2005 U.S. Open (golf)

2005 U.S. Open
Tournament information
Dates June 15–19, 2005
Location Pinehurst, North Carolina
Course(s) Pinehurst No. 2
Tour(s) PGA Tour
PGA European Tour
Japan Golf Tour
Statistics
Par 70
Length 7,214
Field 156 players, 83 after cut
Cut 149 (+9)
Prize fund $6,250,000
Winner's share $1,170,000
Champion
Michael Campbell
280 (E)

The 2005 United States Open Championship was the 105th U.S. Open, played from June 13 to June 19 at Pinehurst Resort course No. 2. The U.S. Open returned to Pinehurst No. 2 for the first time since 1999 when Payne Stewart won his second U.S. Open four months before his death. Six years was the shortest gap between U.S. Opens at the same site since the 1946 U.S. Open. Michael Campbell won his first career major in a surprising collapse by two of the best players in the world. The event took place in the Village of Pinehurst, North Carolina. The purse was $6.25 million and Campbell earned $1.17 million.

Contents

History of U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2

The 2005 U.S. Open at Pinehurst was only the second U.S. Open to be played there because of the fear it would be too hot in mid-June and its abandons from a major city of populated area. In 1999 Payne Stewart won his second U.S. Open title in one of the most remarkable U.S. Open victories ever. He trailed Phil Mickelson by one stroke on the 16th hole where he then made an amazing 25-foot putt for par then moments later Mickelson missed a 7-foot putt for par. Stewart birdied 17 and holed a 15-foot par putt on 18 in one of the most dramatic finishes ever. Stewart died in a plane crash four months later. He was honored at the 2005 U.S. Open with a silhouette of Payne’s 1999 U.S. Open victory pose on the flag of the 18th green.

Round-by-round summary

First round (Thursday)

Qualifiers Olin Browne and Rocco Mediate stole the first round lead at Pinehurst No. 2. While Masters champion Tiger Woods battled to an even-par 70 and two time winner Ernie Els ground out a 71. Retief Goosen launched his title defense with a three-birdie 68 for a three-way tie for third, 2004 Masters winner Phil Mickelson returned a 69 after holing a 20-foot birdie putt at the last and world number two Vijay Singh opened with a 70.

# Player Country Score To par
T1 Olin Browne  United States 67 -3
Rocco Mediate  United States
T3 Retief Goosen  South Africa 68 -2
Brandt Jobe  United States
Lee Westwood  England
T6 K.J. Choi  South Korea 69 -1
Luke Donald  England
Steve Jones  United States
Phil Mickelson  United States
T10 Tommy Armour III  United States 70 E
Bob Estes  United States
Adam Scott  Australia
Vijay Singh  Fiji
Toru Taniguchi  Japan
David Toms  United States
Tiger Woods  United States

Second round (Friday)

Two-time champion Retief Goosen shared the lead in the U.S. Open second round after most of the field struggled at Pinehurst on Friday. Trailing by one at the start of the day, the South African carded an even-par 70 to finish on two-under 138, level with overnight leader Olin Browne and unheralded Jason Gore. Gore, who missed the cut in his only previous U.S. Open appearance in 1998, vaulted up the leaderboard late in the day with a five-birdie 67. South Korea's K.J. Choi (70) and Australian Mark Hensby (68), who were tied for fourth at one under. World number two Vijay Singh was a further shot back in a four-way share of sixth after a second successive 70, alongside Spaniard Sergio García and New Zealand's Michael Campbell, who fired matching 69s, and Briton Lee Westwood, after a 72. Of the other big names, Tiger Woods was one over after a 71, while Phil Mickelson (77) and Ernie Els (76) just made the halfway cut which fell at eight-over 148. Nine players finished under par after the opening round but only five were still in red figures after day two.

# Player Country Score To par
T1 Olin Browne  United States 67-71=138 -2
Retief Goosen  South Africa 68-70=138
Jason Gore  United States 71-67=138
T4 K.J. Choi  South Korea 69-70=139 -1
Mark Hensby  Australia 71-68=139
T6 Michael Campbell  New Zealand 71-69=140 E
Sergio García  Spain 71-69=140
Vijay Singh  Fiji 70-70=140
Lee Westwood  England 68-72=140
T10 Stephen Allan  Australia 72-69-141 +1
Keiichiro Fukabori  Japan 74-67=141
Jim Furyk  United States 71-70=141
Brandt Jobe  United States 68-73=141
Rocco Mediate  United States 67-74=141
Adam Scott  Australia 70-71=141
Tiger Woods  United States 70-71=141

Amateurs: Every (+8), Moore (+8), Kuehne (+10), List (+13), Denham (+14), Putnam (+15), Williams (+18), Soero (+20).

Third round (Saturday)

Retief Goosen took a three-shot lead after the U.S. Open third round on Saturday. The world number five recovered from a double-bogey six at the 13th with three birdies in the last five holes to card a one-under-par 69. Goosen finished at three-under-par, the only man to end the day in red figures. Tied for second at even par 210 were Goosen's playing partner Olin Browne and Jason Gore, both carding 72s. Michael Campbell, another qualifier, registered a 71 to share fourth place at one-over 211 with Mark Hensby (72). David Toms, the 2001 PGA champion, was a further shot back after a 70 while Tiger Woods recorded a 72 to finish in a four-way tie for seventh at three over.

# Player Country Score To par
1 Retief Goosen  South Africa 68-70-69=207 -3
T2 Olin Browne  United States 67-71-72=210 E
Jason Gore  United States 71-67-72=210
T4 Michael Campbell  New Zealand 71-69-71=211 +1
Mark Hensby  Australia 71-68-72=211
6 David Toms  United States 70-72-70=212 +2
T7 K.J. Choi  South Korea 69-70-74=213 +3
Peter Hedblom  Sweden 77-66-70=213
Lee Westwood  England 68-72-73=213
Tiger Woods  United States 70-71-72=213

Final round (Sunday)

Michael Campbell held off a charging Tiger Woods to clinch his maiden major title by two shots on Sunday. The 36-year-old Campbell, four off the pace overnight, collected four birdies and three bogeys to close with a one-under-par 69. Woods, who had been chasing his 10th career major, rallied from a bogey-bogey start and reeled off four birdies in the last nine holes to secure second place with a matching, best-of-the-day 69. He missed an eight-footer for par on 16 and three-putted for bogey on 17. Sergio García and South Africa's Tim Clark both carded 70s to tie for third at five over, level with Mark Hensby who registered a 74. Retief Goosen, three strokes clear overnight, threw away his chance of a third U.S. Open title by dropping six shots in the first nine holes. Five more bogeys after the turn led to a dismal 81 and a share of 11th place at eight-over 288. Jason Gore ballooned to a 14-over 84 to tie for 49th while Olin Browne returned an 80 for a share of 23rd. David Toms shot a 77 to finish tied for 15th. Ernie Els fired his lowest score of the week, a level-par 70 earning him a share of 15th at nine-over 289 while Phil Mickelson returned a 74 to finish at 12 over in a tie for 33rd.

# Player Country Score To par Winnings
1 Michael Campbell  New Zealand 71-69-71-69=280 E $1,170,000
2 Tiger Woods  United States 70-71-72-69=282 +2 $700,000
T3 Tim Clark  South Africa 76-69-70-70=285 +5 $320,039
Sergio García  Spain 71-69-75-70=285
Mark Hensby  Australia 71-68-72-74=285
T6 Davis Love III  United States 77-70-70-69=286 +6 $187,813
Rocco Mediate  United States 67-74-74-71=286
Vijay Singh  Fiji 70-70-74-72=286
T9 Arron Oberholser  United States 76-67-71-73=287 +7 $150,834
Nick Price  Zimbabwe 72-71-72-72=287

Amateurs: Every (+11), Moore (+16).

Quotes

"I was telling myself 20 times a hole, 'keep your focus'" - Michael Campbell

"If I had putted normally, I would be looking a lot better right now" - Tiger Woods

"I figured if I could just get to even par I might be able to get into a playoff. Unfortunately, I made those two bogeys on 16 and 17 and that kind of put me out of that equation." - Tiger Woods

"It's completely changed my whole career. I can't believe I'm holding this trophy." - Michael Campbell

"I almost gave up golf in 1998. I had had injuries, I had lost my card. I had nowhere to play but invitations came in and it got me started again. I've won 10 times since '99." - Michael Campbell

"So I had a three-shot lead going to the last and I thought to myself: 'just keep your focus, keep your focus'. And it worked." - Michael Campbell

"I got off to a bad start and from there on it pretty much went downhill the whole way," - Retief Goosen

"I played rubbish at the end of the day. There is nothing else to say." - Retief Goosen

External links

Preceded by
2005 Masters
Major Championships Succeeded by
2005 Open Championship