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A mental lapse may cost a PGA Tour winner a spot in the U.S. Open.
On a wild day of U.S. Open final qualifying, the wildest moment occurred in Ontario to conclude an eight-for-three playoff. Down to three players vying for one spot, Max McGreevy made birdie to punch his ticket to Shinnecock, but Matt Wallace and Adam Svensson still needed to settle who would be first alternate from the site.
RELATED: Everything you need to know from U.S. Open final qualifying
Svensson ended that quickly, however, when, not realizing the full situation, he picked up his ball marker instead of putting for par. With Wallace already in with par, that gave Wallace the top alternate spot—and likely means the Englishman will wind up at Shinnecock.
"This is a big deal, it's a really big deal," Golf Channel's Brandon de Jonge said. "There's a good opportunity that Matt Wallace is going to play. Often we see the first alternate get in, it's a big mistake made there by Adam Svensson and, unfortunately, at the end of a long day, you can make these type of mental errors."
Have a look at how it all went down:
Svensson will be the second alternate from that site. The 32-year-old Canadian and winner of the 2022 RSM Classic has played in two career U.S. Opens, finishing T-60 in 2023 and T-56 in 2024.
RELATED: U.S. Open qualifier suprised to know the U.S. Open is next week
Continue reading...
On a wild day of U.S. Open final qualifying, the wildest moment occurred in Ontario to conclude an eight-for-three playoff. Down to three players vying for one spot, Max McGreevy made birdie to punch his ticket to Shinnecock, but Matt Wallace and Adam Svensson still needed to settle who would be first alternate from the site.
RELATED: Everything you need to know from U.S. Open final qualifying
Svensson ended that quickly, however, when, not realizing the full situation, he picked up his ball marker instead of putting for par. With Wallace already in with par, that gave Wallace the top alternate spot—and likely means the Englishman will wind up at Shinnecock.
"This is a big deal, it's a really big deal," Golf Channel's Brandon de Jonge said. "There's a good opportunity that Matt Wallace is going to play. Often we see the first alternate get in, it's a big mistake made there by Adam Svensson and, unfortunately, at the end of a long day, you can make these type of mental errors."
Have a look at how it all went down:
Svensson will be the second alternate from that site. The 32-year-old Canadian and winner of the 2022 RSM Classic has played in two career U.S. Opens, finishing T-60 in 2023 and T-56 in 2024.
RELATED: U.S. Open qualifier suprised to know the U.S. Open is next week
Continue reading...