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US Open golf 2023: Wyndham Clark wins his first major championship – live reaction | US Open

Key events

One of Clark’s secrets to success? He said this earlier in the week: “I will say that I came here (to LA CC) with my good buddy, PJ. He’s a member. He’s a good player and he really knows the golf course.

“That 18 holes was the equivalent of probably playing 36 holes because he was telling me how certain putts break, how this one is faster than that. If you’re here, you want to go there. He was spot on.

“When I left that practice round I felt like I didn’t even need a practice round. I felt like it was that in-depth.”

The final scores on the doors:

-10: W Clark
-9: R McIlroy
-7: S Scheffler
-6: C Smith
-5: T Fleetwood, M W Lee, R Fowler
-4: T Kim, H English

Rory McIlroy on his performance: “The putter – I’ll rue some chances. That wedge on 14 coming up short, too. Just didn’t quite get the job done. I’ll keep coming back. I’m right there but it’s such fine margins.”

“So good, so good, so good,” yelled a friend of Clark as he received back slaps and fist pumps galore. It’s a sentiment that is hard to argue with. He has been superb this week.

Wyndham Clark is the 2023 US Open champion.

A sensational performance. A second win of the year. A first major championship. Tears and a look to the heavens.

Clark’s caddie removes the flag. Clark hits his putt. Oh it’s good. Very, very good. Inches from the hole.

Wow. The galleries have been allowed to surround the 18th green.

Clark peers back at them. It’s as raucous on 18 today as it’s been anywhere all week.

Here we go. Clark settles over his ball. 198 yards to the flag. “The palm tree,” says his caddie, meaning the line.

His ball finds the front of the green. He’s 60 feet from the flag. Triumph is within touching distance … but it’s not over yet.

“All he can do now is wait,” says Ewen Murray on TV, as McIlroy walks off the 18th green.

Behind, Clark has to walk up the 18th hole with a cameramen beside him. What thoughts must be racing through his head!

McIlroy’s putt at 18 is one of his best of the day but it doesn’t drop!

Back on the tee, Clark finds the fairway. He’s got three shots from there to become a major champion.

Clark is superb – yet again – with his short game. His pitch on the 17th settles by the hole and he secures his par. It’s all down to the 72nd hole now. But advantage Clark – he leads McIlroy by one.

What about the approaches?

Clark at 17 first: he misses the green (he’s done that every round this week) but has done so in a good spot. He’s 54 feet away with nothing between his ball and the flag. Relatively flat too. The biggest hazard? Nerves!

McIlroy at 18: he watches Scheffler knock one close, can he produce the same? He has to step away because of the din – the first din of the week more or less – then he finds the putting surface but he’s 41 feet away.

Clark on the 17th tee, finds the fairway, 182 to the flag. McIlroy on the 18th tee, finds the fairway, 185 yards to the flag.

There really is very little in this!

What happens if we need extra holes? The US Open is now decided by an aggregate two hole play-off if there is a tie after 72 holes.

McIlroy is frustrated after his birdie putt does no more than nestle by the hole. But he doesn’t know what has happened on the 16th green. Riley said earlier that the Northern Irishman had ignored a leaderboard – will he know the situation heading up the final hole?

-10: W Clark (16)
-9: R McIlroy (17)

Bogey for Clark! He slaps the face of his putter after his ball lips out at the 16th!

He is now only one clear of McIlroy.

TV’s Wayne Riley knew better than the cameras. McIlroy, he explains, planned to take an alternative route to the 17th green. He powered the ball over trees onto an adjacent fairway. His approach landed with a roar from the galleries but he still has 32-feet to the hole.

Clark executes a superb approach at the 16th. He’s left himself 7-feet for par.

Let’s have a reminder of just how remarkable it is that he’s withstood the major championship pressure. First, there is his major record which includes four missed cuts in six starts and a best of tied 75th. But it’s also true that 23 of the last 25 major championship winners had experience of contending a major in at least one of the three that preceded their win (finishing top eight or sitting top four with 18 holes to play). Clark has never felt that heat. It doesn’t seem to be bothering him, however.

Leaderboard update

It’s getting very twitchy. McIlroy’s drive at 16 has gone left and might be in trouble. It’s one of those where the TV camera lingers on trees and marshals who are walking towards them. Behind, Clark has to heave his ball out of the fairway bunker at 15 so needs to save par from 130 yards. The state of play:

-11: W Clark (15)
-9: R McIlroy (16)
-7: S Scheffler (16), R Fowler (15)
-6: C Smith (F)

McIlroy’s long distance birdie putt at 16 slips a nasty 7-feet past the hole.

But drama behind him on the tee – Clark has driven into the fairway bunker and might struggle to reach the green.

McIlroy putts …and it drops! That was vital.

McIlroy has an ugly lie after that errant tee shot at the 16th. He has, however, clattered it onto the putting surface. A long away from the hole, though.

Clark’s chip has slipped to around 10-feet at 15. Can he stay three shots clear? No! A bogey and the first crack in his previously iron-clad short game. The gap is two.

Thanks Dave. Things have certainly changed in the last 20 minutes. I’m thinking of this week’s most regular emailer, Michael Meagher, who is somewhere out there sighing: “Oh Rory.”

Also, before I crack on with the finale, I just want to say that, in a week that’s been full of chatter about the Golden Age of Hollywood, well played Min Woo Lee for celebrating it best with his Douglas Fairbanks/Errol Flynn style moustache. And his top 10 finish, of course.

McIlroy drives into rough at 16. Not good. Clark’s tee shot at 15 is waywad though and misses the green. Do we have further twists? Matt will take you down the closing stretch.

Here goes McIlroy with his birdie putt at 15. It shaves the hole. Of course it does. That’s a par.

Clark eyes up his eagle try back at 14. Holing it would be fantastic; taking two putts for birdie is a very valuable consolation prize. Clark is rightfully cautious and makes sure of the birdie-4. He pulls three clear. Fowler also makes birdie but that’s more to firm up his bid for bronze rather than gold.

-12: W Clark (14)
-9: R McIlroy (15)
-7: R Fowler (14)
-6: C Smith (F), Scheffler (15)

Clark must have seen all the McIlroy drama and he’s had to spend plenty of time stewing in the fairway. Under the circumstances he could be forgiven for messing this approach up. Instead, he hits a worldie from 280 yards onto the green and will have 20 feet for eagle. Very soon, Clark could be three clear with four to play.

McIlroy needs to pull something out of the bag. Perhaps he’s started that process with a tee shot to 19 feet at the par-3 15th. But, for goodness sake, he has to hole a putt not sooner or later but now.

McIlroy drops his ball, without penalty, in rough outside of the bunker and hacks out to nine feet. A chance to save par but he hasn’t holed a putt of that length all day. He looks anxious as he stalks the putt. This is huge and… he misses right. Ouch. A first bogey for McIlroy and he falls two back. Scheffler also drops a shot and he’s six off the pace. A costly hole.

Out on the course, Sky’s Wayne Riley explains that it’s broken ground so McIlroy can pluck out his embedded ball and get a free drop. It was deemed to be plugged. That’s a huge, huge break. The turning point? We shall see.

McIlroy slumps over his knees as his approach to 14 holds up in the wind and plonks into the front bunker. And drama, it’s plugged in the face. This will require a ruling. Back on the tee, Clark booms away a solid drive.

The clubhouse leader, replacing Tommy Fleetwood, is Open champion Cam Smith. The Aussie signs for a 67 to finish at 6-under.

Clark does indeed take two putts for par at 13, the second a pressure-free tap-in. He retains his one-shot lead. McIlroy lays up on the 612-yard par-5 14th. Barring a big collapse from either, the 123rd US Open is surely now a two-horse race. McIlroy has only holed 27 feet of putts over his first 13 holes by the way.

-11: W Clark (13)
-10: R McIlroy (13)
-6: C Smith (17), Fowler (13)

Viktor Hovland, one of the pre-tournament favourites for victory, wraps up his week with a 72. That’s currently good enough for tied 20th (Partridge shrug).

Scheffler holes a bomb at 13 to return to -6 and perhaps give himself the merest squeak. What Rory would give for that. Scheffler’s putt raced into the hole but McIlroy’s tentative effort pulls up four or so feet short. In it goes though and it’s a 12th straight par. This is Nick Faldo Muirfield ‘87 golf but, in a tough US Open, that’s no bad thing.

Back down the fairway, Clark has to thrash out of a tough lie but from 187 yards he lands his ball short and it runs onto the green. It’s a long way from the flag but he’ll fancy himself to two-putt it for par. As he walks to the green, Rory’s tee shot at 14 drifts left into the rough.

Great drive by McIlroy at 13, currently the 2nd hardest hole on the course. He hits his 12th green out of 13 in regulation although not within birdie range. Would Rory accept six closing pars now? Quite possibly. Back on the tee, Clark misses the fairway so making four from there is no guarantee.

Top fives in majors are good to have on the record and there are currently four players in a tie for fifth: Tommy Fleetwood after his 63, Min Woo Lee (17), Tom Kim (15) and Scottie Scheffler (12).

Clark’s wedge at 12 is played with caution to the heart of the green. No point in taking on that front flag. He’ll take his chances with a 30-footer instead. Fowler has to be more aggressive given that he’s playing his third and his approach finishes 10 feet away. You sense he’ll have to hole that to keep his chances alive. Clark cosies his first putt to the side of the hole so that’s another par ticked off. But Fowler? Nope, he misses right. That’s a fifth bogey of the day and he’s five behind and almost out of it.

-11: W Clark (12)
-10: R McIlroy (12)
-6: C Smith (16), Fowler (12)

Last year’s winner Matt Fitzpatrick knocks in a 12-footer for par at 18 and that completes a pretty solid defence. Rounds of 71-70-68-70 for a total of 1-under 279 which currently has him in a tie for 18th.

Scheffler’s putter is deserting him now. He misses his par putt at 12 and drops six back. Race run surely. Back down the fairway, Fowler can only chip back to the fairway from a miserable lie as The Smiths song goes.

Thanks Matt. How good is Wyndham Clark’s short game! He floats a beautiful chip up on to the 11th green and it almost drops in the hole. He’ll have four feet or so for par. Fowler also hits a great chip and should save par but he doesn’t, tugging his putt left for another bogey. With Clark finishing off his up and down, Fowler is four back again.

McIlroy finds the green at 12 and is 30 feet away. But here’s a thing: Rory hasn’t holed anything over five feet today. He ranks 52nd out of 65 for Strokes Gained: Putting in round four. The consolation is that Clark isn’t playing like Cam Smith in last summer’s Open. Clark looks nervous. Pars may be good enough for McIlroy on this tough back nine. That’s what he settles for at 12 after a good first putt which, of course, threatens but doesn’t drop.

Leaderboard update

Cam Smith has suddenly climbed into the top five. He’s -3 for the day and -6 for the week. Trouble for the last pair as they miss the green at the 11th – Fowler in a bunker and Clark in the rough. State of play as I pass the baton to Dave.

-11: W Clark (10)
-10: R McIlroy (11)
-8: R Fowler (10)
-6: C Smith (15) S Scheffler (11)

Will Clark be watching?! As McIlroy lines up his birdie putt at 11, Clark is on the tee and it might be a long way away but it’s high up – the view is very clear. Footage suggests he might be keeping his head down, “looking” for something in his bag.

McIlroy putts … and it runs out of steam. A touch dribbly. He suggests it bobbles. Upside? A tough hole negotiated. Downside? A good chance missed.

Scheffler hits a terrible par putt and it’s not his first rotter today. Laura Davies on TV says she doesn’t even fancy the bogey putt. But he makes it. Now -6 for the week and five back.

Dave Bowyer from Coffs Harbour emails: “Rootin’ for Rory today! I got faith.”

The 295-yard par-three 11th. Probably the test Matt Fitzpatrick was thinking of when he poo-pooed an anonymous hole yesterday. Ridiculously long. McIlroy biffs a long iron to 18-feet.

Harris English returns to our screens. Only to hole a longish par putt. Ditto DJ. They’re surely spent.

A big few minutes. While Clark attempts to save par from another nasty spot, McIlroy has a 14-foot birdie putt coming up at the 10th.

Clark chops down on his ball and it seems, at first glance, that he’s skewed the shot, but he’s been very shrewd. He catches a slope and the ball runs down it leaving a very makeable par putt.

McIlroy runs his putt past the hole.

Back to Clark – he holes it! Very courageous. He remains one clear as he makes the turn.

Someone might have slipped Kryptonite into Clark’s pocket, Gregory. His tee shot at the par-three 9th has found more of the lush greenside Bermuda rough that resembles very long greengrocer fake grass.

Gregory Odle emails: “Well, Fowler’s gone afoul, Rory’s yet to roar, and Clark? I’m thinking Clark Kent’s in the house!”

Clark completes his bogey and Fowler records a birdie at the same hole to edge back into it. Updated scores at the top end:

-11: W Clark (8)
-10: R McIlroy (9)
-8: R Fowler (8)
-7: S Scheffler (9)

With his fourth shot Clark has an almighty wipe at the ball and does remove it from the thicket of long grass but it has flown over the green. He’s facing a big challenge here. The fifth shot is chopped out and it is very good. Very, very good. “Outstanding,” says TV’s Andrew Coltart. A bogey 6 is on the cards. A good damage limitation exercise.

Where has Clark ended up? His ball is in thick grass. His left leg is higher than his right. He thrashes at it … and nothing happens! It’s still in there!

Xander Schauffele has closed the front nine with back-to-back birdies. Too little, too late, but he’s in the red for the day again (-1) and lifts himself to solo 5th on -6.

Clark finds the barranca at the 8th! Stood over his approach to the par-five 8th, the leader had a big opportunity to edge further clear. He might still do so but he’d have hoped to find the green and has instead pulled his ball into the scrub of the dry creek.

Yikes. McIlroy three putts the 8th green for a par-five! Michael knows …

Michael Meagher emails: “This is starting to feel a lot like St Andrews: Rory playing well but not quite sparking and an opponent playing the round of his life. Oh Rory!” Don’t give up faith just yet Michael!

Oh dear. Talking of punctures, Rickie Fowler is having problems at the par-three 7th and will make another bogey which leaves him -7 for the week. Clark very nearly makes another birdie but will tap in for par. He remains -12 for the tournament.

Up ahead, Scheffler and McIlroy will take aim at eagle-3s on the par-five 8th with putters.

Thanks Dave and I enjoyed the Tour de France reference earlier (at 23.22). To run with it a little further, I think Harris English got a puncture, but is a domestique helping him back into it? He’s just made a birdie at the 8th to climb back to +2 for the day, -4 for the week and tied 8th.

Is this now a two-horse race? Fowler has slipped four back while Scheffler is six in arrears after eventually making a bogey at 7 following that wayward tee shot. Matt will take you through the next hour.

“Seriously impressive so far,” says Sky’s Rich Beem as Clark rolls in his birdie putt to hit 12-under. That’s two clear of McIlroy whose positive putt at 7 just stays out. That’s an opening birdie and six pars for Rory. All good but he may have to find some extra gears if Clark continues to set this sort of pace.

-12 W Clark (6)
-10: R McIlroy (7)
-8: R Fowler (6)
-6: S Scheffler (7)
-5: T Fleetwood (F), X Schauffele (8)

McIlroy launches his tee shot at 7 so far into the air it nearly clips the moon. His ball finally emerges from space and finds the front of the green. By contrast, Scheffler’s tee shot is off the planet left. Marshals scuttle off into the woods, looking for signs of life.

At 6, Clark finds thick greenside rough but shows magic wrists to hack out to about five feet. He’ll have that for birdie and a two-shot lead. It’s easy to see why he ranks 4th for Strokes Gained: Around The Green this week. Fowler wedges to 20 feet but his putt slips by. It just doesn’t look to be his day.

Back to Scheffler and he somehow finds a line through the trees and cashes in on his fortunate break to clip his second onto the green.

Fowler flexes his knees sharply as a six-footer for par at 5 doesn’t catch enough of the hole. That’s another bogey and he’s +2 for the day and not doing what he needs to do. Clark looks far more on it and he pars. Fowler is now three back, still in contention but current status is now “wobbling”.

Rory plays the short par-4 6th rather scruffily. An average drive leaves him a difficult second which he leaves 30 feet away. His first putt pulls up four feet short but he holes the knee-knocker. No pictures on the scorecard as they say. A par and he moves on.

-11 W Clark (5)
-10: R McIlroy (6)
-8: R Fowler (5)
-7: S Scheffler (6)
-5: T Fleetwood (F)

Joe Pearson from Indianapolis mails in: “Is the wording of Fleetwood’s tweet meant to imply that maybe a monkey has done it? Or possibly a horse?” Fair point. It’s sort of a vague, English, self-deprecation type thing I guess.

Much was made of Scottie Scheffler’s cold putter coming into this week. If it heated up, he’d be unstoppable. But at pre-US Open temperatures it would foil any victory hopes. To this point, it’s fallen between those two extremes. He’s a fairly good 29th for Strokes Gained: Putting but Clark is 4th, McIlroy 16th and Fowler 9th. If just a few more had dropped, Scheffler would be vying for the lead. As it is, he’s four back and fighting to stay on Clark’s heels.

Scottie Scheffler with his putter. Photograph: Michael Madrid/USA Today Sports

Great up and down from Fowler and he saves par at the 4th hole to stay one back. But only momentarily. Clark rattles his five-footer into the hole with aplomb and moves clear at the top. At five, McIlroy’s drive bounded down the cambered fairway and toppled into the right rough. He’s had to hack out to short left of the green so needs to scramble for par. Rory decides to putt from about 90 feet away and… wow, it catches the lip and spins out. That could have gone in or whizzed 15 feet by. Rory chuckles, perhaps more thinking of the latter.

-11 W Clark (4)
-10: R McIlroy (4)
-9: R Fowler (4)
-7: S Scheffler (4)
-5: T Fleetwood (F), X Schauffele (6)

Summarize this content to 100 words Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureOne of Clark’s secrets to success? He said this earlier in the week: “I will say that I came here (to LA CC) with my good buddy, PJ. He’s a member. He’s a good player and he really knows the golf course.“That 18 holes was the equivalent of probably playing 36 holes because he was telling me how certain putts break, how this one is faster than that. If you’re here, you want to go there. He was spot on.“When I left that practice round I felt like I didn’t even need a practice round. I felt like it was that in-depth.”Updated at 22.09 EDTThe final scores on the doors:-10: W Clark-9: R McIlroy-7: S Scheffler-6: C Smith-5: T Fleetwood, M W Lee, R Fowler-4: T Kim, H EnglishRory McIlroy on his performance: “The putter – I’ll rue some chances. That wedge on 14 coming up short, too. Just didn’t quite get the job done. I’ll keep coming back. I’m right there but it’s such fine margins.”“So good, so good, so good,” yelled a friend of Clark as he received back slaps and fist pumps galore. It’s a sentiment that is hard to argue with. He has been superb this week.Wyndham Clark is the 2023 US Open champion.A sensational performance. A second win of the year. A first major championship. Tears and a look to the heavens.Clark’s caddie removes the flag. Clark hits his putt. Oh it’s good. Very, very good. Inches from the hole.Wow. The galleries have been allowed to surround the 18th green.Clark peers back at them. It’s as raucous on 18 today as it’s been anywhere all week.Here we go. Clark settles over his ball. 198 yards to the flag. “The palm tree,” says his caddie, meaning the line.His ball finds the front of the green. He’s 60 feet from the flag. Triumph is within touching distance … but it’s not over yet.“All he can do now is wait,” says Ewen Murray on TV, as McIlroy walks off the 18th green.Behind, Clark has to walk up the 18th hole with a cameramen beside him. What thoughts must be racing through his head!McIlroy’s putt at 18 is one of his best of the day but it doesn’t drop!Back on the tee, Clark finds the fairway. He’s got three shots from there to become a major champion.Clark is superb – yet again – with his short game. His pitch on the 17th settles by the hole and he secures his par. It’s all down to the 72nd hole now. But advantage Clark – he leads McIlroy by one.What about the approaches?Clark at 17 first: he misses the green (he’s done that every round this week) but has done so in a good spot. He’s 54 feet away with nothing between his ball and the flag. Relatively flat too. The biggest hazard? Nerves!McIlroy at 18: he watches Scheffler knock one close, can he produce the same? He has to step away because of the din – the first din of the week more or less – then he finds the putting surface but he’s 41 feet away.Updated at 21.36 EDTClark on the 17th tee, finds the fairway, 182 to the flag. McIlroy on the 18th tee, finds the fairway, 185 yards to the flag.There really is very little in this!What happens if we need extra holes? The US Open is now decided by an aggregate two hole play-off if there is a tie after 72 holes.McIlroy is frustrated after his birdie putt does no more than nestle by the hole. But he doesn’t know what has happened on the 16th green. Riley said earlier that the Northern Irishman had ignored a leaderboard – will he know the situation heading up the final hole?-10: W Clark (16)-9: R McIlroy (17)Bogey for Clark! He slaps the face of his putter after his ball lips out at the 16th!He is now only one clear of McIlroy.TV’s Wayne Riley knew better than the cameras. McIlroy, he explains, planned to take an alternative route to the 17th green. He powered the ball over trees onto an adjacent fairway. His approach landed with a roar from the galleries but he still has 32-feet to the hole.Clark executes a superb approach at the 16th. He’s left himself 7-feet for par.Let’s have a reminder of just how remarkable it is that he’s withstood the major championship pressure. First, there is his major record which includes four missed cuts in six starts and a best of tied 75th. But it’s also true that 23 of the last 25 major championship winners had experience of contending a major in at least one of the three that preceded their win (finishing top eight or sitting top four with 18 holes to play). Clark has never felt that heat. It doesn’t seem to be bothering him, however.Leaderboard updateIt’s getting very twitchy. McIlroy’s drive at 16 has gone left and might be in trouble. It’s one of those where the TV camera lingers on trees and marshals who are walking towards them. Behind, Clark has to heave his ball out of the fairway bunker at 15 so needs to save par from 130 yards. The state of play:-11: W Clark (15)-9: R McIlroy (16)-7: S Scheffler (16), R Fowler (15)-6: C Smith (F)McIlroy’s long distance birdie putt at 16 slips a nasty 7-feet past the hole.But drama behind him on the tee – Clark has driven into the fairway bunker and might struggle to reach the green.McIlroy putts …and it drops! That was vital.McIlroy has an ugly lie after that errant tee shot at the 16th. He has, however, clattered it onto the putting surface. A long away from the hole, though.Clark’s chip has slipped to around 10-feet at 15. Can he stay three shots clear? No! A bogey and the first crack in his previously iron-clad short game. The gap is two.Updated at 21.12 EDTThanks Dave. Things have certainly changed in the last 20 minutes. I’m thinking of this week’s most regular emailer, Michael Meagher, who is somewhere out there sighing: “Oh Rory.”Also, before I crack on with the finale, I just want to say that, in a week that’s been full of chatter about the Golden Age of Hollywood, well played Min Woo Lee for celebrating it best with his Douglas Fairbanks/Errol Flynn style moustache. And his top 10 finish, of course.McIlroy drives into rough at 16. Not good. Clark’s tee shot at 15 is waywad though and misses the green. Do we have further twists? Matt will take you down the closing stretch.Here goes McIlroy with his birdie putt at 15. It shaves the hole. Of course it does. That’s a par.Clark eyes up his eagle try back at 14. Holing it would be fantastic; taking two putts for birdie is a very valuable consolation prize. Clark is rightfully cautious and makes sure of the birdie-4. He pulls three clear. Fowler also makes birdie but that’s more to firm up his bid for bronze rather than gold.-12: W Clark (14)-9: R McIlroy (15)-7: R Fowler (14)-6: C Smith (F), Scheffler (15)Clark must have seen all the McIlroy drama and he’s had to spend plenty of time stewing in the fairway. Under the circumstances he could be forgiven for messing this approach up. Instead, he hits a worldie from 280 yards onto the green and will have 20 feet for eagle. Very soon, Clark could be three clear with four to play.McIlroy needs to pull something out of the bag. Perhaps he’s started that process with a tee shot to 19 feet at the par-3 15th. But, for goodness sake, he has to hole a putt not sooner or later but now.McIlroy drops his ball, without penalty, in rough outside of the bunker and hacks out to nine feet. A chance to save par but he hasn’t holed a putt of that length all day. He looks anxious as he stalks the putt. This is huge and… he misses right. Ouch. A first bogey for McIlroy and he falls two back. Scheffler also drops a shot and he’s six off the pace. A costly hole.Out on the course, Sky’s Wayne Riley explains that it’s broken ground so McIlroy can pluck out his embedded ball and get a free drop. It was deemed to be plugged. That’s a…
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/live/2023/jun/18/us-open-golf-2023-final-round-live US Open golf 2023: Wyndham Clark wins his first major championship – live reaction | US Open

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