vBookie Event: Pick the Winner (115th US Open Championship)
This event is over.

Outcome Odds Total Bets Total Staked
Rory McIlroy 5/1 F (6.00) 3 650  
Jordan Spieth 7/1 (8.00) 3 400 WIN!
Dustin Johnson 14/1 (15.00) 1 250  
Justin Rose 18/1 (19.00) 0 0  
Rickie Fowler 18/1 (19.00) 2 275  
Adam Scott 20/1 (21.00) 2 125  
Phil Mickelson 20/1 (21.00) 2 175  
Jason Day 22/1 (23.00) 2 125  
Henrik Stenson 25/1 (26.00) 1 100  
Bubba Watson 28/1 (29.00) 1 75  
Sergio Garcia 28/1 (29.00) 1 100  
Hideki Matsuyama 33/1 (34.00) 0 0  
Jim Furyk 33/1 (34.00) 1 50  
Jimmy Walker 33/1 (34.00) 1 200  
Martin Kaymer 33/1 (34.00) 0 0  
Matt Kuchar 33/1 (34.00) 0 0  
Patrick Reed 33/1 (34.00) 0 0  
Tiger Woods 33/1 (34.00) 0 0  
Brandt Snedeker 50/1 (51.00) 0 0  
Brooks Koepka 50/1 (51.00) 1 100  
Billy Horschel 55/1 (56.00) 1 200  
Keegan Bradley 55/1 (56.00) 0 0  
Paul Casey 55/1 (56.00) 0 0  
Graeme McDowell 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Hunter Mahan 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
JB Holmes 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Lee Westwood 66/1 (67.00) 1 25  
Louis Oosthuizen 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Ryan Moore 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Webb Simpson 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Zach Johnson 66/1 (67.00) 0 0  
Bill Haas 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Charl Schwartzel 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Charley Hoffman 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Chris Kirk 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Harris English 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Ian Poulter 80/1 (81.00) 0 0  
Jason Dufner 80/1 (81.00) 1 25  
Luke Donald 80/1 (81.00) 1 25  
Steve Stricker 90/1 (91.00) 0 0  
Francesco Molinari 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Gary Woodland 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Graham DeLaet 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Jamie Donaldson 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Kevin Na 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Marc Leishman 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Victor Dubuisson 100/1 (101.00) 0 0  
Angel Cabrera 125/1 (126.00) 1 25  
Brendon Todd 125/1 (126.00) 0 0  
Ernie Els 125/1 (126.00) 1 25  
Nick Watney 125/1 (126.00) 0 0  
Russell Henley 125/1 (126.00) 0 0  
Ryan Palmer 125/1 (126.00) 0 0  
Shane Lowry 125/1 (126.00) 0 0  
Brendon de Jonge 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Danny Willett 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
John Senden 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Jonas Blixt 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Kevin Stadler 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Miguel Angel Jimenez 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Thomas Bjorn 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Thorbjørn Olesen 150/1 (151.00) 0 0  
Bernd Wiesberger 175/1 (176.00) 0 0  
K.J. Choi 175/1 (176.00) 0 0  
Kevin Chappell 175/1 (176.00) 0 0  
Matt Jones 175/1 (176.00) 1 20  
Seung-Yul Noh 175/1 (176.00) 0 0  
Stewart Cink 175/1 (176.00) 0 0  
Bo Van Pelt 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Boo Weekley 200/1 (201.00) 2 30  
David Toms 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Erik Compton 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Geoff Ogilvy 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Joost Luiten 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Kevin Streelman 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Matt Every 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Nicolas Colsaerts 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Padraig Harrington 200/1 (201.00) 1 20  
Retief Goosen 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Stephen Gallacher 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Thongchai Jaidee 200/1 (201.00) 0 0  
Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano 250/1 (251.00) 0 0  
Matteo Manassero 250/1 (251.00) 0 0  
Darren Clarke 500/1 (501.00) 0 0  
Y.E. Yang 500/1 (501.00) 0 0  
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Thread: 115th US Open Championship at Chambers Bay (SETTLED)

  1. #1
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    Golf 115th US Open Championship at Chambers Bay (SETTLED)

    Why the U.S. Open will be the best major of 2015
    By Rex Hoggard - The Golf Channel




    Editor's note: The majors are always the most highly anticipated tournaments of the year. But which one will be the best? We asked our writers to present the cases for the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship.

    The 115th U.S. Open is already a game-changing event and the first tee shot is still some five months away.

    This year’s Open will be the first played in the Pacific Northwest, a geographic anomaly that defies explanation, but even that milestone isn’t why the year’s second major has all the markings of a seminal championship.

    What separates June’s championship from others will be Chambers Bay, the publicly owned links-like layout that was designed to host the U.S. Open. Everything about the former sand and gravel quarry was built to be a major venue.

    It’s the kind of blank canvas that a man such as Mike Davis, the USGA’s executive director, dreams about. It also explains Davis’ enthusiasm when he talks about Chambers Bay.

    “This is a little bit of out-of-the-box thinking for the USGA,” said Davis last June. “The last time we truly came to a new golf course for the U.S. Open was Minneapolis in 1970 at Hazeltine. To say we are excited to come to Chambers Bay would be the understatement of the year.”

    If the 2010 U.S. Amateur, which was played at Chambers Bay, is any indication of what players and fans should expect from the Robert Trent Jones-designed layout Davis’ excitement is understandable.

    In the tune-up to this year’s U.S. Open Davis pushed the course to its limits in 2010 and, some suggested, perhaps beyond. If the new-look Pinehurst No. 2 set the standard as brown as the new green last year, expect a similarly dusty scene when the golf world arrives at University Place, Wash.

    The 7,742-yard (nope, not a typo, that’s 7,742) course will give Davis and Co. endless setup options. Although par is expected to be 70 for the championship, that number will very much be relative considering the first and 18th holes will alternately be played as either a par 4 or par 5, depending on the day and conditions.

    Of course, the players will provide the lion’s share of storylines as championship week inches closer, they always do. But until the field takes center stage for Round 1 on June 18 it will be the golf course that captures the imagination.

  2. #2
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    Starts on Thursday, get your wagers in

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    Dilly dilly Goofy's Avatar
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    I can't decide

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    Picked 10 players

  5. #5
    #DeSantis2024 Teh One Who Knocks's Avatar
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    I picked a bunch too

  6. #6
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    Wow, how the mighty have fallen, nobody has bet on Tiger

    I think his game is gone, I don't see him (or anyone for that matter) ever breaking Jack's major wins record.

  7. #7
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    Pro Tip Nicklaus, Irwin: Quit whining about Chambers & just win Open

    Jim McCabe - Golfweek




    Forty-one years later, it remains the benchmark by which demanding tests of golf are held, and Hale Irwin won't dispute that winning the U.S. Open at Winged Foot in 1974 was grueling work. It's just that in one respect there was an ease to it.

    "By Tuesday, 70 percent of the field had given up," Irwin said. "I said to myself: All I have to do is beat 30 percent."

    So infamously tough was the golf course setup that the late Dick Schaap wrote a book about the week and titled it "Massacre at Winged Foot." Legendary are the incidents that took place, from Jerry McGee getting heckled in a practice round and challenging that fan to a $100 bet that he couldn't advance a golf ball out of greenside rough at the 18th, to Jack Nicklaus putting off the green on his first hole Thursday, to Johnny Miller saying he knows "what 6-inch rough looks like and that wasn't 6-inch rough, it was much higher."

    Miller won the U.S. Open with a 279 score in 1973; the next year he shot 302. Yes, Winged Foot was that brutally tough. There hasn't been a higher score posted by a U.S. Open winner since Irwin's 287 (although Lou Graham won with that same total the next year), including those that he went on to win at Inverness in 1979 (284) and Medinah in 1990 (280).

    But of Irwin's three titles, the one that remains unforgettable is the one at Winged Foot and it comes to mind this week because another U.S. Open is upon us and, shock of shocks, guys are moaning about the golf course --€” in advance, without really having seen it in competition.

    Will they never learn?

    "Rather than get up in arms, shouldn't guys just go and play and let the best man win?" Irwin said.

    Now 70, Irwin said he has never been to Chambers Bay but he has read stories about the windswept links-like layout outside of Seattle. It is expected to feel more like an Open Championship than a typical U.S. Open test, what with balls bouncing over firm fescue grass, and Irwin concedes that that is intriguing. "I'm sure we might see something we've never seen before (in a U.S. Open), but my general rule of thumb has always been 'Don't complain, you just have to deal with the set-up.'"

    Another player from Irwin's era thinks similarly, a guy by the name of Jack Nicklaus. And given that he won four U.S. Opens, it gets you thinking that perhaps he and Irwin had the proper attitude toward this major championship.

    "It really makes little difference what remarks have been made about Chambers Bay," Nicklaus said. "You are going to play the tournament if you want to win the golf tournament. Somebody's name is going to be on the trophy at the end of the week. Somebody, regardless of whether they like (Chambers Bay) or not like it, is going there enough ahead of time, learn what they need to learn about the golf course and play it."

    Nicklaus said the biggest motivation behind his decision to go to a U.S. Open venue a week ahead of time was to "get all that crap out of the way," meaning a determination of which challenges were going to be greatest -- slick greens, penal rough, tight fairways.

    Then, during practice rounds when Nicklaus heard players groan, he secretly smiled to himself. "When they said, 'I don't like the course,' I checked him off. Oh, the fairways are too narrow? Check him off. The fairways are too sloppy? Check him off. The greens are too fast? Check him.

    "Guys would say a course doesn't suit their game. It's not supposed to suit your game. You are supposed to suit your game to the golf course."

    Not that Nicklaus didn't run have trouble at U.S. Open courses. Most notably, Hazeltine in 1970, when he had a first-round 81 and wound up miles behind. "The only golf course that I've ever been to where Arnold (Palmer) and Gary (Player) and I were not even close and they kept our scores on the leaderboard all week long," Nicklaus said.

    With England's Tony Jacklin in command of the tournament, ahead of Dave Hill, whose biting comments about Hazeltine were a storyline all week, officials must have felt it was important to deflect attention toward the game's biggest three names.

    "At the bottom of the leaderboard would be Palmer (T-54), Player (T-44) and Nicklaus (T-51) and our score is like 26 over par. It was ridiculous."

    Yet Nicklaus wasn't about to rip Hazeltine ahead of time, just as he wasn't about to moan about the demanding challenge that was Pebble Beach in 1972. He shot 290? So what, he won, handling the mental test better than anyone.

    Irwin was there at Pebble in '72, his 306 total the highest 72-hole score in his 33 U.S. Opens. But that was an indication of Pebble's challenge that week, because Irwin finished tied for 36th, and he left there knowing he had what it takes to win this championship.

    "I always felt that I was going to hit a lot of bad shots at the U.S. Open, that it was always about having the mental discipline to accept that. The U.S. Open had deeper rough, faster greens, and harder challenges? That was fine with me," Irwin said.

    "I credited that to my football background. Winged Foot was a cakewalk compared to the things I came up against in football."

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    Go home Tiger, you're done

    Strange that the US Open is being played on a Scottish links course

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fodster View Post
    He should've chucked the rest of them away too Fuckin' 80...... i bet you could match that Fod!

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    Fodster (06-20-2015)

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    Watching some of it today mate, I would rack up one hell of a score!

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    I reckon i could break 200 there on a good day

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    Dustin Johnson

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    I only saw the first couple of holes last night then fell asleep........ did DJ blow it?

  17. #15
    #DeSantis2024 Teh One Who Knocks's Avatar
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    He had a 12 foot eagle put to put it away on 18.....and three putted to lose by 1

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