction.
-- Paul Hodowanic
9:35 a.m.: Sipping coffee and looking through the pin locations for this Sunday round. A few to keep an eye on ...
- No. 10 -- Sitting in the very front, just above a steep false front, expect this to be one of the most difficult approach shots on Sunday. Most players are driving it down the hill and leaving themselves an uphill wedge inside 70 yards. But with this location, it's going to be incredibly difficult to generate enough spin to keep this ball close. Any aggressive shots have the risk of coming back to their feet. It makes me wonder whether more players will lay back to the top of the hill to leave themselves a full wedge/short iron that they can better control spin with.
- No. 7. -- This 187-yard par-3 has proven difficult all week. Less than half the field has hit this green in regulation and this pin location tucked far on the left side could cause some challenges.
- No. 3 -- The safe play will be to bail to the front left of the green, but if anyone tries to go at this front right pin, they may have issues. Tucked in the very front corner, just five paces from the bunker, the slopes want to feed balls right into the greenside bunker, which will leave a short-sided, difficult up-and-down.
9:00 a.m.: Good morning. It's quiet here in the media center, but it won't take much for the energy to climb. Wyndham Clark leads by six strokes, but if there's a golf course and an opponent that you wouldn't want to face as you're trying to hold that lead, it would be Shinnecock Hills and Scottie Scheffler. We've got a while before the final group goes off, though. Here are some tee times to follow in the interim.
- 9:51 a.m. -- Miles Russell (a), Jackson Koivun (a)
- 10:02 a.m. -- Chris Gotterup, Robert MacIntyre
- 12:13 p.m. -- Rory McIlroy, Akshay Bhatia
- 1:35 p.m. -- Matt Fitzpatrick, Collin Morikawa
- 1:46 p.m. -- Tommy Fleetwood, Xander Schauffele
- 1:57 p.m. -- Sam Burns, Keith Mitchell
- 2:08 p.m. -- Emiliano Grillo, Sam Stevens
- 2:19 p.m. -- Tom Kim, Sahith Theegala
- 2:30 p.m. -- Scottie Scheffler, Wyndham Clark
-- Paul Hodowanic




