SAN DIEGO, California. – Jon Rahm became the first US Open champion from Spain when he finished with two brilliant birdies to outlast Louis Oosthuizen by one stroke at Torrey Pines on Sunday (Monday in Manila).
An emotional Rahm quickly dedicated the victory to his late compatriot Seve Ballesteros, the man who put Spain on the golfing map by winning five major titles before dying of brain cancer at age 54.
“This is definitely for Seve. I know he wanted to win this one most of all,” said Rahm, his voice cracking with emotion.
Rahm edged South African Oosthuizen in a wild battle of attrition that finally turned into a two-man race as several other contenders came unglued on the difficult back nine.
Rahm was the only serious contender to avoid a bogey on the inward half, and he timed his run perfectly by sinking lengthy, sharply-breaking putts at the 17th and 18th holes.
He shot 67 for a six-under-par 278 total and was confirmed as the champion when Oosthuizen was unable to eagle the par-five 18th.
The win comes a fortnight after Rahm was withdrawn from the Memorial tournament after testing positive for coronavirus before the final round. He had a six-shot lead at the time.
“I’m a big believer in karma and after what happened a couple of weeks ago, I stayed really positive knowing big things were coming,” he said.
“I didn’t know what it was going to be, but I knew we were coming to a special place. I got my breakthrough win here (on the PGA Tour) and it is a very special place for my family.”
While Rahm celebrated, Oosthuizen pondered another major near-miss.
Though he birdied the final hole for a 71, it was another bitter pill for the likeable South African, who also finished runner-up at last month’s PGA Championship, and now has six career runner-up finishes in the four tournaments that comprise the grand slam.
At least Oosthuizen, apart from a poor drive at the penultimate hole that led to an ultimately very costly bogey, held his game together down the stretch, unlike several other heavy hitters.
Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy were among the biggest names who came unglued on the most difficult stretch of the course early on the back nine.
Defending champion DeChambeau began the final round two shots back and set himself up to be a repeat winner when he nearly made an ace at the par-three eighth, his ball stopping an inch shy of dropping in.
Still, the tap in birdie was enough to give him the sole lead at the time.
But DeChambeau blew any chance of holding on by hitting a series of wayward drives and poor putts starting at the 11th, dropping four shots in three holes to plunge out of contention.
A quadruple-bogey at the 17th only added salt to the wound. He tied for 26th.