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It could be a long day for several golfers competing in the U.S. Open on Saturday after the second round did not finish on Friday due to weather. Thirteen players did not complete their second round after heavy rainfall and lightning in the area forced event officials to suspend play.
Sam Burns maintains slender lead but Adam Scott, JJ Spaun and Viktor Hovland are in pursuit after intriguing third day at the US Open.
If you don’t have cable or a TV antenna, you’ll need a live TV streaming service to stream the US Open for free. One option we love is Hulu + Live TV, which comes with three days free and starts at $82.99/month after. The Hulu + Live TV base plan includes USA and NBC, where the tournament is airing across four days.
The US Open continued Friday at Oakmont. The leaderboard took shape as the cut line loomed. Here are updates and scores.
Saturday was moving day at the US Open and Adam Scott took that to heart, charging up the leaderboard and ending the day a shot behind leader Sam Burns.
The Oakmont faithful have become somewhat spoiled by their U.S. Open winners, with the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan, Johnny Miller and Larry Nelson a part of the club’s rich history. Ernie Els won a U.S. Open at Oakmont, as did Dustin Johnson.
The event will be back on schedule for the final day, after a weather delay suspended play in the second round on Friday and forced an early morning on Saturday to finish out the round. The third round was also pushed back from its originally scheduled start as a result, but finished on Saturday evening.
The full list of Saturday's tee times can be found here. TV coverage starts at 10 a.m. ET on USA and shifts to NBC at 12 p.m. ET. The event can also be live-streamed on Peacock. After the first two days of the 2025 U.S. Open, Sam Burns and J.J. Spaun are atop the leaderboard.
It’s not that the venerable venue hosting its record 10th U.S. Open this week ... want to be on the leaderboard, so it should be a fun experience for him.’’ Burns revealed what he’s ...
As he stood on the ninth tee box in the pouring rain, it looked for all the world like J.J. Spaun had just played his way out of contention for the 125th US Open championship.