U.S. Open 2026: Rahm, DeChambeau lead big names to miss the cut at Shinnecock

· Yahoo Sports

It is inarguable that Shinnecock Hills has identified both quality play and premier golfers over the first two rounds of the 126th U.S. Open. Perusing the leaderboard on Friday evening, there are five major champions among the top 10 scorers heading into the weekend. Sam Stevens and Harry Higgs are the only players in that group to not have won on the PGA Tour, and the other eight have a combined 52 wins, including eight majors.

That’s got to be satisfying to the USGA, which was under so much pressure to present a setup that tested every element without becoming tricked up. The potential is there for a fantastic weekend.

Visit syntagm.co.za for more information.

Unfortunately for some of the best in the world, they weren’t ready for the exam.

Among those who missed the cut that came at four over par were three U.S. Open champs from this decade—last year’s winner J.J. Spaun (eight over), Bryson DeChambeau (five over) and Jon Rahm (six over). Also sent packing were four other major champs in their 30s—Brooks Koepka (10 over), Shane Lowry (six over), Cameron Smith (six over) and Patrick Reed (five over).

There were a couple of sentimental misses. Adam Scott was playing in his 100th straight major, but was ejected by shooting eight over, and Rickie Fowler’s streak of starts without a major win reached 59 with him scoring five over.

Other sizeable names to be clipped by Shinnecock: Viktor Hovland (five over), Billy Horschel (five over), Patrick Cantlay (six over), Min Woo Lee (six over), Padraig Harrington (11 over) and Graeme McDowell (12 over).

The miss by Rahm was probably the most surprising. He entered the week as one of the pre-tournament favorites, with two wins on LIV this year and a T-2 in May’s PGA Championship. But the two-time major winner went from a strong 68 on Thursday to an awful 78 on Friday. Rahm made only one birdie in the second round and shot six over in a five-hole stretch on the back nine.

Spaun has shown that last year’s win at Oakmont was no fluke, with a win and three top-10s this year. But he opened his defense with a 77 and, despite making an eagle, couldn’t overcome five bogeys on Friday.

Koepka has shown continued promise since returning to the PGA Tour this season from LIV, but the five-time major winner shot 73-77 while making only four birdies.

DeChambeau, meantime, has now missed the first three major cuts in a season for the first time in his career. It seemed like a self-fulfilling prophecy after he’d speculated in a Flushing It Golf interview that he might miss all four cuts in the majors. DeChambeau battled to the end. He nearly overcame back-to-back double bogeys early in the round by having a 13-foot birdie attempt at 18 to make the cut on the number. But DeChambeau missed and was sent home.

MORE GOLF DIGEST U.S. OPEN COVERAGE

U.S. Open 101: Answering all your frequently asked questions

How to watch the 2026 U.S. Open

Power Rankings: Every player in the U.S. Open field, ranked

Here’s the record prize money payout for each golfer at the U.S. Open

Video: Every hole at Shinnecock Hills

Why can't the USGA get Shinnecock Hills right? Our interactive guide explains

What’s a ‘good’ shot at Shinnecock? The difference between our editos and tour average

Breaking down Scottie Scheffler’s chances to complete the career Grand Slam

Every chip shot you’ll see at Shinnecock Hills, explained

Read full story at source